Aosta, who was Auriane Nathalie Laisne, the girl killed in the abandoned church

Her name was Auriane Nathalie Laisne, he was 22 years old and, those who met her in the last days of her life, described her as “very beautiful, but suffering, emaciated”, dressed in black, with dark clothes. She is the girl found dead in an abandoned church in the woods near La Salle, in the province of Aosta. The police they managed to identify her thanks to an object, with his name, which he kept in his backpack. He lived in Saint-Priest, a small town in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region, about ten kilometers from the historic center of Lyon.

In the last months, Auriane Nathalie Laisne had reported Teima Sohaib for mistreatment, the 21-year-old who was with her in Valle d'Aosta in the days she was killed. Born in Fano, in the Marche region, where he lived for several years, the young man was then entrusted to a relative in Lyon, and it is there that he met the young woman. He was due to appear on trial in early May for domestic violence and was banned from approaching the victim. But the measure had not been respected: the two were traveling together.

They mainly used buses low cost: at the Mont Blanc tunnel the border police had also stopped and identified them for a routine check, but the officers did not know that the boy had been under “judicial control” since January 13, after the domestic violence episode, nor that the judge had forbidden him to come into contact with her. As the alarm did not go off and the journey continued.

A witness who had spoken to them reports that they were looking for abandoned places on which legends had been built, perhaps even for camping. The two they went up on foot, along the path in the woods, to the abandoned village of the Equilivaz hamlet. That's where Auriane was killed with stab wounds to the neck and abdomen, “probably” inside the church. For the murder, on Wednesday evening, the gendarmerie arrested Teima Sohaib, who so far is the only suspect and on whom there are heavy clues.

According to the first tests on the body, the crime took place between March 26 and 27: the girl bled to death. The chief prosecutor of Aosta, Luca Ceccanti, is certain: «It is a femicide, determined by motives of possession and the annulment of the victim's will. It wasn't a case of rapture, jealousy or passion. Essentially it is a murder typical of a demonstration of power towards the girl.”

Source: Vanity Fair

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