Giulia Cecchettin, a children’s book was also found near her body

Among the finds found not far from the body of Giulia Cecchettin there is also a children’s book. It’s about «Even monsters brush their teeth» created by the Venetian illustrator Jessica Martinelli, with the contribution of Gregoire Mabire. Perhaps a last purchase made by Giulia Cecchettin before being killed or perhaps a book that she had brought with her that day. Giulia indeed he loved to draw and she was enrolled at the Reggio Emilia Graphics School to cultivate one of her dreams: becoming an illustrator. Maybe she wanted to study that text or she particularly loved the author. The book was found in the woods between Lake Barcis and Piancavallo next to the body of the twenty-two-year-old student together with about twenty other finds. Among these, Giulia’s bag with her cell phone, documents and computer does not appear.

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Several handkerchiefs stained with blood were found, the black bags still rolled up like those used to wrap Giulia’s body and a black left moccasin that the girl may have lost while being dragged by her killer. Tuesday is expected the guarantee interrogation for Filippo Turetta arrived in Italy from Germany and is now detained in Montorio prison, north of Verona. The investigating judge Benedetta Vitolo will question him to understand if Turetta intends to confirm the statement already made before the German police to whom he told that he “killed his girlfriend”.

After fuchsia tide that in International day against violence against women, on November 25th, flooded the main squares and streets of Italy, Gino Cecchettin, Giulia’s father, also dedicated a few words, in a post published on social media, to the fight against gender violence. “The only hand raised to a woman must be to invite her to dance.”

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Furthermore, Giulia’s father made it known that the messages, letters and images that all of Italy sent to remember Giulia and make their closeness to the family felt will become a website dedicated to remembering his daughter’s story.


Source: Vanity Fair

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