A court in Genoa sentenced the former CEO of Italy’s main highway operator to 12 years in prison for the 2018 collapse of the Morandi bridge, which caused 43 deaths. This verdict marks a significant step in addressing one of Italy’s worst infrastructure disasters.
The trial lasted four years and involved 57 defendants, including company executives and engineers. The bridge, built in 1967, had long been considered structurally unsafe, with warnings ignored before its collapse.
A court has sentenced the former CEO of Italy’s main highway operator to 12 years in prison over the collapse of the Morandi road bridge in the port city of Genoa.
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Judges delivered their verdict on Thursday in Genoa in the first trial over the collapse of the bridge, which killed 43 people when it fell apart on August 14, 2018. It is considered one of the country’s worst infrastructure disasters.
Atlantia CEO Giovanni Castellucci was found guilty of vehicular homicide and negligence related to the Morandi bridge’s collapse.
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The bridge was operated by Atlantia’s motorway unit, Autostrade per l’Italia, which has come under severe scrutiny in this affair.
Castellucci is already in prison, serving a six-year sentence over another fatal incident in 2013 on a viaduct in southern Italy, and was not in court to hear the verdict.
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Also convicted on Thursday were Autostrade’s former head of maintenance, Michele Donferri Mitelli, who was sentenced to 11 years in prison and the former CEO of the SPEA engineering company, Antonino Galata, who received five years and six months.
In all, 32 people were convicted and handed sentences ranging from one year and 11 months to 12 years. Others were either found not guilty, or lesser charges had expired under the statute of limitations.
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Relatives of the victims, meanwhile, packed the court to hear the outcome of a case that has become a symbol of Italy’s decaying infrastructure and slow justice system. The verdict came after four years of trial hearings for 57 defendants, including company executives, engineers and transport ministry officials, on charges of manslaughter, endangering transport safety and falsifying official documents.
The 1,182-metre (1,293-yard) bridge, which had been dubbed Italy’s “Brooklyn Bridge”, was designed by the architect Riccardo Morandi and inaugurated in 1967.
By the turn of the century, experts continued to warn that the structure was deteriorating, yet critical repairs were never carried out.
Prosecutor Walter Cotugno dubbed the bridge “a ticking time bomb” at the verdict.
The collapse of the then-51-year-old bridge triggered years of investigations into the maintenance of its decrepit infrastructure. A 50-metre (160-foot) high section of the bridge collapsed with as many as 35 vehicles on it, which fell onto warehouses and a riverbed below.
“I wish to apologise to the victims’ families, to the people of Genoa, and to all Italians for the suffering caused by the tragic Morandi disaster, fully aware that our gesture can never erase their pain,” Autostrade CEO Arrigo Giana wrote in an apology statement on Wednesday.
Prosecutors argue that years of inadequate maintenance, ignored warning signs and delayed safety work contributed to the collapse, alleging that vital work was postponed, while profits continued to be generated and distributed.
The defence’s main argument was that the bridge had a hidden construction defect, namely corrosion of its cables, that caused its collapse, not a lack of maintenance.
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