Technicians from the Udine Municipality have “found no malfunctions in the morgue facilities of the San Vito Cemetery,” according to an official note. The investigation revealed “no issues with the electrical supply or voltage drops, and no restorative measures or resetting of systems were necessary.” The municipality has reported these findings to the Public Prosecutor’s Office concerning the two separate mishaps involving the corpse of Alessandro Venier and that of another man. The city stated these were “two different deaths on different days which have no connection to each other.”
The municipality clarified that in the first case, the autopsy was performed at Udine’s Civil Hospital. The city’s role was limited to “hosting and preserving the body in the refrigerated units until the day before the examination, which took place on August 13.” Regarding this incident, the Udine Municipality affirms it “has not received any kind of official notification from the Prosecutor’s Office.”
The second case, however, “concerns the body of a man who died on August 9. It arrived at the San Vito Cemetery on the afternoon of the day following the morning of his death.” The body was stored in the refrigerated cells as required by law, and the autopsy was carried out regularly on August 18 in the autopsy room of the San Vito Cemetery.