Forensic analysis has revealed that the “gloved” imprint found on one of the black bags containing Liliana Resinovich’s corpse was not left by a glove, but by the texture of the victim’s own jeans. The finding comes from the Padua-based Interregional Forensic Science Department for Triveneto, commissioned by the Trieste Prosecutor’s Office after preliminary investigations judge (GIP) Luigi Dainotti rejected a request to dismiss the case, as reported by Il Piccolo.
Judge Dainotti had ordered a “comparative examination between the textile imprint resembling a glove pattern and gloves used by investigators, to determine or rule out third-party interference on the body bags”. This examination found the texture on the bag “incompatible” with a left-hand glove discovered near the body. Consequently, forensic experts conducted an experiment using the victim’s jeans and three similar trash bags. They replicated environmental conditions and used instant adhesives, successfully reproducing “regular patterned imprints similar and comparable to the one found on the bag covering Liliana’s lower limbs”.
Furthermore, additional checks on the GoPro camera mounted on the bicycle of Sebastiano Visintin – Liliana’s husband and the sole suspect in her death – reportedly revealed no discrepancies. According to the FVG Postal Police Cyber Security Operational Center, the GPS coordinates marking the start of the videos, which form part of Visintin’s alibi, “correspond with the camera footage”. The file timestamps also “align with Visintin’s statements and the detailed timeline reconstruction conducted by the Flying Squad personnel”. The footage covers Visintin’s movements between 12:16 PM and 1:33 PM on the day his wife disappeared.
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