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Former Bay Area students charged in Italian police officer’s slaying await their fate

Gabriel Natale-Hjorth and Finnegan Lee Elder in court
Gabriel Natale-Hjorth, left, and his friend and co-defendant Finnegan Lee Elder in a Rome courtroom April 26.
(Remo Casilli / Pool Photo)
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The COVID-19 pandemic was just bearing down on Italy when the trial began of two young Northern California men charged with the murder of a police officer near their hotel in Rome while they were on vacation in 2019.

On Wednesday, after more than 14 months, defense lawyers will wrap up their arguments, and the two defendants — high school classmates from Mill Valley who were 19 and 18 when the slaying occurred — can expect to learn their fates later this week.

For the record:

3:50 a.m. May 5, 2021A previous version of this story misstated the ages of the two defendants at the time of the alleged murder. They were 19 and 18, not both 19.

Finnegan Lee Elder, now 21, and Gabriel Christian Natale-Hjorth, now 20, insist that they acted in self-defense in the death of Carabiniere Vice Brigadier Mario Cerciello Rega. They say they thought they were being attacked by a pair of thugs or mafiosi when Cerciello Rega and fellow officer Andrea Varriale approached them in plainclothes in the early hours of July 26, 2019.

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The officers had been dispatched to follow up on a report of a small-scale extortion attempt, allegedly devised by the Americans in reprisal for a botched drug deal when the young men were out in Trastevere, a nightlife district in Rome, earlier in the night.

The case has largely come down to the testimony of Varriale, who insists that the officers identified themselves as police, against that of the young men, who, according to their own accounts, had spent the evening drinking beer and shots and trying in vain to buy cocaine. Neither officer brought his service pistol to the encounter.

Prosecutors alleged that Elder thrust a 7-inch military-style attack knife repeatedly into Cerciello Rega, who bled profusely and died shortly afterward in a hospital.

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Elder told the court that the heavyset Cerciello Rega was on top of him during a scuffle, and he feared the officer was trying to strangle him, so he pulled out the knife and stabbed him. When the officer didn’t immediately let him go, he stabbed again.

Under Italian law, alleged accomplices can also be charged with homicide even if prosecutors admit they had no material role in the actual slaying. In her final arguments, the prosecutor asked the court to convict both defendants and sentence them to life imprisonment, Italy’s harshest criminal penalty.

Judge Marina Finiti has indicated that verdicts would likely be delivered Wednesday or Thursday.

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Shortly after trial began Feb. 26 of last year, Italy, the first nation in the West to be hit hard by the coronavirus, went into a severe lockdown. Several of the trial’s hearings were held without the public or even journalists. At times, Elder and Natale-Hjorth followed proceedings via a video link from jail.

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The men told the court that after some sightseeing, they decided to visit Trastevere, a Rome neighborhood popular with young people.

At one point in the evening, the defendants testified, they sought to buy cocaine. After being put into contact by a go-between with a dealer, they paid 80 euros ($96), but instead of cocaine they received an aspirin-like tablet. Before Natale-Hjorth, who speaks Italian, could confront the dealer, a separate Carabinieri patrol intervened, and those on the scene scattered.

Cerciello Rega, wearing a T-shirt and long shorts, and Varriale, also dressed casually on the warm night in a polo shirt and jeans, were assigned to respond in plainclothes to what prosecutors contended was an extortion scheme devised by Natale-Hjorth.

When the cocaine transaction was botched, the Americans snatched the go-between’s knapsack in reprisal. Inside was the man’s cellphone, and Natale-Hjorth testified that he spoke with the man by phone, setting up a rendezvous to exchange the bag and phone in exchange for the cash they lost in the drug deal.

The defendants have insisted that they expected the go-between to show up outside their hotel. Instead, two men — the plainclothes officers — appeared without the go-between, they said. It was the go-between who had phoned police to report his bag stolen.

While Cerciello Rega wrestled with Elder, Natale-Hjorth scuffled with Varriale, who suffered a back injury. After the stabbing, the Americans ran to their hotel room, where, according to Natale-Hjorth, Elder cleaned the knife and asked him to hide it. Natale-Hjorth testified that he hid the knife behind a ceiling panel in their room, where it was discovered hours later by police.

Elder and Natale-Hjorth have also been charged with assault for causing Varriale’s injury, carrying an attack-type knife outside home without just cause, resisting a public official and attempted extortion.

During pretrial investigation, Elder told his lawyers to check out video footage from a bank near the stabbing, but it turned out no video surveillance camera was running that night.

Italian newspapers published a photo of Natale-Hjorth blindfolded and with his hands cuffed behind his back during questioning at a Rome Carabinieri station, in violation of Italian law protecting suspects’ dignity. Among those in the questioning room was Varriale, who said he used his phone to film the incident but didn’t transmit the video. The blindfold incident was put under a separate investigation.

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