Rome, 29 October (LaPresse) – With regard to the corruption investigation by the Brescia Public Prosecutor's Office, the three lawyers who represented Andrea Sempio in 2017, namely Massimo Lovati, Federico Soldani and Simone Grassi, will be heard in the next few hours as persons informed of the facts. This was revealed on “Dentro la notizia” on Canale 5. During the programme, it was also reported that, in all likelihood, public prosecutor Giulia Pezzino, who was in charge of the 2017 investigation into Sempio together with Mario Venditti, currently the only suspect, will also be heard. Rumours also suggest that Dr Laura Barbaini, who was deputy attorney general in Milan, will soon be heard as a witness. Regarding these developments, which have been reported by the Brescia Public Prosecutor's Office, lawyer Liborio Cataliotti stated during the programme: 'I would like to clarify, for the benefit of everyone, that we are not aware that Andrea Sempio is involved in that investigation. I am not in a position to comment on it. What I know, I learn from you in the press. It is right to investigate if a note or who knows what else has raised suspicions. I do not believe that this changes the interpretation of the evidence and scientific findings that we are gathering in the trial that concerns us, namely the one in which Andrea Sempio is under investigation.‘ Regarding the new developments that may arise from the rewriting of the crime scene, Cataliotti explains: ’You are very well informed about the trial, so there is no point in me recounting the background. I will get straight to the point: we are doing nothing more than replicating or interfacing with what the investigators are doing on the one hand — Professor Cattaneo's findings and plausible subsequent checks, not in cross-examination — and expert reports (I use the plural because there are several investigators) — genetic and other — in the preliminary hearing. We are doing what the investigators are doing, we are doing what the judge's experts are doing, we are doing it privately, trying to combine scientific data with legal data.