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Socialite, 65, who ran over and killed Moroccan mugger who stole her bag is given 18-year sentence in Italy

أخبار محلية
Daily Mail
2026/06/11 - 12:11 501 مشاهدة
By JADA BAS, REPORTER and PERKIN AMALARAJ, FOREIGN NEWS REPORTER Published: 13:10, 11 June 2026 | Updated: 13:17, 11 June 2026 A socialite who killed a mugger by running him over to reclaim her stolen bag has been sentenced to 18 years. Italian businesswoman Cinzia Dal Pino, 65, was caught on street CCTV ramming the Moroccan man with her white Mercedes GLE in Viareggio, Tuscany, in September 2024. The chilling footage shows the socialite swerve off the road in her £80,000 SUV and repeatedly plough into Noureddine 'Said' Mezgui, 52. As he fell to the ground, Dal Pino reversed and then drove forward, crushing him under the front wheels of her two-and-a-half-tonne motor. But as the Moroccan national writhed in agony, Dal Pino reversed and ran over him twice more until he stopped moving. She stepped out of the luxury vehicle in her stiletto heels before she took back her bag, then continued to drive off. Mr Mezgui was later declared dead at the scene after passersby called paramedics. Dal Pino was on trial for aggravated voluntary homicide and the judge ruled she will be able to serve her term under house arrest after prosecutors argued she sought 'excessive' revenge.  Italian businesswoman Cinzia Dal Pino, 67, has been sentenced for 18 years after killing a man who stole her bag She was caught on CCTV ramming the victim with her white Mercedes GLE in Viareggio, Tuscany Dal Pino told police earlier that Mezgui had mugged her as she came out of a restaurant after a dinner date. Her lawyer Enrico Marzaduri said: 'She didn't want to kill, but to stop the man and get her bag back. 'Inside it were her documents and house keys, and she was fearful he would have committed other crimes.' But despite this fear, rather than calling police or paramedics Dal Pino calmly returned to the restaurant where she had been dining with friends before the attack to bring back an umbrella she had borrowed, local media reported. Dal Pino admitted to police she had chased after him and had only wanted to get her bag back. She told police: 'He had threatened to kill me with a knife. I was scared. I didn't mean to kill him I just wanted my belongings back. 'There were important documents in my bag and I couldn't call the police because my phone was in there.' Officers later revealed no knife had been found on Mezgui and Dal Pino was initially held in jail on suspicion of manslaughter before being freed under house arrest. Nourdine Mezgui, 52, was killed after he stole Dal Pino's bag Mr Mezgui's family in Morocco previously spoke of their horror at the incident and called for 'justice' Her lawyer Enrico Marzaduri dismissed the video and said last year: 'I understand from the autopsy that it was certainly the initial impact that proved fatal and there are no tyre marks on the body. 'She just wanted to stop him and was aiming for his legs. She is suffering for what she did and is feeling remorse for what happened.' Dal Pino, a well known socialite in the Italian coastal city, was identified through her SUV's number plate and arrested by police just hours after the incident. The high-flying socialite, who was under house arrest before her trial, was also accused of cruelty, deceitful methods and killing her victim while he was unable to defend himself. Mr Marzaduri's motion to downgrade the charge to self-defence or manslaughter was rejected by the court. The woman was granted mitigating circumstances and the aggravating circumstance of cruelty was dropped. Police had been monitoring Mr Mezgui in the lead up to his death and had wanted to repatriate him, but authorities had not responded to their requests, meaning he had remained at large in Viareggio. Mr Mezgui's family in Morocco previously spoke of their horror following the incident and criticised Italian authorities for placing Dal Pino under house arrest while she awaited trial rather than in jail. 'Not even an animal is killed in this way,' his sisters told Moroccan channel Chouf TV, adding: 'We ask for justice for our brother, Cinzia Dal Pino must remain in prison.' Dal Pino's lawyers argued she did not intend to kill and had only wanted to get her bag back Mezgui's family said of the 52-year-old, who had lived in Italy for 24 years: 'He was a good man and we want justice. Everyone who knows him will tell you that.  'She ran over him four times and then just calmly drove off when he was dying and didn't even ask for help.' Local archbishop monsignor Paolo Giulietti said just after the mugger's death: 'Other than self-defence, the video shows astonishing behaviour. 'How do you drive your car over a person's body several times? How could we think that a quiet and esteemed lady, a capable entrepreneur, could carry out such an action? 'Evil wins when it makes us evil: those who rejoice because this episode would be an episode of self-defence demonstrate how evil wins. 'I say, let's not rejoice, this is not self-defence, and it is not justice. Nothing, absolutely nothing can justify murder. 'Not just because we live in a state of law. But because every person, in every situation they find themselves in, has the right to live.' Italy's deputy prime minister Matteo Salvini took a different view and wrote on Facebook: 'This drama is the consequence of a crime. If the man who lost his life hadn't been a delinquent this wouldn't have happened.' No comments have so far been submitted. Why not be the first to send us your thoughts, or debate this issue live on our message boards. By posting your comment you agree to our house rules. Do you want to automatically post your MailOnline comments to your Facebook Timeline? Your comment will be posted to MailOnline as usual. Do you want to automatically post your MailOnline comments to your Facebook Timeline? 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