Chiuso il primo troncone di indagine

Da Armanna ad Amara: cosa hanno scoperto i pm sul depistaggio del processo Eni

FILE - In this Friday, Feb. 23, 2018 file photo, an employee walks by banners with name and sign of energy firm Eni at Strovolos area in capital Nicosia, Cyprus. Oil giants Shell and Italy’s Eni were acquitted Wednesday, March 17, 2021 of corruption charges in a $1.1 billion bribery case involving control of a lucrative oil block on Nigeria. In addition the companies, Eni’s current CEO, his predecessor and a former Nigerian oil minister were among 13 defendants acquitted in the three-year-old trial, involving the 2011 purchase of the OPL245 block. (AP Photo/Petros Karadjias, File)
FILE - In this Friday, Feb. 23, 2018 file photo, an employee walks by banners with name and sign of energy firm Eni at Strovolos area in capital Nicosia, Cyprus. Oil giants Shell and Italy’s Eni were acquitted Wednesday, March 17, 2021 of corruption charges in a $1.1 billion bribery case involving control of a lucrative oil block on Nigeria. In addition the companies, Eni’s current CEO, his predecessor and a former Nigerian oil minister were among 13 defendants acquitted in the three-year-old trial, involving the 2011 purchase of the OPL245 block. (AP Photo/Petros Karadjias, File)
  • La procura di Milano ha chiuso un primo troncone di inchiesta che ruota intorno al presunto complotto che manager e consulenti Eni avrebbero ordito nei confronti della procura di Milano mentre quest’ultima indagava prima sull’Algeria e poi sulla Nigeria.
  • Sei gli indagati di questo troncone, tra i quali Piero Amara, Vincenzo Armanna e Massimo Mantovani, con varie accuse che vanno dalla calunnia all'induzione a non rendere dichiarazioni all'autorità giudiziaria e intralcio alla giustizia.
  • Al centro dell’attività calunniosa il tentativo di delegittimare il procuratore aggiunto Fabio De Pasquale, a capo del pool che indaga sui reati internazionali.

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