Machiavelli
Philosopher
- Joined
- Sep 19, 2010
- Messages
- 5,844
Mignini's ability to do any more damage has been significantly curtailed due to his recent "promotion".
In his new job, as deputy (something something), under Galatti, Mignini can't lead investigations or prosecute cases in court. He is only allowed to sit on appeal hearings, and only then with other judges to baby sit him and keep him out of trouble.
Mignini has been effectively warehoused by the Italian judiciary in a ceremonial cul-de-sac, until they are ready to ship him off to prison, where he belongs.
All this is just false; actually delusional, there's something made up here that quite shows fudnamental ignorance about the Italian system.
Mignini was not "promoted" by external forces. That could never happen. Magistrates are "unmoveable" under Italian Constitution (art.107).
As for the law, a magistrate can be promoted to some position only following his own request. Which in fact is what happened: Mignini applied to the post at Prosecution General long ago, at the time of Meredith's murder, maybe before (I shall ask him about the exact date). His application for promotion was freezed, however, as for the rules, because the Procura of Florence indicted him. When the case against him and Giuttari was completely annulled in Florence, however, the CSM lifted the barrage.
Also should be clear that he was a "deputy" prosecutor before too. The title "deputy" sounds a bit strange in Italian as well, since this does not mean that there is someone baby sitting him or leading in his place. I think something like 90% of prosecutors are "deputies" in Italy, because only the Chief Prosecutor does not have this word before his title.
It's a strange terminology. "prosecutor" in Italian is procuratore, and the office is Procura, which translates as "proxy". So the chief "proxy man" is called procuratore and all the others are called sostituti.
This is all about acting "in the name of" something, an Office, a judicial Power, the Republic etc.
This does not mean there is a hierarchical power during work, nothing of the kind that deputies follow orders from chiefs: the "substitute" who becomes "competent" with a case (who gains jurisdiction) in fact becomes dominus, the authority of reference, and no one else can interfer with his/her work (except another substitute who may be appointed "competent", such as Manuela Comodi).
So there is nobody keeping Mignini "out of trouble".
He is a dominus who works alone on cases he prosecutes on appeals.
He is actually regaded as a very qualified magistrate, one reason why he was immediately appointed to PG after he was cleared, is because Galati lobbied as he strongly wanted him.
I assume Mignini applied for the post at Prosecution General office for the obvious reason that it's a post better paid than prosecutor at the 1st instance court. There are at least 25 prosecutors in Umbria, while Prosecution General has a staff of only 4 magistrates (and each gets better wages). So I guess that was the practical reason why Mignini wanted that post.
I also think Mignini probably won't remain in that position for long, I tend to think he will seek some even higher post, most likely outside Umbria.
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Btw, I think it's worth remind that Mignini's findings on the Narducci case are acknowledged as the truth. Courts have acknowledged the body-swap at the Trasimeno lake. Also, the Cassazione accepted Mignini's recourse about the 20 suspects, who were never "found innocent" (one of them, Brizioli, is still on trial; the others are off only because of expiration terms, thanks to Micheli delaying motivations).
Giuttari is vindicated now by courts even about his career. The Florentine judge who convicted him in 2010, Maradei, has fallen in disgrace on a political corruption scandal.
A new MoF investigation on "masterminds" has been opened focused on deceased Reinecke, one of the main focuses of Giuttari at the time of his investigation and a person of interest at the time of the Calamandrei case.
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