Who cares what Nencini established. He got a lot wrong, and his court was the ONLY court to come to this conclusion. Further, there was no new or "fresh evidence of video footage", he just chose to re-swizzle what the other courts concluded.
It was proven in the Massei trial that the garage CCTV clock was 10 minutes SLOW. The very first time the Postal Police's Fiat is seen on CCTV is at 12:36. At 12:41 the Fiat is again seen driving past the gate, and an image believed to be Battistelli is seen walking away from the cottage towards the Fiat. At 12:48 two figures appear to meet and talk near the gate, one of which is believed to be Battistelli. Given the clock is 10 minutes slow, it shows them actually arriving at 12:58, which is AFTER the call to 112. This timeline is also consistent with what Amanda and Raffaele told the Postal Police when they arrived, that they were surprised the Carabinieri arrived so soon after calling them, only to learn they weren't the Carabinieri.
No, that is NOT what I said. I said Amanda told Filomena of the broken window during her last call with her at 12:34. I made no mention of when she learned the window was broken, but I think we all know they both said it was discovered shortly after their arrival at the cottage and it was at that time that Amanda told Raffaele it didn't appear like anything was stolen. Raffaele called the Carabinieri about 20 minutes after Amanda spoke with Filomena last, or 12:54. THAT'S how he was able to tell the Carabinieri that nothing was stolen. The Postal Police arrived shortly after that, and the Carabinieri arrived roughly 30 minutes after that (they called Amanda's phone at 13:29 looking for directions).