(ANSA) - Milan, October 20 - A Milan court of appeals on Thursday explained why it upheld the acquittal of two men who gave a Roman salute, finding it was unclear whether their gesture "crossed the boundary of commemoration" into the realm of spreading Fascist ideology.
The latter is a crime in post-World War II Italy.
The acquittal was handed down September 21, and the court today released its motivation for the verdict. In June 2015, a preliminary hearings judge first acquitted defendants Marco Clemente and Matteo Ardolino, both members of extreme-right group Casapound, of intending to spread Fascist ideology during an April, 2014 commemoration for three slain fellow believers: World War II militant Carlo Borsani, who was executed in 1945; student Sergio Ramelli, a youth group member of the neofascist MSI party who was beaten to death by an extreme-left group in 1975; and 49-year-old Enrico Pedenovi, an MSI provincial councillor who was shot dead by an extreme-left commando in 1976.
The prosecution had requested six months in prison for both defendants, with ANPI resistance fighters association a civil plaintiff in the case.
It argued the commemoration in itself was "intrinsic" to the defendants' desire to spread Fascist ideology, but the court disagreed.
Two acquitted of spreading Fascist ideology
Clemente, Ardolino made Roman salute at commemoration