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Tuesday, March 7, 2023

Italy: Milan Stabber (Cont)




Here is more on the identity of the lovely chap who went on a stabbing and robbery rampage yesterday near Milan's Central Train Station. His name is Abrahman Rhasi (23) and he is from (surprise) Morocco. And yes, the is is not the first time he has had a run-in with Italian police. However, since he had previously applied for political asylum in Germany, he could not be expelled from Italy. So now, 5 innocent people are now recovering (thankfully) from stab wounds.

 https://milano.corriere.it/notizie/cronaca/23_marzo_07/milano-il-rapinatore-di-viale-brianza-gia-fermato-a-rogoredo-vita-randagia-si-spostava-di-continuo-tra-i-quartieri-37263d02-350e-48c9-b8aa-a3dda7ebfxlk.shtml

Milan, the viale Brianza robber had applied for asylum in Germany: "He could not be expelled from Italy"

Cesare Giuzzi

Abrahman Rhasi, 23, Moroccan, arrested with his hands covered in blood. A month ago, he was accused of stealing a cell phone on line 90. Admitted to the hospital at San Donato, he then dropped out of view.

The theft of a cell phone on line 90. Then the railway police arrested him on a train at the Rogoredo station. The discovery of the stolen property and the complaint. His name is Abrahman Rhasi, born May 7, 1999 in Morocco, asylum-seeker in Germany, the 23-year-old was arrested Monday evening by police for having robbed and stabbed six people between the Central Station and viale Brianza. These are the details in which he was identified a month ago after being arrested by police at Rogoredo. For that episode, he was charged with theft by snatch and grab. Then he dropped out of view.

Recovery in hospital

He arrived in Italy from Germany where he had applied for political asylum. For that reason, he could not be expelled. It is not yet clear how long he was in Milan prior to the dramatic afternoon with 5 consecutive robberies, all against women, armed with a small knife. Perhaps, 5 or 6 months and the investigators are checking for other stops made by police. There is no record of him entering Italy at Lampedusa, and he was apparently first photographed abroad. In the past weeks, he apparently slept in the streets, but not only in the area around the Central Station. "A roaming life, moving continuously in various quarters," an investigator explains. When he was arrested, he still had a hospital wristband on his left wrist. According to what has been reconstructed by investigators, that wristband is reportedly related to a stay at the San Donato hospital a month ago, at the time of the stop by the Rogoredo railway police.  He had a bruise laceration injury and appeared to be under the influence of alcohol and/or drugs; for this, he was taken to the hospital. Since then, that wristband was never taken off. In the theft incident, which occurred on line 90, he was only charged because when he was arrested on the Lodi-Saronno regional (train), some hours had already passed since the theft. The railway police officers intervened on the conveyance after a report of an "intoxicated" person who was creating a disturbance with the passengers: "He was behaving violently and aggressively". When he was arrested Monday evening after the robberies, he was dressed in a black Nike tracksuit, a dark sweatshirt, and a grey t-shirt. He also had a neck warmer and a cap on his head. Crumpled clothes with signs of a life spent on the street. His hands were covered in the blood of the victims. The injured were all released from the hospital with prognoses from 5 to 21 days.

The investigations

Now the investigators of the General Prevention Office of the police headquarters and the Mobile Squad are trying to reconstruct how he had lived in these past weeks and if he had committed other robberies. Rhasi is still being treated at the Fatebenefratelli Hospital, and in the afternoon, will be taken to San Vittore jail on the orders of Prosecutor Maura Ripamonti.



 




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