

Brescia, Northern Italy, 2005. The suburban calm of a peaceful dwelling was shattered when a relative arrived for a planned holiday visit and found the main entrance locked. Inside the lower apartment, the scene was unsettlingly pristine, described by one relative as being "like a dollhouse," though the two long-term occupants were nowhere to be found. Crucial details immediately contradicted the idea of a voluntary, spontaneous departure: the pairâs automobile and bicycles remained unused in the garage, groceries sat waiting in the refrigerator, and the one device connecting them to the outside world, a mobile phone long sought by investigators, was discovered switched off and lifeless inside a drawer in the home.The mystery suddenly took a horrific turn weeks later: high above the area, amidst an unforgiving mountain scarp, search teams discovered approximately ten refuse sacks. Inside were the mutilated remains of the elderly couple, along with shears containing traces of their blood.What unfathomable hatred could possibly fuel a crime so cold and meticulously planned? A chilling case that will keep you in suspense until the end...----------------------------------------------------------Don't forget to subscribe to the Casefile Confidential podcastTwo chilling episodes will be released every week, on Tuesdays and Fridays.---------------------------------------------------------- Visit tonysale.com for original case files, in-depth articles on unsolved and forgotten crimes, and a collection of books that dig deep into the worldâs darkest chapters.
Brescia, Northern Italy, 2005. The suburban calm of a peaceful dwelling was shattered when a relative arrived for a planned holiday visit and found the main entrance locked. Inside the lower apartment, the scene was unsettlingly pristine, described by one relative as being "like a dollhouse," though the two long-term occupants were nowhere to be found. Crucial details immediately contradicted the idea of a voluntary, spontaneous departure: the pairâs automobile and bicycles remained unused in th...