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Ex-Atlantia CEO faces up to 18 years in prison for Genoa bridge collapse, according to prosecutors

The Italian prosecution sought on Tuesday a sentence of 18-1/2 years in prison for the former Atlantia CEO Giovanni Castellucci, over the fatal 2018 collapse of an autobahn bridge in Genoa, a port city located to the northwest.

The prosecution is continuing its closing arguments for the three-year case involving 56 defendants. These include employees and executives from the company responsible for the maintenance of the bridge and the Transport Ministry.

Castellucci has already been in prison in Rome for six years, after a fatal accident in 2013, on a viaduct located in southern Italy.

Atlantia's Autostrade per l'Italia unit, which operates the Morandi Bridge in Genoa (Aspi), collapsed the bridge during the height of summer holidays on August 14, 2018. The collapse killed 43 people and exposed the crumbling state of Italy's infrastructure.

They face charges that range from multiple manslaughter, to false statements. All of them have denied the allegations.

In 2022, the judge closed the case against Autostrade and SPEA, its maintenance subsidiary.

The collapse of the bridge sparked a dispute that led to the sale in 2021 of Atlantia’s controlling stake in Autostrade.

The collapse of the bridge was caused by the rupture of load-bearing cable inside the ninth pillar's stay, which had been eaten away over the past 51 years by a highly corrosion atmosphere.

The prosecution claimed that the collapse of the building was due to years of inadequate, faulty or omitted maintenance in order to delay necessary repairs as long as possible and continue to pay dividends.

Lawyers for the defence said that the collapse of the stay cable 9 was due to a construction defect which was not detectable and was unavoidable.

Experts from civil parties said that structural problems had been previously identified in cables 10, 11, and then reinforced. It was therefore foreseeable that cable 9 could have experienced similar issues.

In the months to come, after the prosecutors and civil plaintiffs present their closing arguments the defence lawyers of all defendants will present them. The first-instance decision is not expected to be handed down before spring 2026.

(source: Reuters)