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ROME (AP) - Italian prosecutors investigating the killing of an Italian
secret service agent at a checkpoint in Iraq plan to charge a U.S. soldier with
murder and attempted murder, Italian media reported Tuesday.
U.S. gunfire killed Nicola Calipari near the checkpoint March 4 as the agent
was heading to Baghdad airport in a car with an Italian journalist who had just
been released after being held hostage by militants.
The ANSA and Apcom news agencies reported Tuesday that prosecutors planned
to charge the soldier with murdering Calipari and attempting to murder the agent
driving the car as well as the journalist, Giuliana Sgrena, who were both wounded
during the incident. State TV news Tg1, and private SKY TG 24 television news
also carried the report.
The prosecutor in charge of the case, Franco Ionta, could not be reached for
comment Tuesday evening. A Pentagon spokesman, Lt.-Col. Barry Venable, said
the Pentagon had not seen any charges actually filed and declined to comment.
An Italian government report in May blamed U.S. military authorities for failing
to signal there was a military checkpoint ahead on the road. It also contended
that stress, inexperience and fatigue played a role in the shooting.
The Americans insisted that the car was going fast enough to alarm the soldiers.
The Italians have said the vehicle was travelling slowly.
Police and ballistic experts assigned by Rome prosecutors to examine the car
have concluded it was travelling slower than the U.S. military claimed. They
agreed with U.S. findings that only one soldier fired at the car.
The shooting angered Italians, already largely opposed to the war in Iraq,
and led many to step up calls for withdrawing the Italian contingent. Prime
Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who sent some 3,000 troops to Iraq after Saddam
Hussein's ouster, insisted the incident would not affect troop levels or Italy's
friendship with Washington.