Murder of Giulia Cecchettin

Giulia Cecchettin (5 May 2001 – 11 November 2023) was an Italian college student who was murdered by her ex-boyfriend Filippo Turetta on 11 November 2023. Her murder sparked protests in Italy against femicide and refocused public opinion on domestic violence.

Life
Giulia Cecchettin was born in Padua on 5 May 2001 to Gino Cecchettin and Monica Camerotto. She had two siblings, Elena and Davide. She enrolled at University of Padua, where she studied biomedical engineering and met Filippo Turetta. They had a relationship for one year before breaking up in the summer of 2023. Her sister Elena revealed that Turetta was possessive; in the autumn of 2023, he began to behave irrationally, telling Giulia that he felt depressed and suicidal, as he didn't see a future without her. Giulia and Turetta continued to meet up, but she confided that she experienced his pressure as emotional blackmail.

Murder
On 11 November 2023, Giulia left home, accompanied by Turetta, at around 18:00 to go to a shopping centre in Marghera to buy a pair of shoes for her graduation. Turetta and Giulia also dined together at a McDonald's inside the shopping centre at around 21:02, with Giulia paying for both their meals with her credit card. They then left the building at approximately 22:30. At 22:43, Giulia sent her last message via WhatsApp to her older sister Elena, who was in Vienna at the time for university studies.

The following day, Giulia's father reported her missing at the local Carabinieri station at around 13:30. In the meantime, Elena posted appeals on social media to locate the former couple. A witness came forward reporting that at around 23:15 he had seen a violent argument between a boy and a girl from the balcony of his apartment, taking place in a car park located about 150 metres from Giulia's house in Vigonovo. The girl shouted for help and the witness called the 112, but nobody arrived because all units in the area were busy and the closest one was over 45 minutes away from the location. Later, security video footage from a factory located in the nearby town of Fossò showed Turetta violently hitting Giulia. When she tried to escape, Turetta hit her again from the back, then loaded her bleeding body into the boot of his black Fiat Punto.

A manhunt for Turetta was initiated and was extensively reported on by Italian media for one week. After it emerged that Turetta had crossed the border into Austria, Gino Cecchettin made announcements in English and German, asking the public's help to find Giulia. Italian law enforcement issued a European arrest warrant for Turetta on charges of kidnapping and murder.

Giulia's body was discovered near lake Barcis in Piancavallo on 18 November 2023 by the special dogs unit of the Civil Protection. The body was found inside a large nylon bag in a cave at 50 metres altitude, within a wooded area that is generally closed during the autumn-winter period for security reasons. The Italian forensic services performed an autopsy on 1 December 2023, and reported that Giulia's body had over twenty stab wounds.

One week after the murder, Turetta was arrested in an emergency lane of a motorway near Leipzig, after his car had run out of petrol. His first words to officers upon being stopped were: "I am Filippo Turetta. I killed my girlfriend". On 25 November Turetta was extradited to Italy, on a special Air Force flight that landed in Venice, and incarcerated in Verona prison. The first Hearing of the trial against Turetta is scheduled on September 23, 2024.

Funeral and reactions
On 20 November 2023, the Corriere della Sera published a letter by Giulia's older sister Elena, in which she denounced a society responsible for dismissing men who commit violent acts against women as "monsters" or mentally ill, stating that they were in fact the natural result of "patriarchy and rape culture". She invited all men to take responsibility, recalling friends and colleagues who displayed behaviours tolerated by society that could be the prelude to femicide, defined by her as "state murder" and a "crime of power" which society must be educated against.

Cecchettin's funeral was held at the Abbey of Santa Giustina in Padua, officiated by the bishop of Padua Claudio Cipolla, in the presence of approximately 8,000 people and civil and military authorities; the funeral was also aired on the main Italian television channels. Giulia is buried next to her mother Monica, who died of cancer in autumn 2022. Her father Gino delivered the eulogy, urging men to change their attitudes toward women.

On 2 February 2024, in the presence of her relatives, the University of Padua conferred an honorary degree to Giulia Cecchettin. Gino Cecchettin has published a book with the title ''Cara Giulia. Quello che ho imparato da mia figlia'' ("Dear Giulia. What I have learned from my daughter") about the memories of his daughter and how he lived with the grief of the loss. The book was released in Italy on March 5, 2024.