From Gazzetta di Reggio of December 3, 2010 Here is the article:
The prosecutor has collected the memories of six people sull'eccidio 1944
Villa Minozzo. Years, although many do not stop the memory. Thus longer list of witnesses to the massacre of Cervarolo of March 20, 1944: 24 unarmed civilians shot by the Germans with the complicity of the fascists. The words of three men and three women will be used in the process taking place in Verona against former military Goering. To listen to those who now have white hair, his face marked by wrinkles, but with the head still functioning well, the prosecutor Bruno Bruni in the process of Verona, made a visit to Cervarolo Monchio and then, in Modena, another theater Nazi-Fascist barbarism that the defendants are a dozen former military officers and noncommissioned officers of departments of the division that operated in Goering 'Tuscan-Emilian Apennines. Brown has raised a total of eleven new evidence to be attached to the pleadings, of these, six Cervarolo. These three men and many women who at the time were children and young people: Italy Gigli, Cesare Merciadri; Remo Magnani; Marialuisa Paini; Remo Monchi e Paola Fontana. Da ricordare alcune loro storie. Magnani aveva 14 anni quando nel marzo '44 a Civago sfuggì per miracolo a raffiche di mitra che gli spararono dei fascisti della Gnr (la guardia nazionale repubblicana). Remo Monchi, dopo la strage di Cervarolo, venne costretto dai tedeschi a trasportare delle cassette di munizioni. Il ragazzo arrivò così fino a Case Bagatti con gli uomini della Goering. Qui rischiò di essere eliminato come scomodo testimone, ma alla fine in qualche modo riuscì a salvarsi. Di assoluto rilievo, per la ricostruzione degli eventi che precedettero l'eccidio di Cervarolo, viene ritenuta la testimonianza fornita da Italia Gigli. All'epoca lavorava nell'ufficio Postal and telegraph Gazzano. On the evening of March 19th (24 hours before the massacre) was closing the office when he was stopped by some soldiers (in units of the country had come to spend the night). The elderly, in a previous interview he reported that to force her to return to the office "were the Germans, but there was also a fascist uniform. It was of our parts because he spoke in dialect. " The Gigli was forced to send orders via telegraph. Were guidelines for the action of raking and encirclement of Cervarolo scheduled for the next day. The woman had also heard phone calls with the head of the GNR in those hours that he was in Villa Minozzo. December 3, 2010
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