The police commissioner adopted them following the violent fight that broke out last spring in Venafro. Provision issued for the first time in the province
ISERNIA/VENAFRO. There are six Daspos ‘out of context’ issued by the police commissioner of Isernia Davide Della Cioppa and notified by the Anticrime to some of the people involved in the huge brawl that broke out last spring in front of a bar in Venafro.
The police commissioner, after having already ordered the suspension of the bar license for 10 days and having adopted 16 bans on access to urban areas for all participants in the fight, issued, on the proposal of Digos, these new measures in order to protect public order and safety.
The episode involved two groups made up of numerous people, some of whom already had specific criminal records and were banned from attending sporting events. What ignited things was a verbal clash between two young people, for trivial reasons, which took place inside the club, which was very popular with young people from Venafra. The argument degenerated, inducing many other boys, friends of the respective parties, to confront each other.
The two factions – made up, respectively, of local residents (including some individuals attributable to the organized supporters of Venafro) and citizens of North African origins – opposed each other outside the business with objects and wooden sticks being thrown , then suddenly fleeing through the surrounding streets. The fight was filmed by passers-by and the images were spread on social media, causing particular alarm among residents, also due to the location of the bar in the center.
This particular type of Daspo (out of context), which was applied for the first time in the province of Isernia, is aimed at people who have been responsible for serious crimes, committed outside the sporting context, with the aim of preventing these may reproduce the same illicit or violent conduct, even within stadiums or in places where sporting events take place, where similar conduct could pose serious risks to public order and safety.
The duration of the ban on access to the places where sporting events take place has been set at one year and concerns all sports, national and international series and categories, friendly matches, as well as all other sporting events