Overview
- Daniel D'Alessandro told the Corte d'Assise in Milan on Monday that he fired the shots that killed longtime Inter ultras leader Vittorio Boiocchi and said he was paid €15–16,000 for the attack.
- Former curva Nord leader Andrea Beretta, who is cooperating with prosecutors, has testified that he was the instigator and described a €50,000 payment routed through intermediaries to organize the killing.
- Prosecutors present the case as a premeditated, organized plot and are seeking to apply an aggravante mafiosa, while five defendants including Marco Ferdico, his father Gianfranco Ferdico, and alleged co‑executor Pietro Andrea Simoncini face trial.
- D'Alessandro was located and arrested in Sveti Vlas, Bulgaria in April 2025 and has said his cocaine dependence influenced his role; he described taking the weapon during the ambush and the subsequent disposal of the gun.
- The trial frames the murders as part of the curva Nord's shift from fan camaraderie to profit‑driven, illicit activity and could carry larger legal penalties and wider scrutiny of organized crime links if the mafia aggravation is upheld.