
The man who went on a shooting spree outside the Italian government
headquarters in April, as Prime Minister Enrico Letta's new cabinet was
being sworn in, was not mentally ill and is fit for trial, a
psychiatrist has said. Luigi Preiti shot and injured two police officers
outside Palazzo Chigi in Rome on April 28th and reportedly begged
police officers to kill him afterwards, prompting speculation that he
was mentally ill.
Although a medical report released on Sunday claimed he was in control
of his actions. A psychiatrist, Dr Pietro Rocchini, said in his
assessment, "At the time he showed a mild depressive disorder...of an
intensity not significant enough to affect his capacity to understand
and decide,"
Rocchini said that Preiti's shooting spree was motivated by an
"aggressive search" for public recognition, rather than being a suicidal
act.
The unemployed Preiti had an "immature desire to transform himself into a
sort of heroic avenger" based on his strong sense of revenge against
national institutions and politicians, Rocchini said.
Rather than a victim of mental illness or a man suffering from Italy's
economic woes, the psychiatrist paints a picture of an "immature and
egocentric" man, with "a very low capacity to empathize with the
victims".
Preiti has been in prison since the shooting and in May stopped taking anti-depressants, Corriere said.
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