Thursday, March 10, 2011

Investigate the dissemination of data from a bank account Berlusconi

The Guarantor of Privacy of Italy has decided to open an investigation into a newspaper dissemination of information relating to an alleged bank account of Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi. In a press release issued today, the body which monitors respect for the right to information privacy that has also decided to investigate the publication by another journal of the contents of emails from some Italian magistrates.

"An investigation concerning the publication by a newspaper of the content of emails sent in a mailing list reserved for judges, including, in particular, the spread of private email addresses of some registered in that list," said the statement. "Other research relates to the publication, by another newspaper, information relating to an excerpt of a current account given by the newspaper to Silvio Berlusconi," he concludes.

The announcement of the opening of files by the Guarantor of Privacy by the leak of information about an alleged bank account Berlusconi arrived on the same day that the Milan daily Corriere della Sera reported that the Prime Minister spent 34 million euros in 2010 in shopping, gifts and maintenance of their residences, among other services.

The newspaper, which provides details of the alleged gifts that Berlusconi could do to the girls who participated in their festivals, today unveiled a number of banking transactions made from an account that supposedly belongs to Berlusconi and his accountant ran, Giuseppe Spinelli. This is a bank account in the Monte dei Paschi of Siena, who became one of the strengths of the research carried out by the Milan prosecutor of the case called Ruby, which the president will be judged from April 6 for alleged abuse of power and incitement to prostitution.

Also on Wednesday, the eve of the adoption by the Cabinet tomorrow the much-heralded reform of the judiciary, the newspaper "Il Giornale", close to Berlusconi, published the contents of emails from some judges to justify the "plot" orchestrated against the president denouncing his environment.

In an editorial, the paper's director, Alessandro Sallusti, said: "Cause effect to see a judge calling the prime minister 'Uncle Berlusconi' contemptuous tone and raised the problem that, once the agent section will have to face the problem of their constituents, ie the 12 million Italians to the dome of the judiciary obviously considered fools.

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