David Rossi’s Death: Commission Says "Conclusive Evidence Rules Out Suicide"
It’s the dramatic twist that so many in Siena have been waiting for, for thirteen long years. Today, March 6, 2026, the Parliamentary Commission of Inquiry did what no prosecutor had ever dared to do: it has categorically ruled out the suicide hypothesis. We have concrete evidence that excludes a voluntary act, the commissioners stated. And for those who remember that night of March 6, 2013, vividly—with the broken shutters and the body of the Mps executive lying beneath the window—it feels like waking up from one nightmare only to enter another, but one that is finally real.
The official version—that the executive plunged to his death while in the grip of a sudden impulse—has collapsed. Commission investigators worked for months on previously unseen material, and the picture they've painted is damning. Here are the key points that led to this sensational breakthrough:
- The body's position and injuries: new technical assessments show the impact is not consistent with a voluntary jump. Too many fractures, too many bruises that tell a story of a push, perhaps a struggle.
- The blood traces on the window: they were found on the outside of the sill, but appear to date from before the fall. A sign that someone was bleeding up there, while trying to defend themselves.
- Calls made in the dark: re-examined phone records reveal contacts with individuals never before interviewed, deleted and then recovered messages that expose a climate of threats and pressure in the days leading up to the death.
- A silenced private life: those who knew David had spoken of fears and a tense atmosphere surrounding him. Words that were dismissed at the time as the ravings of a depressed man, but which now carry the weight of evidence.
This is no longer just the theory of a persistent widow or a few local reporters. It’s the Parliamentary Commission stating: there was no suicide here. And tonight, on the news analysis programs, I imagine they'll be talking once again about obstruction and omissions, with the family's lawyers poised to demand justice.
This is the turning point we’ve been waiting for. Now the focus is on those who wanted to paint David Rossi as a man who took his own life. And Siena, which saw those shutters with its own eyes, can remain silent no longer.