David Rossi's Death: Parliamentary Commission Says "Tangible Evidence Rules Out Suicide"
It's the dramatic twist that many in Siena have been waiting for, for thirteen long years. Today, 6 March 2026, the Parliamentary Commission of Inquiry did what no magistrate had ever dared to do: it effectively put an end to the suicide theory. We have tangible evidence that rules out a voluntary act, the commissioners stated. And for those who remember that night of 6 March 2013 well – the broken shutters, the body of the Mps manager lying below 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 fell to his death while in the grip of a sudden impulse – has been overturned. Commission investigators worked for months on previously unseen material, and the picture that emerged is damning. Here are the key points that led to this stunning development:
- The body's position and injuries: New forensic analyses show the impact is not consistent with a voluntary jump. Too many fractures, too many bruises that suggest a push, perhaps even a struggle.
- Blood traces on the window: These were found on the outside of the sill, but are believed to date from before the fall. A sign that someone was bleeding up there, while trying to defend themselves.
- Calls made in the dark: Recovered phone records reveal contacts with individuals never before questioned, along with deleted and subsequently restored messages that point to a climate of threats and pressure in the days leading up to his death.
- A silenced private life: Those who knew David had spoken of his fears and the tense atmosphere surrounding him. At the time, these words were dismissed as the ravings of a depressed man, but today they carry the weight of evidence.
This is no longer just the theory of a persistent widow or a few local reporters. It is the Parliamentary Commission stating: there was no suicide here. And tonight, on the current affairs programmes, I imagine we'll hear talk again of red herrings and cover-ups, with the family's lawyers ready to demand justice.
This is the breakthrough we've been waiting for. Now, the investigation focuses on those who wanted to portray David Rossi as a man who took his own life. And Siena, which saw those shutters up close and personal, can no longer stay silent.