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  • 3
    Nov
    2012
    12:53pm, EDT

    Suspect in stabbing of US student can't recall events after taking drug, lawyer says

    By Praxilla Trabattoni, NBC News

    Updated at 4:15 a.m. ET on Nov. 5:  ROME -- The suspect in the stabbing of a 19-year-old American student in the Italian capital Rome says he has no recollection of the events, officials said Saturday.

    Reid Schepis, 20, told a judge Saturday that he didn't even want to go clubbing Halloween night before the Thursday morning stabbing, his lawyer told NBC News.


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    The victim, New Jersey-born Fabio Malpeso, is "doing much better and is awake and has already spoken to his parents and sibling," Police Chief Lorenzo Suraci told NBC News. "Doctors are more confident on his recovery now."

    Malpeso was in critical condition after the attack, officials said.


    Suraci said police hope to speak to Malpeso, who underwent surgery for stab wounds to his lungs and other parts of his body, when he recovers further.

    Attorney Vincenzo Comi, who represents Schepis, also said he was told Malpeso is improving.

    "He is obviously still under observation but he is awake and talking," Comi told NBC News. "He even asked about the situation and what is happening."

    Earlier: Italy police say student stabs sleeping American friend while on drugs

    Comi said a judge on Saturday confirmed Schepis' arrest and will decide soon on a defense request that Schepis be held under house arrest.

    Comi said that Schepis told the judge that he "did not remember anything of the episode."

    "As he spoke of the events leading up to the tragedy he was crying desperately and sobbing throughout," Comi said. "He kept saying how sorry he was. Every time Fabio's name was mentioned he would break down. He just couldn't explain the events."

    Comi said Schepis went "against his will" with Malpeso and two unnamed young men to the club Atlantic, where some in the group drank alcohol and took drugs.

    Schepis told the judge that it was the first time he had ever taken drugs, Comi said.

    Schepis firmly denied buying the drug, Comi said. An unnamed friend among the foursome gave it to him, Comi said.

    Schepis remembers seeing his friend collapse, Comi said. He said he panicked and became very agitated as he tried to think of how to help and recalls running to the bathroom, fetching a glass of water and throwing on his friend, Comi said.

    Schepis said he then started feeling ill and faint himself, Comi said. From that moment on he has no recollection of going back to the house or any of the horrific events that took place there, he said.

    Schepis "woke up in the police station cell."

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    "Reid is a good kid; he comes from a good family,” Comi told NBC News. "Fabio and Reid were the best of friends. They were both in their second year of university but knew each other from before. Even their parents knew each other. This is another dramatic aspect of the whole tragedy. They were all friends."

    "Reid is just a 20-year old kid who found himself in the middle of something he could never even have imagined," he said. "There was not a single sign that could have forewarned anyone of this tragedy." 

    Yara Nardi / F3 Press

    Reid Schepis is taken into custody Thursday after allegedly stabbing fellow student Fabio Malpeso in Rome, Italy.

    Authorities earlier said the motive for the early Thursday attack in an apartment that overlooks Rome's famous Colosseum was unclear. However, detectives suspect "drug- and alcohol-related delirium" might be a factor.

    Schepis and Malpeso are both second-year students at John Cabot University, an American college in Rome, Comi said.

    A third man, an Italian in his 30s named Andrea Rinaldi, suffered injuries to his arms and hands trying to defend Malpeso, and was also in the hospital, police said. Rinaldi is the boyfriend of Malpeso's sister, Federica.

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    The couple had returned to the flat early Thursday and had not gone to the club with the foursome, as earlier reported.

    The two unnamed youths with Schepis and Malpeso had returned to the flat, too, but left before Malpeso was stabbed about 7:45 a.m., according to court testimony.

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    113 comments

    Drugged up teens, can't they stab somebody with a carrot or a banana instead of a knife? They know what they are doing when they go for the knife.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: italy, student, american, rome, stabbing, featured, fabio-malpeso, alexander-reid
  • 2
    Nov
    2012
    8:14am, EDT

    Italy police: Student stabs sleeping American friend while on drugs

    Yara Nardi/F3 Press

    Reid Schepis is taken into custody Thursday after he was alleged to have stabbed fellow student Fabio Malpeso.

    By Praxilla Trabattoni, NBC News
    Editor's note: This story includes a correction.

     

    Updated at 4:15 a.m. ET on Nov. 5: ROME -- A 19-year-old American was in critical condition Friday after he was allegedly stabbed while he slept by a fellow student following a night of partying in the Italian capital, officials told NBC News.

    The victim, New Jersey-born Fabio Malpeso underwent surgery for stab wounds to his lungs and other parts of his body. Police said Friday that Malpeso was in critical but stable condition in intensive care at a hospital in Rome. 

    Authorities said the motive for the attack, which happened in an apartment that overlooks Rome's famous Colosseum early Thursday morning, was unclear. However, detectives suspect "drug- and alcohol-related delirium" might be a factor.


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    The alleged assailant, who was taken to a police station and then a prison in central Rome, was named as Reid Alexander Schepis, 20. The suspect and victim are both students at John Cabot University, an American college in Rome.

    Police said Schepis, a resident of Reggio Calabria in southern Italy, appeared to have joint U.S. and Italian citizenship, but they were working to establish his nationalities.

    Lawyer: Suspect a 'model student'
    Schepis' lawyer, Vincenzo Comi, said his client was "distraught and exhausted," after visiting the young man in jail Friday.

    "He is clearly under shock, and nothing in his past could have prepared him for this. He has never had any problems with the law and has always been a model student with top grades,” Comi said, adding he did not want to say what Schepis had told him at this stage.

    Comi said Schepis’ mother was American and his father Italian, and as far as he was aware Schepis had dual citizenship.

    A third man, an Italian aged in his 30s named Andrea Rinaldi, suffered injuries to his arms and hands trying to defend Malpeso, and was also in the hospital, police said.

    Paolo Guiso, a judiciary police inspector who is leading the investigation, told NBC News Friday that Schepis and Malpeso had returned to the apartment, where Malpeso's sister Federica and Rinaldi were also staying, after partying in a nightclub Wednesday night and early Thursday.

    Yara Nardi / F3 Press

    The building where Schepis is alleged to have stabbed Malpeso is not far from the Coliseum in central Rome.

    More international coverage from NBC News

    "Federica, Rinaldi and Fabio went to bed at 6 a.m. [Thursday]. Reid stayed in the living room. At a certain point, he went to the kitchen, fetched a knife and went into Fabio's room, where he started to stab the sleeping youth," Guiso alleged. 

    "Hearing the screaming and commotion, Rinaldi and the victim's sister ran in to see what was happening. They stepped in to defend Fabio, which resulted in Rinaldi suffering cuts to his hands and arms," he said.

    "The motive of the attack is still not clear. At present we … believe that the violence was brought on due to a drug- and alcohol-related delirium," Guiso added.

    'Best friends'
    Guiso said early Friday that he had not been able to speak properly with Schepis as he was "still half asleep and at times catatonic ...  he was almost in a state of unconsciousness at times."

    "We have taken him to Regina Coeli prison in the heart of Rome. Within 48 hours from the arrest, he will have to go before the judge who will need to confirm his arrest," he added.

    Marta Canigiulia, 20, a student at John Cabot, told NBC News Friday that she was friends with Schepis and Malpeso, though she had only recently met the latter.

    “They were best friends ... they are best friends, I hope they still are,” she added. “I loved them for the fact that they were always very cheery. They would always come up to you and say: ‘Hi Marta, what’s up?’ They were always smiling.”

    More US coverage from NBCNews.com

    Referring to Schepis, Canigiulia said with tears in her eyes, “he is a good person.”

    “I can’t explain why this happened. Probably it’s because of drugs,” she speculated.

    Geraldine Gully, 18, another student, said she did not know Schepis and Malpeso personally but “saw them all the time at school. ... They seemed like very good friends. I was so shocked to hear what had happened because it was so unexpected and you wouldn’t believe it,” she said.

    In a statement, John Cabot University President France Pavoncello said he was dealing “with this situation personally” with support from other staff and was in touch with the “involved parties and their families.”

    He confirmed the suspect and victim were students at the university, saying they were roommates in an off-campus apartment. 

    “I trust you will all join me in sending our prayers to the victim's family for their son's full recovery as well as to the family of the alleged attacker, who is likely shattered by this tragic event,” he added.

    Thursday was the fifth anniversary of the brutal murder of British student Meredith Kercher in Perugia, Italy, that led to the arrest, trial and eventual acquittal of American student Amanda Knox.

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    71 comments

    I'm just waiting for the Italian prosecutors to claim the American was apart of some kind of Satanic cult or something and that the other student was just defending himself.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: italy, student, american, rome, stabbing, featured, fabio-malpeso, reid-schepis

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