Английская Википедия:Disappearance of Alessia and Livia Schepp
Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Infobox person Alessia Vera Schepp and Livia Clara Schepp are twin sisters from Saint-Sulpice, a suburb of Lausanne in the canton of Vaud, Switzerland who were last seen on January 30, 2011. Matthias Schepp, their father, picked up his twin daughters from his ex-wife's home in St-Sulpice; they never returned. The body of Matthias was later found in Italy, where the authorities presumed that he had committed suicide.[1] The disappearance of the six-year-old girls led to an unsuccessful police hunt across Switzerland, France and Italy.[1]
Background
Alessia and Livia were twin sisters, born on October 7, 2004,[2] the only children of Irina Mayme Lucidi Schepp, an Italian-born Swiss lawyer,[3][4] and Matthias Kaspar Schepp, 43, a Canadian-born Swiss engineer.[5] The parents married in July 2004 in Ascoli Piceno, Italy,[5] where they both worked for the tobacco company Philip Morris.Шаблон:Cn
A year before the girls disappeared the couple had split up, living in separate homes the same village.Шаблон:Citation needed
Timeline
The following timeline is based on a Swiss Police publication:[6]
- Friday 28 January: Matthias Schepp picks up his daughters to spend the weekend with them.
- Saturday 29 January: Schepp sends an SMS to his wife: "we are all right, we'll return on Monday".
- Sunday 30 January
- at 12:00: The girls are seen for the last time with Schepp in Saint-Sulpice, Vaud.Шаблон:Citation needed
- at 17:04: Schepp crosses the border into France.
- Monday 31 January
- Tuesday 1 February
- Wednesday 2 February at 09:13: Schepp is photographed alone at a toll.
- Thursday 3 February
Possible murder by Matthias Schepp
In February 2011 police investigators said that Schepp sent a letter to his wife suggesting that he had killed the children. The letter was not released to the public. According to CNN, the Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera was allowed to publish a single sentence from the letters which said "The children rest in peace, they have not suffered". A search of Schepp's computer showed that in the days leading up to the trip, he searched for information about firearms and poisons, along with the timetables for the ferry.[8]
Novelization
In 2015, Italian journalist and writer Concita De Gregorio published a novel, Mi sa che fuori è primavera, based on the girls' disappearance, written from the point of view of Irina Lucidi. De Gregorio received a Brancati Prize for the book in 2016.[9] It was published in English in 2022 as The Missing Word.[10]
See also
References
External links
- Английская Википедия
- 2010s missing person cases
- 2011 in Switzerland
- January 2011 events in Europe
- Canton of Vaud
- Incidents of violence against girls
- Kidnapped Swiss children
- Kidnapping in the 2010s
- Missing people
- Missing person cases in Switzerland
- Swiss twins
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- Страницы с телепортом
- Википедия
- Статья из Википедии
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