Pope Francis had a personal assembly on Friday with Beniamino Zuncheddu, an Italian who was acquitted this 12 months after spending 33 years in jail for crimes he didn’t commit. The assembly passed off within the library of the Apostolic Palace.
Zuncheddu, now 60, was convicted in 1991 of murdering three shepherds on the Italian island of Sardinia. The crimes passed off at night time in a distant mountain space and Zuncheddu was implicated by a single eyewitness who initially stated he couldn’t determine the killer. The witness later accused Zunchedda, allegedly beneath quite a lot of strain from the police.
Regardless of the shortage of strong proof, Zuncheddu was convicted and sentenced to life in jail. He remained incarcerated for greater than three many years, enduring harsh situations and sharing overcrowded cells with as much as eleven different inmates.
Throughout his imprisonment, Zuncheddu maintained his innocence and drew energy from his religion in God, whilst he misplaced what ought to have been among the finest years of his life. Zuncheddu described his time in jail as an inhumane expertise and stated he survived daily by serving to others worse off than himself. He additionally discovered resolve by trusting in God's enduring love and pondering of his household.
In January 2024, an Italian appeals court docket overturned Zuncheddu's conviction, citing inadequate proof and questions in regards to the reliability of witness statements. His launch marked the tip of wrongful imprisonment that had lasted greater than half of his life.
Throughout his assembly with Pope Francis, Zuncheddu gave the Pope a replica of his e book “Io Sono Innocente” (I’m harmless), which he wrote collectively along with his appeals lawyer. The e book, revealed in Could 2024, recounts his ordeal and the function his religion performed in serving to him survive the expertise.
Zuncheddu holds quick to his Christian beliefs and has publicly expressed forgiveness to the person who falsely accused him, regardless of the lengthy years of struggling that adopted.