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Aktualitet2025-10-13 12:25:00

Murder of Greek owner and Albanian assistant, third person involved in the crime revealed; what does the evidence reveal

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Murder of Greek owner and Albanian assistant, third person involved in the crime

As authorities try to unravel the mystery of the double murder at the Finikounda campsite, where one of the victims was Albanian, the testimony of an elderly woman may shed more light on the mysterious person who appears near the crime scene.

A security camera has filmed an unknown man meeting the perpetrator of the double murder in Finikounda, to whom he is suspected of giving instructions. The question that arises is whether this mysterious person is the mastermind of the crime at the campsite or whether he is an accomplice with a secondary role in the execution of the "death contract".

The evidence so far leads police officers from the Homicide Department to the conclusion that there is a third person, besides the organizer and the executioner, who played a decisive role in the murder. It seems that the puzzle of this case is beginning to be completed and the authorities are getting closer to solving the mystery.

From analyzing the evidence and facts, police authorities believe they have now clarified the motive, who gave the order, and are searching for the perpetrator of the murder along with the man who instructed him.

According to the analysis, the perpetrator of the murder is a young man with delinquent behavior, but does not appear to belong to an organized crime network. In other words, he is not a professional "hitman" who was transported from Athens to carry out the death contract.

It appears that he traveled from the capital to Finikounda to carry out the murder, and since he was unfamiliar with the area, a third person told him where to go. However, this person, according to the authorities, was not directly involved in the murder. After carrying out the act, the perpetrator returned to Athens to hide.

The police already know the route he followed and estimate that it is only a matter of time before they find and arrest him.

Greek Police spokeswoman Konstantina Dimoglidou, speaking to the Mega television station, explained that the double killer has not yet been identified, nor has his car "because he managed to hide the license plate number."

Responding to the question of whether this is a death contract or not, she said: "Both possibilities are open. It has not been clarified whether this is a death contract. Some rushed to say that this is a death contract because they saw a person leaving and arriving in Attica. This does not mean that he could not have been recognized either by a known person or by the victims and wanted to leave. There are differences in the will from the previous one. However, if we do not find the person who took his life and if there is a moral instigator, we cannot talk about a motive. I want to believe that we are very close to identification. We still do not know whether he stayed in Attica or left."

Constantia Dimoglidou stressed that the victim had not informed the authorities about the two attacks against him that occurred before the summer. In fact, she said, the police were informed about one of the attacks when the victim was taken to the hospital.

She also said authorities are not only reviewing descriptions from his nephew, who was an eyewitness, but also from others.

"He gave us a description, but that doesn't mean the police were acting on that description, because he may not have been able to describe it. We also have other descriptions that may be the same as the witness's. The important thing now is to find the motorcycle driver."

She added, "The will issue is serious. The police can compare the contents of both wills. It is important that the time of drafting coincides with the time of submission. He sat down, wrote it and submitted it directly in a climate of panic. Of course, the will may not be important."

For his part, George Kalliakmanis, honorary president of the Northeastern Attica Police Officers' Union, stressed that the fact that the perpetrator arrived in Athens should not have been revealed.

"If it started in Athens, it's possible that someone set him up, that he's a 'paid gunman.' It might not be the case, and it might be someone he knows and wants to kill."

 

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