Tony Colombo five trumpeter inspectors played at the trash wedding were fired. With the damage to the image caused by the inspectors, the fiduciary relationship with the Penitentiary Corps would have disappeared. The agents had already been suspended from the Dap. They had been recognized in the videos posted on the web of the wedding on which the police were investigating

The five trumpeter inspectors belonging to the band of the Penitentiary Police who fired the so-called trash wedding between the Sicilian neo-melodic singer Tony Colombo and the widow of the Camorra boss Gaetano Marino were dismissed by the prison administration from the penitentiary administration.

With the damage to the image caused by the inspectors, the fiduciary relationship with the Penitentiary Corps would have disappeared.

The agents had already been suspended from the Dap.

Tony Colombo five trumpeter inspectors played

They had been recognized in the videos posted on the web of the wedding on which the police of Naples were investigating, coordinated by the investigators of the Neapolitan prosecutor.

The five inspectors, trumpeters of the prison police band would have been called by an agency based in the Neapolitan area, which organizes events. It is not yet clear whether they lent their trumpet as guests. The marriage by Tony Colombo and Tina Rispoli had been celebrated in the Maschio Angioino of Naples. It had been preceded by a festive procession that had literally blocked Corso Secondigliano and by a party in Piazza del Plebiscito which had been reported to the authorities in charge as a flash mob. As recounted by ilfattoquotidiano.it, the Municipality has recently moved a conference by Libera on the innocent victims of the Camorra from the Maschio Angioino to Palazzo San Giacomo to avoid embarrassing contacts. The mayor Luigi De Magistris had defended himself saying: "Impossible to predict".


Hachiko, the heartbreaking True Story behind the film

Here is the true story of Hachiko, the dog who waited for years for the return of his master and who became the protagonist of a film by Lasse Hallstrom.

If there is a story that can prove the truth of the motto, the dog is the man's best friend, this is the story of Hachiko.

Made known thanks to the film by Lasse Hallstrom, Hachiko's story is one that is capable of breaking the heart and moving even after many years.
Hachiko - Your best friend

Released in 2009 and presented at the then well-known Rome Film Festival, Lasse Hallstrom's film told the story of Parker Wilson (Richard Gere), a university professor of music, and Hachiko, an Akita puppy. An extremely faithful breed, Hachi immediately demonstrates a very strong bond with Parker, so as to defeat even the reluctance of the man's wife (Laura Boccanera), who does not seem inclined to accept the entry on the scene of a dog in his daily life at home.

The peculiarity of the story of this friendship is given by the fact that Hachi waited every day for the return of his master at the train station: Parker, in fact, was forced to commute to carry out his academic duties. And that's where Hachiko continued to wait for Parker even when the tragedy hit the Wilson family.
The true story of Hachiko

Warning: telling the true story of Hachi can be a spoiler for those who have never seen the film.

The story from which Lasse Hallstrom drew his heartbreaking film is taken from events that really happened. The history of Hachi, in fact, took place at the turn of the 1920s and 1930s, in Japan.

Originally from Odate, in Akita Prefecture, Hachi - to which the KO particle was added, which in Japanese has endorsement value - was adopted by Professor Hidesaburo Ueno, an agronomist from the University of Tokyo. Ueno took the puppy with him to his home in Shibuya, and made him an integral and essential part of his family.

Hachi - which means eight, as all fans of the anime Nana well know - got into the habit of accompanying his master every day to Shibuya station, where Uedo took the train to go to work. At 5:00 pm, when the man returned home, Hachi was always out of the station, patient and faithful, waiting for him.

The turning point occurred on May 21, 1925, when the then fifty-three year old Ueno died following a stroke while he was in university. That day Hachi was, as always, stationed waiting for his master's arrival. Hachi and Ueno had been together less than two years, but the relationship that had developed between the two was so strong as to push Hachi to return to Shibuya station, day after day, to wait in vain for the return of his master.

Every day, as punctual as the proverbial Swiss watch, Hachi appeared in Shibuya around five, but never met his master again. This, however, did not cause us to lose determination and hope