The prosecutor in the case assured that Roberto Bárzola is the new suspect. His DNA was found on the victim’s robe 17 years after the crime.
The prosecutor Pablo Javega confirmed that Roberto Bárzola is the new suspect in Nora Dalmasso’s crime. This is the family gardener who had already been involved in the case by testifying six times. “Genetic mapping made it possible to locate who the fingerprints that were unknown on the belt belonged to,” the magistrate explained.
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The Public Prosecutor’s Office of Córdoba reported that a man’s DNA was compatible with the genetic fingerprints collected on the victim’s robe and body. In the case, it was detailed that work continues on the analysis of “the rest of the evidence table available for the composition of hypotheses based on the contribution of said material.”


The expertise that was known today reveals that there were eight compatible prints on the belt of the robe that allow Roberto Bárzola to be positioned as the new suspect in the crime. Meanwhile, two other prints found on the belt were linked to the victim’s family, so they have no criminalistic relationship.
Last Friday afternoon, the genetic compatibility of Roberto Bárzola with a hair found in Nora Dalmasso’s groin was also confirmed. Meanwhile, two genetic tests complicate it.
Who is Roberto Barzola
Roberto Bárzola is from Rio Cuarto and worked as a floor polisher and would have worked in the victim’s house in the week before the crime. Bárzola is expected to be charged with sexual abuse followed by death, for which he could be sentenced to life in prison.
Local media reported that the suspect was a gardener who worked with the Macarrón family and that he was in the house in the moments before the crime. In the case he testified six times and Nora’s family had accused him of being responsible for the murder in November 2006.
They found genetic fingerprints of a male compatible with evidence collected on the robe and on the body
The Special Prosecutor’s Unit operating in the city of Río Cuarto reported that genetic fingerprints of a male person were found compatible with evidence collected on the victim’s robe and body, within the framework of the investigation into the crime of Nora Dalmasso. in November 2006.
This was announced by the Public Prosecutor’s Office of Córdoba, while indicating that work continues on the analysis of “the rest of the evidence table available for the composition of hypotheses based on the contribution of said material.”
“We are also working on aspects relevant to the analysis of the criminal action derived from the aforementioned event. Such conclusions were communicated to the complaining family and to the accused person, who went to the headquarters of the Prosecutor’s Unit to exercise, with due legal assistance, his material and technical defense,” they detailed.
Source: Ambito

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