Word: icardi
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...House Armed Services Committee called a Pittsburgh law clerk to Washington and asked him, in effect: Had he murdered an OSS major named William V. Holohan while they were together on a wartime mission behind the German lines in Italy in 1944? The witness was ex-Lieut. Aldo Lorenzo Icardi, 35, and the question was not unexpected. The Defense Department had already accused Icardi and a Rochester tool designer, ex-Sergeant Carl G. LoDolce, of shooting Major Holohan and dumping his body in a lake-but it could not bring them to trial because they had been honorably discharged...
Holohan had parachuted into the northern Italian mountains with an Italian-speaking U.S. lieutenant, Aldo Icardi, and a U.S. sergeant named Carl G. LoDolce, to organize resistance in the enemy rear. A few months later, his subordinates rei ported by secret radio that Holohan was presumed to have been killed during an attack by German forces. Four years after the war, curious Italian police unearthed a shockingly different story...
...Italian partisans said that Holohan was murdered because he had refused to supply money and arms to Communist guerrillas; under the urging of Lieut. Icardi, members of Holohan's mission had fed him a bowl of poisoned soup. Holohan merely got sick. The plotters had then drawn lots, and LoDolce, the loser, had gone to the major's bedroom and coldblooded y fired two pistol bullets into his head. The body had been weighted and sunk in the icy waters of the lake; the police found it where the witnesses said it was, dredged it up, found...
...Icardi denied the whole story. LoDolce confessed in detail. But no U.S. court had jurisdiction over a crime committed in Italy, and the Army, having honorably discharged both LoDolce and Icardi, had no legal means of bringing them to justice. Finally, however, the Holohan case was made public. Though LoDolce retracted his confession, the Italian government asked that he be extradited to stand trial for murder...
LoDolce, who is now married and the father of two children, received the news in a Buffalo veterans' hospital-where, as an ex-soldier with an officially blameless record, he is receiving treatment for a wartime back injury. He was jubilant. Icardi, now working as a law clerk in Pittsburgh, announced that he hoped to publish a book giving the "true" story of his commander's death. But, officially speaking, the Holohan case seemed closed for good...