Nadia Lioce
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Nadia Desdemona Lioce (Foggia, 29 September 1959) is an imprisoned Italian member of the Red Brigades. Lioce was arrested in 2003 with Mario Galesi after a shootout on a train travelling between Rome and Florence and charged with several murders. At trial she admitted being a Brigadist and refused to speak more. She was sentenced to life imprisonment and placed in the restrictive 41-bis prison regime, which involves solitary confinement.
Lioce was born in Foggia and studied history at the University of Bari.[1][2] In 1984, she began a relationship with Luigi Fuccini. Together they participated in the Pantera student movement and were involved with political movements associated with anti-Zionism, Sandinista solidarity and a self-managed social centre.[2] Lioce lived in Pisa with Fuccini until 1995, when she went underground. In 2002, as part of the investigation into the 1999 murder of academic Massimo D'Antona, a pre-trial detention order was made against Lioce in absentia and five other people. The Minister of the Interior Giuseppe Pisanu later said that Lioce, alongside Mario Galesi and Michele Pegna, was a militant of the Combatant Communist Nuclei, and had joined the BR-PCC (Red Brigades – Communist Combatant Party).[1] The original Red Brigades became famous internationally in 1978 for the kidnapping and murder of Aldo Moro.[3]