Greece arrests US man with Malta link over mother and child deaths in Rome park

Italian police arrested a U.S. citizen on Friday in connection with the death of a woman and her baby daughter whose naked bodies were found in a park in central Rome.

The man, who was not named, was arrested on the Greek island of Skiathos, Rome’s chief prosecutor Francesco Lo Voi told reporters at a news conference.

The case has grabbed headlines in Italy since the mother and her child, who was less than one year old, were found dead on Saturday in Villa Pamphili, Rome’s largest central city park.

None of the people involved have been named, and prosecutors in the case told reporters they had still not been able to identify the mother or the child.

The Malta Link

The names of the woman and the child remain unknown. So far, the only confirmed detail is that both were American citizens. Investigators believe Ford and the woman were married in Malta, a lead that strengthens suspicions the baby may have been born there—most likely in the capital, Valletta.

Authorities are now combing through local hospital and civil records in Malta, searching for any trace of the birth or formal registration of the child. If found, such documentation could prove pivotal in confirming their identities and piecing together what happened.

Italian newspapers have reported that the mother and child were also U.S. citizens, but prosecutors did not confirm this.

Lo Voi said the arrested man had declared he was the father of the child, and there was “robust evidence” that he had killed her, while the cause of death of the mother was less clear.

The suspect flew to Skiathos from Rome on Wednesday, and his DNA would be examined to establish whether he was the father, the prosecutor said.

He was arrested based on evidence including witness accounts and surveillance camera footage, while the fact he had flown to Greece shortly after being seen with the victims “in itself doesn’t count in his favour,” Lo Voi said.

Lead prosecutor Giuseppe Cascini said the man had been seen with the child in his arms after the presumed time of death of the mother.

The evidence against the suspect was particularly strong regarding the death of the child, Cascini said, but the case was “a probable dual murder”.

The prosecutors thanked the U.S. FBI for its help in identifying the man, and the Greek authorities for their role in the arrest.

The man, woman and child were first seen together in Italy in April, and there was no record of any of them in the country before then, they said.

Via Il Messagero/La Repubblica

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