A 33-year-old man was assaulted early this morning in the Via Aselli area of Milan after removing posters dedicated to Sergio Ramelli, a far-right youth murdered 51 years ago. Several people got out of a vehicle and beat him, causing minor injuries to his lip and eyebrow. He was taken to the hospital with a green code.
How urban surveillance fails to detect predictable assaults 🚨
The incident occurred around midnight, when the area's video surveillance system failed to deter or record the attack. Security cameras, often overloaded by commemorative events, show limitations in covering secondary roads. The police response, though swift, relied on eyewitnesses. To improve prevention, integrating motion sensors and real-time behavior analysis would be useful—technologies already available but poorly implemented in public spaces.
The logic of the poster: tear paper, get beaten 🤕
The victim, apparently, miscalculated the risks of his action: tearing down posters in an area where a commemoration was being prepared is like deleting browsing history in a cybercafe full of hackers. The result was a split lip and a broken eyebrow, but at least he got out with a green code, which in hospital jargon means you won't die, but next time wear gloves.