The killings further polarised Italian politics during the
Years of Lead and led to a fracture within the neo-fascist movement, with more radical militants blaming the party leadership for its failure to denounce the police for Recchioni's death and choosing to join emerging extremist groups like the far-right
Armed Revolutionary Nuclei. The attack was claimed by the self-described Armed Nuclei for Territorial Counterpower. Five members of far-left group
Lotta Continua were charged with the murders in 1987 but subsequently acquitted of all charges. A
Škorpion submachine gun, proven by
ballistics to have been used in the attack, was found in 1988 in a
Red Brigades safehouse in Milan. Singer and songwriter Fabrizio Marzi dedicated the song
Giovinezza (
Youth) to Recchioni in 1979. Riots broke out during commemorations of the victims on 10 January 1979, with seventeen-year-old Alberto Giaquinto being fatally injured by police officer Alessio Speranza, who was convicted after four trials and ten years of negligent excess of self-defence. In 2013, then-
mayor of Rome and former MSI member
Gianni Alemanno named a street of the city after the three victims. In 2014, he further commemorated the victims and criticised
Ignazio Marino, the-then mayor of the city, for not doing the same. In January 2024, hundreds of neo-fascists gathered at the MSI's former headquarters to commemorate the Acca Larentia killings. They did
fascist salutes and shouted: "
Camerati, present!" They also did a typical rallying cry at neo-fascist events: "For all fallen comrades!" This prompted criticism from the opposition and outrage. Marco Vizzardelli, a theatre-goer who was quickly identified by
DIGOS for shouting "Long live anti-fascist Italy!" at
La Scala, said that he was "outraged", adding: "Nobody stopped them, double standards."
Fabio Rampelli of
Brothers of Italy (FdI), an MSI-heir party that also commemorates the victims, said that these were loose cannons and that FdI had nothing to do with it. Opposition leaders, such as
Elly Schlein, asked
Giorgia Meloni, the prime minister of Italy and FdI member, to apply the ban of neo-fascist groups that is part of the Italian Penal code which far-right groups are able to circumvent by using a different name and proclaiming themselves to be new political forces. Others also urged Meloni and Lazio regional government president
Francesco Rocca to distance themselves. == See also ==