. The last two on the right are
Alessandro Pavolini and
Achille Starace. Clara Petacci was arrested on 25 July 1943, at the
fall of the Fascist regime. During this period, she maintained an intense correspondence with Mussolini and, despite the Duce's contrary opinion, kept all the letters. In one of these she asked that, at the
Verona trial,
Galeazzo Ciano be sentenced to death as a "traitor, cowardly, filthy, self-interested and false", thus expressing an extremely harsh position (also applicable to
Edda Mussolini, "his worthy accomplice"), which was defined by the historian
Emilio Gentile as showing "
Nazi rigor". On 27 April 1945, Mussolini and Petacci were captured at Dongo by a unit of the 52nd
Garibaldi Brigade of
partisans while travelling with a
Luftwaffe convoy retreating to Germany. The German column included
Italian Social Republic members. On 28 April, she and Mussolini were taken to
Mezzegra and executed. One source alleges Petacci's execution was not planned and that she died by throwing herself on Mussolini in a vain attempt to protect him from the bullets. On the following day, the bodies of Mussolini and Petacci were taken to
Piazzale Loreto in
Milan and hung upside down by their feet from the canopy of the
Esso petrol station in order to protect the bodies from further desecration by the crowd. The location to which they were taken was chosen as a symbolic act of revenge for the
massacre of fifteen partisans and antifascists, executed in reprisal at that same site on 10 August 1944. The bodies were photographed as a crowd vented their rage upon them. On the same day, Clara's brother, Marcello Petacci, was also killed in Dongo by the partisans, along with fifteen other people complicit in Mussolini's escape. cemetery in Rome At around 3 p.m., the bodies arrived at the Civic Morgue on Via Giuseppe Ponzio. At nightfall the following day, 30 April, by order of the
National Liberation Committee (CLN), Claretta Petacci's body was buried (as were Mussolini and others) in a pit in Field 16 of the
Cimitero Maggiore di Milano, left anonymous to avoid further desecration. After two days, at night, to make identification more difficult, again by order of the CLN, the body was exhumed and transferred to a pit in Field 10, the perpetual field intended for the fallen of the RSI, under the fictitious name "Rita Colfosco". It remained there until March 1956, when, with authorization from the
Minister of the Interior Fernando Tambroni, Petacci's body was exhumed, transported to Rome, and interred in the family tomb at the
Campo Verano cemetery on the 16th. Following the war, Petacci's family began civil and criminal court cases against
Walter Audisio for Petacci's unlawful killing. After a lengthy legal process, an investigating judge eventually closed the case in 1967. Audisio was acquitted of murder and embezzlement on the grounds that the actions complained of occurred as an act of war against the Germans and the fascists during a period of enemy occupation. Following the deaths of her direct descendants between the 1960s and 1970s and the relocation of the remaining family members to the United States, the tomb was declared a "structure in a state of abandonment" by the cemetery administration in 2015. An association proposed restoring the structure, while former mayor of
Sant'Abbondio Alberto Botta proposed transferring the body to
Mezzegra, the place of Petacci's death. Subsequently, the tomb was restored in autumn 2017 after a fundraising campaign by the association "Campo della Memoria". == Epistolary correspondence ==