Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

IRPI

Policeman used Couchsurfing site to 'drug and sexually assault' up to 15 women

Dino Maglio will go on trial next month.

AN ITALIAN POLICEMAN who posed as a host on the Couchsurfing website has been charged with drugging and raping a 16-year-old Australian and may have sexually assaulted up to 15 other women.

Dino Maglio (35) will go on trial in Padua near Venice from 17 March on charges of raping a minor with the aggravating circumstance of having administered a narcotic without her knowledge, prosecutors in the northern city said.

The case is set to reignite safety concerns surrounding Couchsurfing, a social networking site that puts travellers in touch with hosts who are willing to put them up and show them around their hometowns for free.

The site’s declared aim is “a world made better by travel and travel made richer by connection”. But its model has been criticised because of previous incidents of travellers being attacked by hosts they know nothing about.

Prosecutors investigating the case of the Australian 16-year-old are also now considering possible further charges arising from a suspected attack after Maglio was first charged. They are also looking at statements about similar incidents made by 14 women from seven countries to the Investigative Reporting Project Italy (IRPI).

The network of freelance reporters, which began looking into Maglio’s activities after being approached by one of the women who says she was assaulted by him, handed an extensive dossier to prosecutors last month.

“Three of the women — all Czech nationals — have so far filed rape charges and we are looking at the evidence presented by the other women,” a judicial source told AFP.

An American student, who also says she was raped, made a statement to police in London following her return to the UK, where she was resident.

Jennifer Billock, Couchsurfing’s chief executive, told IRPI users’ safety was a top priority and that it was constantly “evolving our tools and processes to find and halt abusers of our system”.

Powerful daterape drug

The women interviewed by IRPI include nationals of Canada, Germany, Hong Kong, Poland and Portugal.

All recounted similar tales of how “Leonardo”, as Maglio presented himself on the site, initially seemed to be a charming and remarkably generous host.

Soon however he became overbearing and inexplicably insistent that they should drink tea or his “special wine” with him.

None of them however felt themselves particularly in danger because they were all travelling with other people.

The alleged rape of the Australian girl occurred in March 2014. She is understood to have stayed up chatting to Maglio while her mother and younger sister, who were also staying at his apartment, went to bed.

The mother told police she did not believe there was any reason for concern as Maglio was himself a police officer.

When she woke in the morning, the mother discovered her daughter in Maglio’s bed without her underwear and in an extremely lethargic state.

Arrested after the family filed charges in Venice, Maglio admitted having spiked the girl’s drink and to having sexual intercourse with her while knowing she was a minor. He claimed that the sex had been consensual, judicial sources said.

couchsurfing site

Police confiscated a stock of 40 ‘Tavor’ pills at his apartment. Tavor is the Italian brand name for Lorazepam, a powerful anti-anxiety drug which has featured regularly in daterape cases thanks to its ability to trigger confusion, weakness and amnesia in people taking it.

Pending his trial, Maglio was placed under house arrest and suspended from the Carabinieri, which is a branch of the Italian army.

By that stage, complaints about his conduct had begun to circulate online and his Couchsurfing account had been suspended by the site’s safety team.

He was however able to re-register under a different alias and resumed his attempts to lure women.

Police discovered what he was up to and a raid found him in the company of two women, an Argentinian and an Armenian who showed symptoms of having been drugged.

He was then placed in pre-trial custody.

Additional reporting: Órla Ryan

Italy denies paying €10m ransom to free young hostages

360 migrants leave ‘ghost ship’ stranded off Italian coast

Author
View 30 comments
Close
30 Comments
    Submit a report
    Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
    Thank you for the feedback
    Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.
    JournalTv
    News in 60 seconds