Queer Places:
Via di S. Elena, 8, 00186 Roma RM

Laura Di Nola (December 3, 1932 - July 7, 1979) was a militant of the Radical Party in 1978, writer, essayist, and promoter of some of the first homosexual and alternative culture groups - as they were called then - which arose in those years in Italy. Incidentally her name entered the investigation into the kidnapping and murder of Aldo Moro, starting from the end of the summer of 1978.

Two parallel investigations, developed in that final part of 1978, concerned the ghetto of Rome, focusing the attention of the investigators on the alleged subversive cell which they supposed was constituted, among others, by Anna Buonaiuto, Rosa Nicoli, Bruno Sermoneta (the whose name had already been found on the slip affixed to the key of a Jaguar found on 18 April 1978 in the hideout in Via Gradoli) and the spouses Laura Di Nola and Raffaele De Cosa, residing in Via Sant'Elena 8. Those investigations did not lead to any charges, as regards the kidnapping and murder of Moro, for any of the persons named.

Laura Di Nola died prematurely less than a year after the start of those investigations, on July 7, 1979.



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