The family of the Italian DJ who died in Ibiza contradicts the autopsy: "He had seven broken ribs and clavicles."
The Civil Guard denied the facts and the family continues to demand an investigation.

PalmThe family of Italian DJ Michele Noschese (known as Godzi), who died in Ibiza, contradicts the autopsy results and claims the DJ had seven broken ribs and two broken collarbones. According to a report Corriere della SeraThe DJ's father, Giuseppe Noschese, former director of the Cardarelli Trauma Center and one of Italy's leading experts in multiple trauma, insists on the injuries his son suffered and describes the autopsy as "hasty." Despite the facts reported in the family investigation, the Italian newspaper highlights that the injuries may have been caused during Noschese's resuscitation maneuvers or during the autopsy itself.
On the other hand, the DJ's father has also denounced the attitude of the Civil Guard and criticized their accusations that the DJ was a habitual drug user. "What evidence do they have to accuse him? I want them to show me the complaints that prove what they say."
The controversy between the family and the Civil Guard is not new. Last week, DJ Godzi's parents filed a formal complaint in Spain accusing Civil Guard officers of homicide. His father demanded that "the Spanish officers be investigated for voluntary homicide." "They punched him and left him to die," he said. The family added that Michele Noschese died "while in the custody of the Spanish police forces and was not taken to a hospital, but directly to the morgue."
In response to the accusations, the Civil Guard issued a statement denying all the facts reported by the family and asserting that the Italian artist "was drugged and suffering from hallucinations, and when the officers tried to restrain him, he began to convulse, collapsed, and lost consciousness." The armed force's version completely contradicts that of the family and denies any assault by the officers.
A friend of the victim, who claims to have been in the apartment at the time of the death, has asserted that the police version is false. "He was handcuffed and lying on a sofa. During those frantic moments, the officers had hit him numerous times, including on his back."