Italian police plants evidence against protestors

The Italian police planted molotov cocktail bottles at protestors' location. This was revealed in court proceedings.
Italy: G8-Genoa policemen's trial suspended as planted molotov cocktails disappear

One of the most significant incidents during the three-days  of police violence against protestors that marked the G8 summit  in Genoa on 19-21 July 2001, saw the beating and arrest of 93  activists who were sleeping in the Diaz school, against whom  allegations of criminal association aimed at destruction and  committing violent acts intent were made.

These were partly based on the fabrication of evidence, particularly  the planting of two molotov cocktails in the school after the  police raid had started. The molotov cocktails, which a police  officer had confessed to planting in the school on orders from  Pietro Troiani, the deputy police chief in Genoa, were used to  charge the occupants with possession of explosives and to justify  the raid (see Statewatch, vol. 13 no. 5, August-October 2003).

On 17 January 2007, it surfaced during a hearing in the trial  of 29 police officers facing charges in relation to the raid including violence and the fabrication of evidence, that the  molotov cocktails have disappeared. While prosecutors and lawyers  acting on behalf of the victims of the raid claim that this is  not overly significant because all the necessary tests on the  bottles have been run and there is extensive documented evidence  of them, including photographs "taken from all angles",  lawyers defending the officers argue that "photographs can  never substitute the material evidence of a crime, which must  be physically recognised".

Sources: Repubblica, 18.1.2007; il manifesto, 19.1.2007.