L'Espresso
[7] Renowned journalists and writers who worked for L'Espresso include Giorgio Bocca, Umberto Eco, Giampaolo Pansa, Enzo Biagi, Michele Serra, Marco Travaglio, Roberto Saviano, Naomi Klein, and Jeremy Rifkin.[12][13] Government officials, including Cyprus president Nikos Christodoulides,[14] as well as European lawmakers,[15] began responding to the investigation's findings in less than 24 hours,[16] calling for reforms and launching probes.[17][18] The open letter to L'Espresso on the Pinelli case, also mentioned as an appeal or manifesto against Commissioner Luigi Calabresi, is a document published on 13 June 1971 by the weekly L'Espresso, with which numerous politicians, journalists, and intellectuals asked for the dismissal of some officials, believed to be the authors of serious omissions and negligence in ascertaining responsibility for the death of Giuseppe Pinelli, who fell from a window while he was in custody at the Milan police as part of the investigations into the Piazza Fontana bombing conducted by Commissioner Calabresi, who slanderously indicated him as responsible.On 10 June 1971, the letter was initially signed by ten signatories: Marino Berengo, Anna Maria Brizio, Elvio Fachinelli, Lucio Gambi, Giulio A. Maccacaro, Cesare Musatti, Enzo Paci, Carlo Salinari, Vladimiro Scatturin, and Mario Spinella.In the following weeks, from 20 to 27 June 1971, the letter was republished, with the support of 757 signatures which included Gae Aulenti, Marco Bellocchio, Bernardo Bertolucci, Tinto Brass, Liliana Cavani, Toni Negri, Eugenio Scalfari, and Oliviero Toscani.[24] L'Espresso's past contributors have included such well-known journalists and columnists as Umberto Eco, Giampaolo Pansa, Giorgio Bocca, Enzo Biagi, Peter Gomez [it], and Edmondo Berson.