Maria Rita Lorenzetti
Maria Rita Lorenzetti | |
---|---|
President of Umbria | |
In office 17 April 2000 – 30 March 2010 | |
Preceded by | Bruno Bracalente |
Succeeded by | Catiuscia Marini |
Personal details | |
Born | Foligno, Umbria, Italy | 16 March 1953
Political party | PCI (until 1991) PDS (1991–1998) DS (1998–2007) PD (since 2007) |
Residence | Perugia |
Alma mater | University of Perugia |
Maria Rita Lorenzetti (born 16 March 1953 in Foligno) is an Italian politician and a former President of the Italian region of Umbria.[1] In 2000 she was elected governor of Umbria becoming the first woman to serve as governor of Umbria, the fifth woman to serve as governor in Italy, and the first woman directly elected as governor of an Italian region.
From 2010 to 2013 he served as president of Italferr in Florence, a company of the Ferrovie dello Stato group.[2]
Biography
[edit]Graduated in philosophy in 1974, she began her political activity in 1975 as a municipal councilor of the PCI. He also held the positions of councilor and mayor of the municipality of Foligno. She served as MP from 1987 to 2000.
In 2000 she was elected President of the Umbria region and was re-confirmed in the 2005 regional election.
In 2000 she was appointed President of Italferr. During the period in which she was president of Italferr she was investigated, together with about thirty people, by the Florence Public Prosecutor with the charges of criminal association, abuse of office, corruption and illicit traffic of waste. For the alleged crimes, on 16 September 2013 Lorenzetti was placed under house arrest, that was revoked on 30 September after her resignation as President of Italferr.[3]
On 18 November 2014 Lorenzetti was sentenced to eight months imprisonment (with suspended sentence because uncensored) by the Court of Perugia for the offense of ideological forgery regarding a March 2010 resolution, authorizing some local Umbrian health companies the recruitment of staff; at the same time she announced her intention to appeal the sentence. The provision is therefore confirmed first by the Court of Appeal of Perugia on 15 March 2016 and then by the Court of Cassation, which declared it definitive on 28 September 2017.[4]
References
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