Almost all the contested investigations against financier Pasquale Striano by the Perugia public prosecutor's office coincided with recent events. Among the 800 accesses examined by investigators “without any service motive”, several concerned almost the entire government, precisely in the phase of creation of the new executive. And if a famous person made the news, as in the case of Fedez or Andrea Agnelli, there would be access to the database in search of sensitive data carried out by the financier who worked in the DNA SOS group. Striano had the opportunity to consult the main state archives, from the Serpico which contains personal data and income received, through the Siva, the Sdi and the Sidna, which allows access to the criminal record. And then the Land Registry, Infocamere and Telemaco, recall Repubblica. According to the Perugia public prosecutor's office, 78 famous people found themselves looking for Striano without any real reason for investigation. Among these several ministers, starting with Guido Crosetto, who started everything with his complaint. Much of Striano's research findings then made their way to five journalists and were subsequently published in their respective newspapers. According to the Perugia public prosecutor's office, in doing so they would not have simply done their job, but would have participated in the crime.
There are, however, other investigations requested or opened on the basis of the DNA “pulse”, for which prosecutor Antonio Laudati is also indicted. The Perugia public prosecutor's office suspects four cases in which databases were illegally consulted to constitute “preliminary investigation files”. One of them concerns the president of the FIGC, Gabriele Gravina. Regarding him, Laudati allegedly claimed to have received criminal information from the Salerno public prosecutor's office. The information would have come to him from someone close to the president of Lazio, Claudio Lotito. The case was then dismissed by the Rome public prosecutor's office. Another suspicious investigation concerns the research ordered by Laudati in Striano on a company interested in purchasing a convent in Santa Severa, on the Roman coast. An article on the affair first appeared in the Domani newspaper, then information was sent to the prosecution which put forward the hypothesis of mafia interests in this sale. As Repubblica writes, the suspicion of the Perugia public prosecutor's office is that the only person interested in the case was Laudati “owner of land in the area”, who would not have appreciated the possible real estate speculation in front of his house.