- Avv. Prof. Francesco Mucciarelli
- Avv. Luisa Mazzola
- Avv. Marta Lanfranconi
- Avv. Adriano Raffaelli
- Avv. Marco Calleri
- Avv. Barbara Bonzano
- Avv. Valeria Tartara
- Avv. Emanuela Danelli
- Avv. Giacomo De Carolis
- Avv. Enrico Basile
- Avv. Federico Pezzani
- Avv. Andrea Rossetti
- Avv. Alessandro Palazzo
- Avv. Caroline Hassoun
- Avv. Federico Guastoni
- Avv. Rosaria Giambersio
- Avv. Niccolò Matteo Piramidal
- Avv. Martina Alessandra Leo
- Avv. Claudia Pantè
- Avv. Elisa Cesaroni
- Avv. Davide Attanasio
Avv. Adriano Raffaelli
Born in Florence in 1965. He graduated in Law from the Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore (Catholic University of the Sacred Heart) of Milan in March 1988, then he served as an Officer in the Carabinieri; he was admitted to the Milan Bar in 1991 and he qualified to plead before the Italian Supreme Court of Cassation in 2004. He has also pleaded before the Italian Constitutional Court.
He joined the Mucciarelli law firm in 1995. Prior to that, he collaborated with the legal department of a leading Italian credit institution and the editorial team of the most important Italian legal publishing house, among other things. At first he focused his practice especially on environmental and industrial safety issues: over more than twenty years, he has engaged, inter alia, in the Taranto steelworks case and in some of the most famous occupational disease trials. He has also represented some of the defendants in the Viareggio rail disaster trial.
In the new millennium, he has acted as counsel in the first cases of judicial application of the legislation on liability of legal entities pursuant to Legislative Decree No. 231/01, in relation to unfair presentation of financial statements and market abuse, as well as accident prevention. Within the criminal law domain, he also focuses his practice on bankruptcy, tax and banking issues.
Even prior to joining the Firm, he was engaged in defending offences against the Public Administration. He specializes in sports law, specifically in the football sector. He has pleaded before the judicial bodies of FIGC (the Italian Football Federation) and CONI (the Italian Olympic Games Committee), as well as the UEFA and FIFA commissions.
He has taught the Specialization Course in Sports Law and Sports Justice of the Università degli Studi di Milano (University of Milan) since it was set up. He has spoken on criminal law matters at conferences organized by leading credit institutions (in particular on money laundering and voluntary disclosure).
Written and spoken English.