Here's the thing. Conte will be checked out of the criminal case by the investigators in Bari, because in order to convict someone by Criminal Law, you have to be 98 % certain they did the Crime. Italy, among other European states, have ratified the Human Rights Convention, and it's article 6 no. 2 places strict demands on evidence in criminal cases.
However, in Italian sports law, in order to receive sporting sanctions (such as bans etc.), it's quite a different matter. Because such sanctions aren't "punishment" in the legal sense of the word (being something that the state through it's people [the legal branch] does to a citizen when he or her hasn't complied with stategiven (criminal) law), but rather something that has the character of a more private sanction within the sporting system itself.
In this system, it will be up to Palazzi to interpret the statements of Kutuzov, and if he finds that there are grounds for deferring Conte for failure to report again, he most definitely will.
Like some of you already said, we all know how this is going to end. It's very likely that Palazzi will recommend that Conte should be banned again, because if he doesn't do that he will make his former decisions look bad. What he did this summer has probably set a sporting law precedence. We know how little it takes to be deferred to the FIGC for failure to report, and my bet is that Kutuzov's testimony will be sufficient.
It's gonna be bye bye all over again.
What I said in a nutshell:
In order to convict someone by criminal law, the demands for proof is 98 %.
In order to receive sporting sanctions, the demands for proof is 50,01 % (overweight of probability).
If Palazzi can create that overweight of probability, Conte will be banned.