Monthly Archives: April 2009

camorra-boss

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Interior minister hails latest blow to organized crime

ANSA) – Naples, April 29 – Police on Wednesday arrested a top-ranking boss of the Neapolitan crime syndicate Camorra and alleged regent of the powerful Casalesi clan.

Michele Bidognetti was nabbed in the Caserta suburb of Casal di Principe, the home base of the Casalesi clan, and police also seized assets valued at over five million euros.

Interior Minister Roberto Maroni congratulated police on the operation and hailed the arrest as the latest blow against organised crime.

”Bidognetti’s arrest was an important event which demonstrates how combating crime remains a top priority of this government,” Maroni said. The arrest was of ” extraordinary importance” for shadow interior minister Marco Minniti, who said it ”underscores the need for the State to continue to move against organised crime with courage and determination”.

Investigators believe that Bidognetti was acting head of the Biognetti-Setola family on behalf of his jailed brother, Francesco Bidognetti, also known as ‘Cicciott’ ‘e Mezzanotte’ (Midnight Fatty), who is currently serving a life sentence.

The seized assets included farms, open land, villas, apartments and commercial activities all acquired by fronts for the clan.

Bidognetti was apprehended while apparently passing on orders from his brother to other clan members.

He is believed to have taken over the family reins following the arrests last year of his brother’s three sons, Aniello, Raffaele and Gianluca.

The arrests were made possible in part thank to information provided by their mother, who turned state’s witness after her arrest for acting as her jailed husband’s go-between. The Casalesi clan was exposed in the best-selling book Gomorra, by Roberto Saviano, which was later made into an award-winning movie of the same name.   thanks ANSA)

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Police stand next to one of the bodies after the bloody Mafia killing in Duisburg

The arduous process of solving the 2007 Mafia bloodbath in Germany has revealed serious deficiencies in European police cooperation. With the German police failing to secure the cooperation of their Dutch and Italian counterparts, it looks like the presumed killers will not be tried in Germany.

When it comes to fighting crime in the European Union, the relevant politicians have learned to overcome borders and national jealousies. “We must put new forms of police cooperation to the test,” German Interior Minister Wolfgang Schäuble recently said, calling for a security network that “is designed to be as transnational as the threats it seeks to contain.”

It’s a shame that the reality of bureaucratic execution are making such a mockery of good intentions and proclamations, something made depressingly evident by the investigation into a sensational Mafia murder in the western German city of Duisburg.

 

The presumed killers,   who are accused of massacring six Italians with at least 70 bullets in front of a restaurant in August 2007, have been captured. But important pieces of evidence are still have been captured. But important pieces of evidence are still missing today, something that can be blamed primarily on problems in the multinational investigation of the Duisburg bloodbath, which was the climax of a feud between rival clans. In the dismal assessment of one investigator, the case represents a “low point in combating organized crime in Europe.”

At first, authorities seemed to have achieved an important success when, on March 12 of this year, a Dutch police task force arrested the presumed mastermind, Giovanni Strangio, at his apartment in Amsterdam’s Diemen neighborhood. Soon afterwards, the police arrested Strangio’s brother-in-law and suspected accomplice, Francesco Romeo. This week, a Dutch court will decide whether to extradite Strangio to Germany or Italy.

But, as it turns out, this is about all that has been achieved. Frank Berlanda, an attorney in the southwestern German city of Lörrach who is defending Strangio, was puzzled by the thin excerpt of the investigation files he was given by the Duisburg public prosecutor’s office. Instead of names, the numbers 8, 13 and 31 are assigned to the key DNA evidence in the case. Berlanda, an experienced attorney, has no idea who the numbers are meant to represent. Absurdly enough, neither do German authorities. To this day, Italian authorities have failed to provide the reference DNA samples that were requested more than a year ago, nor have they responded to German requests for legal assistance.

Ironically, the investigation into the Duisburg Mafia murders was supposed to usher in a new era in European crime fighting. After the Duisburg bloodbath, representatives of both countries were practically tripping over each other in their efforts to declare war on organized crime. “We want to help the German police obtain new information,” said Pietro Grasso, the chief prosecutor of the Italian anti-Mafia bureau, and Jörg Ziercke, who heads up Germany’s Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA), promised new “strategic approaches to fighting the Mafia.” A German-Italian task force was established and staffed with high-level investigators from both countries. Its goal was to coordinate the fight against the Mafia on both sides of the Alps and help law enforcement achieve a breakthrough.

Requests Ignored

But it soon became clear that bureaucracy has a life of its own. For instance, the Germans are still waiting for DNA data on Giuseppe Nirta, the presumed second shooter, which they requested from their Italian counterparts back in September 2007. Without the DNA evidence, German authorities have been unable to issue a warrant for Nirta’s arrest.

It took Italian police two months to deliver information about DNA traces from a car that had been linked to the suspect. The Italians insisted that they had found nothing, but the Germans questioned that claim, because they later found perfectly usable gunshot residues and DNA on other pieces of evidence that the Italians had said were unusable. Besides, the simple process of matching data, which became standard procedure with other European countries long ago, is an impossibility with the Italians, because the country has not yet ratified the relevant EU treaty.

German investigators had a glimmer of hope when suspected killer Nirta, who had already been sentenced to 15 years in prison in Italy for drug trafficking, was arrested in Amsterdam last November, just as Strangio’s sisters were bringing him a meal of Calabrian sausage and noodles. But Dutch judges ignored a German request to obtain a saliva sample and extradited the man to Italy.

 

They didn’t change their position after Strangio was arrested. A few hours before the operation began, the Germans asked Dutch authorities to allow them to be involved in the search for traces in the apartment “and other places where the suspected criminals had spent time” once the arrest had been made.

 

But when the time came, German and Italian investigators were only permitted to observe from a distance. The Dutch authorities instructed police to confiscate only a few items, such as a mobile phone, a laptop computer and one of the presumed murder weapons, a Beretta 93R with a large magazine. Then they turned over the apartment to Strangio’s wife.

On April 2, the disenchanted Duisburg public prosecutor’s office sent a new request for legal assistance, asking for a saliva sample, to their Dutch counterparts. It is still waiting for a response. Then, in a fax sent to Dutch officials last week, the German prosecutors withdrew their request for the extradition of Strangio.

 

 thanks

 

savianno-2

Roberto Saviano

ANSAmed) – Madrid, April 28 – Roberto Saviano, the
Italian writer placed under a death sentence by the Camorra
clan he exposed in his worldwide bestseller Gomorrah, said on
Tuesday he may move to Jerusalem.
Speaking in Madrid where he gave a lecture to a Spanish
interior ministry seminar on organised crime, Saviano said
he was thinking of spending “a long time in Israel, in
Jerusalem“.
During a visit to Israel in February Saviano met Israeli
President Shimon Peres who told him that his country would
“open its doors“ if he wanted to move there.
Saviano, 30, also revealed he was currently at work on
two books.

The writer admitted recently that he didn`t regret
writing Gomorrah but said it had taken away his freedom
because he was now forced to live with a police escort.
He has repeatedly reiterated his plan to leave Italy in
order to escape the pressure of living under the constant
threat of assassination by the Camorra.
“It`s not easy to carry on writing living in a barracks
with a five-man escort and so going away would give me the
chance to do my work,“ he said.
Gomorrah was made into a film directed by Matteo
Garrone which won the second prize at the 2008 Cannes Film
Festival.    thanks ANSAmed)    in milan below.

Sixteen mafia suspects arrested in north

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Milan, 28 April (AKI) – Police on Tuesday arrested 16 mafia suspects in and around the northern city of Milan and the Sicilian city of Palermo in southern Italy. The suspects are accused of trafficking cocaine and extortion 

The drug trafficking charges relate to the period between 2004 and 2006 and the alleged extortion targeted building firms, according to investigators.

The conservative Italian government has vowed to wage war against the mafia, and several mafia bosses have been arrested this year.

Last week Italian police said they uncovered a plot to murder a Sicilian mayor and prominent anti-mafia campaigner Rosario Crocetta. Two suspects, Maurizio La Rosa and Maurizio Trubia, were arrested by police last Friday.

The two suspects were charged with mafia association and extortion against Sicilian-owned businesses in Italy as well as membership of an armed association.

The mafia was plotting to kill several businessmen who had given information to police about a mafia extortion racket, according to investigators.

In 2008, Italian police carried out 200 anti-mafia operations and arrested 2,583 people including 177 fugitives. Millions of euros worth of mafia assets were also seized.
thanks   Security

   mafia  mobster

Good times or bad times, it is business as usual for Italy’s Mafia.

 Indeed, while the recession bites deeply into the legal economy, this is a time for mafiosi to strengthen their positions and increase their wealth. Credit crunches, pay cuts, falling sales and job losses do not touch Cosa Nostra, Calabria’s ‘Ndrangheta or the Camorra in Campania. And liquidity is no problem for the criminal clans.

Their worry is to launder illicit cash, to find ways of investing revenues from drugs, extortion, fraud, loan sharking and the other crimes from which they make money. This liquidity helps them to grow and weave themselves more tightly into the fabric of legitimate business, through buying up firms stretched by the crisis or burdened by debt. Hard for many, the economic downturn brings more opportunities for organised crime.

While the government’s measures may soften the recession’s impact, stimulating an economy that is particularly weak in the south brings a boost for the mafia. Infiltrating parts of the public sector that handle big flows of funds is a priority for the bosses and – aware that control of finance means control of jobs, and these bring votes – some politicians play along with the mafia’s game. A prosecutor in Palermo warns of systematic collusion between the mafia and politics involving all parties in the criminality of power, “a system of corrupt and rapacious power”.

Silvio Berlusconi, Italy’s prime minister, has assured Italians that the mafia will not profit from the reconstruction that will follow the recent earthquake in the Abruzzo region east of Rome, but such an assurance rings hollow. Berlusconi availed himself of the right to silence in November 2002 when anti-mafia prosecutors sought to question him in a mafia case; some people ask why. That there are senators with mafia links lends weight to the prosecutor’s desolate view that “Italy’s dark sickness is the criminality of its governing class”.

Construction has long been a mafia affair, and clans take a cut of the spending on public works. Earthmoving, ballast-supply, plant hire and ready-mix concrete are sectors in which the Mafa thrives. Work under way for more than a decade to improve 500km of autostrada from Salerno, south of Naples, to Reggio Calabria in the toe of the Italian boot, has been dogged by mafia infiltration. Even so, playing down warnings that the project will boost the mafia economy, the government is pushing ahead with plans for a bridge to join the mainland and Sicily across the Messina Strait.

Despite the promises and the effort that the authorities will make to keep the mafia away, the Abruzzo earthquake offers prospects of a bonanza for organised crime. Reconstruction after 1980’s disaster in Campania and Basilicata cost about 60tn lire, equivalent to about €30bn, and prosecutors estimate that half of what came from the public purse went into the mafia’s pockets. Politicians took bribes from firms and won electoral support from the Camorra. Main contractors were paid for putting their names on projects for which they signed contracts, doing no work but sub-contracting to local firms that belonged or were linked to the clans. Hard times for the homeless and jobless, nice work for the mafia then, and probably now.

thanks  David Lane,

mafia2

Italian police during a press conference holding fake Prada bags and shoes, sized in Naples, Italy. While businesses around the world are hunkering down for survival, the Italian mob is living a golden moment. The crime syndicates are flush with billions of euros from extortion rackets, drug trafficking and booming sales in fake designer clothing manufactured in China expressly for the Italian mob _ an increasingly lucrative trade as hard-hit consumers search for bargains, prosecutors and police said in recent interviews. (AP Photo / Salvatore Laporta)           By Frances D’Emilio

Associated Press Writer / April 25, 2009

NAPLES, Italy—While businesses around the world are hunkering down for survival, the Italian mob is living a golden moment. 

 

 

Italy’s various organized crime syndicates — often lumped together colloquially as Mafia Inc. — are gobbling up gas stations, muscling in on supermarket franchises, making loans to cash-starved businesses, taking over trattorias and acquiring buildings in swank neighborhoods in Rome and Milan, investigators say.

These mobsters have lots of what is in short supply for many businesses these days — liquidity — as well as centuries-honed expertise in preying on the vulnerable, whose ranks are swelling in the current financial crisis.

It all means the mob is free to sink cash into two areas that lie at the heart of the global meltdown: real estate and credit markets.

The crime syndicates are flush with billions of euros from extortion rackets, drug trafficking and booming sales in fake designer clothing made in China expressly for the Italian mob — an increasingly lucrative trade as hard-hit consumers search for bargains, prosecutors and police said in recent interviews

For the mob bosses, the global economic meltdown “is only an advantage,” said anti-mafia prosecutor Franco Roberti, in his office in Naples, the chaotic port city that is home to the Camorra, one of the Italy’s major crime syndicates.

Italy has scored some spectacular successes in its decades-long fight against the Mafia, capturing top bosses, persuading turncoats to testify, and encouraging ordinary citizens to resist shakedowns.

But the mob keeps growing — and its drive in recent years to grab chunks of legitimate business is paying off big time in the financial crisis.

In Rome, in the high-rent neighborhoods around the Spanish Steps, Piazza Navona and Trevi Fountain, mobsters are snapping up real estate, anti-Mafia prosecutor Giancarlo Capaldo said in a courthouse interview.

In probes of what Capaldo described as “indications” that mobsters have taken over hotels, restaurants and cafes in Rome, police seized assets of some of these businesses, although the establishments remain open.

These places are well run because they want to make money,” Capaldo said. He declined to identify the establishments because the probe is still being conducted, saying only that “you’ll find some of them in tourist guide books.”

Capaldo’s office also confiscated auto dealerships in Rome from suspected Camorristi or their allies.

“The Camorra makes the money here in the south, but it invests it in legal activities up north,” customs and tax police Gen. Giovanni Mainolfi said in his Naples office.

If the mobsters built posh places in the largely undeveloped south “they would stand out, but do it in Milan … and they blend right in,” Mainolfi said.

In an operation code-named “Easy Money,” police this year seized a hotel in the exclusive Tuscan sea resort of Punta Ala, as well as a supermarket, two Ferraris, a gas station in the wealthy northern Reggio Emilia region and other properties, altogether totaling euro30 million (about $40 million). All were believed to be owned by the Camorra, flush with drug profits.Continued…

The revenues raked in by Italy’s crime syndicates would be more than respectable for many a stock market-listed company these days — although, of course, the mobsters hardly issue annual reports.

The Rome-based Eurispes think tank has estimated that in 2008, “Mafia Inc.” earned euro130 billion (then $167 billion), or about 8 percent of Italy’s GDP, from its criminal activities, nearly half of that from drug trafficking.

Eurispes, which analyzes social, economic and criminal trends, said loansharking brought in an estimated euro12.6 billion ($17 billion) of that income. It calculated that some 180,000 merchants and other businessmen got their loans, directly or indirectly, through organized crime in Italy.

With much of the world financial crunch making its impact in Italy in the first months of this year, it’s too early to tell how much more profit organized crime might make.

Government probes have found that as they launder illicit revenues, mob bosses are increasingly moving their money out of the underdeveloped south where the syndicates are rooted and into affluent central and northern Italy.

In March, Italy’s intelligence services warned in a report that rising unemployment and the credit crunch could help crime syndicates tighten their tentacles around vast swaths of the nation’s business sector, including supermarkets, real estate and tourism.

A main engine of the mob’s recent strength — the age-old practice of loan-sharking — is thriving as banks hoard cash, allowing the Mafia to elbow in on legitimate businesses.

The mobsters are poised to “acquire control of businesses in difficulty, especially through their consolidated practice of loan-sharking,” as well as to “snap up assets put on the market by enterprises experiencing liquidity crises,” the intelligence report said.

The dire predictions seem borne out by businessmen’s complaints.

SOS Impresa, an Italian business lobby dedicated to fighting organized crime, estimated in a report late last year that in the Camorra has “multiplied by 10, 100, perhaps 1,000 times, its penetration of the economic and social fabric, stepping up its business presence in our country, in Europe and the world.”

In Rome, Camorra men or those in their employ have been spotted hanging out at pawnbrokers’ auctions to learn which businesses might be in financial straits, said Carabinieri Lt. Col. Roberto Casagrande. Those businesses would then be approached — and offered a loan they could scarcely refuse.

The Camorra offers shaky businesses attractive interest rates, calculating that the businesses will end up part of its economic empire if the owner falls behind on payments, Roberti said. The mobsters sometimes leave the original owner as a figurehead to thwart suspicion, police said.

The ‘ndrangheta crime syndicate — based in Calabria, the “toe” of Italy’s boot — is also brazenly taking over struggling businesses and snapping up prime northern Italian property at a bargain during the real estate slowdown, investigators say.

Genoa Mayor Marta Vincinzi told a rally against organized crime in Naples late this spring that Mafia bosses, particularly from the ‘ndrangheta, were “gobbling up entire neighborhoods” and pressuring merchants to pay “protection money” in the gritty, northwestern port city.

Investigators believe that flourishing ties with Colombian cocaine cartels have helped the ‘ndrangheta to surpass Sicily’s Cosa Nostra in international drug dealing.

Cosa Nostra has taken blows in recent years. Longtime fugitive bosses have been captured and a rebellion by island businessmen against paying “protection money” is starting to take root. But the anti-extortion revolt is not widespread enough to significantly reduce the Sicilian Mafia’s coffers, the intelligence services’ report noted.

Particularly tempting to the mob is Italy’s recent explosion of supermarkets, a boon to consumers long frustrated by the often limited hours and selection offered by mom-and-pop stores.

In Sicily last year, authorities seized euro$700 million (then worth $900 million) in assets, including supermarket outlets, from a businessman who was known as the island’s “king of supermarkets” and was suspected of letting Cosa Nostra use his businesses to launder money.

Prosecutors in Palermo said the owner’s name turned up on handwritten notes scribbled by Bernardo Provenzano, the longtime fugitive “boss of all bosses” who was captured in 2006.

The intelligence services report predicts that mobsters would step up production of counterfeit name-brand goods given consumers’ apparently increased appetite for fake designer items. The Eurispes think tank estimated this growing business earned the mob euro6.3 billion ($8.5 billion) last year.

Naples anti-organized crime prosecutor Roberti said the Camorra has pumped up what once was a kind of cottage industry, with crime clan bosses knitting closer ties with mobsters in China, where fake designer clothing, shoes and accessories are now churned out in factories for the mob.

Trafficking in fake designer goods — which investigators suspect the Camorra is also peddling in the United States, France, Britain and Germany — is now becoming more profitable for the Neapolitan syndicate that dealing in cocaine and hashish, said Mainolfi, the customs and tax police general.

He has calculated that for every euro it costs to manufacture the counterfeit designer goods, the Camorra earns 10 euros, while for every euro spent to run drug trafficking, it earns six or seven euros.

The fakes, sold in street stalls and clothing shops in the Naples and Rome areas, arrive by the tons in Naples’ sprawling, chaotic port, where custom officials manage to check only some 5 percent of the shipping containers being unloaded, Mainolfi said. 

read more    http://www.boston.com/news/world/europe/articles/2009/04/25/italys_mafia_thrives_in_global_financial_meltdown/

142d8270fcf12570ccc067f78bb012adANSA) – Gela, April 24 – Mafia bosses in this southern Sicilian city planned to kill its mayor because of his anti-Mafia drives, police said Friday.

The top clan in Gela, irked by Rosario Crocetta’s clampdown on rackets and his anti-Mob press campaigns, were reportedly poised to carry out their assassination attempt when police moved in.

”We had to act with some urgency,” a police spokesman said after two people were arrested.

Crocetta, 58, a former Communist now in Italy’s largest centre-left party, the Democratic Party, has been fighting Mob infiltration since he was first elected in 2003 to govern the port city of some 80,000 people midway between Agrigento and Siracusa.

Now under round-the-clock police protection, he has called on Italy’s institutions ”not to leave Gela on its own”.

Crocetta received statements of support from across the political spectrum after the news from Gela.

The city 85 km south of Caltanissetta has been rated as one of Sicily’s most Mob-active spots but Crocetta has stressed that ”the overwhelming majority of our citizens are hard-working and decent people”.

Italy’s Anti-Mafia chief, Piero Grasso, said the plot to murder Crocetta – who is Italy’s first openly gay mayor – highlighted ”the risks run by those who put up a serious fight against the Mafia”. The Emmanuello clan also wanted to murder several businessmen who had stood up to them in the port, which has an important oil refinery, police said.

The probe that led to the arrests also uncovered evidence of the clan preying on Sicilian companies that won public works contracts in northern Italy and especially Milan.

They were taking protection money from, among others, the firm performing maintenance on one of Milan’s main water lines, police said.  
Grasso said that Mafia recycling of profits in northern Italy was widespread and companies often dodged anti-Mafia controls by moving north after installing new frontmen in place of Mob-tainted executives    thanks ANSA) –

Deliberations under way in U.S. marshal’s trial

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US Marshal  Ambrose

Deliberations under way in U.S. marshal’s trial

Jurors deciding the case of a deputy U.S. marshal accused of passing along confidential witness security details that ended up with the Mob began deliberating today with additional instructions from the federal judge about what constitutes “stolen information.”

Over objections by John Ambrose’s defense attorneys, U.S. District Judge John Grady gave a four-page written reply to seven questions submitted late Thursday by one of the male jurors

The questions, six typed and one handwritten, pertain to the definition of “stolen” regarding information in the case.

Ambrose, 42, of Tinley Park, is accused of leaking secrets about protected witness Nicholas Calabrese whom he guarded in 2002 and 2003. Calabrese had flipped and was spilling details about dozens of unsolved Outfit homicides, which put him at great risk for retaliation.

Ambrose’s chatter to a family friend about a big “O.C. guy” he had watched ended up in the hands of brothers convicted in the Family Secrets case against organized crime. His attorneys have argued he broke marshal policy, not the law.

Defense attorney Susan Shatz said she feared providing the answer would set an improper precedent for jurors. Since the note emerged within 40 minutes of the start of deliberations, “I feel the jury doesn’t want to do its job or homework,” she told Grady.

“I’m the stopper,” the judge replied

The defense protested again when the judge’s secretary revealed the note was typed up Wednesday night, before closing arguments.

If the jury still has questions, he continued, “I’m going to answer them.”

In her final argument Thursday, Assistant U.S. Attorney Diane MacArthur told jurors Ambrose gave sensitive details about Calabrese to William Guide, a former Chicago police officer and friend of his father who had organized crime connections. She said Guide passed the information on to mob boss James Marcello and his brother Michael.

“Instead of protecting Calabrese, Mr. Ambrose relayed that information to Mr. Guide. Mr. Ambrose relayed that information not once but two times, not by mistake but by design,” MacArthur said.

Defense attorney Francis Lipuma said Ambrose did not aim to betray his office, never named Calabrese in his conversations with Guide and that Calabrese was never harmed.

Lipuma criticized U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald and Chicago FBI chief Robert Grant, who confronted Ambrose with their accusations in a September 2006 meeting at the federal building in Chicago. He accused the two of ganging up on Ambrose to try to intimidate him into admitting to the leaks and told jurors the men’s versions of what happened that day didn’t jive.

“Fitzgerald told you he didn’t even know all the facts, he showed up unprepared, he didn’t know all the ins and outs,” Lipuma said. “Grant’s testimony was evasive, meandering and at times just plain silly. You’re left with two powerful men who gave inconsistent, contrary versions of what they heard on Sept. 6, 2006.”

But Assistant U.S. Attorney Markus Funk said Ambrose admitted more than once to discussing Calabrese with Guide.

“The problem Mr. Ambrose has is he confessed, not once, not twice, but three times,” Funk told jurors.

He blasted Lipuma’s assertion that Ambrose revealed no names and no crucial details while boasting to Guide, didn’t intend for the information to get to the mob and had no criminal intent.

“The crime isn’t to give it to (mobsters). If he gave it to his mother, that would be a crime,” Funk said.

Jurors are to start deliberations this morning.

thanks  Lauren FitzPatrick

23romney

Former state Civil Service commissioner William P. Monahan (left) filed a wrongful termination lawsuit against former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney.
jerry1
Gennaro “Jerry” Angiulo

 

 By Shelley Murphy, Globe Staff

Former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney appeared in federal court today and calmly defended his decision to seek the resignation in 2003 of the state civil service commissioner because of a decades-old real estate deal with a Boston mafioso.

The credibility of the former commissioner, William P. Monahan had been severely undermined, Romney said, by news that he had bought property on Tremont Street in 1980 from New England mafia underboss Gennaro “Jerry” Angiulo.

“Had I known about it, I wouldn’t have appointed him in the first place,” Romney said.

While the governor said he initially hoped that Monahan would be able to keep his position, Romney said his staff helped convince him that his continued service on the commission “would not be appropriate.” Romney likened the civil service commissioner to a judge and testified that news of the real estate deal with a mafia figure undermined Monahan’s credibility.

Monahan has sued Romney and four members of his administration, alleging that he was wrongly terminated and defamed without due process. Monahan, a longtime Romney supporter, contends that he never had the opportunity to defend himself and never agreed to resign.

Romney testified today that he spoke to Monahan after he had agreed to leave his post.

“I called Mr. Monahan to express my sympathy for the circumstances and my appreciation for him having resigned,” Romney said, adding, “He’s a person I like and respect. I knew this would be difficult for him. I felt [the state civil service commission] was a good opportunity for him and now it came to naught.”

.

Romney testified that he offered to help Monahan find a job in the private sector and noted that during the telephone conversation he never indicated that he was unwilling to resign. The governor has known Monahan since the 1970s, when Monahan served as a selectman in Belmont, where Romney lived with his family.

Under cross-examination, attorney Richard Hayes grilled Romney about why he didn’t personally call Monahan to ask him to resign and why he left it for his staff to do. Hayes accused Romney of putting Monahan in a difficult position.

“No,” Romney responded. “A difficult position brought on by himself.”

 http://www.boston.com/news/local/breaking_news/2009/04/romney_testifie.html

gingello

gangster  Salvatore ” Sammy ”  Gingello

04/22/09 9:05 AM

On this day, April 23, in 1978, colorful gangster Salvatore Gingello was killed in a car bomb after five unsuccessful attempts.
Hailed as the new boss of a Rochester, N.Y., mob, Gingello was targeted by a rival gang trying to stake its claim on the city. He managed to sidestep assassination attempts for two months, including surviving an explosion outside of Gingello’s favorite restaurant.
Other failed ideas included planting a bomb in a children’s toy and lowering another into his nonexistent chimney. Aware of the plots but undaunted, Gingello continued to frequent his local hangouts with two bodyguards.
But on April 23, a bomb detonated under his borrowed, black Buick, ejecting his bodyguards out the side doors. In the driver’s seat, Gingello was blackened and broken from the explosion.
He died soon after because of shock and loss of blood from losing both his legs. 
Drunks, hookers and pimps surrounded the wreckage and paid tribute to their hometown boss by collecting car debris and even pieces of his flesh.     thanks  The Examiner

MAFIA RING IN NORTHERN ITALY BUSTED
busted

ANSA) – Milan, April 23 – Police on Thursday arrested
39 people in an operation uncovering infiltration in the
northern region of Lombardy by Calabria`s `Ndrangheta Mafia.
The organised crime ring, linked to the Farao-Marincola
clan in Crotone, allegedly exercised control using threats
and violence over a number of business activities in northern
Italy, especially in the building and real estate sectors.
Arrest warrants were issued for people in Lombardy,
Piedmont, Emilia Romagna, Lazio, Campania, Basilicata and
Calabria on a variety of charges including attempted murder,
extortion, arson and money recycling.

Interior Minister Roberto Maroni congratulated the
police on the “important operation“.
Last month police confiscated a NATO-style rocket
launcher and issued 22 arrest warrants in a similar operation
revealing wide-scale intimidation in Lombardy`s public works
sector by an `Ndrangheta clan.

thanks  http://www.lifeinitaly.com/node/5258

ambrose_20090413_12_56_03_17-282-4001

deputy U.S. marshal   Ambrose

CHICAGO (AP) — Federal prosecutors have rested their case in the Chicago trial of a deputy U.S. marshal accused of leaking information about a federal witness to the mob.

Before prosecutors rested Tuesday, FBI Special Agent Edward McNamara testified that John Ambrose called a restaurant hours after his second stint protecting witness Nicholas Calabrese.

Ambrose’s friend William Guide owned The Pizza King. Prosecutors say Ambrose fed details of Calabrese’s cooperation in the Operation Family Secrets investigation to Guide, knowing they’d end up with the mob.

The defense called two of Ambrose’s colleagues in the Marshals Service. They say they used The Pizza King as a “staging area” for the fugitive warrant unit. Both say Ambrose is honest

thanks tbo,com news

22 Hells Angels arrested in Spain

Weapons and Neo-nazi material were amongst the items seized

spain-angels

Spanish police have arrested 22 members of Hell’s Angels biker gang in an operation which took place in five provinces. The majority of the arrests – 13 – were in Barcelona , with the remaining suspects taken into custody in Valencia, Málaga, Madrid and Las Palmas. The charges against them range from illicit association, to drugs and weapons trafficking, and extortion.

The operation remains open, with more than 30 property searches having taken place so far. Biker clubs believed to be used by the gang members in Barcelona city and L’Hospitalet de Llobregat were also being searched, EFE reports. It’s understood that the Barcelona judge in charge of the investigation has issued a secrecy order

 

 

 

 

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The Camorra the Italian organized crime groupwith ties to dallas  has been overshadowed in American pop culture by th  Godfather and other iconic images of the Sicilian mafia

But the ages-old clandestine syndicate from the port city of Naples is getting some attention lately.

The indie film Gomorrah a Cannes winner, is based on Roberto Saviano’s recent book  about the secretive and violent Camorra underworld. Not surprisingly, Saviano has recieved death threats  since his book was published and is said to travel under police guard.

For those wanting more information on the Dallas drug case involving the Camorra, here are some documents:

Mexican cartels unloading drugs to
Italian mafia        
Mexican drug traffickers are funneling cocaine to Italian organized crime, and some shipments are moving through Dallas.

“We’ve got some of the major cartel members established here dealing their wares in Europe,” said James Capra, head of the Drug Enforcement Administration’s Dallas office.

Experts say warring cartels battered by unprecedented U.S. and Mexican government crackdowns are increasingly looking to Europe as an expansion market. Across the Atlantic, demand for cocaine is high and prices are up. A kilo sold for $20,000 in Dallas is worth up to three times as much overseas, experts say.

Mexican cartel operatives in North Texas “are dealing with Italy, Spain, you name it,” he said. “They can operate their logistical center from here and coordinate between Mexico, Central America and Europe.”

Italian capos are venturing to North Texas to get in on the action, says one mob expert.

“Places like Houston and Dallas are where these criminal organizations are most likely to invest their money,” said Antonio Nicaso, an internationally recognized author and lecturer on Italian organized crime. “This is the right time, with the recession going on.”

Dallas has long been a recognized distribution hub for drugs smuggled up the Interstate 35 corridor from Laredo. From here, narcotics head out across the country to Atlanta, Chicago, New England and elsewhere.

The revelation that the cartels are forming alliances with Italian syndicates came last year when the DEA revealed that the Mexican Gulf cartel, which supplies Dallas with cocaine, was working with New York associates of the powerful Italian ‘Ndrangheta mafia.

Last August, the DEA arrested a Dallas County jailer accused of tipping off drug dealers to what appeared to be a small-time local narcotics conspiracy. The jailer, Brenda Medina Salinas, has pleaded guilty and is awaiting sentencing. As others pleaded guilty and court documents piled up, it became clear that the drug pipeline in that case reached all the way to Europe and the clandestine world of the Camorra.

 

Camorra syndicate   

The Naples-based Camorra traces its roots to the 16th century. Ruthlessly violent when they need to be, Camorra members often smuggle behind quiet business fronts. They’re known to work across ethnic and political lines.

Relatively little is known about the local Camorra associate, other than that he had ties to Dallas, Houston and Mexico.

The Camorra associate was not charged in the case because agents had not developed enough information to nab him when they were forced to act because of Salinas’ leaking information to co-conspirators.

Agents learned the Camorra associate’s name last May. That’s when DEA agents monitoring a meeting between him and his local contacts asked Dallas police to pull over the Camorra associate’s car and check his identity.

He had just met with Higinio “Gino” Hernandez, a 30-year-old flooring installer from Carrollton, and Altin Kore, a 32-year-old Dallas man also charged in conspiracy. Kore is charged in the case but is a fugitive. Hernandez has pleaded guilty.

The DEA began investigating the Hernandez network after being tipped by Italian authorities in the fall of 2007. Their wiretaps on Camorra associates in Italy revealed a Dallas cocaine supplier.

Higinio Hernandez was close to his brother Henry “Tito” Hernandez, 34, of Dallas, who has also pleaded guilty. A third brother, Luis, 35, has been charged but is a fugitive.

Henry and Higinio worked for years as flooring installer subcontractors for Carpet One in Southlake.

“They were leading a double life,” said prosecutor Ernest Gonzalez in Plano. “They were doing flooring by day, and at night they were conducting these drug transactions.”

It was obvious to those around them that laying floors was not their only source of income.

When they were arrested last fall, federal agents seized Higinio’s Cadillac Escalade and Lexus IS30, as well as Henry’s Escalade.

Henry and Luis kept snapshots of themselves partying in limos with friends, booze and women. They also had dealings in Cuba, authorities say.

“They didn’t hide their money,” Gonzalez said.

Authorities say Higinio’s supplier in Mexico was half brother Rodolfo Lopez, 35, another fugitive charged in the case.

While living in the U.S., Lopez forged the relationship with the Camorra associate and dealt with cocaine producers in Colombia and elsewhere, authorities say. Lopez eventually relocated to Mexico, where authorities say he directed shipments to his brothers in Dallas.

From Dallas, the cocaine was taken to Houston, where the Camorra associate operated a scented candle export business. It took about a month for the cocaine, smuggled amongst the candles, to make the voyage across the Atlantic to Italy.

 

Cartel crackdowns 

Major ports attract Italian organized crime syndicates, which operate in at least 19 U.S. cities, according to the Justice Department’s latest Drug Threat Assessment.

The Hernandez case is considered somewhat of an anomaly among law enforcement. Federal agents for years have said that the mafia has no significant grip here.

Still, after a lull, mob influence nationwide seems to be increasing, experts say. Much of their work is partnering with the Mexican distributors and Colombian producers and supplying Europe with cocaine.

It’s a good time to expand to Europe, as crackdowns on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border have made smuggling cocaine into Texas increasingly difficult. In the past year, authorities have arrested more than 500 Gulf Cartel and 750 rival Sinaloa Cartel members here and in Mexico.

Extraditions of Mexican narcos to the U.S. for prosecution are on the rise under President Felipe Calderón, who has deployed military troops to quell violence in border towns.

Still, a downside to dabbling in international markets is the increased scrutiny by a larger net of law enforcement agencies – which is what stopped the Hernandez ring.

Last spring, DEA agents in Dallas learned that a meeting was to take place between Higinio and the Camorra associate. On May 15, agents set up surveillance at a Chili’s restaurant on Knox Street in Dallas.

It was not a pleasant meeting for Higinio. DEA agents were watching as the Italian poked a finger in his chest. The cocaine they were selling wasn’t pure enough, he told Hernandez. Customers were complaining.

After the meeting, Higinio reached out to his brother, Henry, to see if his own supplier, Moises Duarte, could get purer powder.

But agents were forced to swoop in before any more cocaine made it to Italy.

The reason: Brenda Salinas. The 23-year-old befriended Henry Hernandez and Duarte on the club scene in Dallas, and eventually dated both men.

As a jailer with Dallas County, she had access to law enforcement databases. In July, when agents learned that she was feeding both men information, DEA agents felt they had to act. They arrested Duarte and set up stings on his cohorts.

So far, nine defendants – including Salinas – have pleaded guilty. Among them is an Albanian financial consultant from Dallas. He has ties to an ex-stockbroker being investigated by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in connection with an alleged pump-and-dump stock scam.

According to the DEA, the investigation is ongoing

thanks   Jason Trahan