by PolackTony » Fri Jun 06, 2025 9:18 pm
Stroccos wrote: ↑Fri Jun 06, 2025 8:18 pm
B. wrote: ↑Fri Jun 06, 2025 5:33 pm
Doesn't say that the Cleveland FO identified these Camorra groups as active in their jurisdiction though it's interesting the Cleveland FO made this request and wanted the Camorra groups to be referred to more specifically/accurately by the broader FBI. Suggests maybe there were Camorra links they were investigating in Ohio. Can't imagine the Cleveland FO was sitting around thinking about the Camorra out of boredom and nothing else.
As Fabien said there was a strong historic Calabrian Camorra/'ndrangheta presence in OH and PA but this report refers exclusively to the Campanian Camorra. Later Domenico Violi and some of his sons lived outside of Cleveland though he was a Calabrian 'ndranghetista and not part of the Campanian branch.
they were invetgating a camera member who married a Cleveland lady , and they had a store on the Westside eof Cleveland ,
anontio eggizito he was killed in the mid 90s if I recall
Antonio
Egizio, “‘o Tedesco” (the German). He was a rather significant Camorrista, capo of the Egizio clan based in Castello di Cisterna/Brusciano in the Northern suburbs of Napoli (Camorristi from this area also had tied to Chicago and NYC in this period). The Egizio clan was affiliated with the Nuova Fratellanza Napolitana (dubbed “Nuova Famiglia” by the Italian press), the Camorra bloc that was closely aligned with Cosa Nostra, as a number of its leading figures were inducted into Cosa Nostra. After their bloody conflict with the Nuova Camorra Organizzata, the NF split and went to war with each other, culminating in a major “maxi blitz” by the Carabinieri on 100s of Camorristi from these clans. A bunch of them fled Italy at that time, with Egizio lamming it to Germany, where he already had prior business connections (hence the nickname).
In 1987, he moved to Cleveland with his wife (she was a US citizen from Cleveland who grew up in Germany, where she later met and married Egizio) after surviving an assassination attempt. In OH he set up a boutique clothing store, EGY Eurostyle in the Kamms Corner section of West Cleveland (fashion boutiques being a common trade for Camorristi in the US), as well as an import-export business and a construction contracting company. While he was not known to have been engaged in any criminal conduct during his time in America, US authorities were aware of who he was and were watching him. In 1990, a US Attorney’s office OC strike force in Cleveland tipped off Italian authorities that Egizio was traveling to Germany, leading to his arrest at the Munich Airport on charges related to a 1985 armored car robbery and allegations that Egizio had attended a major Camorra summit in 1988.
Egizio was convicted on the robbery charges in 1993 and sentenced to 19 years, but was allowed to remain on house arrest while he appealed his conviction. This turned out poorly for Egizio, however, as he was then murdered in 1994. The Egizio clan had split off factional rivals that established themselves as the Nuzzo-Piscopo and Rea-Romano-Foria clans, who killed “‘o Tedesco” and set off a wave of retaliatory violence in Castello di Cisterna. Typical Camorra shit.
[quote=Stroccos post_id=295245 time=1749266288 user_id=2183]
[quote=B. post_id=295243 time=1749256390 user_id=127]
Doesn't say that the Cleveland FO identified these Camorra groups as active in their jurisdiction though it's interesting the Cleveland FO made this request and wanted the Camorra groups to be referred to more specifically/accurately by the broader FBI. Suggests maybe there were Camorra links they were investigating in Ohio. Can't imagine the Cleveland FO was sitting around thinking about the Camorra out of boredom and nothing else.
As Fabien said there was a strong historic Calabrian Camorra/'ndrangheta presence in OH and PA but this report refers exclusively to the Campanian Camorra. Later Domenico Violi and some of his sons lived outside of Cleveland though he was a Calabrian 'ndranghetista and not part of the Campanian branch.
[/quote]
they were invetgating a camera member who married a Cleveland lady , and they had a store on the Westside eof Cleveland ,
anontio eggizito he was killed in the mid 90s if I recall
[/quote]
Antonio [b]Egizio[/b], “‘o Tedesco” (the German). He was a rather significant Camorrista, capo of the Egizio clan based in Castello di Cisterna/Brusciano in the Northern suburbs of Napoli (Camorristi from this area also had tied to Chicago and NYC in this period). The Egizio clan was affiliated with the Nuova Fratellanza Napolitana (dubbed “Nuova Famiglia” by the Italian press), the Camorra bloc that was closely aligned with Cosa Nostra, as a number of its leading figures were inducted into Cosa Nostra. After their bloody conflict with the Nuova Camorra Organizzata, the NF split and went to war with each other, culminating in a major “maxi blitz” by the Carabinieri on 100s of Camorristi from these clans. A bunch of them fled Italy at that time, with Egizio lamming it to Germany, where he already had prior business connections (hence the nickname).
In 1987, he moved to Cleveland with his wife (she was a US citizen from Cleveland who grew up in Germany, where she later met and married Egizio) after surviving an assassination attempt. In OH he set up a boutique clothing store, EGY Eurostyle in the Kamms Corner section of West Cleveland (fashion boutiques being a common trade for Camorristi in the US), as well as an import-export business and a construction contracting company. While he was not known to have been engaged in any criminal conduct during his time in America, US authorities were aware of who he was and were watching him. In 1990, a US Attorney’s office OC strike force in Cleveland tipped off Italian authorities that Egizio was traveling to Germany, leading to his arrest at the Munich Airport on charges related to a 1985 armored car robbery and allegations that Egizio had attended a major Camorra summit in 1988.
Egizio was convicted on the robbery charges in 1993 and sentenced to 19 years, but was allowed to remain on house arrest while he appealed his conviction. This turned out poorly for Egizio, however, as he was then murdered in 1994. The Egizio clan had split off factional rivals that established themselves as the Nuzzo-Piscopo and Rea-Romano-Foria clans, who killed “‘o Tedesco” and set off a wave of retaliatory violence in Castello di Cisterna. Typical Camorra shit.