toto wrote:
Maybe Mori managed to hit Cosa Nostra in Catania where it was weak but in Palermo where it was strong the allies of Cosa Nostra probably directed Mori in to different directions like bandits..
I just bought a book called "Mafia alla sbarra" by Manoela Patti which deals exactly with the mafia in the city of Palermo and the nearby territory during fascism. Haven't finished it yet, but the sentences for most bosses were indeed ridiculous.
For example, these guys got only 3 years:
Stefano Bonta' (boss of Villagrazia)
Andrea Saccone (boss of Falsomiele)
Gaetano Amoroso (boss of Porta Montalto)
Gioacchino Pennino (boss of Brancaccio)
Giovanbattista Buffa (boss of Ciaculli) and Serafino Marsala (boss of the Guadagna borgata) must have gotten more, but the book doesn't specify how much.
The clan of the Santa Maria di Gesu' district was indicted in 1928, but almost everybody was out by 1932.
Santo Bonetti, boss of Ficarazzi, got about 10 years however.
Anyway, when the fascists didn't manage to keep them in prison, they often sent them (at least those who didn't join the fascist party) to small islands where they couldn't contact the organization. For example, a group of mafiosi sent to the Favignana island, got so desperate they offered financial contribute for the war in Africa in exchange of freedom. They included:
Pietro Buffa, son of the Ciaculli boss Giovanni Battista Buffa
3 members of the D'Agati family from Villabate
Francesco Cuccia (boss of Piana dei Greci)
Antonino Cracolici (a high-ranking mafioso from Piana dei Colli)
Leonardo Greco from Bagheria
Paolo Virzi' from the Noce district in Palermo
All in all, 41 mafiosi signed the letter.