Italian Mafia groups reported scale and influence over Nation states

Discuss all mafia families in the U.S., Canada, Italy, and everywhere else in the world.

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500YearReign
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Italian Mafia groups reported scale and influence over Nation states

Post by 500YearReign »

/Tiziana Fabi)
Lessons from the case against the Calabrian mafia: Organized crime is global, and flourishing
I went to Sicily to report on the migrant crisis and quickly learned the mafia was making a massive profit from it

236
ALEX PERRY
JUNE 24, 2018 3:00PM (UTC)
In the spring of 2015, I flew to Sicily to report a story about the European migration crisis. Then, as now, hundreds of thousands of migrants from Africa and the Middle East were crowding into small fishing boats and flimsy rubber dinghies in Libya, Egypt and Turkey and setting out across the Mediterranean for Europe. In 15 years, 22,000 had drowned en route. But if the humanitarian crisis was well known and comprehensively reported, I had been tipped off that a central explanation for this catastrophe had received less attention. Anti-mafia prosecutors in Palermo were claiming to have evidence suggesting that one answer to why so many refugees and migrants were heading to Sicily was because the Italian Mafia wanted them to.

In Sicily, I interviewed the prosecutors and reviewed their evidence, and talked to Carabinieri, anti-mafia activists, refugees and social workers. Where the world had seen an unprecedented emergency, Italy’s gangsters had perceived an unrivaled opportunity. North African and Middle Eastern gangs handled the trafficking across the Mediterranean. But once the migrants arrived, mafiosi were making millions from them, sometimes putting them to work on farms for as little as €3 a day, sometimes taking a cut from Nigerian prostitution rackets, but mainly by infiltrating and corrupting Italy’s immigration system. The mafia’s men inside these authorities ensured that mafia businesses were awarded contracts for the construction and management of refugee reception centers. Each migrant earned the mafia €28 per head per day. A three-year contract to run Europe’s biggest migrant center at Mineo in eastern Sicily was worth €97 million. A Carabinieri surveillance team in Rome recorded one mobster, convicted murderer Salvatore Buzzi, boasting in a phone call to an associate: "Do you have any idea how much I make from immigrants? Even drugs aren’t as profitable!"


The story was a startling correction to the idea of the Italian Mafia as historic. It also repudiated any notions of mafia glamor. Here was a vast present-day criminal conspiracy making tens of millions from the excruciating suffering of hundreds of thousands of people and 3,000 to 4,000 deaths every year. This was not the stylish menace of "The Godfather" or "Goodfellas" or even Elena Ferrante. This was sordid, venal and deadly.

My last two interviews were in Rome. Through friends, I contacted a journalist in the capital who specialized in mafia stories, Laura Aprati, and asked her to set up two interviews, one with a Carabinieri chief, another with a senior anti-mafia magistrate, both of whom she knew. Laura’s price was €250, plus my mandatory attendance at a showing of a play she had co-written with another journalist and two anti-mafia activists at a school in a run-down, mafia-heavy area on the outskirts of Rome. "You will come," commanded Laura.

Perry

The play turned out to be a one-woman show, accompanied by the mournful bow of a single cellist, set against a plain, blood-red backdrop. At the time, I spoke no Italian and understood very little of the drama, but one thing I did manage to catch was the name of the play’s protagonist, Maria Concetta Cacciola. That single name turned out to be the key that unlocked another hidden world. Concetta, as I later read in several thousand pages of judicial documents, had been born into a family that worked for one of the ruling clans in the Calabrian Mafia, the ’Ndrangheta, in the toe of Italy. In May, June and July 2011, she had testified against her family in return for entry to Italy’s witness protection program. By doing so, she was following the example of two other ’Ndrangheta women, her friend Giuseppina Pesce, who came from Concetta’s home town of Rosarno on Calabria’s west coast, and Lea Garofalo, who was from Pagliarelle, a mountain village above Calabria’s east coast. Concetta, Giuseppina and Lea all shared the same motivations for giving evidence. They wanted their children to have a different life, away from the blood and killing of the mafia; and they had all been accused of having an affair.

The three women’s testimony blew the secret world of the ’Ndrangheta wide open. Like Sicily’s Cosa Nostra and the Camorra in Naples, the ’Ndrangheta (pronounced un-drung-get-a and derived from the Greek andrangheteia, meaning "society of men of honor and valor") had been founded in the tumultuous years around the unification of the Italian peninsula in 1861. Like the other two mafias, too, the ’Ndrangheta covered its criminality with a veneer of righteous revolution: their infiltration and corruption of the economy and the state was part, so the mafioso narrative went, of an honorable, southern subversion of the new northern-dominated Italian state. But at the time, little else was known about the organization. For most of its existence, the ’Ndrangheta had been considered a poor cousin to Cosa Nostra and the Camorra, country bumpkins in dusty suits who might extract protection from the local trattoria but never strayed far from their groves of oranges, lemons and olives.


Thanks in part to the three women’s testimony, that caricature was revealed as woefully out of date. In their statements to police and in court, which ran to thousands of pages, the women described a global monster. Eventually, Calabria’s prosecutors would conclude that the ’Ndrangheta had a presence in 120 of the world’s 200 countries and a global income of $50-100 billion at its upper end, around $10 billion more than Microsoft’s annual revenue. They ran heroin, marijuana and 70 percent of the cocaine in Europe. They extorted Calabria’s businesses for billions of euros every year and, further afield, embezzled and rigged contracts from the Italian government and the European Union worth billions more, even cornering the market in the disposal of nuclear waste, which they dumped in the Red Sea off Somalia. Their empire linked a mob war in Toronto to a cocaine-delivering pizzeria in Queens, New York, called Cucino a Modo Mio (I Cook My Own Way) to the reported ownership of an entire Brussels neighborhood to mining in Togo.


Their gun-running business directly affected the destiny of nations: Franco Roberti, head of Italy’s anti-mafia directorate, told me the ’Ndrangheta was selling weapons to several sides in Syria’s civil war. But it was laundering their riches and those of other crime groups from around the world, which the Calabrians did for a fee, that made the ’Ndrangheta a global power. Millions of people worked in their companies, shopped in their stores, ate in their restaurants, lived in their buildings and elected politicians they funded. Giuseppe Lombardo, a Calabrian prosecutor specializing in the ’Ndrangheta’s finances, told me that by buying up the government debt of two Asian countries, Thailand and Indonesia, then threatening to dump it, the ’Ndrangheta had blackmailed entire nations into letting it operate on their territory. Their money, said Lombardo, had elevated the group to a position of invulnerability. They now occupied a "fundamental and indispensable position in the global market," he said, one that was "more or less essential for the smooth functioning of the global economic system."

That almost no one knew any of this until the last decade or so is no coincidence. The secret of the ’Ndrangheta’s success was secrecy or, as they called it, omertà. As I describe in "The Good Mothers," their great flaw turned out to be the claustrophobic family loyalty and murderous misogyny with which they enforced it. The women of the ’Ndrangheta had lives as restricted as women living under conservative Islam. To persuade them to talk, all the prosecutors had to do was offer them and their children an alternative.


The investigations built on Concetta’s, Giuseppina’s and Lea’s evidence brought down several large crime families and shook the ’Ndrangheta to its core. What unnerves me, still, is that such a giant, global enterprise could function for so long without anyone knowing. That revelation sits alongside two other disturbing modern truths: that globalization assists illicit business as much as it does legitimate commerce; and that the era of global, mass connectivity has, paradoxically, decreased how what we know about the world as the conversation narrows to a few common narratives (Trump, terrorism, #Metoo) and the truth is subsumed by noise.

What I discovered about the ’Ndrangheta has made me curious about other, equally unfamiliar organized crime groups. Years of research lie ahead. But I can already say with some confidence that the great hidden truth of our era is that terrorism is a spectacular distraction from the real threat: the rise of global organized crime. From drugs to guns, cyber-attacks to the dark web, political financing to narco-states, people trafficking to child abuse, tax havens to smuggled wine, counterfeit watches to fake news, nail bars to hand car washes and money laundering through property and financial markets from London to New York to Hong Kong to Johannesburg, organized crime is all around us. The most remarkable thing about that? Almost nobody seems to have noticed.
"People always underestimate me, Don."

<>

"You know what the real difference is between crooks and lawmen, Warden?

[Warden] Try me.

What side of the bars they're on."
scagghiuni
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Re: Italian Mafia groups reported scale and influence over Nation states

Post by scagghiuni »

sicilian mafia and camorra were founded before the unification of italy, probably in the early 1800... anyway only idiots could think they are patriotic, they are scumbags who cares about their earnings only, they helped garibaldi in 1860 because he promised them to burn the bourbons archives
500YearReign
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Re: Italian Mafia groups reported scale and influence over Nation states

Post by 500YearReign »

"Their gun-running business directly affected the destiny of nations: Franco Roberti, head of Italy’s anti-mafia directorate, told me the ’Ndrangheta was selling weapons to several sides in Syria’s civil war. But it was laundering their riches and those of other crime groups from around the world, which the Calabrians did for a fee, that made the ’Ndrangheta a global power. Millions of people worked in their companies, shopped in their stores, ate in their restaurants, lived in their buildings and elected politicians they funded. Giuseppe Lombardo, a Calabrian prosecutor specializing in the ’Ndrangheta’s finances, told me that by buying up the government debt of two Asian countries, Thailand and Indonesia, then threatening to dump it, the ’Ndrangheta had blackmailed entire nations into letting it operate on their territory. Their money, said Lombardo, had elevated the group to a position of invulnerability. They now occupied a "fundamental and indispensable position in the global market," he said, one that was "more or less essential for the smooth functioning of the global economic system."
"People always underestimate me, Don."

<>

"You know what the real difference is between crooks and lawmen, Warden?

[Warden] Try me.

What side of the bars they're on."
scagghiuni
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Re: Italian Mafia groups reported scale and influence over Nation states

Post by scagghiuni »

some things they say about ndrangheta is bullshit anyway, they tend always to overrate it too much nowadays... there is no way its revenue is 100 billions lol even if they control all the cocaine in europe,about 400 tons (and they don't) they wouldn't be even close, if they control 100 tons, 1/4 of the european one and they sell it in the wholesale market they would earn 10 billions at most
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Strax
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Re: Italian Mafia groups reported scale and influence over Nation states

Post by Strax »

While ’Ndrangheta is most powerful organized crime group, the numbers are overrated by the media. Also there is no way they control 80% of EU cocaine trade.
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Re: Italian Mafia groups reported scale and influence over Nation states

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Strax wrote: Fri Aug 16, 2019 11:05 am While ’Ndrangheta is most powerful organized crime group, the numbers are overrated by the media. Also there is no way they control 80% of EU cocaine trade.
yeah, no doubt it is among the most powerful criminal group worldwide but it's impossibile they control 80% of european cocaine, i think they control 25% at most
500YearReign
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Re: Italian Mafia groups reported scale and influence over Nation states

Post by 500YearReign »

The Calabrian prosecutor claims they bought up all the debt of two asian sovereign nations and used that as leverage to control those countries to some degree. Threaten to dump the debt bonds and the country caved to whatever demands.

Certainly seems like they are very smart and powerful, N'drangheta. Would like to see supporting documentation about the scenario described above. Would be very interesting if there is truth to those claims.
"People always underestimate me, Don."

<>

"You know what the real difference is between crooks and lawmen, Warden?

[Warden] Try me.

What side of the bars they're on."
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Re: Italian Mafia groups reported scale and influence over Nation states

Post by scagghiuni »

500YearReign wrote: Fri Aug 16, 2019 11:32 am The Calabrian prosecutor claims they bought up all the debt of two asian sovereign nations and used that as leverage to control those countries to some degree. Threaten to dump the debt bonds and the country caved to whatever demands.

Certainly seems like they are very smart and powerful, N'drangheta. Would like to see supporting documentation about the scenario described above. Would be very interesting if there is truth to those claims.
i doubt is true, they have no absolutely any proof to support what they say, so it's just inflated bullshit to me otherwise
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Strax
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Re: Italian Mafia groups reported scale and influence over Nation states

Post by Strax »

'Ndrangheta is very powerful thanks to their good links with freemasonry and secret services. I doubt its true , but wouldn't be impossible. An 'Ndrangheta boss Pantalone Mancuso was recorded saying "'Ndrangheta doesn't matter anymore,its all about P3 & P4 now". If P3 & P4 are powerful like P2 was, i think its possible.
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Re: Italian Mafia groups reported scale and influence over Nation states

Post by scagghiuni »

Strax wrote: Fri Aug 16, 2019 11:58 am 'Ndrangheta is very powerful thanks to their good links with freemasonry and secret services. I doubt its true , but wouldn't be impossible. An 'Ndrangheta boss Pantalone Mancuso was recorded saying "'Ndrangheta doesn't matter anymore,its all about P3 & P4 now". If P3 & P4 are powerful like P2 was, i think its possible.
the occult masonic lodges nowadays are weaker than the 1980s, the p3 or p4 are not even close to p2 was... in the '80 sicilian mafia killed tons of important people and in most of these murders there were freemasons and secret services behind, today they have not this power anymore and ndrangheta is not capable to do it, to kill the judge di matteo in 2012 they (freemasons/secret services) asked messina denaro to do it, not ndrangheta
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Re: Italian Mafia groups reported scale and influence over Nation states

Post by CabriniGreen »

scagghiuni wrote: Fri Aug 16, 2019 11:32 am
Strax wrote: Fri Aug 16, 2019 11:05 am While ’Ndrangheta is most powerful organized crime group, the numbers are overrated by the media. Also there is no way they control 80% of EU cocaine trade.
yeah, no doubt it is among the most powerful criminal group worldwide but it's impossibile they control 80% of european cocaine, i think they control 25% at most
That's probably more accurate, still a huge market share though....
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Re: Italian Mafia groups reported scale and influence over Nation states

Post by CabriniGreen »

Who are the most powerful, first Families in Sicily?

After families, who are the richest- strongest clans?
In your opinion?
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Re: Italian Mafia groups reported scale and influence over Nation states

Post by scagghiuni »

CabriniGreen wrote: Sat Aug 17, 2019 11:36 pm Who are the most powerful, first Families in Sicily?

After families, who are the richest- strongest clans?
In your opinion?
san lorenzo, brancaccio, san giuseppe jato and porta nuova 'mandamenti' in palermo province, castelvetrano and alcamo 'mandamenti' in trapani, riesi 'mandamento' in caltanissetta, santa elisabetta 'mandamento' in agrigento and the santapaola-ercolano family from catania in eastern sicily... among the familiar clans guttadauro, fidanzati, santapaola, inzerillo, badalamenti, rinzivillo, caruana-cuntrera
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