Daily Mirror

THE BIG SATURDAY READ PROSECUTOR RECA The brave women who brought down the Mob

’Ndrangheta wives and daughters were ultimate insiders

- BY EMMELINE SAUNDERS Emmeline.saunders@mirror.co.uk @emm_saunders

The ‘Ndrangheta has controlled the southern peninsula of Italy ruthlessly for decades, with hundreds of victims left dead, maimed or vanishing without a trace.

This mafia’s relentless extortion racket – demanding protection money, or pizzo, from businesses – combined with blackmail, money laundering and importing cocaine from Colombia, meant that by 2007, the ‘Ndrangheta was raking in a yearly revenue of €40billion (£35bn), the equivalent of 3.5 per cent of Italy’s GDP.

Nothing could stop what was one of most powerful criminal organisati­ons in the world, no one would dare touch them. Or so they believed. Ironically, for an organisati­on where family was everything, it was the wives and daughters of the criminals, a handful of brave, determined women, who did what neither rivals nor authoritie­s have managed.

This story is now being told in a Disney+ show, The Good Mothers, which shines a light on the women of the ‘Ndrangheta – pronounced n-drahng-ghe-ta – and their brave battle to bring some of the worst “godfathers” to justice.

Chief prosecutor Alessandra Cerreti was instrument­al in putting some of the clan’s biggest linchpins behind bars, working with three women who put their lives on the line to testify against their families.

Speaking exclusivel­y to the Mirror, she said: “There have been difficult times for both me and these women. For some of them, unfortunat­ely, it didn’t work out because they didn’t trust the State enough. They didn’t allow us to protect them as fully as we would have liked. Thankfully the others are now safe with their children.”

From its origins in the late 18th century, the ‘Ndrangheta steadily increased its influence from the southern city of Calabria and exploded worldwide with the start of mass emigration in the 1950s. Today, the mob still operates globally and has a special relationsh­ip with cartels in South America.

While building its influence, the ‘Ndrangheta kept most of its illegal activities under wraps, silencing any potential whistleblo­wers with threats and violence.

That changed in 1973 when the mob kidnapped John Paul Getty III, the grandson of oil tycoon J. Paul Getty, once the richest man in the world, off the street in Rome and kept him captive in a cave.

Demands to his rich family for a $3.2million ransom were ignored as the Gettys believed the 16-year-old was part of the plot. So the gang sliced off the teenager’s

ear and sent it to a newspaper to make it clear they were serious.

When the youngster was released five months later, in December 1973, he was in poor health, and later succumbed to drug and alcohol addiction as a way to cope with his traumatic experience­s.

The ‘Ndrangheta was linked to more than 200 such abductions between the 1970s and mid-1990s, and by 2010 was estimated by the Italian state to be running 70% of Europe’s cocaine trade. Its tentacles snaked around the globe, extorting billions from businesses, government and even the European Union through dodgy contracts for ports, roads and energy production.

Closer to home, the mob went after perceived enemies with laser focus. Italian

magistrate Francesco Ferlaino was gunned down in cold blood while returning home one night in July 1975. In 1983, marine engineer Gennaro Musella was blown up by a car bomb for interferin­g in a public contract for the constructi­on of a new port.

Alessandra, now 55, had good reason to pursue the ‘Ndrangheta. She grew up in Sicily, where the Cosa Nostra ran the island with an iron fist and residents turned a blind eye out of fear.

The period which coincided with the first 15 years of her life is known in Sicily as la mattanza – the slaughter, with more than 1,700 Sicilians killed by the mafia.

“At that time I didn’t understand what the mafia was, but I decided that I had to stop them,” she says from her office in Milan. “I have always

dreamed of being an anti-mafia judge and I worked hard to become one.”

Other state prosecutor­s had tried and failed to stop the syndicate, but Alessandra had a new tactic: targeting the women trapped within layers of family loyalty, menacing threats to their lives and omertà, the code of honour and silence.

All too often the women had been dismissed by the Italian state as mere victims, their or‘ndrine, monitored fathers as and by they to brothers, cousins and uncles. their seal were married off young by al behaviour was fiercely

Widows could be killed by family members if they were caught being “unfaithful” to their dead husbands, their bodies dissolved in acid or burnt to expunge the black stain from the family’s honour. Betrayal was virtually unknown.

That changed with Lea Garofalo, who was 16 when she fell in love with a cocaine smuggler called Carlo Cosco and eloped with him. They had a daughter, Denise, and Lea was once forced to watch Cosco and his brother slaughter a man in Milan. Having been born into the ‘Ndrangther­e heta, she knew was no way out.

“You don’t live, you just survive in

As a child I didn’t understand what mafia was, but I decided to stop them... I worked hard

ALESSANDRA CERRETI ANTI-MOB PROSECUTOR BASED IN MILAN

some way,” she once said. “You dream about something, anything – because nothing’s worse than that life.”

Desperate to make a new life for her and Denise, she bravely went to the authoritie­s to turn in her husband. Forced to flee into witness protection, she was tailed by Cosco’s men for the next 13 years, until he was released from prison and begged to see her. Knowing the risk she ran, Lea decided to meet him in Milan.

The first few days were quiet and calm, they dined together as a family each evening. But on the last night, Lea disappeare­d. Fragments of her body were found years later: she had been burnt and hit in the face with a mast multiple times. The message was clear: if you cross the ‘Ndrangheta, you pay with your life.

It was at this point in 2010 that Alessandra joined the prosecutor’s office. She worked with fearless Denise to get justice for her mum.

Six mobsters including Cosco and two of his brothers were given life sentences for the brutal murder.

It led to two more women coming forward with their own stories of life in the mob. Maria Concetta Cacciola, who had been married off at 13 and beaten by her husband, walked into a police station one day and told the officer she was willing to testify against the ‘Ndrangheta.

After meeting with Alessandra, she left her children and family for witness protection. But it wasn’t long before her furious relatives tracked her down and began intimidati­ng her, using her children as leverage.

Unable to take the pressure, after seven weeks of testimony Cacciola returned home. Days later she was dead, with an empty litre bottle of hydrochlor­ic acid found next to her body in the family’s basement.

Her parents claimed it was suicide. A recording of her retracting her evidence turned up at the prosecutor­s’ office three days later. Alessandra despaired: the case against the ‘Ndrangheta was breaking down and the death would surely dissuade any other woman from coming forward.

But she hadn’t counted on Cacciola’s friend Giuseppina Pesce, who had eloped with an ‘Ndrangheti­sta named Rocco Palaia at 14. Pesce was aware her three children would be subjected to the same strict rules as she was. When she was arrested in a 2010 raid, newspapers reported she was having an affair while her husband was in jail.

“Someone who betrays and dishonours the family must be punished by death,” she later said. “It is a law.”

If she was killed or jailed, her two young daughters would have been married off by the mob and her innocent son would have been raised to kill. While in custody, she decided to write to Alessandra and promised to tell the state everything she knew.

“It was an important moment,” says the prosecutor. “Historic. I had to make that young woman understand there was a different life option for her children, a future of freedom. It wasn’t easy but I did it. That woman’s love for her children was stronger than the mafia ties with the family.”

Pesce’s 1,500-page testimony detailed cocaine movements, credit card fraud, evidence of murders and diagrams of the mob’s hierarchy, and was enough to charge 64 members of the ’ndrina with crimes. After five years, multiple members of the clan were jailed, including her uncle, father, husband, mother, brother and grandmothe­r.

Pesce is now in witness protection, moved between safe houses every year to reduce the risk of retaliator­y attacks. She is not permitted to speak to anyone from her old life, but in a letter she said has no regrets.

“All these experience­s strengthen­ed me,” she said. “I knew the risks for me and for my loved ones. But in the end I did it.”

While the ‘Ndrangheta still operates, the authoritie­s have a better grip on its activities as a result of the women’s brave actions.

Alessandra, who must go everywhere with bodyguards, sees stopping the mob as her life’s work. “I’ve never been afraid for my safety, because I am the State,” she says.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? INVESTIGAT­ION
Prosecutor Alessandra Cerreti won trust of mafia women
INVESTIGAT­ION Prosecutor Alessandra Cerreti won trust of mafia women
 ?? ?? DRAMA Actresses Gaia Girace and Micaela Ramazzotti in scene from The Good Mothers
DRAMA Actresses Gaia Girace and Micaela Ramazzotti in scene from The Good Mothers
 ?? ?? KIDNAP Mirror and freed Getty in 1973
KIDNAP Mirror and freed Getty in 1973
 ?? ?? MURDERED
Police images of Lea and suspects
MURDERED Police images of Lea and suspects
 ?? ?? SECURE Site where trial held in Calabria
SECURE Site where trial held in Calabria
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? WITNESS
Lea Garofalo with daughter Denise
WITNESS Lea Garofalo with daughter Denise
 ?? ?? INFORMER
Giuseppina Pesce provided detailed testimony
INFORMER Giuseppina Pesce provided detailed testimony

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