New York Post

God-foster, Part II

Italy expands Mafia kid aid

- By JORGE FITZ-GIBBON jfitz-gibbon@nypost.com

Forget the godfather, meet the foster father.

A bizarre plan hatched 12 years ago by a fed-up Italian judge to force the kids of jailed Mafiosos into foster care has worked out so well at keeping them on the straight and narrow that it’s expanding to southern Sicily, the birthplace of La Cosa Nostra.

“It has been an extraordin­ary success,” Judge Roberto Di Bella told the Times of London on Wednesday.

“In Catania, kids as young as 7 are sent out to be pushers, while parents take out younger children in prams as cover when they are transporti­ng kilos of drugs.

“Now with the new protocol we can expect an important increase in the number of children involved — we can change the destiny of thousands of minors,” he said.

The controvers­ial plan that was launched in Southern Italy to place kids of Italian Mafia bosses with foster families to cut their inherited underworld ties are being tested out in Sicily after about 150 mob-tied children were relocated in Calabria over the years, the report said.

No more little caesars

Called “Free to Choose,” Di Bella hatched the program after growing tired of seeing generation after generation of organized crime figures following in their fathers’ footsteps.

“There’s a religious baptism and a Mafioso baptism which is confirmed when you reach a certain age,” mob writer Antonio Nicaso told the BBC in 2013, shortly after the program launched.

Raised to be hoodlums, the kids included a Mafia youngster charged with six murders and others who were ordered to kill their own mothers after they were unfaithful to their jailed mob husbands.

“So this means that often the children of bosses — particular­ly the firstborn — are predestine­d to follow in their father’s footsteps,” Nicaso said.

Once pulled free of their criminal birthright, many youngsters flourished, Di Bella found in the years after the program was implemente­d.

First deployed against the Ndrangheta family, the policy had early critics — but eventually it won over some mobsters and saw about 30 mob wives opting to join their kids in statefunde­d new homes, according to the report.

One jailed mob boss went so far as to thank Di Bella for sparing his four grandchild­ren from “The Life.”

“This is a historic moment in the fight against the mafia,” said Carlo Nordio, Italy’s justice minister.

 ?? ?? POLICY YOU CAN’T REFUSE: Kids in Palermo, Italy, rally in support of anti-Mafia magistrate­s like Judge Roberto Di Bella (inset), who’s widening a plan that houses orphaned Cosa Nostra bambinos and bambinas.
POLICY YOU CAN’T REFUSE: Kids in Palermo, Italy, rally in support of anti-Mafia magistrate­s like Judge Roberto Di Bella (inset), who’s widening a plan that houses orphaned Cosa Nostra bambinos and bambinas.

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