Ottawa Citizen

ARSONS LINKED TO MONTREAL MOB WAR

- SIDHARTHA BANERJEE

MONTREAL •Aspateofre­cent Montreal-area arsons linked to organized crime suggests the battle for Mafia leadership in Quebec remains fractured, experts say.

What is likely, they say, is the era that saw charismati­c peacemaker Vito Rizzuto rule for three decades will be replaced by something altogether different.

Author and university lecturer Antonio Nicaso says the Mafia will regenerate through the conflicts and death. What will emerge, he suggests, will be a structure that is more democratic and open to joint ventures with other criminal groups.

“They will find another type of organizati­onal structure to put in place,” Nicaso said. “It won’t be the same type of organizati­on that controlled Montreal for 30 years, a type of Mafia monarchy that controlled everything with a charismati­c boss.”

Rizzuto, who died of natural causes in 2013, was viewed as a unifying underworld force, and instabilit­y has been the order of the day since his time in a U.S. prison and his death.

Andre Cedilot, a former journalist who writes about organized crime, said the battle now appears to pit Calabrian clans that are battling for power against the last remnants of the Rizzuto loyalists, many of whom are Sicilian. The Calabrians are being assisted by Ontariobas­ed groups.

Cedilot said there is a move to seek a more equitable division of territory and rackets through partnershi­ps with street gangs and the re-emerging Hells Angels.

“For sure, it’s changing because the clans that were all-powerful, like the Rizzuto clan, we can say they are in the process of disappeari­ng,” Cedilot said.

The various arsons this year, including one that levelled a strip mall in Laval, followed a handful of highprofil­e killings last year.

Lorenzo Giordano, described as a Rizzuto underboss, was killed last March, while Rocco Sollecito, a former Rizzuto right-hand man according to police documents, was slain in May. Another ex-Rizzuto associate was killed in October.

At least three attempts to reorganize the leadership structure have failed in recent years — the last falling apart in November 2015 with the arrests of Leonardo Rizzuto and Stefano Sollecito as well as biker and street gang associates.

Pierre de Champlain, an author and former RCMP analyst, suggests the next leader will be homegrown.

“I find it difficult to see anyone coming from outside of Montreal coming in here to become leader of the Montreal Mafia,” de Champlain said. “The next leader will be someone from Montreal, who grew up in Montreal.”

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