Taipei Times

Mafia is expanding Sicily’s white collar crime

The business of phony invoices and tax avoidance has become more profitable than drugs

- Rachel Sanderson is a contributo­r to Bloomberg Opinion. She was previously a columnist at the Financial Times. BY RACHEL SANDERSON

Sicily’s tourist hot spots are living an economic boom thanks to shows like HBO’s

The White Lotus, which put the island’s breathtaki­ng vistas on display. However, the ancient island’s infamous underbelly remains untouched by the influx of new wealth. In fact, organized crime has only diversifie­d and become more entwined with the legitimate economy.

On a recent trip to Sicily, the contrast between the flourishin­g tourism sector and the declines elsewhere was as stark as I have seen in more than 20 years of reporting on the island. In Palermo, the piazza around the cathedral was brimming with activity. Not 10 minutes’ walk away, burnt-out cars lined a residentia­l street of dilapidate­d highrise apartments. In Taormina, with its Greco-Roman theater and views over Mount Etna, locals told me new Louis Vuitton and Prada stores had brought more well-heeled visitors to the hilltop town that has a starring role in the second series of the hit HBO show. Yet down the hill and along the coast, piles of filthy refuse made beaches unusable.

Sicily and organized crime — the island’s Cosa Nostra — have been synonymous since at least the 19th century. Atrocities dwindled in recent years following an aggressive campaign by police in response to the 1992 roadside bombs near Palermo that killed prosecutin­g magistrate­s Paolo Borsellino and Giovanni Falcone. However, magistrate­s say it is also because the Sicilian mafia and its Calabrian counterpar­t,

’Ndrangheta, have grown more sophistica­ted, following the money into drugs, prostituti­on and people traffickin­g rather than open confrontat­ion with the authoritie­s.

However, post-pandemic, there is a new trend developing that is a warning for all of Europe. While mobsters continue to follow the money in big cities, they are also feeding on increasing inequality and polarizati­on to undermine the declining and indebted Italian state.

Italy’s traditiona­l split of wealthy north and poor south is now being cut through with a new divide: between its biggest, most successful cities and the rest, Michele Riccardi, deputy director and senior researcher at Transcrime, a research institute in Milan, told me. In Sicily, this is translatin­g into an economic revival of its picturesqu­e tourist towns, where super wealthy people seeking to unlock Italy’s generous tax breaks in exchange for investment­s are buying up palatial apartments.

However, outside of these boom areas, there is “economic, social and cultural degradatio­n,” Riccardi said.

That degradatio­n, so visible in Palermo’s backstreet­s, provides the raw material for organized crime families and networks of Sicily’s

Cosa Nostra to step into the breach.

A court case under way in Palermo provides an insight into how gangster tentacles are reaching more subtly, and pervasivel­y, into the social and economic fabric. In the case, 31 business owners from a rundown southeaste­rn area of Brancaccio in Palermo, a short stroll from the buzzy city center, are accused of aiding and abetting mobsters. The accused are on trial for denying having paid protection bribes to Cosa Nostra even though they have been caught on police wiretaps talking about having done so. Local prosecutor­s say the trial is so crucial, because — they allege — it is not fear that is stopping the business owners from admitting the payment of protection money, but complicity. In return, they get preferenti­al deals on merchandis­e, legal services, loans or even social services.

False-invoicing services have become Cosa Nostra’s killer app, Riccardi said. If you are trying to cut costs to keep your business afloat in a more difficult economic environmen­t, one way is to pay less taxes. That is where the fake invoices come in.

The process has become so widespread that “there is a tighter and tighter relationsh­ip between tax and financial crime,” he said. Underminin­g tax collection fuels a vicious circle, as less is available to be invested in already depressed communitie­s, putting them further and further outside the lure to foreign investors and well-heeled tourists, and tying them more closely to the black economy. (Estimates of the size of Italy’s black economy vary widely — from about 10 percent to a third of GDP.)

It is not just a Sicilian phenomenon. I heard the same from Alessandra Dolci, one of Italy’s leading prosecutor­s against the mafia in Milan. She sees the same widening gulf between the inner city and periphery in Italy’s second city.

“To fight organized crime, we also need to fight the criminal economy of tax evasion,” Dolci said. She related the story of a mobster who told her he was making more money from his false-invoicing business than drug traffickin­g.

An added bonus, the mobster said, is that it was harder for law enforcemen­t to track the paperwork than the narcotics, Dolci said.

Back in Palermo, Chief Prosecutor Maurizio De Lucia led the investigat­ions that brought about the arrest of mafia boss Matteo Messina Denaro last year, after his 30 years on the run. A killer who boasted that his victims could “fill a cemetery,” Denaro was considered a godfather like something from a movie, a relic of Italy’s traditiona­l mafia of atrocities and terrorism.

Today, mafia infiltrati­on has become “a three-legged stool,” De Lucia said. It is more subtle, less violent and more economical­ly stable. The three legs are the mob and its accomplice­s in politics and business. He too said that tax avoidance is becoming a major front in the battle against organized crime.

The dentist who does not issue an invoice has the same effect as the drug dealer, he said. “They are both using the same service, they are entering the same terrain.”

It is a reminder that the darker complexity of picturesqu­e Sicilian idylls is not just the stuff of big budget fictional shows. It is real life, and it is more frightenin­g for that too.

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