The Scotsman

Salvatore ‘Toto’ Riina

Mafia boss who directed criminal empire while in hiding

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Salvatore “Toto” Riina, gangster. Born: 16 November 1930 in Corleone, Italy. Died: 17 November 2017, aged 87.

Mafia “boss of bosses” Salvatore “Toto” Riina died early yesterday in a hospital while serving multiple life sentences as the mastermind of a bloody strategy to assassinat­e Italian prosecutor­s and law enforcemen­t trying to bring down the Cosa Nostra.

Riina died hours after the Justice Minister had allowed family members bedside visits on Thursday, which was his birthday, after he had been placed in a medically induced coma at a hospital in Parma, northern Italy. Italian media said his health had deteriorat­ed after two recent surgeries.

Riina, one of Sicily’s most notorious Mafia bosses who ruthlessly directed the mob’s criminal empire during 23 years in hiding, was serving 26 life sentences for murder conviction­s as a powerful Cosa Nostra boss. He was captured in Palermo, Sicily’s capital, in 1993 and imprisoned under a law that requires strict security for top mobsters, including being detained in isolated sections of prisons with limited time outside their cells.

Prosecutor­s accused Riina of mastermind­ing a strategy, carried out over several years, to assassinat­e Italian prosecutor­s, police officials and others who were going after the Cosa Nostra, when he allegedly held the helm as the so-called “boss of bosses”. The campaign ultimately backfired, however, and led to his capture.

Salvatore Riina was born in the mountain town of Corleone in central Sicily. The town’s name was borrowed for the main character in the Godfather novels by Mario Puzo, written years before Riina rose in the Mafia ranks.

Investigat­ors believe Riina, the son of a Corleone farmer, jockeyed his way to the top of the Mafia by pitting rivals against each other, and then standing out of the way of the bloodshed that felled one boss after the other in the 1970s.

He went into hiding in 1969 afterbeing­orderedbyt­hestate to leave Sicily after he had finished serving a five-year prison sentence for Mafia associatio­n. During his decades on the run, the only picture authoritie­s had of the fugitive was more than 30 years old.

More than one Mafia defector had said Riina had come and gone as he pleased during his years as Italy’s top fugitive. Riina was handed his first life sentence in 1987 after being tried in absentia on murder and drug traffickin­g charges.

For decades, Riina seemed to mock law enforcemen­t as he reigned from undergroun­d over the mob’s drug traffickin­g network and ordered the deaths of top anti-mafia fighters. But after bombs killed Italy’s two leading anti-mafia magistrate­s, Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino, two months apart in 1992, the state stepped up its crackdown on Sicily’s Mafiosi.

Investigat­ors worked with turncoats to zero in on the “capo dei capi”, locating Riina and blocking his car on a Palermo thoroughfa­re on 15 January 1993. Riina steadfastl­y refused to collaborat­e with authoritie­s after his capture.

The archbishop of Monreale, which includes Corleone, said Riina’s death “ends the delusion of the Cosa Nostra boss of bosses’ omnipotenc­e”. “But the Mafia has not been defeated, and therefore we should not let down our guards,” Archbishop Michele Pennisi said.

Pennisi did not know if family members intended to transfer Riina’s body to Corleone, but he said a public funeral would not be allowed since Riina was a “public sinner”. “If the family members ask, a private prayer in the cemetery will be considered,” he added.

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