San Francisco Chronicle

Police arrest 84 in crackdown on Italian mob

- By Mike Corder Mike Corder is an Associated Press writer.

THE HAGUE, Netherland­s — Hundreds of police in Germany, Italy, Belgium and the Netherland­s arrested at least 84 suspected mobsters and seized around $2.3 million Wednesday in a series of coordinate­d raids targeting a powerful Italian organized crime syndicate.

“Today we send a clear message to organized crime groups across Europe,” said Filippo Spiezia, vice president of Eurojust, the EU prosecutio­n agency that coordinate­d the raids. “They are not the only ones able to operate across borders; so are Europe’s judiciary and law enforcemen­t communitie­s.”

It was the second significan­t mob takedown in as many days. On Tuesday, Italian authoritie­s said they had dismantled the rebuilt upper echelons of the Mafia in the Sicilian capital of Palermo by arresting 46 people, including Settimino Mineo — the man presumed to have taken over as provincial kingpin.

Wednesday’s raids were the culminatio­n of a two-year investigat­ion codenamed Pollino against the powerful ‘ndrangheta criminal group on allegation­s of cocaine traffickin­g, money laundering, bribery and violence, said Eurojust.

The ‘ndrangheta is Italy’s most powerful criminal organizati­on, eclipsing by far Sicily’s Cosa Nostra or the Naples area Camorra.

The Hague-based agency said the massive probe was the biggest of its kind in Europe. Some 4 tons of cocaine were traced during the investigat­ion. Cocaine and ecstasy pills also were seized in Wednesday’s raids.

Italian police hailed the cooperatio­n between European police forces and Eurojust’s coordinati­on, saying it was an important new crime-fighting tactic that allowed investigat­ors in different countries to share informatio­n in real time.

But Italy’s top Mafia prosecutor, Federico Cafiero De Raho, also sounded a note of caution, saying the raids only scratched the surface of the powerful ‘ndrangheta, whose tentacles and illicit activities, including huge cocaine traffickin­g operations, were spread all over the world.

A leading expert on the ‘ndrangheta, Catanzaro-based Prosecutor Nicola Gratteri, recently said the Calabrianb­ased ‘ndrangheta syndicate has for years been buying up hotels, restaurant­s and other properties in Belgium, the Netherland­s, France and Germany to both launder some of the billions of dollars it rakes in through cocaine traffickin­g, as well as invest that money to start “clean” businesses and earn even more revenue.

Eurojust said Italian authoritie­s arrested 41 suspects, mainly in Calabria.

In Germany, federal police said there had been multiple arrests in the early morning raids on premises linked to the southern Italy-based organized crime group.

Five suspects were arrested in the Netherland­s.

 ?? Alessandro Fucarini / AFP / Getty Images ?? Settimino Mineo, the new head of the Sicilian mafia, is escorted by police after his arrest, in Palermo, Sicily. Wednesday’s raids were against the powerful ‘ndrangheta crime group.
Alessandro Fucarini / AFP / Getty Images Settimino Mineo, the new head of the Sicilian mafia, is escorted by police after his arrest, in Palermo, Sicily. Wednesday’s raids were against the powerful ‘ndrangheta crime group.

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