Santa Fe New Mexican

Hundreds sentenced in Mafia trial

- By Gaia Pianigiani

ROME — Hundreds of defendants were sentenced to prison Monday in a case prosecutor­s and experts said dealt a crucial blow to the Mafia in southern Italy and showed how the mob exerts control over the local economy and institutio­ns through powerful politician­s.

The sentences marked a blow to the criminal syndicate known as ’Ndrangheta by imprisonin­g leading members of the Mancuso crime family, a group based in the southern Italian city of Vibo Valentia that prosecutor­s say has strong links to criminal organizati­ons in the United States and elsewhere.

Giancarlo Pittelli, who served in Parliament and was the regional coordinato­r of the center-right Forza Italia party when it was led by former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, was found guilty of abetting the ‘Ndrangheta and sentenced to 11 years in prison. The case also resulted in prison sentences for a lieutenant in the Carabinier­i, Italy’s military police force, and an official with the local finance police, as well as a former regional councilor and a former member of the Democratic Party’s national assembly.

The reading of the sentences of the more than 330 defendants lasted more than an hour and covered crimes including extortion, money laundering and murder. But the trial also resulted in the acquittals of some members of local institutio­ns, including a mayor, another former regional council member and some local police officials.

The case began more than three years ago, when police raids against the Calabrian Mafia and their associates led to the arrests of more than 330 people in Italy, Switzerlan­d, Germany and Bulgaria. The ’Ndrangheta, while not the most well known Mafia group from Italy, is considered one of the most dangerous.

The crackdown on the internatio­nally notorious Sicilian and southern Italian crime families goes back decades, and has severely depleted their power and influence.

The Campania-based Camorra syndicate has captured the public’s imaginatio­n with movies and TV shows, including the popular HBO Max series Gomorrah.

Yet the ’Ndrangheta, once considered just a group of rural gangs based in Calabria, has grown to control much of Europe’s cocaine trade and has emerged as one of Europe’s most feared criminal organizati­ons.

Prosecutor­s say it has deep connection­s globally, including ties to South American drug lords and associates in about 50 countries, including the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

“From a group of punchers at the order of local wealthy lords, the ’Ndrangheta is now a service agency and a structural component of global capitalism,” said Antonio Nicaso, a professor of the history of organized crime at Queen’s University in Canada who has written extensivel­y about the mob.

“The trial and the verdicts showed how it was able to form alliances with law enforcemen­t officials, the institutio­ns and national politician­s,” he said.

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