Italian mafia's brutal tactics recounted at major trial

Informants give details of deeds including intimidation, drug trafficking and murder

LAMEZIA TERME (Italy) • A dead dolphin on a doormat and windows smashed with sledgehammers. Weapons stored in cemetery chapels. Bribes to judges for acquittals, and bogus medical certificates letting convicted killers dodge prison.

These are the stories recounted since January by dozens of 'Ndrangheta members who became state witnesses in Italy's largest anti-mafia trial in three decades, covering everything from intimidation to vote-buying, and drug trafficking to murder.

"They waited for them in Piazza Morelli, invited them to eat ricotta at the farm... and then they killed, burned and melted them," testified one criminal-turned-witness, Andrea Mantella, describing a 1988 revenge killing of two brothers.

The 'Ndrangheta, Italy's most powerful organised crime syndicate, is in the crosshairs of the "maxi-trial" against 355 defendants held in the poor southern region of Calabria, the group's home turf. Having expanded well beyond its rural roots, the 'Ndrangheta now dominates Europe's cocaine trade and has infiltrated many areas of the legal economy throughout Italy, and even abroad.

It is helped by close contacts with politicians and business figures, as well as its stranglehold over the local population in Calabria.

Testimony that wrapped up this month from an unprecedented 58 mafia informants - connected to court by video link - exposed both the brutality of the 'Ndrangheta and the insidious influence of the group at all levels of society.

The trial focuses on one Calabria province, Vibo Valentia, whose family clans are dominated by Luigi "The Supreme" Mancuso, 67, who is on trial after serving a 19-year sentence for drug and mafia crimes until 2012.

With nicknames like Lamb Thigh, Sweetie, Wolf and The Wringer, the defendants - many of whom are related - are alleged bosses and operatives, as well as white-collar enablers. They are accused of procuring weapons, gathering votes or delivering messages.

Others allegedly collected and distributed cash to prisoners, acted as accountants, or managed relations with mafia in other regions. Still others determined extortion targets and planned ambushes.

The court has heard of ambulances moving drugs, water supplies diverted to marijuana crops and drowned migrants buried without coffins after rigged public tenders.

Informant Mantella, a high-ranking member who confessed to numerous murders, said €70,000 (S$108,700) was paid to release him from prison to a medical clinic where "I did what I wanted", underscoring the 'Ndrangheta's financial clout. Mantella and another state witness also testified that the 'Ndrangheta paid €50,000 to a former senator and lawyer, Mr Giancarlo Pittelli, who insists on his innocence, for trial fixing.

The defendants include police, court workers, mayors and officials - some of whom allegedly met the mafia in illegal Masonic lodges.

In the past 30 years, 110 city councils in Calabria have been dissolved over mafia infiltration, including in Lamezia Terme where the trial is being held.

Allegations in the 351-page indictment show how the 'Ndrangheta will stop at nothing to pursue its aims. Various tactics are used to coerce protection money, force owners to sell below market value, get businesses to switch to mafia suppliers, or chase loans with extortionate interest, sometimes above 200 per cent.

Dead puppies, dolphins and goat heads have been dumped on the doorsteps of resisters, threatening phone calls made, beatings meted out, cars torched, Molotov cocktails thrown and shots fired.

Suspects in five murders, including a 'Ndrangheta member killed in 2002 because of his homosexuality, are in the dock in the maxi-trial.

There were 1,320 mafia-related murders in Calabria from 1983 to 2018, according to the authorities.

AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on November 29, 2021, with the headline Italian mafia's brutal tactics recounted at major trial. Subscribe