https://www.straitstimes.com/world/europe/dutch-free-british-f1-fan-mistaken-for-major-mafia-boss
Dutch free British F1 fan mistaken for major mafia boss
Sept 12, 2021
https://www.straitstimes.com/world/europe/dutch-free-british-f1-fan-mistaken-for-major-mafia-boss
Dutch free British F1 fan mistaken for major mafia boss
Sept 12, 2021
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/jan/16/matteo-messina-denaro-how-fast-living-mafioso-evaded-police-for-30-years
Matteo Messina Denaro: how fast-living mafioso evaded police for 30 years
Sicilian mobster who boasted ‘I filled a cemetery by myself’ managed to stay hidden without going far from home
When the Cosa Nostra boss Salvatore “Totò” Riina was arrested in 1993, after 23 years on the most wanted list, he was living comfortably in Palermo with his wife and four children. Thirteen years later, his sidekick, living like an ascetic, eating cheese and chicory and reading his Bible in a shepherd’s hut near his birthplace, Corleone, was run to ground.
For years, only one of Riina’s inner circle, responsible for a campaign of violence that left hundreds dead including judges, priests and politicians, remained at large. A man known for his wealth and his love of fast cars, who had numerous girlfriends and liked the finer things in life, he nonetheless managed to hide from investigators without going far from home.
The man who once boasted “I filled a cemetery by myself” evaded the police because he still commanded loyalty from the people living in his territory, the town of Castelvetrano and the wider province of Trapani. Hundreds of police had been engaged in the search over the years with no success. A series of arrests of people close to him, including his sister Patrizia, raised hopes that the net was closing, but none of them would talk.
“If you asked, where is Matteo Messina Denaro, people would say, he’s either dead, or he’s in the province of Trapani,” said Giacomo di Girolamo, author of a biography of Denaro called The Invisible. “He wasn’t one of those mafiosi who would go abroad, to Brazil, or northern Europe. He didn’t need to build himself a bunker like the heads of the ‘Ndrangheta in Calabria. He was protected in his territory.”
Investigators described him as combining the qualities of the old and new mafia. “Like the old mafiosi, he sees the mafia as a superior state, involving a select few who are worthy of the honour,” Teresa Principato, a former magistrate and a member of the Direzione Nationale Antimafia (DNA) who was on his trail for decades, said in 2014. “He allows in only those who are close to him. But he is also modern … He is a greedy, ruthless, money-maker who will get involved in any business that makes a profit – and his methods work.”
Denaro’s status within the organisation has long been the subject of speculation. He was Riina’s golden boy, close to the ferocious Graviano brothers from Brancaccio, a suburb of Palermo. “If anything happens to me,” Riina reportedly said, “Matteo and Giuseppe [Graviano] know everything.” After the arrest of the big beasts, the central decision-making commission of Cosa Nostra tried to appoint a new head, but each time investigators were listening in and managed to pounce.
Although his father, Ciccio, was a capo of the old school, it was said that Denaro, known as U Siccu (“Skinny”), did not have the qualities to be a traditional boss. He was too showy, and his obsession with gaming did not impress (another nickname was Diabolik, after a comic book character).
“He became part of the Corleone group, but he was a very modern boss in some ways,” says Di Girolamo. “He was not married, but he had a child with his partner. That would have been unthinkable for an old-style mafia boss. Also, while the old bosses were attached to the rites and trappings of religion, he professed himself to be agnostic, if not atheist.”
The mafia has always been adept at changing with the times, and Denaro’s enduring strength was his connection with the “grey zone” where organised crime coexists with politics and business. As the mafia expert John Dickie puts it in his book Mafia Republic, the grey zone is “an area of society where complicity with the bosses is hard to detect, and where the partnership between the bosses and the businessmen, or between the gun and the laptop, is by no means always tilted in favour of the former”.
His immense wealth came from his investments in energy and refuse, successfully infiltrating local government to get control of important building contracts. Three years ago a windfarm entrepreneur was arrested for bankrolling Denaro. While the mafia’s business dealings are largely in the legitimate sphere, they are still backed by the threat of violence.
Whoever, owing allegiance to the United States and having knowledge of the commission of any treason against them, conceals and does not, as soon as may be, disclose and make known the same to the President or to some judge of the United States, or to the governor or to some judge or justice of a particular State, is guilty of misprision of treason and shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than seven years, or both.