home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
/
TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
/
1990
/
93
/
jan_mar
/
01259930.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1994-04-24
|
6KB
|
127 lines
<text>
<title>
(Jan. 25, 1993) Gotcha, Godfather!
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Jan. 25, 1993 Stand and Deliver: Bill Clinton
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
ITALY, Page 47
Gotcha, Godfather!
</hdr>
<body>
<p>The capture of the Sicilian Mafia's top don after 23 years as
a fugitive will cripple but not kill the Mob
</p>
<p>By JOHN MOODY/PALERMO
</p>
<p> Salvatore ("Toto") Riina, who listed his occupation as
shepherd, once said the surest cure for a sore finger is to cut
off the arm to which it is attached. Last week Italy's
organized-crime network was decapitated when the 62-year-old
godfather of the Sicilian Mafia was arrested as his car sat
stuck in Palermo's rush-hour traffic.
</p>
<p> As the don quietly surrendered--confirming his identity
and complimenting his captors--Italy's law enforcers smelled
a larger victory in their struggle against the Mob. Riina's
capture was the latest in a series of successes by the
government since it began to get tough with entrenched crime
following the 1992 murders of two of the country's top Mafia
prosecutors. Last September, Giuseppe ("Piddu") Madonia, a
member of the Mafia's 24-man decision-making body known as the
Cupola, was caught after police tapped his portable phone. The
same week Carmine Alfieri, the leader of the Camorra, the Naples
crime syndicate that competes and cooperates with the Sicilian
Mafia, was taken into custody. Even Riina's 84-year-old uncle
was picked up in the search for the top don. Nonetheless, said
Interior Minister Nicola Mancino, "the fight is a long way from
being finished."
</p>
<p> Toto Riina, whose underlings dubbed him "the Short One"
and whose enemies called him "the Beast," had been on the run
for 23 years. Suspected of ordering at least 150 killings, he
was convicted in absentia in 1987 of murder and drug
trafficking and was sentenced to life imprisonment. Some sources
suggested he had undergone plastic surgery to change his
appearance, but apart from grayer hair and a more pronounced
paunch, the man captured last week bore an unmistakable likeness
to an FBI computer-generated drawing based on the last known
photograph of Riina, from 1973.
</p>
<p> The don's blood-soaked leadership of the crime family
based in the western town of Corleone--and through it, of
Sicily's criminal kingdom--had finally repelled a country that
romanticized and at times even sympathized with the so-called
men of honor. Says Pino Arlacchi, a sociologist and author of
two books on the Mafia: "Every time he had to make a choice
between convincing and killing someone, he chose to kill."
</p>
<p> A near illiterate with a brilliant criminal mind, Riina
committed a series of blunders that led to his downfall. Among
his mistakes, say authorities:
</p>
<p>-- He ordered the assassinations last year of Giovanni
Falcone and Paolo Borsellino, two widely admired magistrates who
had made Mafia busting their life's work. Public outrage over
the murders, and the seeming untouchability of those who
committed them, stiffened the Italian government's resolve to
confront organized crime. The national assembly swiftly passed
sweeping antiracketeering laws that permit wider use of phone
taps, property searches, confiscation of the property of
suspected Mafiosi and guarantees of protection for state's
witnesses.
</p>
<p>-- He surrounded himself with a group of thuggish henchmen
who specialized in murder and mayhem rather than the silkier
arts of persuasion and blackmail once favored by the Mafia.
Unlike tradition-bound gangsters who obeyed the vow of silence
when arrested, some of these lieutenants cut deals with the
law. Over the past year, 270 so-called pentiti provided
unprecedented details of the Mob's workings and helped
investigators tighten the net around its chief. According to
some sources, the tip that led to Riina's arrest came from at
least one such stool pigeon who put more faith in the
authorities' promises than in Riina's forgiveness.
</p>
<p>-- He extended the Mob's traditional area of operations.
Riina sent underbosses throughout the Continent to take
advantage of Europe's open borders. He contracted with
Colombia's cocaine cartels to distribute their wares, and was
exploring ways to manipulate stock and currency markets. The
threat of wider Mafia influence persuaded law-enforcement
agencies across Europe and the U.S. to work together.
</p>
<p> Riina's errors were all the more damaging because of a
hardening public sentiment toward corruption. Unlike the U.S.
Mafia, which makes most of its money through criminal activities
like drug smuggling, loan-sharking, prostitution and gambling,
the Italian Mob has gained most of its income by siphoning off
public funds through rigged contracts, faked repairs and padded
expenses for government projects.
</p>
<p> Repeated bribery, corruption and kickback scandals have
soured Italians on authority in general and politicians in
particular. Suspected affiliation with the Mob, once dismissed
as unprovable, has increasingly become a political kiss of
death. Italian authorities believe that the Mob, with less of
its money coming from state funds, will now be forced to turn
to higher-risk crime.
</p>
<p> As news of Riina's arrest spread through Palermo last
week, some residents expressed jubilation, but most had nothing
to say. "It's none of my business," grunted a young man on a
motorcycle. "Knowing too much about that stuff is dangerous."
It will remain so, even with Riina behind bars. At least five
members of the Cupola are still at large. According to some
sources, they long ago sketched out an agreement on how to
divide the shepherd's fields and flock.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>