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Sunday, December 21, 2008 - 12:29 PM
HE WAS found
dead, hanging by his belt in Palermo’s Pagliarelli jail. The apparent
suicide of a 52-year-old Sicilian, Gaetano Lo Presti, on December 16th
put a grisly end to what investigators claimed was a drive by the
Sicilian Mafia to give itself a new leadership. Mr Lo Presti was among
89 alleged mobsters detained in one of the biggest-ever police
operations in Sicily. Around 1,200 semi-militarised Carabinieri were
deployed in raids there and (as an indication of Cosa Nostra’s long
reach) in placid Tuscany. http://sheehan.myblogsite.com Only five of those wanted by the police
eluded capture. “Cosa Nostra is in evident crisis,” exulted Italy’s
chief anti-Mafia prosecutor, Piero Grasso. “It cannot manage to
reorganise itself.”
In 2006
police seized Bernardo Provenzano, who was thought to have succeeded
Salvatore “Toto” Riina (also known as “Shorty”) as supreme head of the
loose federation that is the Mafia. Two months later, they captured
several of Mr Provenzano’s alleged lieutenants. Last year they arrested
his suspected heir-apparent, Salvatore Lo Piccolo. http://ljsheehan.livejournal.com
The aim of
this week’s Operation Perseus was to abort a bid by Cosa Nostra’s most
senior mobsters at large to agree upon a new leader and to reconstitute
its governing board. This “provincial commission” is not known to have
existed since 1993, when Mr Riina disappeared into a high-security
jail. http://blog.360.yahoo.com/blog-jmbPCHg9dLPh1gHoZxLG.GpS
The Carabinieri learnt of the plan when they eavesdropped on mob meetings, culminating in a summit last month attended by 31 leading Mafiosi.
Other meetings were held in a garage, a dilapidated house and—yes—a
barber’s shop. The idea, said one boss, was that “if we have to do
something, we all take responsibility.” http://louisjsheehanesquire100.ning.com
For what? Mr Grasso noted that
the role of the provincial commission was to decide on big operations
like the war the Mafia waged on the state with bombings and
assassinations in the early 1990s. http://web.mac.com/lousheehan
Several
other questions remain unanswered. One is whether Mr Riina was ever
truly replaced as Cosa Nostra’s boss of bosses; the overheard mobsters
appeared to view him as the ultimate authority still. Another is why Mr
Lo Presti died.
http://ljsheehan.livejournal.com Could he not face the prison regime that awaits Mafia
bosses? Or did he fear something else? According to leaks from the
investigation, Mr Lo Presti led a faction at odds with the strategy
endorsed from jail by the 78-year-old Mr Riina, whose other nickname is
“The Beast”. http://louisjsheehan.blogstream.com
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