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Cesare Mori

Cesare Mori (Italian pronunciation: [ˈtʃeːzare ˈmɔri, ˈtʃɛː-]; 22 December 1871 – 5 July 1942) was a prefect (prefetto) before and during the Italian Fascism period. He is known in Italy as the "Iron Prefect" (Prefetto di Ferro) because of his iron-fisted campaigns against Sicilian Mafia in the second half of the 1920s.

Cesare Mori
Member of the Italian Senate
In office
10 January 1928 – 5 July 1942
MonarchVictor Emmanuel III
Prefect of Palermo
In office
1 November 1925 – 1 June 1929
Prefect of Trapani
In office
2 June 1924 – 12 October 1925
Prefect of Bologna
In office
8 February 1921 – 20 August 1922
Police commissioner of Castelvetrano
In office
1909 – January 1915
Personal details
Born(1871-12-22)22 December 1871
Pavia, Kingdom of Italy
Died5 July 1942(1942-07-05) (aged 70)
Udine, Friuli, Kingdom of Italy
Political partyNational Fascist Party
Spouse(s)
Angelina Salvi
(m. 1897⁠–⁠1942)
; her death
Alma materUniversity of Palermo (Hd)
ProfessionSoldier, police officer, politician
Nickname"The Iron Prefect"
Military service
Allegiance Kingdom of Italy
Branch/service Royal Italian Army
Years of service1895–1898
RankSoldier
Battles/warsNone

Mori described himself as a Fascist, and wrote strongly of his admiration of the effectiveness of both the National Fascist Party and Benito Mussolini several times in his self authored accounts in Sicily, "What caused the undoubted efforts made in the past to peter out was a feeling of listlessness, in the minds of the people which seemed refractory even to unusual stimulants. It was not a reality, it was not a fact, but a feeling; yet the past was infected and dominated by it until the day when, on the coming of Fascism, the Duce in person broke the evil spell."[1] Mori is also known for being the first to ever destroy the influence of the Mafia within Italy.[2][3] The 1977 film Il prefetto di ferro, directed by Pasquale Squitieri, is about his fight against the Mafia when he was prefect in Sicily.

Early years edit

Mori was born in Pavia in Lombardy and grew up in an orphanage and was only recognised by his natural parents in October 1879 at the age of seven. He studied at the Turin Military Academy. However, he married a girl, Angelina Salvi, who did not have the dowry stipulated by military regulations of the time, and had to resign.[4] He joined the police, serving first in Ravenna, then Castelvetrano in the province of Trapani (Sicily) – where he made his name capturing the bandit Paolo Grisalfi – before moving to Florence in 1915 as vice-quaestor.[5]

At the end of the First World War, the situation of Sicilian criminality got worse when war veterans joined gangs of bandits. In 1919 Mori was sent back to Sicily as the head of special forces against brigandage.[6] In his roundups, Mori distinguished himself for his energetic and radical methods. At Caltabellotta he arrested more than 300 people in one night.[7] The press wrote of a "lethal blow to the Mafia", but Mori said to a member of his staff :

These people haven't understood yet that brigands and the Mafia are two different things. We have hit the first, who are undoubtedly the most visible aspect of Sicilian criminality, but not the most dangerous one. The true lethal blow to the Mafia will be delivered when we are able to make roundups not only among Prickly Pears, but in prefectures, police headquarters, employers' mansions, and why not, some ministries.[7]

In 1920, he returned to the mainland and served in Turin as quaestor, followed by Rome and Bologna. In 1921 he was prefect of Bologna, and was one of the few members of the forces of law and order to oppose the organised thuggery (squadrismo) of the Fascist movement. Mori was removed and sent to Bari. He retired with his wife to Florence in 1922, when the Fascist leader Benito Mussolini took over the government after the March on Rome.[8]

Appointed in Sicily edit

His reputation as a man of action caused his recall to active service in 1924 by the Minister of the Interior, Luigi Federzoni. In the same year, Mori joined the Fascist Party.

He was next appointed prefect of Trapani. Arriving in June 1924, he stayed there until 20 October 1925, when Mussolini appointed him prefect of Palermo, with special powers over the entire island of Sicily and the mission of eradicating the Mafia by any means possible. In a telegram Mussolini wrote to Mori:

Your Excellency has carte blanche, the authority of the State must absolutely, I repeat absolutely, be re-established in Sicily. Should the laws currently in effect hinder you, that will be no problem, we shall make new laws.[9]

Mussolini's drive against the Mafia, the story goes, followed an official visit to Sicily in May 1924 during which he felt insulted by the Mafioso Francesco Cuccia, who publicly proclaimed that Mussolini did not need a police escort because the mere presence of Cuccia would protect him. Mussolini felt humiliated and outraged.[10][11] However, according to scholar Christopher Duggan, the reason was more political rather than personal. The Mafia threatened and undermined his power in Sicily, and a successful campaign would strengthen him as the new leader, thus legitimising and strengthening his rule.[12]

Fight against the Mafia edit

 
Mori in black shirt

Mori took up his post in Palermo in November 1925 and remained in office until 1929. Within the first two months he arrested over five hundred men, a number that would only grow in the following years.[13] In January 1926, he undertook what was probably his most famous action, the occupation of the village of Gangi, a stronghold of various criminal gangs. Using carabinieri and police forces he ordered house-to-house searches, picking up bandits, small-time Mafia members and various suspects who were on the run. Due to the necessity of the nature of the mafia, he was forced to discreetly collect large amounts of evidence and subsequently make arrests en masse to avoid large numbers of mafiosi going into hiding. As he poetically states, "These operations were carried out in considerable numbers and on a large scale: and the rapidity with which they succeeded one another and the exactness of evidence on which they were based completely strangled the criminal associations which for so many years had flourished with impunity. And the whole island chanted a hymn of liberation."[14] These sweeping mass arrests, earned him the nickname of "Iron Prefect".

Mori understood the basis of Mafia power. In order to defeat the phenomenon, he felt it necessary to "forge a direct bond between the population and the state, to annul the system of mediation under which citizens could not approach the authorities except through middlemen..., receiving as a favour that which is due them as their right."[15] Mori's methods were sometimes similar to those of the Mafia. He did not just arrest the bandits, but sought to humiliate them as well. If he could display a strong central authority to rival the Mafia, people would see that the Mafia was not their only option for protection.[13] He often found evidence of how the Mafia operated, and seized their property and cattle.

Mori's inquiries brought evidence of collusion between the Mafia and influential members of the State apparatus and the Fascist party. His position, however, became more precarious. Some 11,000 arrests are attributed to Mori's rule in Palermo.[16] That led to massive amounts of paperwork in order to prepare for the trials, which may have been partially responsible for his dismissal.[17][3]

Mussolini had already nominated Mori as a senator in 1928, and in June 1929 he was relieved of his duties. The Fascist propaganda proudly announced that the Mafia had been defeated.[18]

Final years edit

As a senator, Mori continued to follow Sicilian affairs closely, and made sure he was always well informed; but he no longer had much political influence. He wrote his memoirs in 1932. Five years later he openly expressed concerns about Mussolini's new alliance with Adolf Hitler,[citation needed] and was isolated inside the Fascist Party from that time on.[citation needed] He retired to Udine in 1941 (though he never formally left the senate), and he died in Udine one year later. By this stage he was a largely forgotten figure in a country preoccupied with the Second World War.

Impact edit

At the time and since, the general perception was that Mori had smashed the Mafia. Sicily's murder rate sharply declined in the early 1930s.[19] The Mafia pentito Antonio Calderone said that Mori's crackdown had hit the Mafia hard.[20] Some Mafiosi escaped and moved abroad (especially to the United States), such as Joseph Bonanno. Other Mafiosi remained in Sicily and either turned over their fellow Mafiosi (or low-level bandits) to the police or simply went quiet and sought accommodation with the Fascist authorities until the end of the regime in Italy.[21]

With the invasion of Sicily in 1943 and the collapse of the Fascist regime, the Mafia re-established itself, sometimes with the help or ignorance of the Allied Military Government of Occupied Territories (AMGOT). AMGOT needed the support of local elites in order to govern. Because of their local authority, their record of persecution under the Fascist regime, and their willingness to cooperate with the Allies, noted Mafiosi, such as Calogero Vizzini and Giuseppe Genco Russo, were appointed to head local administrations in many of the towns in western Sicily.[15] According to the journalist Michele Pantaleone:

By the beginning of the Second World War, the Mafia had dwindled to a few isolated and scattered groups and could have been completely wiped out if the social problems of the island had been dealt with... the Allied occupation and the subsequent slow restoration of democracy reinstated the Mafia with its full powers, put it once more on the way to becoming a political force, and returned to the Onorata Società the weapons which Fascism had snatched from it.[22]

The neo-fascist politician Giorgio Almirante wrote on Il Borghese in the 1970s that Sicilian society was really transformed by the full destruction of the Mafia in the 1930s, but the destruction of World War II and the imposition of "antifascism", which criticised everything achieved by Fascism, even against mafiosi, together with the return of the (Allies-sponsored) Mafia bosses, who had taken refuge in the United States, was responsible for the Mafia's resurgence in postwar Sicily.[citation needed]

However, some writers today have questioned the effectiveness and value of the methods used by Mori against the Mafia. While his methods were certainly effective, at least in the short term, Timothy Newark has written that they mainly targeted the small-time criminals of Sicily and left the big-timers, the real Mafia bosses, relatively unscathed, which drove the Mafia underground but failed to stamp it out.[23] Judith Chubb says, "Fascism succeeded in stamping out the Mafia as a criminal organization by providing a more efficient substitute. It succeeded in monopolizing political power and the use of violence without, however, transforming the social and economic conditions in which the Mafia had flourished. It was thus no surprise that the Mafia re-emerged as soon as Fascism fell."[15]

In popular culture edit

In Leonardo Sciascia's 1961 novel The Day of the Owl (Il giorno della civetta), the main character, a captain of the Carabinieri, recalls the great popularity of Mori's results among the Sicilian common people, and the widespread nostalgia for Fascism among them at the time.[24] Mori's campaign against the Mafia was the subject of a 1977 film, Il prefetto di ferro, directed by Pasquale Squitieri, starring Giuliano Gemma and Claudia Cardinale, with music by Ennio Morricone.[25] In 2012, the Italian public broadcaster RAI produced Cesare Mori - Il prefetto di ferro.

Autobiography edit

  • Mori, Cesare (1933), The last struggle with the Mafia, London/New York: Putnam

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Mori, Cesare (1933). The Last Struggle With the Mafia. Black House. p. 141. ISBN 978-1-910881-38-5.
  2. ^ Mori, Cesare (1933). The Last Struggle With the Mafia. Black House. pp. 5, 205. ISBN 978-1-910881-38-5.
  3. ^ a b Newark, Mafia Allies, pp. 45-46
  4. ^ Newark, Mafia Allies, p. 28
  5. ^ Dickie, Cosa Nostra, pp. 176-78
  6. ^ Newark, Mafia Allies, p. 17
  7. ^ a b Petacco, Il prefetto di ferro, p. ?
  8. ^ Newark, Mafia Allies, pp. 20-21
  9. ^ Petacco, L'uomo della provvidenza, p. 190.
  10. ^ Newark, Mafia Allies, p. 23
  11. ^ Dickie, Cosa Nostra, p. 182
  12. ^ Duggan, Fascism and the Mafia, p. 119
  13. ^ a b Governmental Floundering and the Survival of the Mafia, by Dominica Tarica, The Florence Newspaper
  14. ^ Mori, Cesare (1933). The Last Struggle With the Mafia. Black House. pp. 89, 169. ISBN 978-1-910881-38-5.
  15. ^ a b c The Mafia and Politics 4 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine, by Judith Chubb, Cornell Studies in International Affairs, Occasional Papers No. 23, 1989
  16. ^ Duggan, Fascism and the Mafia, p. 245
  17. ^ Duggan, Fascism and the Mafia, p. 225
  18. ^ Newark, Mafia Allies, pp. 47-48
  19. ^ Lupo, History of the Mafia, p. 186
  20. ^ Dickie, Cosa Nostra, pp. 175-76
  21. ^ Duggan, Fascism and the Mafia, p. 189
  22. ^ Pantaleone, The Mafia and Politics, p. 52, quoted in The Mafia Restored: Fighters for Democracy in World War II April 17, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia, Alfred W. McCoy.
  23. ^ Newark, Mafia Allies, p. 203
  24. ^ Sciascia,The Day of the Owl, p. ?
  25. ^ , New York Times Movies

Sources edit

  • Mori, Cesare (1933) The last struggle with the Mafia, London & New York; Putnam;
  • Mori, Cesare (1923) Tra le zagare oltre la foschia, Firenze
  • Dickie, John (2004). Cosa Nostra. A history of the Sicilian Mafia, London: Coronet, ISBN 0-340-82435-2
  • Duggan, Christopher (1989). Fascism and the Mafia, New Haven: Yale University Press ISBN 0-300-04372-4
  • Newark, Tim (2007). Mafia Allies. The True Story of America's Secret Alliance with the Mob in World War II, Saint Paul (MN): Zenith Press ISBN 0-7603-2457-3 ()
  • Petacco Arrigo (2004). L'uomo della provvidenza: Mussolini, ascesa e caduta di un mito, Milan: Mondadori.
  • Petacco, Arrigo (1975/2004). Il prefetto di ferro. L'uomo di Mussolini che mise in ginocchio la mafia, Milan: Mondadori ISBN 88-04-53275-0
  • Sciascia, Leonardo (1963). The Day of the Owl (originally published as: , Turin: Einaudi, 1961)

External links edit

  • Sicily And The Mafia: Part Four - Mussolini Takes On the Mafia, by Mike La Sorte, AmericanMafia.com, April 2004
  • , by Mike La Sorte, AmericanMafia.com, June 2005
  • The last Struggle with the Mafia Mori, Cesare, London & New York; Putnam (1933) at The Internet Archive

cesare, mori, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead, provide, accessible, overview, important, aspects, article, january, 2024, italian, pronunciation, ˈtʃeːzare, ˈmɔri, ˈtʃɛː, december, 1871, jul. This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article January 2024 Cesare Mori Italian pronunciation ˈtʃeːzare ˈmɔri ˈtʃɛː 22 December 1871 5 July 1942 was a prefect prefetto before and during the Italian Fascism period He is known in Italy as the Iron Prefect Prefetto di Ferro because of his iron fisted campaigns against Sicilian Mafia in the second half of the 1920s Cesare MoriMember of the Italian SenateIn office 10 January 1928 5 July 1942MonarchVictor Emmanuel IIIPrefect of PalermoIn office 1 November 1925 1 June 1929Prefect of TrapaniIn office 2 June 1924 12 October 1925Prefect of BolognaIn office 8 February 1921 20 August 1922Police commissioner of CastelvetranoIn office 1909 January 1915Personal detailsBorn 1871 12 22 22 December 1871Pavia Kingdom of ItalyDied5 July 1942 1942 07 05 aged 70 Udine Friuli Kingdom of ItalyPolitical partyNational Fascist PartySpouse s Angelina Salvi m 1897 1942 wbr her deathAlma materUniversity of Palermo Hd ProfessionSoldier police officer politicianNickname The Iron Prefect Military serviceAllegiance Kingdom of ItalyBranch service Royal Italian ArmyYears of service1895 1898RankSoldierBattles warsNone Mori described himself as a Fascist and wrote strongly of his admiration of the effectiveness of both the National Fascist Party and Benito Mussolini several times in his self authored accounts in Sicily What caused the undoubted efforts made in the past to peter out was a feeling of listlessness in the minds of the people which seemed refractory even to unusual stimulants It was not a reality it was not a fact but a feeling yet the past was infected and dominated by it until the day when on the coming of Fascism the Duce in person broke the evil spell 1 Mori is also known for being the first to ever destroy the influence of the Mafia within Italy 2 3 The 1977 film Il prefetto di ferro directed by Pasquale Squitieri is about his fight against the Mafia when he was prefect in Sicily Contents 1 Early years 2 Appointed in Sicily 3 Fight against the Mafia 4 Final years 5 Impact 6 In popular culture 7 Autobiography 8 See also 9 References 10 Sources 11 External linksEarly years editMori was born in Pavia in Lombardy and grew up in an orphanage and was only recognised by his natural parents in October 1879 at the age of seven He studied at the Turin Military Academy However he married a girl Angelina Salvi who did not have the dowry stipulated by military regulations of the time and had to resign 4 He joined the police serving first in Ravenna then Castelvetrano in the province of Trapani Sicily where he made his name capturing the bandit Paolo Grisalfi before moving to Florence in 1915 as vice quaestor 5 At the end of the First World War the situation of Sicilian criminality got worse when war veterans joined gangs of bandits In 1919 Mori was sent back to Sicily as the head of special forces against brigandage 6 In his roundups Mori distinguished himself for his energetic and radical methods At Caltabellotta he arrested more than 300 people in one night 7 The press wrote of a lethal blow to the Mafia but Mori said to a member of his staff These people haven t understood yet that brigands and the Mafia are two different things We have hit the first who are undoubtedly the most visible aspect of Sicilian criminality but not the most dangerous one The true lethal blow to the Mafia will be delivered when we are able to make roundups not only among Prickly Pears but in prefectures police headquarters employers mansions and why not some ministries 7 In 1920 he returned to the mainland and served in Turin as quaestor followed by Rome and Bologna In 1921 he was prefect of Bologna and was one of the few members of the forces of law and order to oppose the organised thuggery squadrismo of the Fascist movement Mori was removed and sent to Bari He retired with his wife to Florence in 1922 when the Fascist leader Benito Mussolini took over the government after the March on Rome 8 Appointed in Sicily editHis reputation as a man of action caused his recall to active service in 1924 by the Minister of the Interior Luigi Federzoni In the same year Mori joined the Fascist Party He was next appointed prefect of Trapani Arriving in June 1924 he stayed there until 20 October 1925 when Mussolini appointed him prefect of Palermo with special powers over the entire island of Sicily and the mission of eradicating the Mafia by any means possible In a telegram Mussolini wrote to Mori Your Excellency has carte blanche the authority of the State must absolutely I repeat absolutely be re established in Sicily Should the laws currently in effect hinder you that will be no problem we shall make new laws 9 Mussolini s drive against the Mafia the story goes followed an official visit to Sicily in May 1924 during which he felt insulted by the Mafioso Francesco Cuccia who publicly proclaimed that Mussolini did not need a police escort because the mere presence of Cuccia would protect him Mussolini felt humiliated and outraged 10 11 However according to scholar Christopher Duggan the reason was more political rather than personal The Mafia threatened and undermined his power in Sicily and a successful campaign would strengthen him as the new leader thus legitimising and strengthening his rule 12 Fight against the Mafia editMain article Sicilian Mafia during the Mussolini regime nbsp Mori in black shirt Mori took up his post in Palermo in November 1925 and remained in office until 1929 Within the first two months he arrested over five hundred men a number that would only grow in the following years 13 In January 1926 he undertook what was probably his most famous action the occupation of the village of Gangi a stronghold of various criminal gangs Using carabinieri and police forces he ordered house to house searches picking up bandits small time Mafia members and various suspects who were on the run Due to the necessity of the nature of the mafia he was forced to discreetly collect large amounts of evidence and subsequently make arrests en masse to avoid large numbers of mafiosi going into hiding As he poetically states These operations were carried out in considerable numbers and on a large scale and the rapidity with which they succeeded one another and the exactness of evidence on which they were based completely strangled the criminal associations which for so many years had flourished with impunity And the whole island chanted a hymn of liberation 14 These sweeping mass arrests earned him the nickname of Iron Prefect Mori understood the basis of Mafia power In order to defeat the phenomenon he felt it necessary to forge a direct bond between the population and the state to annul the system of mediation under which citizens could not approach the authorities except through middlemen receiving as a favour that which is due them as their right 15 Mori s methods were sometimes similar to those of the Mafia He did not just arrest the bandits but sought to humiliate them as well If he could display a strong central authority to rival the Mafia people would see that the Mafia was not their only option for protection 13 He often found evidence of how the Mafia operated and seized their property and cattle Mori s inquiries brought evidence of collusion between the Mafia and influential members of the State apparatus and the Fascist party His position however became more precarious Some 11 000 arrests are attributed to Mori s rule in Palermo 16 That led to massive amounts of paperwork in order to prepare for the trials which may have been partially responsible for his dismissal 17 3 Mussolini had already nominated Mori as a senator in 1928 and in June 1929 he was relieved of his duties The Fascist propaganda proudly announced that the Mafia had been defeated 18 Final years editAs a senator Mori continued to follow Sicilian affairs closely and made sure he was always well informed but he no longer had much political influence He wrote his memoirs in 1932 Five years later he openly expressed concerns about Mussolini s new alliance with Adolf Hitler citation needed and was isolated inside the Fascist Party from that time on citation needed He retired to Udine in 1941 though he never formally left the senate and he died in Udine one year later By this stage he was a largely forgotten figure in a country preoccupied with the Second World War Impact editAt the time and since the general perception was that Mori had smashed the Mafia Sicily s murder rate sharply declined in the early 1930s 19 The Mafia pentito Antonio Calderone said that Mori s crackdown had hit the Mafia hard 20 Some Mafiosi escaped and moved abroad especially to the United States such as Joseph Bonanno Other Mafiosi remained in Sicily and either turned over their fellow Mafiosi or low level bandits to the police or simply went quiet and sought accommodation with the Fascist authorities until the end of the regime in Italy 21 With the invasion of Sicily in 1943 and the collapse of the Fascist regime the Mafia re established itself sometimes with the help or ignorance of the Allied Military Government of Occupied Territories AMGOT AMGOT needed the support of local elites in order to govern Because of their local authority their record of persecution under the Fascist regime and their willingness to cooperate with the Allies noted Mafiosi such as Calogero Vizzini and Giuseppe Genco Russo were appointed to head local administrations in many of the towns in western Sicily 15 According to the journalist Michele Pantaleone By the beginning of the Second World War the Mafia had dwindled to a few isolated and scattered groups and could have been completely wiped out if the social problems of the island had been dealt with the Allied occupation and the subsequent slow restoration of democracy reinstated the Mafia with its full powers put it once more on the way to becoming a political force and returned to the Onorata Societa the weapons which Fascism had snatched from it 22 The neo fascist politician Giorgio Almirante wrote on Il Borghese in the 1970s that Sicilian society was really transformed by the full destruction of the Mafia in the 1930s but the destruction of World War II and the imposition of antifascism which criticised everything achieved by Fascism even against mafiosi together with the return of the Allies sponsored Mafia bosses who had taken refuge in the United States was responsible for the Mafia s resurgence in postwar Sicily citation needed However some writers today have questioned the effectiveness and value of the methods used by Mori against the Mafia While his methods were certainly effective at least in the short term Timothy Newark has written that they mainly targeted the small time criminals of Sicily and left the big timers the real Mafia bosses relatively unscathed which drove the Mafia underground but failed to stamp it out 23 Judith Chubb says Fascism succeeded in stamping out the Mafia as a criminal organization by providing a more efficient substitute It succeeded in monopolizing political power and the use of violence without however transforming the social and economic conditions in which the Mafia had flourished It was thus no surprise that the Mafia re emerged as soon as Fascism fell 15 In popular culture editIn Leonardo Sciascia s 1961 novel The Day of the Owl Il giorno della civetta the main character a captain of the Carabinieri recalls the great popularity of Mori s results among the Sicilian common people and the widespread nostalgia for Fascism among them at the time 24 Mori s campaign against the Mafia was the subject of a 1977 film Il prefetto di ferro directed by Pasquale Squitieri starring Giuliano Gemma and Claudia Cardinale with music by Ennio Morricone 25 In 2012 the Italian public broadcaster RAI produced Cesare Mori Il prefetto di ferro Autobiography editMori Cesare 1933 The last struggle with the Mafia London New York PutnamSee also editSicilian mafia during the Mussolini regimeReferences edit Mori Cesare 1933 The Last Struggle With the Mafia Black House p 141 ISBN 978 1 910881 38 5 Mori Cesare 1933 The Last Struggle With the Mafia Black House pp 5 205 ISBN 978 1 910881 38 5 a b Newark Mafia Allies pp 45 46 Newark Mafia Allies p 28 Dickie Cosa Nostra pp 176 78 Newark Mafia Allies p 17 a b Petacco Il prefetto di ferro p Newark Mafia Allies pp 20 21 Petacco L uomo della provvidenza p 190 Newark Mafia Allies p 23 Dickie Cosa Nostra p 182 Duggan Fascism and the Mafia p 119 a b Governmental Floundering and the Survival of the Mafia by Dominica Tarica The Florence Newspaper Mori Cesare 1933 The Last Struggle With the Mafia Black House pp 89 169 ISBN 978 1 910881 38 5 a b c The Mafia and Politics Archived 4 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine by Judith Chubb Cornell Studies in International Affairs Occasional Papers No 23 1989 Duggan Fascism and the Mafia p 245 Duggan Fascism and the Mafia p 225 Newark Mafia Allies pp 47 48 Lupo History of the Mafia p 186 Dickie Cosa Nostra pp 175 76 Duggan Fascism and the Mafia p 189 Pantaleone The Mafia and Politics p 52 quoted in The Mafia Restored Fighters for Democracy in World War II Archived April 17 2011 at the Wayback Machine The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia Alfred W McCoy Newark Mafia Allies p 203 Sciascia The Day of the Owl p Il Prefetto di Ferro 1977 New York Times MoviesSources editMori Cesare 1933 The last struggle with the Mafia London amp New York Putnam Mori Cesare 1923 Tra le zagare oltre la foschia Firenze Dickie John 2004 Cosa Nostra A history of the Sicilian Mafia London Coronet ISBN 0 340 82435 2 Duggan Christopher 1989 Fascism and the Mafia New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 04372 4 Newark Tim 2007 Mafia Allies The True Story of America s Secret Alliance with the Mob in World War II Saint Paul MN Zenith Press ISBN 0 7603 2457 3 Review Petacco Arrigo 2004 L uomo della provvidenza Mussolini ascesa e caduta di un mito Milan Mondadori Petacco Arrigo 1975 2004 Il prefetto di ferro L uomo di Mussolini che mise in ginocchio la mafia Milan Mondadori ISBN 88 04 53275 0 Sciascia Leonardo 1963 The Day of the Owl originally published as Il giorno della civetta Turin Einaudi 1961 External links editSicily And The Mafia Part Four Mussolini Takes On the Mafia by Mike La Sorte AmericanMafia com April 2004 Hail Cesare The Life and Times of Cesare Mori the Scourge of the Mafia by Mike La Sorte AmericanMafia com June 2005 The last Struggle with the Mafia Mori Cesare London amp New York Putnam 1933 at The Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cesare Mori amp oldid 1216055150, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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