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Corleonesi Mafia clan

The Corleonesi Mafia clan was a faction within the Corleone family of the Sicilian Mafia, formed in the 1970s. Notable leaders included Luciano Leggio, Salvatore Riina, Bernardo Provenzano, and Leoluca Bagarella.

Corleonesi
Luciano Leggio at a court appearance in 1974
Founded1970s
Founding locationCorleone, Sicily
Years active1970s–2006[1]
TerritorySicily, Lazio, Lombardy
MembershipSicilian Mafia
AlliesCuntrera-Caruana Mafia clan
Nuvoletta clan
Banda della Magliana
Madonia Mafia family
Russo clan
Motisi Mafia family
Santapaola Mafia family
RivalsInzerillo Mafia clan
Bontade Mafia family
Calderone Mafia family
and numerous others Palermo Mafia families
Notable membersLuciano Leggio, Totò Riina, Bernardo Provenzano, Calogero Bagarella, Leoluca Bagarella, Giovanni Brusca

Corleonesi affiliates were not restricted to mafiosi of Corleone. During the Second Mafia War in the early 1980s, the Corleonesi clan opposed the faction of the Palermitans represented, among others, by Gaetano Badalamenti, Stefano Bontate and Salvatore Inzerillo. The victory of the Corleonesi, and in particular the rise of Totò Riina, marked a new era in the history of the Sicilian Mafia. Between 1992 and 1993, the Corleonesi initiated a season of attacks against the state, followed by the State-Mafia Pact.

History

Beginnings

In February 1971, the Corleonesi clan's first boss, Luciano Leggio, ordered the kidnapping for extortion of Antonino Caruso, son of the industrialist Giacomo Caruso, and also that of the son of the builder Francesco Vassallo in Palermo.[2] Leggio was linked to the murder of the General Attorney of Sicily, Pietro Scaglione, who was shot dead on 5 May 1971 with his police bodyguard Antonino Lo Russo.[3] He became a fugitive, and was finally captured in Milan on 16 May 1974.[3][4] He was sentenced to life imprisonment in 1975. By the end of the 1970s, his lieutenant Salvatore Riina, who was also a fugitive, was in control of the Corleonesi clan.

The Corleonesi's primary rivals were Stefano Bontade, Salvatore Inzerillo and Tano Badalamenti, bosses of various powerful Palermo Mafia families. Between 1981 and 1983, Bontade and Inzerillo, together with many associates and members of both their Mafia and blood families, were killed. There were up to a thousand killings during this period as Riina and the Corleonesi, together with their allies, wiped out their rivals. By the end of the war, the Corleonesi were effectively ruling the Mafia, and over the next few years Riina increased his influence by eliminating the Corleonesi's allies, such as Filippo Marchese, Giuseppe Greco and Rosario Riccobono. In February 1980, Tommaso Buscetta fled to Brazil to escape the brewing Second Mafia War instigated by Riina.[5]

Whereas Riina's predecessors had kept a low profile, leading some in law enforcement to question the very existence of the Mafia, Riina ordered the murders of judges, policemen and prosecutors in an attempt to terrify the authorities. A law to create a new offence of Mafia association and confiscate Mafia assets was introduced by Pio La Torre, secretary of the Italian Communist Party in Sicily, but it had been stalled in parliament for two years. La Torre was murdered on 30 April 1982. In May 1982, the Italian government sent Carlo Alberto Dalla Chiesa, a general of the Italian Carabinieri, to Sicily with orders to crush the Mafia. However, not long after arriving, on 3 September 1982, he was gunned down in the city centre with his wife, Emanuela Setti Carraro, and his driver bodyguard, Domenico Russo. In response to public disquiet about the failure to effectively combat the organisation Riina headed, La Torre's law was passed ten days later.[6] On 11 September 1982, Buscetta's two sons from his first wife, Benedetto and Antonio, disappeared, never to be found again, which prompted his collaboration with Italian authorities.[7] This was followed by the deaths of his brother Vincenzo, son-in-law Giuseppe Genova, brother-in-law Pietro and four of his nephews, Domenico and Benedetto Buscetta, and Orazio and Antonio D 'Amico.[8][9] Buscetta was arrested in Sao Paulo, Brazil once again on 23 October 1983, and extradited to Italy on 28 June 1984.[10][11][12] Buscetta asked to talk to the anti-Mafia judge Giovanni Falcone, and began his life as an informant, referred to as a pentito.[13]

Buscetta was the first high-profile Sicilian Mafiosi to become an informant; he revealed that the Mafia was a single organisation led by a Commission, or Cupola (Dome), thereby establishing that the top tier of Mafia members were complicit in all the organisation's crimes.[14] Buscetta helped judges Falcone and Paolo Borsellino achieve significant success in the fight against organized crime that led to 475 Mafia members indicted, and 338 convicted in the Maxi Trial.[15]

In an attempt to divert investigative resources away from Buscetta's key revelations, Riina ordered a terrorist-style atrocity, the 23 December 1984 Train 904 bombing; 17 people were killed and 267 wounded. It became known as the "Christmas Massacre" (Strage di Natale) and was initially attributed to political extremists. It was only several years later, when police stumbled on explosives of the same type as used in Train 904 while searching the hideout of Giuseppe Calò, that it became apparent that the Mafia had been behind the attack.[16]

As part of the Maxi Trial, Riina was given two life sentences in absentia.[15] Riina pinned his hopes on the lengthy appeal process that had frequently set convicted mafiosi free, and he suspended the campaign of murders against officials while the cases went to higher courts. When the convictions were upheld by the Supreme Court of Cassation in January 1992,[17][18] the council of top bosses headed by Riina reacted by ordering the assassination of Salvatore Lima (on the grounds that he was an ally of Giulio Andreotti), and Giovanni Falcone.

Bombings of 1992–93

 
Sheets commemorating murdered Antimafia judges Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino. They read: "You did not kill them: their ideas walk on our legs".

On 23 May 1992, Falcone, his wife Francesca Morvillo and three police officers died in the Capaci bombing on highway A29 outside Palermo.[19] Two months later, Borsellino was killed along with five police officers in the entrance to his mother's apartment block by a car bomb in via D'Amelio.[20] Both attacks were ordered by Riina.[21] Ignazio Salvo, who had advised Riina against killing Falcone, was himself murdered on 17 September 1992. The public was outraged, both at the Mafia and also the politicians who they felt had failed adequately to protect Falcone and Borsellino. The Italian government arranged for a massive crackdown against the Mafia in response.

News reports in May 2019, indicated that a Cosa Nostra insider revealed that John Gotti of the Gambino crime family had sent one of their explosives experts to Sicily to work with the Corleonesi. This individual allegedly helped plan the bombing that would kill Falcone. One mafia expert was surprised that the two groups would cooperate because the American Cosa Nostra was affiliated with the rivals of the Corleonesi. But another expert said the joint effort was understandable. "It may be that the Gambinos at a certain point recognised that the Corleonesi had been victorious in the war between rival families in Sicily ... there is nothing unusual in the traffic of personnel and ideas across the Atlantic ... they were cousin organisations," according to John Dickie, professor of Italian studies at University College London and the author of Mafia Republic – Italy’s Criminal Curse.[22]

Decline

On 15 January 1993, Carabinieri arrested Riina at his villa in Palermo. He had been a fugitive for 23 years.[23][24][25] After Riina's capture, a division emerged among the Corleonesi, and a series of bombings occurred by the Corleonesi against several tourist spots on the Italian mainland — the Via dei Georgofili bombing in Florence, Via Palestro massacre in Milan and the Piazza San Giovanni in Laterano and Via San Teodoro in Rome, which left 10 people dead and 93 injured as well as severe damage. In total, Riina was given 26 life sentences,[26] and served his sentence in solitary confinement.[27]

Giovanni Brusca – one of Riina's hitmen who personally detonated the bomb that killed Falcone, and became a state witness (pentito) after his arrest in 1996 – has offered a controversial version of the capture of Totò Riina: a secret deal between Carabinieri officers, secret agents and Cosa Nostra bosses tired of the dictatorship of Riina’s faction of the Corleonesi. According to Brusca, Provenzano "sold" Riina in exchange for the valuable archive of compromising material that Riina held in his apartment in Via Bernini 52 in Palermo.[28][29]

Some investigators believed that most of those who carried out murders for Cosa Nostra answered solely to Leoluca Bagarella, and that consequently Bagarella actually wielded more power than Bernardo Provenzano, who was Riina's formal successor. Provenzano reportedly protested about the terroristic attacks, but Bagarella responded sarcastically, telling Provenzano to wear a sign saying "I don't have anything to do with the massacres".[30]

On June 24, 1995, Bagarella was arrested, having been a fugitive for four years.[31] In total, Bagarella was given 13 life sentences plus 106 years and ten months, and solitary confinement for 6 years.[32]

Provenzano subsequently took the reins of the Corleonesi. Provenzano had been a fugitive from the law since 1963.[33] Provenzano was finally captured on 11 April 2006, by the Italian police near his home town, Corleone.[34] After the arrest of Provenzano, the power of the Corleonesi was decimated.[1]

Affiliation and power of the Corleonesi

Corleonesi affiliates were not restricted to mafiosi of Corleone. The Corleone Mafia bosses initiated “men of honour”, not necessarily from Corleone, whose status was kept hidden from the other members of the Corleone cosca and other Mafia families. Members of other Mafia families who sided with Riina and Provenzano were called Corleonesi as well, forming a coalition that dominated the Mafia in the 1980s and 1990s, that can be considered as a kind of parallel Cosa Nostra. (Giovanni Brusca from the San Giuseppe Jato Mafia family was considered to be part of the Corleonesi faction for example) [35]

The pentito (Mafia turncoat) Antonino Calderone provided first-hand accounts of the leaders of the Corleonesi: Luciano Leggio, Totò Riina and Bernardo Provenzano. About Leggio, Calderone said:

"He liked to kill. He had a way of looking at people that could frighten anyone, even us mafiosi. The smallest thing set him off, and then a strange light would appear in his eyes that created silence around him. When you were in his company you had to be careful about how you spoke. The wrong tone of voice, a misconstrued word, and all of a sudden that silence. Everything would instantly be hushed, uneasy, and you could smell death in the air."

"The Corleone bosses were not educated at all, but they were cunning and diabolical," Calderone said about Riina and Provenzano. "They were both clever and ferocious, a rare combination in Cosa Nostra." Calderone described Totò Riina as "unbelievably ignorant, but he had intuition and intelligence and was difficult to fathom and very hard to predict." Riina was soft spoken, highly persuasive and often highly sentimental. He followed the simple codes of the brutal, ancient world of the Sicilian countryside, where force is the only law and there is no contradiction between personal kindness and extreme ferocity. "His philosophy was that if someone’s finger hurt, it was better to cut off his whole arm just to make sure," Calderone said.[36]

Another pentito Leonardo Messina described how the Corleonesi organized their rise to power:

"They took power by slowly, slowly killing everyone ... We were kind of infatuated with them because we thought that getting rid of the old bosses we would become the new bosses. Some people killed their brother, others their cousin and so on, because they thought they would take their places. Instead, slowly, (the Corleonesi) gained control of the whole system ... First they used us to get rid of the old bosses, then they got rid of all those who raised their heads, like Pino Greco (aka Scarpuzzedda, Little shoe), Mario Prestifilippo and Vincenzo Puccio ... all that’s left are men without character, who are their puppets."[37]

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b Orsatti, Pietro (July 2, 2013). "La fine del potere dei corleonesi. Riina parla della trattativa Stato mafia, a modo suo". I Siciliani giovani.
  2. ^ http://archiviopiolatorre.camera.it/img-repo/DOCUMENTAZIONE/Antimafia/02_rel_6.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  3. ^ a b http://archiviopiolatorre.camera.it/img-repo/DOCUMENTAZIONE/Antimafia/04_rel_02.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  4. ^ "#AccaddeOggi: 16 maggio 1974, arrestato a Milano Luciano Liggio, la". L'Unione Sarda.it. May 16, 2018.
  5. ^ "E LEGGIO SPACCO' IN DUE COSA NOSTRA - la Repubblica.it". Archivio - la Repubblica.it (in Italian).
  6. ^ Inside The Mafia 2019-07-26 at the Wayback Machine, National Geographic Channel, June 2005.
  7. ^ "L'11 settembre della mafia palermitana: la tragica fine dei figli di Buscetta" (in Italian). palermotoday.it. 11 September 2019.
  8. ^ "UN IMPERO BASATO SULLA COCAINA CHE GESTIVA COME UN MANAGER - la Repubblica.it". Archivio - la Repubblica.it (in Italian).
  9. ^ "GIUSTIZIATO IL NIPOTE DI BUSCETTA - la Repubblica.it". Archivio - la Repubblica.it (in Italian).
  10. ^ "impastato-cronologia le vicende del processo". www.uonna.it.
  11. ^ "IL BRASILE HA CONCESSO L' ESTRADIZIONE TOMMASO BUSCETTA PRESTO IN ITAL - la Repubblica.it". Archivio - la Repubblica.it (in Italian).
  12. ^ "BUSCETTA CI DISSE: 'NON SONO UN NEMICO' - la Repubblica.it". Archivio - la Repubblica.it (in Italian).
  13. ^ "'SONO DON MASINO. NON DICO ALTRO...' - la Repubblica.it". Archivio - la Repubblica.it (in Italian).
  14. ^ Follain, p.19-21
  15. ^ a b "338 GUILTY IN SICILY IN A MAFIA TRIAL; 19 GET LIFE TERMS". The New York Times. 17 December 1987.
  16. ^ (in Italian) Rapido 904: "Un intreccio tra mafia, camorra e politica", Il Fatto Quotidiano, 27 April 2011
  17. ^ Giovanni Falcone, Paolo Borsellino and the Procura of Palermo 21 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine, Peter Schneider & Jane Schneider, May 2002, essay is based on excerpts from Chapter Six of Jane Schneider and Peter Schneider, Reversible Destiny: Mafia, Antimafia and the Struggle for Palermo, Berkeley: U. of California Press
  18. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-10-19. Retrieved 2017-07-23.
  19. ^ "Gli esecutori materiali della strage di Capaci - Sentenza d'appello per la strage di Capaci" (PDF) (in Italian).
  20. ^ Interview of agent Vullo the day after the massacre. (in Italian)
  21. ^ "Audizione del procuratore Sergio Lari dinanzi alla Commissione Parlamentare Antimafia - XVI LEGISLATURA" (PDF) (in Italian).
  22. ^ Squires, Nick (22 May 2019). "American mafia 'sent explosives expert' to help Sicilian mob assassinate crusading investigator". The Telegraph. Retrieved 22 May 2019.
  23. ^ Italy Arrests Sicilian Mafia's Top Leader, The New York Times, 16 January 1993
  24. ^ Brother of top Mafia turncoat shot, BBC News, 21 March 1998
  25. ^ Follain p212-213
  26. ^ "The most violent and feared Mafia Godfather has died". NewsComAu. November 17, 2017.
  27. ^ Feeds, IANS (July 19, 2017). "Jailed Sicilian mafia 'boss of bosses' Riina to stay in jail". India.com.
  28. ^ Jamieson, The Antimafia, p. 233-34.
  29. ^ (in Italian) Lodato, Ho ucciso Giovanni Falcone, p. 135-37
  30. ^ Follain, (2012), Vendetta, pp. 230–231
  31. ^ Reputed Head of the Mafia Is Arrested in Palermo Chase, The New York Times, June 26, 1995
  32. ^ "Calcolate le pene di Provenzano e Bagarella: insieme hanno collezionano 33 ergastoli". Repubblica.it. March 25, 2014.
  33. ^ "Arrestato Provenzano, era ricercato dal 1963" (in Italian). Corriere della Sera. 25 April 2006.
  34. ^ "'Top Mafia boss' caught in Italy", BBC News, 11 April 2006.
  35. ^ Paoli, Mafia Brotherhoods, p. 117-19.
  36. ^ Stille, Excellent Cadavers, p. 230-31.
  37. ^ Stille, Excellent Cadavers, p. 364-65.

Bibliography

  • Dickie, John (2004). Cosa Nostra. A history of the Sicilian Mafia, London: Coronet, ISBN 0-340-82435-2
  • Jamieson, Alison (2000), The Antimafia. Italy’s Fight Against Organized Crime, London: MacMillan Press ISBN 0-333-80158-X
  • (in Italian) Lodato, Saverio (1999). Ho ucciso Giovanni Falcone: la confessione di Giovanni Brusca, Milan: Mondadori ISBN 88-04-45048-7
  • Paoli, Letizia (2003). Mafia Brotherhoods: Organized Crime, Italian Style, Oxford/New York: Oxford University Press ISBN 0-19-515724-9
  • Stille, Alexander (1995). Excellent Cadavers. The Mafia and the Death of the First Italian Republic, New York: Vintage ISBN 0-09-959491-9

corleonesi, mafia, clan, fictional, family, corleone, family, faction, within, corleone, family, sicilian, mafia, formed, 1970s, notable, leaders, included, luciano, leggio, salvatore, riina, bernardo, provenzano, leoluca, bagarella, corleonesiluciano, leggio,. For the fictional family see Corleone family The Corleonesi Mafia clan was a faction within the Corleone family of the Sicilian Mafia formed in the 1970s Notable leaders included Luciano Leggio Salvatore Riina Bernardo Provenzano and Leoluca Bagarella CorleonesiLuciano Leggio at a court appearance in 1974Founded1970sFounding locationCorleone SicilyYears active1970s 2006 1 TerritorySicily Lazio LombardyMembershipSicilian MafiaAlliesCuntrera Caruana Mafia clanNuvoletta clanBanda della Magliana Madonia Mafia family Russo clan Motisi Mafia family Santapaola Mafia familyRivalsInzerillo Mafia clan Bontade Mafia family Calderone Mafia family and numerous others Palermo Mafia familiesNotable membersLuciano Leggio Toto Riina Bernardo Provenzano Calogero Bagarella Leoluca Bagarella Giovanni BruscaCorleonesi affiliates were not restricted to mafiosi of Corleone During the Second Mafia War in the early 1980s the Corleonesi clan opposed the faction of the Palermitans represented among others by Gaetano Badalamenti Stefano Bontate and Salvatore Inzerillo The victory of the Corleonesi and in particular the rise of Toto Riina marked a new era in the history of the Sicilian Mafia Between 1992 and 1993 the Corleonesi initiated a season of attacks against the state followed by the State Mafia Pact Contents 1 History 1 1 Beginnings 1 2 Bombings of 1992 93 1 3 Decline 2 Affiliation and power of the Corleonesi 3 References 3 1 Notes 3 2 BibliographyHistory EditBeginnings Edit In February 1971 the Corleonesi clan s first boss Luciano Leggio ordered the kidnapping for extortion of Antonino Caruso son of the industrialist Giacomo Caruso and also that of the son of the builder Francesco Vassallo in Palermo 2 Leggio was linked to the murder of the General Attorney of Sicily Pietro Scaglione who was shot dead on 5 May 1971 with his police bodyguard Antonino Lo Russo 3 He became a fugitive and was finally captured in Milan on 16 May 1974 3 4 He was sentenced to life imprisonment in 1975 By the end of the 1970s his lieutenant Salvatore Riina who was also a fugitive was in control of the Corleonesi clan The Corleonesi s primary rivals were Stefano Bontade Salvatore Inzerillo and Tano Badalamenti bosses of various powerful Palermo Mafia families Between 1981 and 1983 Bontade and Inzerillo together with many associates and members of both their Mafia and blood families were killed There were up to a thousand killings during this period as Riina and the Corleonesi together with their allies wiped out their rivals By the end of the war the Corleonesi were effectively ruling the Mafia and over the next few years Riina increased his influence by eliminating the Corleonesi s allies such as Filippo Marchese Giuseppe Greco and Rosario Riccobono In February 1980 Tommaso Buscetta fled to Brazil to escape the brewing Second Mafia War instigated by Riina 5 Whereas Riina s predecessors had kept a low profile leading some in law enforcement to question the very existence of the Mafia Riina ordered the murders of judges policemen and prosecutors in an attempt to terrify the authorities A law to create a new offence of Mafia association and confiscate Mafia assets was introduced by Pio La Torre secretary of the Italian Communist Party in Sicily but it had been stalled in parliament for two years La Torre was murdered on 30 April 1982 In May 1982 the Italian government sent Carlo Alberto Dalla Chiesa a general of the Italian Carabinieri to Sicily with orders to crush the Mafia However not long after arriving on 3 September 1982 he was gunned down in the city centre with his wife Emanuela Setti Carraro and his driver bodyguard Domenico Russo In response to public disquiet about the failure to effectively combat the organisation Riina headed La Torre s law was passed ten days later 6 On 11 September 1982 Buscetta s two sons from his first wife Benedetto and Antonio disappeared never to be found again which prompted his collaboration with Italian authorities 7 This was followed by the deaths of his brother Vincenzo son in law Giuseppe Genova brother in law Pietro and four of his nephews Domenico and Benedetto Buscetta and Orazio and Antonio D Amico 8 9 Buscetta was arrested in Sao Paulo Brazil once again on 23 October 1983 and extradited to Italy on 28 June 1984 10 11 12 Buscetta asked to talk to the anti Mafia judge Giovanni Falcone and began his life as an informant referred to as a pentito 13 Buscetta was the first high profile Sicilian Mafiosi to become an informant he revealed that the Mafia was a single organisation led by a Commission or Cupola Dome thereby establishing that the top tier of Mafia members were complicit in all the organisation s crimes 14 Buscetta helped judges Falcone and Paolo Borsellino achieve significant success in the fight against organized crime that led to 475 Mafia members indicted and 338 convicted in the Maxi Trial 15 In an attempt to divert investigative resources away from Buscetta s key revelations Riina ordered a terrorist style atrocity the 23 December 1984 Train 904 bombing 17 people were killed and 267 wounded It became known as the Christmas Massacre Strage di Natale and was initially attributed to political extremists It was only several years later when police stumbled on explosives of the same type as used in Train 904 while searching the hideout of Giuseppe Calo that it became apparent that the Mafia had been behind the attack 16 As part of the Maxi Trial Riina was given two life sentences in absentia 15 Riina pinned his hopes on the lengthy appeal process that had frequently set convicted mafiosi free and he suspended the campaign of murders against officials while the cases went to higher courts When the convictions were upheld by the Supreme Court of Cassation in January 1992 17 18 the council of top bosses headed by Riina reacted by ordering the assassination of Salvatore Lima on the grounds that he was an ally of Giulio Andreotti and Giovanni Falcone Bombings of 1992 93 Edit Sheets commemorating murdered Antimafia judges Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino They read You did not kill them their ideas walk on our legs On 23 May 1992 Falcone his wife Francesca Morvillo and three police officers died in the Capaci bombing on highway A29 outside Palermo 19 Two months later Borsellino was killed along with five police officers in the entrance to his mother s apartment block by a car bomb in via D Amelio 20 Both attacks were ordered by Riina 21 Ignazio Salvo who had advised Riina against killing Falcone was himself murdered on 17 September 1992 The public was outraged both at the Mafia and also the politicians who they felt had failed adequately to protect Falcone and Borsellino The Italian government arranged for a massive crackdown against the Mafia in response News reports in May 2019 indicated that a Cosa Nostra insider revealed that John Gotti of the Gambino crime family had sent one of their explosives experts to Sicily to work with the Corleonesi This individual allegedly helped plan the bombing that would kill Falcone One mafia expert was surprised that the two groups would cooperate because the American Cosa Nostra was affiliated with the rivals of the Corleonesi But another expert said the joint effort was understandable It may be that the Gambinos at a certain point recognised that the Corleonesi had been victorious in the war between rival families in Sicily there is nothing unusual in the traffic of personnel and ideas across the Atlantic they were cousin organisations according to John Dickie professor of Italian studies at University College London and the author of Mafia Republic Italy s Criminal Curse 22 Decline Edit On 15 January 1993 Carabinieri arrested Riina at his villa in Palermo He had been a fugitive for 23 years 23 24 25 After Riina s capture a division emerged among the Corleonesi and a series of bombings occurred by the Corleonesi against several tourist spots on the Italian mainland the Via dei Georgofili bombing in Florence Via Palestro massacre in Milan and the Piazza San Giovanni in Laterano and Via San Teodoro in Rome which left 10 people dead and 93 injured as well as severe damage In total Riina was given 26 life sentences 26 and served his sentence in solitary confinement 27 Giovanni Brusca one of Riina s hitmen who personally detonated the bomb that killed Falcone and became a state witness pentito after his arrest in 1996 has offered a controversial version of the capture of Toto Riina a secret deal between Carabinieri officers secret agents and Cosa Nostra bosses tired of the dictatorship of Riina s faction of the Corleonesi According to Brusca Provenzano sold Riina in exchange for the valuable archive of compromising material that Riina held in his apartment in Via Bernini 52 in Palermo 28 29 Some investigators believed that most of those who carried out murders for Cosa Nostra answered solely to Leoluca Bagarella and that consequently Bagarella actually wielded more power than Bernardo Provenzano who was Riina s formal successor Provenzano reportedly protested about the terroristic attacks but Bagarella responded sarcastically telling Provenzano to wear a sign saying I don t have anything to do with the massacres 30 On June 24 1995 Bagarella was arrested having been a fugitive for four years 31 In total Bagarella was given 13 life sentences plus 106 years and ten months and solitary confinement for 6 years 32 Provenzano subsequently took the reins of the Corleonesi Provenzano had been a fugitive from the law since 1963 33 Provenzano was finally captured on 11 April 2006 by the Italian police near his home town Corleone 34 After the arrest of Provenzano the power of the Corleonesi was decimated 1 Affiliation and power of the Corleonesi EditCorleonesi affiliates were not restricted to mafiosi of Corleone The Corleone Mafia bosses initiated men of honour not necessarily from Corleone whose status was kept hidden from the other members of the Corleone cosca and other Mafia families Members of other Mafia families who sided with Riina and Provenzano were called Corleonesi as well forming a coalition that dominated the Mafia in the 1980s and 1990s that can be considered as a kind of parallel Cosa Nostra Giovanni Brusca from the San Giuseppe Jato Mafia family was considered to be part of the Corleonesi faction for example 35 The pentito Mafia turncoat Antonino Calderone provided first hand accounts of the leaders of the Corleonesi Luciano Leggio Toto Riina and Bernardo Provenzano About Leggio Calderone said He liked to kill He had a way of looking at people that could frighten anyone even us mafiosi The smallest thing set him off and then a strange light would appear in his eyes that created silence around him When you were in his company you had to be careful about how you spoke The wrong tone of voice a misconstrued word and all of a sudden that silence Everything would instantly be hushed uneasy and you could smell death in the air The Corleone bosses were not educated at all but they were cunning and diabolical Calderone said about Riina and Provenzano They were both clever and ferocious a rare combination in Cosa Nostra Calderone described Toto Riina as unbelievably ignorant but he had intuition and intelligence and was difficult to fathom and very hard to predict Riina was soft spoken highly persuasive and often highly sentimental He followed the simple codes of the brutal ancient world of the Sicilian countryside where force is the only law and there is no contradiction between personal kindness and extreme ferocity His philosophy was that if someone s finger hurt it was better to cut off his whole arm just to make sure Calderone said 36 Another pentito Leonardo Messina described how the Corleonesi organized their rise to power They took power by slowly slowly killing everyone We were kind of infatuated with them because we thought that getting rid of the old bosses we would become the new bosses Some people killed their brother others their cousin and so on because they thought they would take their places Instead slowly the Corleonesi gained control of the whole system First they used us to get rid of the old bosses then they got rid of all those who raised their heads like Pino Greco aka Scarpuzzedda Little shoe Mario Prestifilippo and Vincenzo Puccio all that s left are men without character who are their puppets 37 References EditNotes Edit a b Orsatti Pietro July 2 2013 La fine del potere dei corleonesi Riina parla della trattativa Stato mafia a modo suo I Siciliani giovani http archiviopiolatorre camera it img repo DOCUMENTAZIONE Antimafia 02 rel 6 pdf bare URL PDF a b http archiviopiolatorre camera it img repo DOCUMENTAZIONE Antimafia 04 rel 02 pdf bare URL PDF AccaddeOggi 16 maggio 1974 arrestato a Milano Luciano Liggio la L Unione Sarda it May 16 2018 E LEGGIO SPACCO IN DUE COSA NOSTRA la Repubblica it Archivio la Repubblica it in Italian Inside The Mafia Archived 2019 07 26 at the Wayback Machine National Geographic Channel June 2005 L 11 settembre della mafia palermitana la tragica fine dei figli di Buscetta in Italian palermotoday it 11 September 2019 UN IMPERO BASATO SULLA COCAINA CHE GESTIVA COME UN MANAGER la Repubblica it Archivio la Repubblica it in Italian GIUSTIZIATO IL NIPOTE DI BUSCETTA la Repubblica it Archivio la Repubblica it in Italian impastato cronologia le vicende del processo www uonna it IL BRASILE HA CONCESSO L ESTRADIZIONE TOMMASO BUSCETTA PRESTO IN ITAL la Repubblica it Archivio la Repubblica it in Italian BUSCETTA CI DISSE NON SONO UN NEMICO la Repubblica it Archivio la Repubblica it in Italian SONO DON MASINO NON DICO ALTRO la Repubblica it Archivio la Repubblica it in Italian Follain p 19 21 a b 338 GUILTY IN SICILY IN A MAFIA TRIAL 19 GET LIFE TERMS The New York Times 17 December 1987 in Italian Rapido 904 Un intreccio tra mafia camorra e politica Il Fatto Quotidiano 27 April 2011 Giovanni Falcone Paolo Borsellino and the Procura of Palermo Archived 21 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine Peter Schneider amp Jane Schneider May 2002 essay is based on excerpts from Chapter Six of Jane Schneider and Peter Schneider Reversible Destiny Mafia Antimafia and the Struggle for Palermo Berkeley U of California Press Archivio LASTAMPA it Archived from the original on 2013 10 19 Retrieved 2017 07 23 Gli esecutori materiali della strage di Capaci Sentenza d appello per la strage di Capaci PDF in Italian Interview of agent Vullo the day after the massacre in Italian Audizione del procuratore Sergio Lari dinanzi alla Commissione Parlamentare Antimafia XVI LEGISLATURA PDF in Italian Squires Nick 22 May 2019 American mafia sent explosives expert to help Sicilian mob assassinate crusading investigator The Telegraph Retrieved 22 May 2019 Italy Arrests Sicilian Mafia s Top Leader The New York Times 16 January 1993 Brother of top Mafia turncoat shot BBC News 21 March 1998 Follain p212 213 The most violent and feared Mafia Godfather has died NewsComAu November 17 2017 Feeds IANS July 19 2017 Jailed Sicilian mafia boss of bosses Riina to stay in jail India com Jamieson The Antimafia p 233 34 in Italian Lodato Ho ucciso Giovanni Falcone p 135 37 Follain 2012 Vendetta pp 230 231 Reputed Head of the Mafia Is Arrested in Palermo Chase The New York Times June 26 1995 Calcolate le pene di Provenzano e Bagarella insieme hanno collezionano 33 ergastoli Repubblica it March 25 2014 Arrestato Provenzano era ricercato dal 1963 in Italian Corriere della Sera 25 April 2006 Top Mafia boss caught in Italy BBC News 11 April 2006 Paoli Mafia Brotherhoods p 117 19 Stille Excellent Cadavers p 230 31 Stille Excellent Cadavers p 364 65 Bibliography Edit Dickie John 2004 Cosa Nostra A history of the Sicilian Mafia London Coronet ISBN 0 340 82435 2 Jamieson Alison 2000 The Antimafia Italy s Fight Against Organized Crime London MacMillan Press ISBN 0 333 80158 X in Italian Lodato Saverio 1999 Ho ucciso Giovanni Falcone la confessione di Giovanni Brusca Milan Mondadori ISBN 88 04 45048 7 Paoli Letizia 2003 Mafia Brotherhoods Organized Crime Italian Style Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 515724 9 Stille Alexander 1995 Excellent Cadavers The Mafia and the Death of the First Italian Republic New York Vintage ISBN 0 09 959491 9 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Corleonesi Mafia clan amp oldid 1129648892, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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