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Greco Mafia clan

The Greco Mafia family (Italian pronunciation: [ˈɡrɛːko]) is historically one of the most influential Mafia clans in Sicily and Calabria, from the late 19th century. The extended family ruled both in Ciaculli and Croceverde Giardini, two south-eastern outskirts of Palermo in the citrus growing area and also rural areas of Calabria where they controlled the olive oil market. Members of the family were important figures in the Sicilian Cosa Nostra and Calabrian 'Ndrangheta. Salvatore "Ciaschiteddu" Greco was the first ‘secretary’ of the Sicilian Mafia Commission, while Michele Greco, also known as The Pope, was one of his successors.

Greco Mafia clan
Mafia boss Giuseppe Greco, also known as "Piddu u tinenti" (Piddu the lieutenant)
FoundedLate 19th century
Named afterGreco family
Founding locationCiaculli and Croceverde Giardini, two south-eastern outskirts of Palermo
Years activeDecline in the 2000s but still active with a very strong influence
TerritoryCiaculli and Croceverde Giardini, two south-eastern outskirts of Palermo and Calabria Dasà
EthnicitySicilian/Calabrian
MembershipSicilian Mafia
ActivitiesPalermo wholesale market; Gioua Taurio Port racket (1950s); cigarette smuggling and heroin trafficking; money laundering
AlliesUneasy alliance with the Corleonesi (Second Mafia War 1981-1983)
RivalsAcquasanta Mafia clan (Palermo wholesale market war in the mid 1950s)
La Barbera brothers (First Mafia War in the early 1960s)
Notable membersGiuseppe Greco, aka "Piddu u tinenti" (Piddu the lieutenant)
Salvatore "Ciaschiteddu" Greco
Salvatore "The Engineer" Greco
Michele Greco aka The Pope
Salvatore "The Senator" Greco

According to the pentito Antonio Calderone "the Grecos effectively exercised power in the whole of Sicily." According to Giovanni Brusca the Greco family was very important and the ones who tipped the balance in every internal Mafia war.[1]

Early history edit

Both family groups probably had a common ancestor in Salvatore Greco who was mentioned in the Sangiorgi report at the turn of the 20th century as the capomafia of Ciaculli.[2][3][4]

The boss of the Croceverde Giardini, Giuseppe Greco, also known as "Piddu u tinenti" (Piddu the lieutenant), was gabelloto of I Giardini, an estate of about 300 hectares of citrus orchards, in particular the tangerines that make the area of Croceverde and Ciaculli famous.[5]

The Grecos were typical representatives of the rural Mafia. In 1916, they ordered the murder of a priest who had denounced the Mafia's interference in the administration of ecclesiastical revenues and charity funds during a Sunday sermon.[2][4] In 1921, a Greco who had suffered a sgarro (a personal affront) killed two shepherds along with their flock of sheep. In 1929, a Greco fired twenty bullets into an enemy's great casks of wine and then sat down amid the foaming splinters to smoke his pipe.[6]

The Greco War: interfamily feud edit

In 1939 a bloody vendetta between both clans started during a brawl about a question of honour among youngsters of the two clans. The son of Giuseppe Greco, also known as "Piddu u tinenti" (Piddu the lieutenant), the boss of Croceverde Giardini cosca, was killed. In 1946-47, the bloody internal feud between the factions in Ciaculli and Croceverde Giardini reached a climax. On August 26, 1946, Giuseppe Greco, the boss of the Ciaculli clan and a brother-in-law of "Piddu u tinenti", and his brother Pietro Greco were killed with machine guns and grenades. The Ciaculli faction reacted a few months later when two of Piddu the lieutenant's men were shot with a lupara, the typical Sicilian short-barrelled shotgun. In revenge the Giardini cosca kidnapped two members of the rival faction who were never seen again, a so-called lupara bianca.[4][5][7]

The struggle between the clans came to a peak with a full-scale gunfight in the main square of Ciaculli on September 17, 1947. First, an important member of the Giardini cosca was shot down by a machine gun. When it became clear he was not dead yet, two women of the Ciaculli clan, Antonina (51) and Rosalia (19) the widow and daughter of one of the bosses killed the year before, went down into the street and finished the victim off with kitchen knives. In return, the brother and sister of the victim shot the women; Antonina was wounded and her daughter killed. Their attacker was then shot and killed by Antonina's 18-year-old son.[4][5][7]

In total, eleven members of the two clans died and several others were wounded in the feud, before other Palermo Mafia bosses started to put pressure on Piddu the lieutenant to end the bloody feud, which drew too much attention. Moreover, Piddu was expected to take care for both factions of the feuding clans, after the killing of the bosses of the rival faction. His status depended on how he would manage the situation.[4]

Mediation edit

Piddu the lieutenant asked for mediation from Antonio Cottone, the boss of the Mafia family of Villabate, a town close to Ciaculli and Croceverde. Cottone, who had been deported from the US, was an influential mafioso both in Palermo as in his native village Villabate, and still had good connections in the US, in particular with Joe Profaci, who came from the same village. At the time, Profaci was in Sicily and it seems he played an important role in the peace negotiations.[4][5][7]

The peace between the two rival factions of the Greco clan was settled by giving the rights of the Giardini estate to Salvatore "Ciaschiteddu" Greco (the son of Giuseppe Greco of Ciaculli) and his cousin Salvatore Greco, also known as "l'ingegnere" (The Engineer) or "Totò il lungo" (Totò the tall) (the son of Pietro Greco of Ciaculli). They became co-owners of a citrus fruit export business and partners in a bus company.

Historians are sceptical about the blood feud theory of the struggle. At stake was the control of the citrus plantations, the management of the citrus derivatives business and transport, as well as control over the wholesale markets in eastern Palermo. Six of the victims in the war did not bear the Greco name. The blood feud legend was probably spread around to hide the real motives behind the struggle.[4][5][7]

Descendants of the Ciaculli faction edit

Giuseppe Greco and Pietro Greco, of the Ciaculli faction, both had a son that became important mafiosi:

  • Salvatore "Ciaschiteddu" Greco (the son of Giuseppe Greco and Santa Greco, the sister of Piddu the lieutenant)
  • Salvatore Greco, (the son of Pietro Greco), also known as "l'ingegnere" (the engineer) or "Totò il lungo" (Totò the tall).

Descendants of the Croceverde Giardini faction edit

Giuseppe Greco, also known as "Piddu u tinenti", the boss of Croceverde Giardini faction, had two sons that rose to prominence in Cosa Nostra:

Piddu the lieutenant asked for mediation from Antonio Cottone, the boss of the Mafia family of Villabate, a town close to Ciaculli and Croceverde. Cottone, who had been deported from the US, was an influential mafioso both in Palermo as in his native village Villabate, and still had good connections in the US, in particular with Joe Profaci, who came from the same village. At the time, Profaci was in Sicily and it seems he played an important role in the peace negotiations.[4][5][7]

Consolidation edit

Piddu the lieutenant withdrew from active life as a mafioso and settled in a modern house in Palermo, where he consolidated and expanded his friendships among the ‘accepted’ section of society, protecting his younger relations when they got into trouble with the law.[5][9] His influence in the higher circles of Palermo was considerable. Cardinal Ernesto Ruffini accepted an invitation of Piddu Greco to bless the new church of Croceverde-Giardini and a dinner afterwards.[10]

The Grecos were protagonist in the violent conflict about the Palermo fruit and vegetable wholesale market that was moved from the Zisa area to Acquasanta near the port in January 1955, disturbing the delicate power balances within Cosa Nostra. The Acquasanta Mafia clan tried to muscle in on the protection racket that traditionally belonged the "Mafia of the Gardens" — such as the Grecos and Cottone — because it now fell under their territory. The bosses of the Acquasanta Mafia clan, Gaetano Galatolo and Nicola D’Alessandro, as well as Francesco Greco from the Ciaculli clan, a major wholesaler of fruit and vegetables, were killed in a dispute over the protection rackets.[11][12]

Some villages just outside Palermo, like Bagheria and Villabate, flared up with the same kind of violence for the control of irrigation, transport, and wholesale markets. On August 22, 1956, Nino Cottone was killed as well. In the end the Acquasanta had to split the profits of the wholesale market racket with the Greco Mafia clan of Ciaculli, who traditionally controlled fruit and vegetable supply to Palermo wholesale market.[5][12][13]

On the Commission edit

Although descendants of the old, established rural Mafia, the cousins Salvatore "Ciaschiteddu" Greco and Salvatore "The Engineer" Greco quickly learned to profit from the post-war economic boom and became involved in cigarette smuggling and heroin trafficking. They both participated at the Grand Hotel des Palmes Mafia meeting in October 1957 between prominent American and Sicilian mafiosi. Heroin trafficking between these two groups might have been discussed, but there certainly was not a general agreement on the heroin trade between the Sicilian Mafia and the American Cosa Nostra, as is often suggested.[citation needed]

At one of the meetings American Mafia boss Joe Bonanno suggested the Sicilians to form a Sicilian Mafia Commission to avoid violent disputes, following the example of the American Mafia that had formed their Commission in the 1930s. The Sicilians agreed and Tommaso Buscetta, Gaetano Badalamenti and Salvatore "Ciaschiteddu" Greco set the ground rules. Somewhere in 1958 the Sicilian Mafia composed its first Mafia Commission. "Ciaschiteddu" Greco was appointed as its first segretario (secretary), essentially a "primus inter pares" – the first among equals.[14] That position came to him almost naturally because he headed one of the most influential Mafia clans at the time. The Commission, however, was not able to prevent the outbreak of a violent Mafia War in 1962.

First Mafia War edit

The cousins Salvatore "Ciaschiteddu" Greco and Salvatore "The Engineer" Greco of the Ciaculli family were also protagonists in the First Mafia War between rival clans in Palermo in the early 1960s for the control of the profitable opportunities brought about by rapid urban growth and the illicit heroin trade to North America. The conflict was sparked by a quarrel over an underweight shipment of heroin and the murder of Calcedonio Di Pisa – an ally of the Grecos – in December 1962. The Grecos suspected the brothers Salvatore and Angelo La Barbera of the attack.

The clash between the Grecos and the La Barberas involved an old and a new Mafia. According to Antimafia judge Cesare Terranova the Grecos "represented the traditional Mafia, the Mafia in trappings of respectability … and they are linked by a dense network of friendships, interests, and protections with the leading Mafiosi of the Palermo area. They occupy a position of preeminence in the sector of cigarette and drug smugglers. The La Barberas, in contrast, come out of obscurity and their power consists especially in their enterprising ways and their following – a determined band of professional killers."[15]

On June 30, 1963 a car bomb exploded near Grecos' house in Ciaculli, killing seven police and military officers sent to defuse it after an anonymous phone call. The outrage over the Ciaculli Massacre changed the Mafia war into a war against the Mafia. It prompted the first concerted anti-mafia efforts by the state in post-war Italy. The Sicilian Mafia Commission was dissolved and of those mafiosi who had escaped arrest many went abroad. Even the old Piddu Greco was arrested in October 1965, and send into internal banishment from Sicily in May 1966.[10]

The repression caused by the Ciaculli Massacre disarranged the Sicilian heroin trade to the United States. Mafiosi were banned, arrested and incarcerated. Control over the trade fell into the hands of a few fugitives: the Greco cousins, Pietro Davì, Tommaso Buscetta and Gaetano Badalamenti.[16]

Salvatore "The Engineer" and "Ciaschiteddu" Greco were sentenced in absentia to respectively 10 and 4 years in prison at the Trial of the 114 in 1968 that was initiated as the result of the First Mafia War, but as they had been on the run since 1963, they did not serve a day. "Ciaschiteddu" Greco had moved to Venezuela, and the whereabouts of "The Engineer" were completely unknown. In 1973 they were both given the maximum period of five years of internal banishment at the remote island of Asinara, but they were nowhere to be found.[17]

Re-emergence edit

In the 1970s the Mafia recuperated. This time it was the Grecos from Croceverde who rose to prominence. The brothers Michele Greco and Salvatore Greco operated low profile and were able to enter into relationships with businessmen, politicians, magistrates and law enforcement officials through their membership of Masonic lodges.[18] Salvatore Greco's nickname was "The Senator" for his political connections. He was the kingmaker of Christian Democrat politicians such as Giovanni Gioia, Vito Ciancimino and Giuseppe Insalaco.[19] Bankers and other notables were invited to wine and dine and take part in hunting parties at Michele Greco's estate La Favarella. The estate was also used as a refuge for mafiosi on the run, and to set up a heroin laboratory.[20][21]

In 1974 the Sicilian Mafia Commission was restored under the leadership of Gaetano Badalamenti. Michele Greco was a member and in 1978 he was appointed as the head of the Sicilian Mafia Commission (Cupola), after its previous leader Gaetano Badalamenti was expelled in the run up to the Second Mafia War between the Corleonesi headed by Totò Riina, and the faction led by Stefano Bontade and Salvatore Inzerillo. In January 1978, the ailing "Ciaschiteddu" Greco came all the way from Venezuela to try to stop Gaetano Badalamenti, Giuseppe Di Cristina, Giuseppe Calderone and Salvatore Inzerillo from retaliating against the growing power of the Corleonesi. His efforts were in vain.

Second Mafia War edit

Gradually, Michele Greco sided with the Corleonesi and according to some, was no more than a "puppet" for Corleonesi boss Totò Riina. The Corleonesi's decimated their adversaries when the simmering conflict escalated into an all-out war after the killing of Stefano Bontade in 1981. According to Tommaso Buscetta Michele Greco would just nod his head and agree with virtually everything Riina said during meetings between the heads of various Mafia families.

During the Second Mafia War another offspring of the Greco clan rose to prominence: Giuseppe Greco, a distant relative of Salvatore and Michele Greco. Giuseppe Pino Greco was one of Totò Riina preferred hitmen and became a member of the Sicilian Mafia Commission as well. Although Michele Greco nominally was his boss and head of the Commission, he was treated by Pino Greco as an irrelevant old man, making clear Pino Greco held the real power, according to pentito Francesco Marino Mannoia. Greco's contempt for Cosa Nostra's leadership was such that he no longer attended the meetings of the Commission, sending his deputy Vincenzo Puccio instead.[22]

Decline edit

Towards the end of 1985, Giuseppe Greco vanished. He was murdered on the orders of Riina, who thought Greco was becoming too ambitious. Riina was apparently threatened by the way that a significant following of younger mobsters looked up to Greco and saw him as a potential future boss. Michele Greco was arrested on February 20, 1986, and joined the hundreds of defendants at the Maxi Trial. Greco gave testimony at the trial and to illustrate his standing as a supposedly honest citizen, he boasted of all the illustrious people he had entertained at his large estate, including a former chief prosecutor and police chiefs.

Resized and restructured edit

The Greco clan lost its grip on the mandamento of Ciaculli, which was merged with Brancaccio and the leadership eventually was passed on, but its criminal presence emerged into Calabria in the late 1990s and with the turn of the new millennium, Interpol and FBI intel information showed that the reemergence of the Greco clan was strongly evident, the Grecos were no longer part of the power structures of Cosa Nostra but restructured their organization to adapt to the new ways of organized crime.[19]

The rising of new Commission edit

On 22 January 2019, all the new bosses of the new Commission were arrested by the police, including Leandro Greco, grandson of Michele Greco, also known as The Prince of The Pope.[8][23] Before his arrest, Leandro Greco had been appointed the capomandamento of Ciaculli, according to the authorities he has the mentality of an old man in the body of a young man.[24] Leandro Greco was subsequently subjected to the strict 41-bis prison regime, and the regent of the Ciaculli family became Giuseppe Greco "U Minnuni", the son of Salvatore "The Senator" Greco and Leandro Greco's cousin, who had been one of the members of the Corleonesi death squad during the 1980s mafia war. In 2021, Giuseppe Greco was arrested once again.[25]

References edit

  1. ^ Lodato, Ho ucciso Giovanni Falcone, p. 53
  2. ^ a b Lupo, History of the Mafia, p. 140
  3. ^ (in Italian) Caruso, Da cosa nasce cosa, p. 84-86
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Dickie, Cosa Nostra, p. 254-59. Ermanno Sangiorgi, Questore (chief of police) of Palermo from 1898-1900 wrote a series of very comprehensive reports on Palermo's and the province's Mafia, formed by various groups, coordinated by a "conference among bosses" and headed by a "supreme boss", with details of criminal family structures, individual profiles, Mafia initiation rituals, codes of behaviour as well as it business methods and operations.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Servadio, Mafioso, p. 178-79.
  6. ^ Sterling, Octopus, p. 97-98.
  7. ^ a b c d e Lupo, History of the Mafia, p. 196-97
  8. ^ a b "Mafia: inchiesta sulla Cupola, tra i fermati anche il nipote di Greco e il figlio di Lo Piccolo". ansa.it. 22 January 2019. Retrieved 22 January 2019.
  9. ^ (in Italian) Onesti, onestissimi praticamenti mafiosi 2007-10-04 at the Wayback Machine, I Siciliani, April 1984
  10. ^ a b (in Italian) L'organizzazione giudiziaria antimafia: una lunga battaglia 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine, Gioacchino Natoli, February 19, 2005
  11. ^ Lupo, History of the Mafia, p. 227
  12. ^ a b Schneider & Schneider, Reversible Destiny, p. 62
  13. ^ , Time, September 3, 1956
  14. ^ Gambetta, The Sicilian Mafia, p. 112
  15. ^ Lupo, History of the Mafia, p. 213
  16. ^ The Rothschilds of the Mafia on Aruba, by Tom Blickman, Transnational Organized Crime, Vol. 3, No. 2, Summer 1997
  17. ^ Servadio, Mafioso, p. 181.
  18. ^ Schneider & Schneider, Reversible Destiny, p. 77-78
  19. ^ a b Caruso, Da cosa nasce cosa, p. 487
  20. ^ Stille, Excellent Cadavers, pp. 187-88
  21. ^ Dickie, Cosa Nostra, p. 209
  22. ^ Stille, Excellent Cadavers, p. 306
  23. ^ amduemila-6. "Tra scappati e corleonesi così si riorganizza Cosa nostra". Antimafia Duemila (in Italian). Retrieved 2020-06-04.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  24. ^ "Mafia, fermato il nipote di Michele Greco: enfant prodige di Cosa nostra che voleva fare la guerra agli altri boss". Il Fatto Quotidiano (in Italian). 2019-01-22. Retrieved 2020-06-04.
  25. ^ "Mafia, a Palermo comandano ancora i Greco: 16 arresti". Il Fatto Quotidiano (in Italian). 20 July 2021. Retrieved 2022-08-28.

Sources edit

  • (in Italian) Caruso, Alfio (2000). Da cosa nasce cosa. Storia della mafia dal 1943 a oggi, Milan: Longanesi ISBN 88-304-1620-7
  • Dickie, John (2004). Cosa Nostra. A history of the Sicilian Mafia, London: Coronet ISBN 0-340-82435-2
  • Gambetta, Diego (1993).The Sicilian Mafia: The Business of Private Protection, London: Harvard University Press, ISBN 0-674-80742-1
  • (in Italian) Lodato, Saverio (1999). Ho ucciso Giovanni Falcone. La confessione di Giovanni Brusca, Milan: Mondadori ISBN 88-04-55842-3
  • Lupo, Salvatore (2009). History of the Mafia, New York: Columbia University Press, ISBN 978-0-231-13134-6
  • Schneider, Jane T. & Peter T. Schneider (2003). Reversible Destiny: Mafia, Antimafia, and the Struggle for Palermo, Berkeley: University of California Press ISBN 0-520-23609-2
  • Servadio, Gaia (1976). Mafioso. A history of the Mafia from its origins to the present day, London: Secker & Warburg ISBN 0-436-44700-2
  • Sterling, Claire (1990), Octopus. How the long reach of the Sicilian Mafia controls the global narcotics trade, New York: Simon & Schuster, ISBN 0-671-73402-4
  • Stille, Alexander (1995). Excellent Cadavers. The Mafia and the Death of the First Italian Republic, New York: Vintage ISBN 0-09-959491-9

External links edit

  • (in Italian) , I Siciliani", April 1984.

greco, mafia, clan, greco, mafia, family, italian, pronunciation, ˈɡrɛːko, historically, most, influential, mafia, clans, sicily, calabria, from, late, 19th, century, extended, family, ruled, both, ciaculli, croceverde, giardini, south, eastern, outskirts, pal. The Greco Mafia family Italian pronunciation ˈɡrɛːko is historically one of the most influential Mafia clans in Sicily and Calabria from the late 19th century The extended family ruled both in Ciaculli and Croceverde Giardini two south eastern outskirts of Palermo in the citrus growing area and also rural areas of Calabria where they controlled the olive oil market Members of the family were important figures in the Sicilian Cosa Nostra and Calabrian Ndrangheta Salvatore Ciaschiteddu Greco was the first secretary of the Sicilian Mafia Commission while Michele Greco also known as The Pope was one of his successors Greco Mafia clanMafia boss Giuseppe Greco also known as Piddu u tinenti Piddu the lieutenant FoundedLate 19th centuryNamed afterGreco familyFounding locationCiaculli and Croceverde Giardini two south eastern outskirts of PalermoYears activeDecline in the 2000s but still active with a very strong influenceTerritoryCiaculli and Croceverde Giardini two south eastern outskirts of Palermo and Calabria DasaEthnicitySicilian CalabrianMembershipSicilian MafiaActivitiesPalermo wholesale market Gioua Taurio Port racket 1950s cigarette smuggling and heroin trafficking money launderingAlliesUneasy alliance with the Corleonesi Second Mafia War 1981 1983 RivalsAcquasanta Mafia clan Palermo wholesale market war in the mid 1950s La Barbera brothers First Mafia War in the early 1960s Notable membersGiuseppe Greco aka Piddu u tinenti Piddu the lieutenant Salvatore Ciaschiteddu Greco Salvatore The Engineer Greco Michele Greco aka The Pope Salvatore The Senator GrecoAccording to the pentito Antonio Calderone the Grecos effectively exercised power in the whole of Sicily According to Giovanni Brusca the Greco family was very important and the ones who tipped the balance in every internal Mafia war 1 Contents 1 Early history 2 The Greco War interfamily feud 3 Mediation 3 1 Descendants of the Ciaculli faction 3 2 Descendants of the Croceverde Giardini faction 4 Consolidation 5 On the Commission 6 First Mafia War 7 Re emergence 8 Second Mafia War 9 Decline 10 Resized and restructured 11 The rising of new Commission 12 References 13 Sources 14 External linksEarly history editBoth family groups probably had a common ancestor in Salvatore Greco who was mentioned in the Sangiorgi report at the turn of the 20th century as the capomafia of Ciaculli 2 3 4 The boss of the Croceverde Giardini Giuseppe Greco also known as Piddu u tinenti Piddu the lieutenant was gabelloto of I Giardini an estate of about 300 hectares of citrus orchards in particular the tangerines that make the area of Croceverde and Ciaculli famous 5 The Grecos were typical representatives of the rural Mafia In 1916 they ordered the murder of a priest who had denounced the Mafia s interference in the administration of ecclesiastical revenues and charity funds during a Sunday sermon 2 4 In 1921 a Greco who had suffered a sgarro a personal affront killed two shepherds along with their flock of sheep In 1929 a Greco fired twenty bullets into an enemy s great casks of wine and then sat down amid the foaming splinters to smoke his pipe 6 The Greco War interfamily feud editIn 1939 a bloody vendetta between both clans started during a brawl about a question of honour among youngsters of the two clans The son of Giuseppe Greco also known as Piddu u tinenti Piddu the lieutenant the boss of Croceverde Giardini cosca was killed In 1946 47 the bloody internal feud between the factions in Ciaculli and Croceverde Giardini reached a climax On August 26 1946 Giuseppe Greco the boss of the Ciaculli clan and a brother in law of Piddu u tinenti and his brother Pietro Greco were killed with machine guns and grenades The Ciaculli faction reacted a few months later when two of Piddu the lieutenant s men were shot with a lupara the typical Sicilian short barrelled shotgun In revenge the Giardini cosca kidnapped two members of the rival faction who were never seen again a so called lupara bianca 4 5 7 The struggle between the clans came to a peak with a full scale gunfight in the main square of Ciaculli on September 17 1947 First an important member of the Giardini cosca was shot down by a machine gun When it became clear he was not dead yet two women of the Ciaculli clan Antonina 51 and Rosalia 19 the widow and daughter of one of the bosses killed the year before went down into the street and finished the victim off with kitchen knives In return the brother and sister of the victim shot the women Antonina was wounded and her daughter killed Their attacker was then shot and killed by Antonina s 18 year old son 4 5 7 In total eleven members of the two clans died and several others were wounded in the feud before other Palermo Mafia bosses started to put pressure on Piddu the lieutenant to end the bloody feud which drew too much attention Moreover Piddu was expected to take care for both factions of the feuding clans after the killing of the bosses of the rival faction His status depended on how he would manage the situation 4 Mediation editPiddu the lieutenant asked for mediation from Antonio Cottone the boss of the Mafia family of Villabate a town close to Ciaculli and Croceverde Cottone who had been deported from the US was an influential mafioso both in Palermo as in his native village Villabate and still had good connections in the US in particular with Joe Profaci who came from the same village At the time Profaci was in Sicily and it seems he played an important role in the peace negotiations 4 5 7 The peace between the two rival factions of the Greco clan was settled by giving the rights of the Giardini estate to Salvatore Ciaschiteddu Greco the son of Giuseppe Greco of Ciaculli and his cousin Salvatore Greco also known as l ingegnere The Engineer or Toto il lungo Toto the tall the son of Pietro Greco of Ciaculli They became co owners of a citrus fruit export business and partners in a bus company Historians are sceptical about the blood feud theory of the struggle At stake was the control of the citrus plantations the management of the citrus derivatives business and transport as well as control over the wholesale markets in eastern Palermo Six of the victims in the war did not bear the Greco name The blood feud legend was probably spread around to hide the real motives behind the struggle 4 5 7 Descendants of the Ciaculli faction edit Giuseppe Greco and Pietro Greco of the Ciaculli faction both had a son that became important mafiosi Salvatore Ciaschiteddu Greco the son of Giuseppe Greco and Santa Greco the sister of Piddu the lieutenant Salvatore Greco the son of Pietro Greco also known as l ingegnere the engineer or Toto il lungo Toto the tall Descendants of the Croceverde Giardini faction edit Giuseppe Greco also known as Piddu u tinenti the boss of Croceverde Giardini faction had two sons that rose to prominence in Cosa Nostra Michele Greco also known as The Pope Salvatore Greco also known as The Senator He married the daughter of Nino Cottone the peacemaker between the two factions Leandro Greco grandson of Michele Greco also known as The Prince 8 Piddu the lieutenant asked for mediation from Antonio Cottone the boss of the Mafia family of Villabate a town close to Ciaculli and Croceverde Cottone who had been deported from the US was an influential mafioso both in Palermo as in his native village Villabate and still had good connections in the US in particular with Joe Profaci who came from the same village At the time Profaci was in Sicily and it seems he played an important role in the peace negotiations 4 5 7 Consolidation editPiddu the lieutenant withdrew from active life as a mafioso and settled in a modern house in Palermo where he consolidated and expanded his friendships among the accepted section of society protecting his younger relations when they got into trouble with the law 5 9 His influence in the higher circles of Palermo was considerable Cardinal Ernesto Ruffini accepted an invitation of Piddu Greco to bless the new church of Croceverde Giardini and a dinner afterwards 10 The Grecos were protagonist in the violent conflict about the Palermo fruit and vegetable wholesale market that was moved from the Zisa area to Acquasanta near the port in January 1955 disturbing the delicate power balances within Cosa Nostra The Acquasanta Mafia clan tried to muscle in on the protection racket that traditionally belonged the Mafia of the Gardens such as the Grecos and Cottone because it now fell under their territory The bosses of the Acquasanta Mafia clan Gaetano Galatolo and Nicola D Alessandro as well as Francesco Greco from the Ciaculli clan a major wholesaler of fruit and vegetables were killed in a dispute over the protection rackets 11 12 Some villages just outside Palermo like Bagheria and Villabate flared up with the same kind of violence for the control of irrigation transport and wholesale markets On August 22 1956 Nino Cottone was killed as well In the end the Acquasanta had to split the profits of the wholesale market racket with the Greco Mafia clan of Ciaculli who traditionally controlled fruit and vegetable supply to Palermo wholesale market 5 12 13 On the Commission editAlthough descendants of the old established rural Mafia the cousins Salvatore Ciaschiteddu Greco and Salvatore The Engineer Greco quickly learned to profit from the post war economic boom and became involved in cigarette smuggling and heroin trafficking They both participated at the Grand Hotel des Palmes Mafia meeting in October 1957 between prominent American and Sicilian mafiosi Heroin trafficking between these two groups might have been discussed but there certainly was not a general agreement on the heroin trade between the Sicilian Mafia and the American Cosa Nostra as is often suggested citation needed At one of the meetings American Mafia boss Joe Bonanno suggested the Sicilians to form a Sicilian Mafia Commission to avoid violent disputes following the example of the American Mafia that had formed their Commission in the 1930s The Sicilians agreed and Tommaso Buscetta Gaetano Badalamenti and Salvatore Ciaschiteddu Greco set the ground rules Somewhere in 1958 the Sicilian Mafia composed its first Mafia Commission Ciaschiteddu Greco was appointed as its first segretario secretary essentially a primus inter pares the first among equals 14 That position came to him almost naturally because he headed one of the most influential Mafia clans at the time The Commission however was not able to prevent the outbreak of a violent Mafia War in 1962 First Mafia War editThe cousins Salvatore Ciaschiteddu Greco and Salvatore The Engineer Greco of the Ciaculli family were also protagonists in the First Mafia War between rival clans in Palermo in the early 1960s for the control of the profitable opportunities brought about by rapid urban growth and the illicit heroin trade to North America The conflict was sparked by a quarrel over an underweight shipment of heroin and the murder of Calcedonio Di Pisa an ally of the Grecos in December 1962 The Grecos suspected the brothers Salvatore and Angelo La Barbera of the attack The clash between the Grecos and the La Barberas involved an old and a new Mafia According to Antimafia judge Cesare Terranova the Grecos represented the traditional Mafia the Mafia in trappings of respectability and they are linked by a dense network of friendships interests and protections with the leading Mafiosi of the Palermo area They occupy a position of preeminence in the sector of cigarette and drug smugglers The La Barberas in contrast come out of obscurity and their power consists especially in their enterprising ways and their following a determined band of professional killers 15 On June 30 1963 a car bomb exploded near Grecos house in Ciaculli killing seven police and military officers sent to defuse it after an anonymous phone call The outrage over the Ciaculli Massacre changed the Mafia war into a war against the Mafia It prompted the first concerted anti mafia efforts by the state in post war Italy The Sicilian Mafia Commission was dissolved and of those mafiosi who had escaped arrest many went abroad Even the old Piddu Greco was arrested in October 1965 and send into internal banishment from Sicily in May 1966 10 The repression caused by the Ciaculli Massacre disarranged the Sicilian heroin trade to the United States Mafiosi were banned arrested and incarcerated Control over the trade fell into the hands of a few fugitives the Greco cousins Pietro Davi Tommaso Buscetta and Gaetano Badalamenti 16 Salvatore The Engineer and Ciaschiteddu Greco were sentenced in absentia to respectively 10 and 4 years in prison at the Trial of the 114 in 1968 that was initiated as the result of the First Mafia War but as they had been on the run since 1963 they did not serve a day Ciaschiteddu Greco had moved to Venezuela and the whereabouts of The Engineer were completely unknown In 1973 they were both given the maximum period of five years of internal banishment at the remote island of Asinara but they were nowhere to be found 17 Re emergence editIn the 1970s the Mafia recuperated This time it was the Grecos from Croceverde who rose to prominence The brothers Michele Greco and Salvatore Greco operated low profile and were able to enter into relationships with businessmen politicians magistrates and law enforcement officials through their membership of Masonic lodges 18 Salvatore Greco s nickname was The Senator for his political connections He was the kingmaker of Christian Democrat politicians such as Giovanni Gioia Vito Ciancimino and Giuseppe Insalaco 19 Bankers and other notables were invited to wine and dine and take part in hunting parties at Michele Greco s estate La Favarella The estate was also used as a refuge for mafiosi on the run and to set up a heroin laboratory 20 21 In 1974 the Sicilian Mafia Commission was restored under the leadership of Gaetano Badalamenti Michele Greco was a member and in 1978 he was appointed as the head of the Sicilian Mafia Commission Cupola after its previous leader Gaetano Badalamenti was expelled in the run up to the Second Mafia War between the Corleonesi headed by Toto Riina and the faction led by Stefano Bontade and Salvatore Inzerillo In January 1978 the ailing Ciaschiteddu Greco came all the way from Venezuela to try to stop Gaetano Badalamenti Giuseppe Di Cristina Giuseppe Calderone and Salvatore Inzerillo from retaliating against the growing power of the Corleonesi His efforts were in vain Second Mafia War editGradually Michele Greco sided with the Corleonesi and according to some was no more than a puppet for Corleonesi boss Toto Riina The Corleonesi s decimated their adversaries when the simmering conflict escalated into an all out war after the killing of Stefano Bontade in 1981 According to Tommaso Buscetta Michele Greco would just nod his head and agree with virtually everything Riina said during meetings between the heads of various Mafia families During the Second Mafia War another offspring of the Greco clan rose to prominence Giuseppe Greco a distant relative of Salvatore and Michele Greco Giuseppe Pino Greco was one of Toto Riina preferred hitmen and became a member of the Sicilian Mafia Commission as well Although Michele Greco nominally was his boss and head of the Commission he was treated by Pino Greco as an irrelevant old man making clear Pino Greco held the real power according to pentito Francesco Marino Mannoia Greco s contempt for Cosa Nostra s leadership was such that he no longer attended the meetings of the Commission sending his deputy Vincenzo Puccio instead 22 Decline editTowards the end of 1985 Giuseppe Greco vanished He was murdered on the orders of Riina who thought Greco was becoming too ambitious Riina was apparently threatened by the way that a significant following of younger mobsters looked up to Greco and saw him as a potential future boss Michele Greco was arrested on February 20 1986 and joined the hundreds of defendants at the Maxi Trial Greco gave testimony at the trial and to illustrate his standing as a supposedly honest citizen he boasted of all the illustrious people he had entertained at his large estate including a former chief prosecutor and police chiefs Resized and restructured editThe Greco clan lost its grip on the mandamento of Ciaculli which was merged with Brancaccio and the leadership eventually was passed on but its criminal presence emerged into Calabria in the late 1990s and with the turn of the new millennium Interpol and FBI intel information showed that the reemergence of the Greco clan was strongly evident the Grecos were no longer part of the power structures of Cosa Nostra but restructured their organization to adapt to the new ways of organized crime 19 The rising of new Commission editOn 22 January 2019 all the new bosses of the new Commission were arrested by the police including Leandro Greco grandson of Michele Greco also known as The Prince of The Pope 8 23 Before his arrest Leandro Greco had been appointed the capomandamento of Ciaculli according to the authorities he has the mentality of an old man in the body of a young man 24 Leandro Greco was subsequently subjected to the strict 41 bis prison regime and the regent of the Ciaculli family became Giuseppe Greco U Minnuni the son of Salvatore The Senator Greco and Leandro Greco s cousin who had been one of the members of the Corleonesi death squad during the 1980s mafia war In 2021 Giuseppe Greco was arrested once again 25 References edit Lodato Ho ucciso Giovanni Falcone p 53 a b Lupo History of the Mafia p 140 in Italian Caruso Da cosa nasce cosa p 84 86 a b c d e f g h Dickie Cosa Nostra p 254 59 Ermanno Sangiorgi Questore chief of police of Palermo from 1898 1900 wrote a series of very comprehensive reports on Palermo s and the province s Mafia formed by various groups coordinated by a conference among bosses and headed by a supreme boss with details of criminal family structures individual profiles Mafia initiation rituals codes of behaviour as well as it business methods and operations a b c d e f g h Servadio Mafioso p 178 79 Sterling Octopus p 97 98 a b c d e Lupo History of the Mafia p 196 97 a b Mafia inchiesta sulla Cupola tra i fermati anche il nipote di Greco e il figlio di Lo Piccolo ansa it 22 January 2019 Retrieved 22 January 2019 in Italian Onesti onestissimi praticamenti mafiosi Archived 2007 10 04 at the Wayback Machine I Siciliani April 1984 a b in Italian L organizzazione giudiziaria antimafia una lunga battaglia Archived 2007 09 28 at the Wayback Machine Gioacchino Natoli February 19 2005 Lupo History of the Mafia p 227 a b Schneider amp Schneider Reversible Destiny p 62 Sicilian Blood Time September 3 1956 Gambetta The Sicilian Mafia p 112 Lupo History of the Mafia p 213 The Rothschilds of the Mafia on Aruba by Tom Blickman Transnational Organized Crime Vol 3 No 2 Summer 1997 Servadio Mafioso p 181 Schneider amp Schneider Reversible Destiny p 77 78 a b Caruso Da cosa nasce cosa p 487 Stille Excellent Cadavers pp 187 88 Dickie Cosa Nostra p 209 Stille Excellent Cadavers p 306 amduemila 6 Tra scappati e corleonesi cosi si riorganizza Cosa nostra Antimafia Duemila in Italian Retrieved 2020 06 04 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Mafia fermato il nipote di Michele Greco enfant prodige di Cosa nostra che voleva fare la guerra agli altri boss Il Fatto Quotidiano in Italian 2019 01 22 Retrieved 2020 06 04 Mafia a Palermo comandano ancora i Greco 16 arresti Il Fatto Quotidiano in Italian 20 July 2021 Retrieved 2022 08 28 Sources edit in Italian Caruso Alfio 2000 Da cosa nasce cosa Storia della mafia dal 1943 a oggi Milan Longanesi ISBN 88 304 1620 7 Dickie John 2004 Cosa Nostra A history of the Sicilian Mafia London Coronet ISBN 0 340 82435 2 Gambetta Diego 1993 The Sicilian Mafia The Business of Private Protection London Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 80742 1 in Italian Lodato Saverio 1999 Ho ucciso Giovanni Falcone La confessione di Giovanni Brusca Milan Mondadori ISBN 88 04 55842 3 Lupo Salvatore 2009 History of the Mafia New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 13134 6 Schneider Jane T amp Peter T Schneider 2003 Reversible Destiny Mafia Antimafia and the Struggle for Palermo Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0 520 23609 2 Servadio Gaia 1976 Mafioso A history of the Mafia from its origins to the present day London Secker amp Warburg ISBN 0 436 44700 2 Sterling Claire 1990 Octopus How the long reach of the Sicilian Mafia controls the global narcotics trade New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 671 73402 4 Stille Alexander 1995 Excellent Cadavers The Mafia and the Death of the First Italian Republic New York Vintage ISBN 0 09 959491 9External links edit in Italian Onesti onestissimi praticamenti mafiosi I Siciliani April 1984 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Greco Mafia clan amp oldid 1205576326, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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