THURSDAY, March 28, 2024
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Gangster head of 'Mafia Capitale' sentenced to 20 years

Gangster head of 'Mafia Capitale' sentenced to 20 years

ROME - The ringleader of a gang whose criminal tentacles reached into almost every department of Rome's City Hall was sentenced to 20 years in prison by an Italian court on Thursday.

Massimo Carminati, 59, a convicted gangster with a history of involvement with violent far-right groups, had been accused along with 45 others of operating a "mafia-style" network that used extortion, fraud and theft to divert millions of euros destined for public services into their own pockets.
    His right-hand man and fellow defendant Salvatore Buzzi, 61, was handed a 19-year jail term by the court at the capital city's Rebibbia jail.
    The scandal, which led to a 20-month trial in the high-security prison, had been dubbed "Mafia Capitale" by the media.
    But judge Rosanna Ianniello said Carminati and Buzzi were guilty of corruption but not of mafia association.
    "The sentence is stiff, but the whole trial revolved around the question: 'Was it mafia or not?'," Carminati's lawyer Ippolita Naso said.
    "'Mafia Capitale does not exist," she said.
    Naso added that she had spoken to Carminati and he was "satisfied".
    Both men were already behind bars in prisons in Parma and Tolmezzo where they were kept under the notorious harsh 41-bis regime, aimed at cutting mafia inmates off completely from their former criminal associates.
    "The 41-bis will have to be repealed. But who will give Carminati back the 22 months spent under it?" lawyer Giosue Bruno Naso, Ippolita Naso's father, said.
    Carminati and Buzzi watched the verdict by video conference, Carminati standing to hear his sentence while Buzzi sat and took notes.
    They will appeal the verdict.
    One-eyed Carminati was given a 10-year prison term in 1998 for membership of the Banda della Magliana, a criminal crew which ruled Rome's underworld in the 1970s and 1980s.
    Carminati's brother Sergio told media at the court that the trial was "ridiculous. Massimo is still paying for the 1980s".
    In 1983, Buzzi received a 30-year prison sentence for the murder of an accomplice in a forged cheques racket.
    He served only six years after pursuing his education and successfully portraying himself as a reformed character.
    The Rome scandal had been a major factor in leaving the city so cash-strapped it can barely afford to repair its buses when they break down, fill potholes in its streets or prevent trees from falling over for lack of upkeep.

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