Italianen verspillen tijd aan Mafia, moeten achter motorijders aan!

Cees Binkhorst ceesbink at XS4ALL.NL
Mon Jun 1 09:53:42 CEST 2009


REPLY TO: D66 at nic.surfnet.nl

Het is bijna 'Godsgeklaagd' zoals die Italianen tijd verspillen aan die
Mafia, ze moeten achter de motorrijders en sexbazen aan!

Groet / Cees

PS Hoezo 'defying Berlusconi'? Dacht dat een pot nat was?

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601109&sid=aHtly5QjUYzo&refer=exclusive#
Mafia Cash Increases Grip on Sinking Italy Defying Berlusconi

By Steve Scherer and Vernon Silver

May 27 (Bloomberg) -- In the southern Italian port city of Palermo, home
to bustling outdoor markets and Arab-influenced architecture, prosecutor
Roberto Scarpinato has hunted Mafia money for two decades.

Now, as the rest of the world tightens its belt in the global recession,
he’s tracking how the mob is profiting by lending and investing what’s
become a scarce commodity these days: a growing hoard of cash.

Scarpinato points to the 2.7 billion euros ($3.8 billion) of assets he’s
seized on the island of Sicily, where Palermo is located, since the start
of 2008. In one haul, he confiscated 12 businesses, 220 buildings, 33
plots of land and a 25-meter (82- foot) yacht from grocery-chain owner
Giuseppe Grigoli.

Known as Sicily’s king of supermarkets, Grigoli, 59, is on trial in
Marsala for running the food stores and other enterprises at the behest of
the Sicilian Mafia. He denies the criminal charge of being a member of an
organized crime group.

Unlike overleveraged companies burned in the credit crisis, the Mafia and
its cash-based, debt-free business model are breezing through economic
hard times. With young, savvy leaders at the helm, organized crime is
poised to expand as legitimate companies founder.

“There’s a risk that Mafia organizations can profit from the current
crisis by buying control of struggling businesses, infiltrating all
regions of the country,” Italian President Giorgio Napolitano cautioned in
May.

Grocery Connection

Not even billionaire Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who’s won praise
for his response to Italy’s deadly April earthquake and has vowed to keep
the Mafia out of reconstruction contracts, has been able to control the
mob and its riches. This year, Berlusconi’s government has proposed
legislation to make it easier to seize assets from organized crime.

Grigoli’s grocery operation and its alleged links to the Mafia and money
laundering represent just a slice of the estimated 130 billion euros in
annual revenue the mob handles. Some of the money is making the rounds via
easy-to-transport 500-euro bills as far away as South America.

Italy’s three main organized-crime groups had combined net income of 70
billion euros last year, producing a 54 percent profit margin, according
to Rome-based research institute Eurispes. Exxon Mobil Corp., the world’s
biggest publicly traded oil company, had a profit of about half that at
$45.2 billion.

Bodyguards, Pistols

“There’s a credit crisis that’s putting many businesses in a difficult
position,” says Scarpinato, 57, whose dark suit sets him apart from his
jeans-wearing bodyguards who tote pistols under their black-and-blue
windbreakers. “The banks have tightened the purse strings, and many
companies risk going bankrupt. Then there’s the Mafia world, which has
vast amounts of cash.”

Prosecutors opened a window on how the Mafia was positioning itself for
financial expansion in 2006, when police captured Bernardo Provenzano, the
Sicilian Mafia’s boss of bosses. Credit markets worldwide began to freeze
in late 2007. By then, Provenzano had helped a new generation of mobsters
secure a foothold in the legitimate economy through mainly cash- based
operations such as food distribution.

Today, as weakened banks get government stress tests, corporations slash
jobs and families struggle to recover amid the economic rout, Italian
organized crime is enjoying the fruits of its liquidity.

‘Ramping Up’

“The Mafia is ramping up its investing,” says Antonino Di Matteo, a fellow
Mafia prosecutor whose bodyguard stands watch outside his office door in
the Sicilian capital’s fascist-era courthouse. “The Mafia’s financial
managers are trying to invest now, while the time is right, so that they
can launder their fortunes once and for all.”

Italy’s cash-depleted banks may be helping the Mafia become even stronger,
says Antonio Maria Costa, executive director of the United Nations’
Vienna-based Office on Drugs and Crime.

The country’s four biggest lenders -- UniCredit SpA, Intesa Sanpaolo SpA,
Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena SpA and Banco Popolare SC -- are planning
to raise more than 9 billion euros to weather the financial crisis by
selling convertible bonds to the government.

On May 6, the Bank of Italy, which regulates lenders, cautioned that banks
have lowered their guard against money laundering. The central bank plans
a new set of anti-laundering rules to classify, monitor and collect data
on clients.

In one of Scarpinato’s investigations, UniCredit Suisse Bank, a UniCredit
unit based across the border in Lugano, Switzerland, was the apparent
destination for 450,000 euros he eventually seized from another Sicilian
grocery store owner. UniCredit spokesman Marcello Berni says the bank
declines to comment on matters involving individual clients.

Fake Bonds

On May 22, Palermo prosecutors busted an alleged Sicilian Mafia ring that
had tried and failed to use fake Venezuelan bonds as collateral to borrow
$2.2 billion from HSBC Holdings Plc, Bank of America Corp. and unnamed
British banks. The two banks declined to comment.

Italy’s three main organized crime groups divvy up a big chunk of southern
Italy. The Sicilian Mafia, or Cosa Nostra, is the most tightly knit. It’s
the inspiration for the American version of the mob, says Salvatore Lupo,
a history professor at the University of Palermo.

The Campania region’s Camorra is centered in Naples. It’s made up of
independent Mafia families who control neighborhoods or towns. Roberto
Saviano’s 2007 book “Gomorrah” (Farrar, Straus & Giroux) and the movie a
year later have brought the Camorra into the public eye.

‘I Sell Money’

Investigators consider the third group, the Calabria region’s ‘Ndrangheta,
to be Europe’s biggest cocaine traffickers. Its name comes from a word for
a network of ‘ndrine, or clans.

Italy’s black market lenders have already stepped in to provide financial
services.

“I sell money,” alleged loan shark Vincenzo Senese told a businessman who
was trying to raise funds for a startup venture, according to the
transcript of a phone call included as evidence from Senese’s Rome arrest
warrant on charges related to drug trafficking.

High-interest lending to consumers and businesses posted the biggest gains
among illicit commercial activities in Italy last year. Such loan-sharking
jumped 17 percent to 35 billion euros, according to SOS Impresa, a
Rome-based business group that fights extortion.

People shut out from legitimate lenders paid as much as 730 percent annual
interest, outstripping the high of 440 percent SOS Impresa documented in
2007, according to evidence from criminal cases compiled by the
organization.

Loan Shark

One desperate borrower is Maurizio Vara. On a sunny morning in March, he’s
avoiding eavesdroppers in the back corner of an outdoor cafe in Mondello,
a beach town outside Palermo. As a tabby cat naps on a table beneath a
nearby magnolia tree, the 40-year-old hotelier and construction contractor
explains that banks aren’t lending to entrepreneurs in the economic
downturn.

Like countless Italian business­people, he turned to a loan shark as his
business faltered.

“I haven’t been able to get credit from banks,” says Vara, who has
wraparound Fila sunglasses perched atop his balding head. His loan shark
sent thugs to collect the 45,000 euros he owes.

“I want to pay,” says Vara, who says he doesn’t have the cash. “I’ve lost
my future.”

Unlike traditional lenders, the mob has no qualms about resorting to
violence, says Alberto Caperna, a Rome prosecutor who’s pursued usury
cases for 20 years.

Broken Teeth

“A bank can’t break all of your teeth if you don’t pay,” he says as he
chain-smokes Merit cigarettes in his modern office near the Vatican.

As strong and feared as the Mafia is now, it’s angling for greater riches
and influence once the economy rebounds, Scarpinato says. Italian
organized crime groups invested 26 billion euros in industries including
tourism, restaurants, car dealerships and fashion last year, according to
SOS Impresa.

Senese’s son Michele used his cash to muscle in on an auto dealer in
Genzano di Roma, south of the capital, according to the arrest warrant in
a pending case in Rome. The owner needed capital. He also wanted Senese’s
thugs to pressure another dealer to pay off a debt, according to the
allegations.

While the Mafia and its hardball tactics are fixtures in popular culture,
mobsters’ modern business model has emerged only in the past few years.

New Generation

In the late 1990s, younger family members with formal educations began
taking the reins from older Mafiosi, says Pietro Grasso, Italy’s chief
anti-Mafia prosecutor. Provenzano, 76, who was captured in a two-room
shepherd’s shack, never finished second grade. By contrast, Giuseppe
Guttadauro, a convicted mobster and head of a Palermo crime family, is a
surgeon.

Guttadauro, 60, is part of a generation that includes his brother’s
brother-in-law, Matteo Messina Denaro, a rising star who’d reported to
Provenzano.

Under the old business strategy, the ‘Ndrangheta made its money in the
1970s by collecting ransoms for kidnappings. It grabbed the spotlight with
its suspected involvement in the 1973 abduction of oil billionaire J. Paul
Getty’s grandson John Paul Getty III.

It has since transformed into a multinational cocaine- trafficking
syndicate with members posted in South America. Those overseas
representatives buy cocaine wholesale and then organize shipments to
Europe to other Mafiosi in Spain, Holland and Italy, Grasso says.

Cocaine

Steered by its younger leaders, Italian organized crime has taken over
most of the European portion of the global $320 billion cocaine trade for
2009, says Russell Benson, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration chief
for Europe and Africa. He says investigations show that the ‘Ndrangheta
then invests its cash as far away as Canada and Australia.

“There’s a tsunami of cocaine coming to Europe,” Benson says, sitting at a
mahogany table in a room with 6-meter-high ceilings at the U.S. Embassy in
Rome, where he’s based. “They’re out to make a profit and invest that
profit in businesses throughout the world.”

The new Mafia bosses are poised to put some of their money into financial
markets. They’ll probably behave much like any investor who looks for good
deals in stocks and bonds, says Ivanhoe Lo Bello, chairman of Banco di
Sicilia, a Palermo-based unit of UniCredit, Italy’s largest bank.

Mafia members invest anonymously by handing their cash to frontmen --
sometimes known as gatekeepers -- who place the money in accounts held in
the names of corporations or other people untraceable to the Mafiosi,
Italian investigations show.

Mob Investors

“Mobsters care about their money, and they try to invest wisely,” says Lo
Bello, who was born and raised near Syracuse in Sicily. “They are invested
in international financial markets, more or less anonymously, or in their
own territory through people who are known in their sectors as legitimate
businesspeople.”

During Provenzano’s arrest, police discovered more than 200 letters, known
as pizzini, which helped shed light on the Mafia’s tactics. The
correspondence written to him and a few of his own letters were carefully
organized next to an electric typewriter in Provenzano’s hide-out.

Through the notes, Provenzano mediated disputes, distributed cash and
communicated with the outside world during his four decades on the run. He
didn’t trust telephones or computers, which can be tapped and traced.

‘The Godfather’

Until Provenzano was captured, the Sicilian Mafia had been controlled by
his Corleone clan, based in the town south of Palermo that gives the
fictional family of Mario Puzo’s “The Godfather” its name. His arrest
marked the end of the Corleone crime family’s grip on Cosa Nostra. More
important for the new generation of mobsters, it opened the gates for
expansion.

Under Provenzano’s rule, younger Mafiosi with global ambitions were on the
verge of starting a war over who would control legitimate local
businesses, including food markets, the notes show. Among the junior
bosses was Messina Denaro -- today one of Italy’s 30 most-wanted fugitives
and the highest-ranking Sicilian Mafia boss at large.

Messina Denaro, 47, has been on the run since 1993, when he was sought for
participating in bombings that killed 10 people in Florence, Milan and
Rome. The blasts targeted Italian cultural sites, including Florence’s
Uffizi Gallery, the home of Sandro Botticelli’s painting “The Birth of
Venus.” The attacks were an attempt to force the state to ease its use of
solitary confinement for mobsters imprisoned in Italy.

‘Diabolik’

A year earlier, Palermo prosecutors Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino
were assassinated in separate bombings.

During his time in hiding, Messina Denaro has strengthened his hold on
Mafia business and enhanced his legend as a fashion- plate villain,
Scarpinato says.

Unlike Provenzano, who wore jeans and wool sweaters while living as a
fugitive, Messina Denaro is known for his Giorgio Armani and Versace
suits. His nickname, “Diabolik,” comes from a character in an Italian
comic book series, a thief who’s embedded machine guns in the hood of his
black Jaguar sports car -- something that Mafia turncoats say Messina
Denaro told them he admired.

Provenzano went by the less-glamorous nicknames of “Tractor” for his
ability to roll over enemies and “The Accountant” for his skill in
dividing up money.

Messina Denaro and other bosses pioneered the financial structure that’s
benefiting the mob in today’s recession, trial documents of cases in
Sicily based on Provenzano’s pizzini show.

‘A Clean Face’

Food stores were an entry point to that network. The Mafia controlled the
distributor from which a market bought its merchandise. The distributor,
in turn, handpicked the growers and suppliers. Mobsters, who made their
cash from the drug trade, loan-sharking and extortion, pumped the money
through the stores and onward through the network.

Shopping centers and supermarkets are attractive investments for all of
Italy’s crime syndicates, investigations in Calabria, Campania and Sicily
show, Grasso says. With a hand on the whole chain of commerce, the mob
could set prices to regulate the market and position itself to prosper
during hard times.

Messina Denaro, whose letters to Provenzano were among the pizzini found,
laid out the food-store-based business plan.

“You have to find a clean face, someone who has never been in trouble with
the law,” he wrote. He mentioned Grigoli, the market owner who’s on trial,
referring to him as his paesano, or townsman. Grigoli had a license to run
stores under the Despar brand of Amsterdam-based Spar International, which
calls itself the world’s largest retail food store chain.

Muscling In

“As soon as you have found this person, I’ll tell my paesano” -- meaning
Grigoli -- “to buy the outlet in your town and kick out the current
owner,” Messina Denaro wrote in a message dated May 25, 2004.

Grigoli denies being part of Cosa Nostra. He says he was a victim of
extortion, according to Paolo Tosoni, one of his lawyers. In Sicily, it’s
inevitable for the Mafia to try muscling in on businesses. That’s what
happened to Grigoli, Tosoni says.

“He doesn’t deny having been in contact with some lower- level criminal
figures,” Tosoni says. “He didn’t benefit from this relationship. On the
contrary, he did nothing but pay.”

Police Bug

The Mafia’s ability to mix illicit and legal funds from cash-based
businesses has multiplied its power, Scarpinato says. Another of his cases
involved a chain called Sisa SpA. The Sicilian Mafia used Sisa stores to
invest and launder criminal money, according to the asset seizure request
Scarpinato filed in November against the estate of Paolo Sgroi, the late
owner of some of the chain’s stores.

Scarpinato won court approval to seize 250 million euros from the estate
as part of his recent 2.7 billion euro haul. The evidence he’s uncovered
indicates that millions more have already made it into the global
financial system.

Scarpinato got a break on April 29, 2006, when Sgroi and his wife, Monica,
were driving to the Palermo airport in their Mercedes-Benz car. A police
bug picked up their conversation as they concocted an alibi for the
450,000 euros they’d stashed in their luggage. If caught while boarding
their flight to Milan, they’d tell the police they were smuggling the cash
to evade taxes, Sgroi said.

His wife agreed, rehearsing the scene: “‘Where are you going?’” she said,
playing an airport official. “To the Virgin Islands or Caymans,” she
answered as herself.

Smuggler

Tax evasion would have been a minor offense compared with what Italian
prosecutors say the couple was really up to. Sgroi’s bag contained the
profits of organized crime, including some that probably belonged to a
Sicilian Mafia fugitive convicted in Italy and Switzerland of money
laundering and drug trafficking, according to the asset seizure request.

Sgroi and his wife landed in Milan with the money, rented a Renault Megane
at Linate airport and drove to find a Polish man who’d agreed to ferry the
cash across the border to Lugano. Paolo Sgroi and the Pole met in front of
a bar on Viale Beatrice d’Este, near Bocconi University.

The man, carrying an apparently empty black briefcase, walked up to Sgroi,
according to an account of police surveillance in the seizure request.
Sgroi called his wife, who met them at the front door of their Milan
apartment. The pair handed over a white plastic bag of cash.

When police pulled over the smuggler’s car heading toward the Swiss
border, he was traveling with his wife and their 8- year-old son as
decoys. The 450,000 euros was in the white bag in the trunk.

Swiss Bank

The planned destination for the cash was UniCredit Suisse Bank, the Polish
man said, according to court documents. Sgroi told investigators the money
drop was to evade taxes and that it was his money, not the Mafia’s. The
UniCredit bank account Sgroi was aiming for already had 1.7 million euros
in it, Scarpinato found.

Prosecutors who seized Sgroi’s estate allege he aided Cosa Nostra and
attempted to launder money for the group. Cosa Nostra probably controlled
part of his supermarket chain as a shadow investor, the seizure document
says. Neither UniCredit nor its employees were charged with any crime.

Sgroi’s estate denies the charges, says Ernesto D’Angelo, a Palermo lawyer
representing Sgroi’s family. The supermarkets were his, as was the money
he was trying to take to Switzerland to avoid taxes, the lawyer says.

500-Euro Bills

“All of his assets were obtained legally, including what was found
abroad,” D’Angelo says of Sgroi. He says Sgroi had been forced to pay
extortion money to the mob. “We hope the court recognizes the fact that he
was a victim,” D’Angelo says.

The contents of Sgroi’s money bag show how cash plays a role in the
Mafia’s new business model. Half the money was in 500-euro bills, a
denomination that was first circulated in 2002 with the introduction of
the common European currency.

Today, the purple note with its depiction of 20th-century architecture is
a symbol of the Italian mob’s increasing reach, the DEA’s Benson says. The
bills, worth about $690 each, are hard to spend in shops in Europe. Yet
they’re easy to transport. A million dollars in $100 bills weighs about 22
pounds (10 kilograms), while $1 million in 500-euro bills weighs about 3.5
pounds, Benson says.

Those bills are turning up in drug busts in Colombia and Mexico, giving
Mafia hunters like Scarpinato another means of tracking the mob’s cash
flow.

Scarpinato says this new evidence shows that Italy’s crime syndicates pose
a growing threat to the global economy, particularly in its weakened
state. He says he worries that once the recession ends, the Mafia will
have sunk its hooks into scores of new markets and businesses, magnifying
its financial clout.

“The Mafia isn’t part of the past, it’s part of the future,” the
prosecutor says. “Organized crime has evolved. It has become the criminal
protagonist of the third millennium.”

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