My Fathers Father or my Grandfather was a member of this special police force up
till the day he died.That was over 70 years ago i used to hear my father talk
about it from the stories his mother told him.I remember he was very proud when
he spoke of his father.He never really knew him cause he had died when my father
was three years old.I came across this story by accident .I had no idea they
still existed .See what you can find when you are bored.These guys were like the first sort of Swat Teams used to combat the Mafia.
Italian Carabinieri, paramilitary policemen, of the "Cacciatori di Calabria"
special corp (Calabria's hunters
ROME - A decade ago, while the Sicilian Mafia was imploding under a ruthless
crackdown, another crime syndicate rooted in the rugged mountains at the tip of
Italy's boot was quietly eclipsing Cosa Nostra in power and reach.
The bullet-riddled bodies of six young Italians who had just dined at a pizzeria
in Germany's industrial heartland told the world last week what Italian
authorities already knew: The clannish 'ndrangheta crime syndicate had come of age as an international
force.
The mob based in Calabria was once largely limited to shaking down small-town
merchants and carrying out kidnappings for ransom. Composed of clusters of
families so loyal they practically pledge their newborns to a life of crime, it
has expanded to become the biggest player in Europe's flourishing cocaine
market.
Prosecutors estimate its operations at home and abroad, which include such
traditional rackets as loan sharking, extortion and arms trafficking, are worth
some $50 billion. Much of that gets laundered through legitimate businesses like
hotels, supermarkets and pizzerias across Europe that the 'ndrangheta snapped up
in a 1990s buying spree.
The horizontal structure of crime families reinforced by marriage has proven
largely impenetrable, said Calabrian prosecutor Nicola Gratteri, who has been
investigating the syndicate for the last 20 years.
Gratteri is heading the Italian investigation into the slayings outside Da Bruno's restaurant in Duisburg, Germany _ an unheard of explosion
abroad of a decades-old feud in San Luca, a tiny Calabrian town where crime
clans are now vying for control of the cocaine trade.
The Italian premier's office presented a report this month before the violence
in Germany asserting that the Calabrian underworld had become the dominant
criminal force in southern Italy.
The syndicate "has a sizable presence" in Germany, France, Belgium, the
Netherlands, the Balkans, eastern Europe and South America, "thanks to
consolidated relations with producers and traffickers of cocaine," the report
said.
Raids in Milan in May turned up 550 pounds of cocaine that investigators said
had been smuggled from South America via Senegal by the 'ndrangheta.
Gratteri said the 'ndrangheta (pronounced AN-dran-getta) invests very little in
southern Italy, instead focusing its money-laundering activities on more
affluent central and northern Italy as well as eastern Europe.
"After the fall of the Berlin Wall, they went there (to East Germany) and bought cheap properties that
were historically or architecturally prestigious," Gratteri said.
Prosecutors say the 'ndrangheta then proceeded to set up a network of pizzerias,
restaurants and hotels for laundering money.
"The Germans must realize that where there is pizza, there's the mafia," Giorgio
Basile, one of the 'ndrangheta's rare turncoats, was quoted as saying by Italian
media after he was arrested at a train station in Bavaria in 1998.
The 'ndrangheta used ransom money in the 1980s to buy heroin from Turkey and
Lebanon but switched to cocaine in the 1990s when prices soared. Now it has a
virtual monopoly on the trade in Europe, Gratteri said.
The crime syndicate has its own polyglot brokers in northern Europe and in
Bogota, Colombia, where its mobsters "buy coke like you buy stock, getting the
best price," Gratteri said.
The heartland of 'ndrangheta power lies in a 6-square-mile rocky patch of the
Aspromonte mountains. But relatives of clan members who have emigrated as far as Canada, the United States, South
America and Australia can provide a support network.
The 'ndrangheta's ascent came as Cosa Nostra was reeling from a police
crackdown. The "Pizza Connection" probe broke a $1.65 billion heroin and cocaine
smuggling operation that used pizzerias as fronts in 1975-84. A series of trials
in Sicily put hundreds of Mafia men behind bars.
In the 1990s, when more than 1,000 turncoats had left Cosa Nostra and were
cooperating with authorities, only some 40 mobsters from the 'ndrangheta
provided evidence, Gratteri said.
The 'ndrangheta's world is highly disciplined, to the point that its bosses
determine who gets to dance with whom at local feast days. Punishment is swift,
decided by a "defense minister" who hands out sentences with no appeal.
Punishments for minor infractions include getting your head stuck in a toilet
bowl while it's being flushed or a clansman urinating on your leg, Gratteri
said. Death sentences are normally handled by a gunshot.
One of the Duisburg victims, who was celebrating a fellow victim's 18th
birthday, is suspected by investigators of being among the hit men who carried
out the Christmas 2006 slaying in San Luca of Maria Strangio, a mob boss's wife.
Investigators believe her husband was the probable target of the attack. The
mother of the slain suspected hit man has denied her son had a role in last
year's killing.
The San Luca feud turned bloody in 1991, after two masked youths from one clan
entered a rival boss's coffee bar in the town and started throwing eggs during
Carnival merrymaking. The youths were gunned down later that day.
The egg-throwing "was just an outward display of tensions which had gone on for
years" in the town of 4,000 people, Gratteri said.
Counting last week's victims, the feud has claimed 15 lives.
"Resistance to tyranny is obedience to God"
-Thomas Jefferson
"The tree of freedom must be nurtured from time to time with the blood of its patriots"
-Thomas Jefferson
"When the Government Fears the People, There is Liberty; When the People Fear the Government, There is Tyranny." - Thomas Jefferson