Leoluca Bagarella

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Mafia boss Leoluca Bagarella
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Mafia boss Leoluca Bagarella

Leoluca Bagarella (born Corleone, February 3, 1942) is an Italian criminal and member of the Sicilian Mafia. He is from the town of Corleone and was a member of the Corleonesi.

Bagarella sided with Luciano Leggio in the late 1950s when Leggio wiped out the former Mafia boss of Corleone Michele Navarra and his men. Bagarella became the brother-in-law of Salvatore Riina when, in 1974, Riina married Bagarella's sister, Ninette. That was the same year Leggio was imprisoned and Riina became the boss of the Corleonesi. The Brother-In-Law became Leoluca's nickname because of his relationship to Riina. Bagarella's own wife, Vincenza, was the niece of Fillipo Marchese, a notorious killer and high ranking member of the Corleonesi.

Bagarella is said to have been involved in around 300 murders [1], including that of his wife, who was killed in the late 1980s not long after her brother Giuseppe Marchese - another Corleonesi hitman - became a state witness (pentito. Bagarella also killed police chief Boris Giuliano as well as a nephew of the pentito Tommaso Buscetta, one of many of Buscetta's relatives to die since he betrayed the Mafia.

Two of Bagarella's brothers were also Mafiosi; his elder brother, Calogero Bagarella, was shot dead on December 10, 1969, in the Viale Lazio in Palermo, during a shootout with rival mafioso Michele Cavataio and Cavataio's men, known as the Viale Lazio bloodbath. A second brother was murdered in prison in 1972.

Following Riina's arrest in early 1993, Bagarella is believed to have taken over a section of the Corleonesi, rivalling Riina's primary successor, Bernardo Provenzano. However, just two-years later, on June 24, 1995, Bagarella was arrested, having been a fugitive for four-years. He was subsequently convicted of multiple murder and imprisoned for life.

Tommaso Buscetta knew him in prison back in the 1970s and had the following to say about Bagarella: "I prefer not to speak about him, I think he doesn't belong to the human species...in prison everybody feared him. I remember we stayed three months together in the prison infirmary and the only words he told me were good morning and good evening"

Bagarella protested in 2002 at his treatment under a new law that placed heavy restrictions on jailed Mafia bosses to prevent them from running their criminal empires from behind bars. At a court appearance that June, Bagarella made some thinly veiled threats to the Italian government, saying the Mafia is "tired of being manipulated by political forces." [1] Some interpreted this as a sign the Mafia was annoyed that its previously cosy relationship with politicians had broken down, as if the harsh restrictions on the Mafia bosses was betraying some sort of clandestine promise made to them by (unnamed) politicians.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Are Mob Hits Bad for Business? Time Magazine Europe, September 30, 2002
  • The Antimafia: Italy’s fight against organized crime (1999), Alison Jamieson, Palgrave Macmillan, ISBN 0-333-80158-X.

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