Banda della Magliana

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The Banda della Magliana was an Italian criminal organization based in Roma, particularly active through-out the late 1970s until the early 1990s. Given by the media, the name refers to the original neighborhood, the Magliana, of most of its members.

The Banda della Magliana was involved in criminal activities during the Italian years of lead (anni di piombo). The Italian justice tied it to other criminal organizations such as the Cosa Nostra, Camorra or 'Ndrangheta, but most importantly also to neofascist activists such as the Nuclei Armati Rivoluzionari (NAR), responsible of the 1980 Bologna massacre, the secret services (SISMI) and political figures such as Licio Gelli, grand-master of the freemasonic lodge Propaganda Due (P2). Along with Gladio, the NATO clandestine anti-communist organization, P2 was involved in a strategy of tension during the years of lead which included false flag terrorist attacks. These ties, underground compared to their standard activities (drug dealing, horse bets, money laundering, etc.), have led the Banda to be related to the political events of the conflict which divided Italy into two during the Cold War, and in particular to events such as the 1979 assassination of journalist Carmine Pecorelli; the 1978 murder of Prime minister Aldo Moro, also leader of the Christian Democracy who was negotiating the historic compromise with the Italian Communist Party (PCI); the 1982 assassination attempt against Roberto Rosone, vice-president of Banco Ambrosiano; "banker of God" Roberto Calvi's 1981 murder; and also the 1980 Bologna massacre. Finally, the mysterious disappareance of Emanuela Orlandi, a case peripherically linked to former Grey Wolves member Mehmet Ali Agca's 1981 assassination attempt on Pope John Paul II, has also been related to the gang.

Contents

[edit] Beginnings

The first criminal act of the Banda della Magliana was the kidnapping of duke Massimiliano Grazioli Lante della Rovere on November 7, 1977, against a ransom. The lord was murdered but the ransom obtained anyhow. Instead of spending everything, the group decided to keep the savings to invest in crime in Roma and take over the capital.

Unlike the Camorra or Cosa Nostra, the Banda della Magliana wasn't structured around a hierarchical pyramid. It was instead composed of various decentralized cells, each working on its own. Making equal shares and living of dividends obtained from the criminal association, they quickly took over Roma, surprising the underground by their violent methods. Money continued to be sent to its members through their families if they were emprisonned, while successful members, going around in Ferraris and Rolex, had to keep on criminal activities, thus remaining "crime laborers" (operai dei crimine).

[edit] Far right ties and Mino Pecorelli's assassination

Some gang members, including founder Franco Giuseppucci, Maurizio Abbatino and Alessandro d'Ortenzi, were far right sympathisants. Crime however, and not politics, was the main activity of the group, and some material incentives much needed to get them involved in this field. One of their first contact with the Italian neofascist movement was in summer 1978 — a few months after Aldo Moro's murder — in a villa of Rieti owned by criminologist, psychiatrist and neofascist professor Aldo Semerari. In exchange of financing his political activities, Aldo Semerari proposed psychiatric expertise to arrested gang members in order to help them be relaxed.

However, the deal didn't last long, as Aldo Semerari was assassinated on April 1, 1982 in Ottaviano (Province of Naples). He had made the same deal with Raffaele Cutolo's Nuova Camorra Organizzata (NCO), as well as with the rival organization of the Cutolo. This didn't please neither Roberto Ammaturo's family nor the NCO. Beside being a famous far right criminologist, Aldo Semerari was also member of Propaganda Due (P2) masonic lodge and maintained links with the SISMI, the Italian military intelligence agency.

More important links were found between the Banda della Magliana and the Nuclei Armati Rivoluzionari (NAR) far right terrorist group, in particular through Massimo Carminati, a NAR member whom was a good customer of Franco Giuseppuci and Maurizio Abbatino's bar. Massimo Carminati quickly became a "pupil" of the gang, and introduced to them Valerio Fioravanti and Francesco Mambro, whom were both accused of implication in the 1980 Bologna massacre. The two criminal organizations quickly became closely linked, with the Banda della Magliana laundering the money obtained from NAR's hold-ups to finance their political activities, while the NAR helped the Banda in street activities (racket, drug transportation, etc). However, their most mysterious "joint venture," which lifted important questions, concerned weapons: ammunitions, guns and bombs belonging to both groups were surprisingly found in the basements of the Italian Health Minister.

In the same basement were found ammunition cartridges of a difficult brand to find on the market (Getelot). Coming from the same lot were four bullets, of the same type and the same usure, which marked them as the one used for one specific homicide: Carmine Pecorelli, a journalist who had published allegations that Prime minister Giulio Andreotti had ties to the Mafia, and was murdered in 1979. Giulio Andreotti and his leading assistant Claudio Vitalone have been suspected for this assassination : Andreotti was convicted in November 2002 of ordering the murder of Pecorelli, and sentenced to twenty-four-years imprisonment. But the eighty-three-year-old Andreotti was immediately released pending an appeal, and on October 30, 2003, an appeals court over-turned the conviction and acquitted Andreotti of the original murder charge.

During the trial, the Italian justice clearly demonstrated the involvement of the banda della Magliana in Pecorelli's murder, although the material responsible of the killing, Massimo Carminati, was relaxed. Still according to the judges, the trial demonstrated "clear links between Claudio Vitalone and the banda della Magliana through the person of Enrico de Pedis," (alias Renatino, one of the leader of the Banda della Magliana). They continued however by stating that the "probation evidence was not univocal." Thus, due to insufficient evidence, Claudio Vitalone was relaxed.

[edit] Roberto Calvi's case

Further information: Roberto Calvi  and Banco Ambrosiano

Roberto Calvi, alias "God's Banker" in charge of Banco Ambrosiano, which main-shareholder was the Vatican Bank, was killed in London on June 18, 1982. Banco Ambrosiano, which crashed in one of the major financial scandal of the 1980's, was involved in money-laundering activities for the mafia, and allegedly of funneling funds to the Polish Solidarity trade-union (Solidarność) and the Contras in Nicaragua. Ernesto Diotallevi, one of the leader of the Banda della Magliana, is been prosecuted for Calvi's murder.

In 1997, Italian prosecutors in Rome implicated a member of the Sicilian Mafia, Giuseppe Calò, in Calvi's murder, along with Flavio Carboni, a Sardinian businessman with wide ranging interests. Two other men, Ernesto Diotallevi (purportedly one of the leaders of the Banda della Magliana) and former Mafia member turned informer Francesco Di Carlo, were also alleged to be involved in the killing.

On July 19, 2005, Licio Gelli, the grand master of the Propaganda Due or P2 masonic lodge, was formally indicted by magistrates in Rome for the murder of Calvi, along with Giuseppe Calò, Ernesto Diotallevi, Flavio Carboni and Carboni's Austrian ex-girlfriend, Manuela Kleinszig. Licio Gelli, in his statement before the court, blamed figures connected with Calvi's work financing Solidarność, allegedly on behalf of the Vatican. Gelli was accused of having provoked Calvi's death in order to punish him for embezzling money from Banco Ambrosiano that was owed to him and the Mafia. The Mafia was also claimed to have wanted to prevent Calvi from revealing that Banco Ambrosiano had been used for money laundering.

On October 5, 2005, the trial of the five individuals charged with Calvi's murder began in Rome. The defendants are Giuseppe Calò, Flavio Carboni, Manuela Kleinszig, Ernesto Diotallevi, and Calvi's former driver and bodyguard Silvano Vittor. The trial is taking place in a specially fortified courtroom in Rome's Rebibbia prison and is expected to last up to two years. [1]

Furthermore, the son of Roberto Calvi has claimed that Emanuela Orlandi's case was closely related to Calvi's case.

[edit] Emanuela Orlandi's case

Further information: Emanuela Orlandi  and Mehmet Ali Agca

Emanuela Orlandi, a citizen of Vatican City, mysteriously disappeared on June 22, 1983 at the age of fifteen. Although the case still hasn't been solved, and Orlandi has remained missing ever since, apparently some have tried to exchange her against Grey Wolves member Mehmet Ali Agca, who shot on the Pope in 1981. Allegedly, some of the persons who tried to strike the deal with the Vatican were members of the Banda della Magliana.

In 2005, an anonymous phone call attested that in order to find a resolution on the Orlandi case, it would have to be discovered as to who is buried in the Crypt of Saint Apollinare’s Church, and about the favour that Renatino, one of the leader of the Banda della Magliana, made to the Cardinal Ugo Poletti, at the time.

In the center of Rome, near Piazza Navona, there is Saint Apollinare Church, with its crypt underneath its Basilica, where Popes, Cardinals and Christian martyrs are buried, there is the grave of Enrico De Pedis, also known as Renatino, one of the most powerful heads of the Magliana gang, assassinated on February 2, 1990. The Basilica is part of the same building of the The Pontifical Institute of Sacred Music that Orlandi attended, and where she was last seen. De Pedis’ interment at the Church is an unusual procedure for a common citizen, and even more because he was a gangster. Authorizing the interment at the time, was then Cardinal Ugo Poletti, now deceased.

In February 2006, an ex-member of the Magliana Gang recognized behind the voice of Mario one of the killers working for Enrico De Pedis (Renatino). Mario was one of the anonymous person who had phoned to propose the exchange of Emanuela Orlandi against Mehmet Ali Agca.

[edit] Bibliography

  • Banda della Magliana, by Otello Lupacchini
  • Ragazzi di malavita, by Giovanni Bianconi
  • La Banda della Magliana, by Gianni Flamini
  • Romanzo criminale, by Giancarlo De Cataldo

[edit] Films

  • Fatti della banda della Magliana, directed by Daniele Costantini (2005)
  • Romanzo criminale, directed by Michele Placido (2005)

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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