Benedetto Santapaola

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Catania Mafia boss Nitto Santapaola
Catania Mafia boss Nitto Santapaola

Benedetto Santapaola (Catania, June 4, 1938), better known as Nitto is a prominent mafioso from Catania, the main city and industrial centre on Sicily's east coast. His nickname is il cacciatore (the hunter), because of his passion for shooting game. He is currently in jail serving several life sentences.

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[edit] Early years

Nitto Santapaola was born in the degraded neighbourhood of San Cristoforo[1] in Catania into a poor family together with his brothers Salvatore, Antonino, Natale and numerous cousins, such as the Ferrera clan, the Ercolano clan and the Romeo clan, all members or associates of Cosa Nostra, and the future nucleus of the Santapaola-Ercolano Mafia family.

At the beginning of 1960s, Santapaola was introduced by his cousin Francesco Ferrera into the largest Mafia family of Catania, at the time under the command of Giuseppe Calderone. Santapaola’s first denunciation was in 1962 for theft and criminal conspiracy. In 1970 he was sent into internal exile and in 1975 he was denounced for cigarette smuggling.

[edit] Ally of the Corleonesi

While Giuseppe Calderone was elevated to the Regional Commission of Cosa Nostra in 1975, his underboss Santapaola took over the illicit business in Catania for the Mafia family and became the capo famiglia of the clan. Santapaola managed the interests in heroin trafficking and acted as chief enforcer for the leading businessmen. Meanwhile, he carefully built a private faction within the family that was loyal to him – and strengthened relations with Totò Riina and the Corleonesi.

While Riina was a fugitive he frequently spent time in and around Catania and often went hunting with Santapaola around the local mountains. Riina decided to support Santapaola’s faction in order to replace Calderone, an ally of Stefano Bontade from Palermo and Giuseppe Di Cristina from Caltanissetta. Giuseppe Calderone, was killed on September 30, 1978 by his former close friend and protégé. Santapaola took over the command of the Catania Mafia Family. These skirmishes were just a prelude to the Second Mafia War that really started after the murder of Stefano Bontade in 1981.

[edit] Catania Mafia wars

In order to kill Santapaola’s rival, Alfio Ferlito, three policemen who were escorting him from Enna to Trapani prison were killed as well
In order to kill Santapaola’s rival, Alfio Ferlito, three policemen who were escorting him from Enna to Trapani prison were killed as well

Santapaola’s command over the Catania Mafia was not unchallenged. He had to fight a war against another independent group that was not part of the Mafia in Catania, known as Cursoti, which waged war in order to control gambling and cigarettes smuggling. He was also involved in a bitter feud with the faction of Alfio Ferlito, who had been a close friend of Giuseppe Calderone. The war involved gun battles in the streets and dozens of murders.[2][3]

On June 6, 1981, Santapaola was seriously wounded when ambushed by Ferlito and his men. When Ferlito was arrested Santapaola planned his revenge. On June 16, 1982, Ferlito was killed in an ambush when he was escorted by the Carabinieri during a transfer between to prisons. The killers were from Palermo and linked to the Corleonesi.

[edit] The murder of General Dalla Chiesa

Santapaola paid back the service by sending a hit team from Catania to Palermo to kill Carabinieri general Carlo Alberto Dalla Chiesa, on September 3, 1982, in the Via Carini in Palermo. Swapping hit teams proved to be a successful way to distract police investigations. Dalla Chiesa had just been appointed prefect of Sicily to end the violence that was the result of a war between rival Mafia families. In his last public interview it had become clear that Dalla Chiesa started to focus on the emerging role of the Catania Mafia.

Dalla Chiesa had noticed that four mighty real estate developers that dominated the construction industry on Sicily were building in Palermo with the consent of the Mafia. The four entrepreneurs, Carmelo Costanzo, Francesco Finocchiaro, Mario Rendo and Gaetano Graci, were granted the honorary title Cavaliere del Lavoro (Knight of Labour) by the Italian government as reward for special merit to the Italian economy.

[edit] Links with business and politics

After Dalla Chiesa’s murder, investigating magistrate Giovanni Falcone found a note that indicated that Dalla Chiesa had discovered that Santapaola was on the payroll of Costanzo. Falcone encouraged Elio Pizzuti of the Italian Financial/Customs Police (Guardia di Finanza) to look into their financial records. Pizzuti found ample evidence of corruption and political influence peddling by the four Knights that tied together the local Mafia, high finance and political figures.[4]

Santapaola had been a guest at the wedding of Costanzo’s nephew and had been hiding in one of Costanzo’s luxury hotels near Catania. He also had access to the private game reserve of another one of the Knights, Gaetano Graci. Mario Rendo bought all his cars from Santapaola’s car dealership, while wiretaps revealed Rendo’s executives discussing subcontracting with various mafiosi.

Pizzuto also discovered a massive tax fraud by the Knights through phoney receipts and a list of payoffs to politicians and magistrates. Rendo told inspectors that the false receipts were necessary to create a slush fund for government contracts. (A prelude to the scandal of political bribery known as Tangentopoli that would emerge ten years later in 1992) Rendo discussed the investigations of Pizzuti with his boss, Treasury minister Rino Formica of the Italian Socialist Party (PSI). Pizzuti was promoted and sent to North Italy – as far away as possible from Sicily.

Later, photographs turned up showing the mayor and members of the Catania city council with Santapaola, while a clan war bloodied the streets at the time. One picture showed Santapaola in friendly embrace with Salvatore Lo Turco, a member of the Sicilian parliament’s Antimafia Commission.[5]

The Catanese Mafia was generally able to learn about arrest warrants before they were issued and sometimes have names crossed of the list. The police released Santapaola after only a few routine questions when his bulletproof car had been found at the scene of a vicious shoot-out in which several people had been killed. Moreover, they continued to grant him a license to bear arms, despite his well-known criminal record.[6]

[edit] Murder of Giuseppe Fava

Giuseppe Pippo Fava, editor of I Siciliani
Giuseppe Pippo Fava, editor of I Siciliani

Santapaola has been convicted for the murder of the journalist Giuseppe Fava on January 5, 1984. Fava, founder and editor in chief of the magazine I Siciliani, exposed the links between the Catania Mafia and the world of business and politics. In the first edition of I Siciliani Fava published an article I quattro cavalieri dell'apocalisse mafiosa (The four horsemen of the Mafia apocalypse), denouncing the links of the entrepreneurs with the Mafia.[7]

In 1994, Maurizio Avola, a nephew of Santapaola, confessed the killing of Fava, and became a pentito. He also confessed some 70 other murders. Avola said that his uncle Nitto Santapaola had ordered the killing of the journalist.[8]

[edit] Arrest and convictions

On May 18, 1993, the fugitive Nitto Santapaola was arrested in a farmhouse hideout outside Catania after being on the run for 11 years. His wife, Carmela Minniti, was killed on September 1, 1995, by killers posing as policemen. They called at her house, pushed past her daughter and shot her dead.[9] "She ran his affairs," said Liliana Madeo, author of a book on the Mafia's new women. "If she was just a little woman, she wouldn't have been killed."[10]

Santapaola’s rival Giuseppe Ferone (who had become a pentito) was one of the killers. Nitto Santapaola forgave his wife's killer in a letter he publicly read in court. Ferone’s son and father had been killed on the orders of Santapaola.

In 1998, Santapaola and Aldo Ercolano were convicted for ordering the killing of Giuseppe Fava.[11] In 2001 the Court of Appeal in Catania confirmed the life sentences. He also received life sentences for the murder of Carlo Alberto Dalla Chiesa, Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino.

Santapaola allegedly continues to run his clan from inside prison with the help of a string of "regents". On December 4, 2007, his son Vincenzo Santapaola who allegedly succeeded his father, was arrested.[12] Vincenzo had been in and out of jail since 1992 on various charges including the murder of Antimafia journalist Giuseppe Fava. He now faces charges of trying to reorganise his father’s business.[13]

[edit] References

  1. ^ (Italian) Catania da primato, Avvenimenti, February 9, 2007
  2. ^ Stille, Excellent Cadavers, p. 74.
  3. ^ (Italian) Nitto Santapaola: wanted?, I Siciliani, March 1985
  4. ^ Stille, Excellent Cadavers, p. 71-73.
  5. ^ Stille, Excellent Cadavers, p. 177.
  6. ^ Stille, Excellent Cadavers, p. 232.
  7. ^ (Italian) I quattro cavalieri dell’apocalisse mafiosa, in I Siciliani, January 1983. The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse are mentioned in the Bible in chapter six of the Book of Revelation. The four horsemen are traditionally named Pestilence, War, Famine, and Death.
  8. ^ (Italian) Giuseppe "Pippo" Fava by Sebastiano Gulisano, Polizia e Democrazia (2002)
  9. ^ As Code of Silence Cracks, Mafia Changes Rules, The New York Times, October 11, 1995
  10. ^ Women play dual role in pushing Mafia into a brave new world, The Irish Examiner, March 19, 1998
  11. ^ Mafiosi jailed for life, BBC News, July 19, 1998
  12. ^ Raids net 38 as Sicily police aim to stamp out the mafia, The Guardian, December 5, 2007
  13. ^ Superboss son caught in huge op, Italy Magazine, December 5, 2007
  • Arlacchi, Pino & Antonio Calderone (1992). Men of Dishonor. Inside the Sicilian Mafia. An Account of Antonio Calderone, New York: William Morrow & Co.
  • Stille, Alexander (1995). Excellent Cadavers. The Mafia and the Death of the First Italian Republic, New York: Vintage ISBN 0-09-959491-9
  • (Italian) Caruso, Alfio (2000). Da cosa nasce cosa. Storia della mafia del 1943 a oggi, Milan: Longanesi ISBN 88-304-1620-7

[edit] External links