Pietro Musumeci

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Pietro Musumeci is a former general and deputy director of Italy's military intelligence agency, SISMI.

A member of Propaganda Due, Musumeci was convicted in 1985, alongside with other SISMI officers Francesco Pazienza and Giuseppe Belmonte, for embezzlement and criminal association. Musumeci and Belmonte were also convicted for possessing and transporting explosives. They tried to sidetrack the investigations on the 1980 Bologna train station bombing by simulating an attempt with explosives on a Taranto-Milan train, in January 1981 (the bombing was voluntarily thwarted by order of Musumeci).[1]

A further conviction came in 1988, when he was also sentenced for slandering said investigation.[2] Although acquitted on appeals, this sentence was upheld by the Italian Supreme Court in 1995.

A 1984 parliamentary inquiry indicated that irregularities at SISMI included the charge that Musumeci used the Camorra to negotiate the release of Ciro Cirillo, a Christian-democratic politician who was kidnapped by the Red Brigades.[3]

One of the members of Musumeci's office, colonel Camillo Guglielmi, was in the same street in which former Italian prime minister Aldo Moro was kidnapped, on 16 March 1978.[4]

References

  1. "Former Top Intelligence Official Convicted, Sentenced". Associated Press. 1985-07-25. 
  2. "Four Convicted Of Mass Murder In Italian Bombing That Killed 85". Associated Press. 1988-07-11. 
  3. "Officers questioned on Bologna blast". The Guardian. 1984-10-22. 
  4. "Gli interrogativi del caso Moro",
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