Girolamo Piromalli

Girolamo Piromalli

Mugshot of Girolamo Piromalli in 1974
Born (1918-10-07)October 7, 1918
Gioia Tauro, Italy
Died February 11, 1979(1979-02-11) (aged 60)
Gioia Tauro, Italy
Nationality Italian
Other names Mommo
Allegiance 'Ndrangheta

Girolamo Piromalli (October 7, 1918 – February 11, 1979), also known as Mommo, was a historical and charismatic boss of the 'Ndrangheta, a Mafia-type organisation in Calabria (Italy). His criminal base was his home town Gioia Tauro on the Tyrrhenian coast of Calabria. He was the capobastone (head of command) of the Piromalli 'ndrina.

'Ndrangheta boss

Mommo Piromalli ruled the most powerful 'Ndrangheta group in the Gioia Tauro plain with his younger brother Giuseppe "Peppe" Piromalli. The Piromalli 'Ndrina contained more than 200 members.[1]

Before becoming one of the most feared criminal power brokers in the Gioia Tauro plain, Mommo Piromalli was a cowherd.[2] In 1939 he was charged with illegal carriage of firearms, in 1940 for grievous bodily harm, in 1944 for robbery with violence and in 1950 for murder.[3] In 1967, the court imposed a five-year mandatory internal banishment (soggiorno obbligato) to remove Piromalli from his home town and criminal associates.[4]

Together with Antonio Macrì from Siderno on the Ionic coast and Domenico Mico Tripodo, the boss of the city of Reggio Calabria and the surrounding areas, the Piromalli brothers formed a sort of triumvirate since the beginning of the 1960s until the outbreak of the first 'Ndrangheta war in the mid 1970s. Their senior position was recognized by all other heads of 'Ndrangheta families and their advice was in most cases followed without protest.[5]

Establishing the Santa

Mommo Piromalli and the bosses of several other families established La Santa at the end of the 1960s. They were eager to modify the traditional rules of the 'Ndrangheta in order to be able to access contracts for public works in the region and start illegal activities such as drug trafficking, which were prohibited by the traditional code but promised to be very profitable. Through the membership of covert Masonic lodges the 'Ndrangheta bosses were able to contact law enforcement authorities, judges and politicians that were necessary to access to public work contracts.[6][7][8]

According to Gaetano Costa (the former chief of the Messina Mafia family turned state witness), "it was Mommo Piromalli who – given the enormous interests which the existed in the Reggio Calabria area (the railroad stump, the steelwork center, and the port in Gioia Tauro, etc.) – entrusted himself with the rank of santista, in order to assert his higher authority and hence directly control the public works. He said that this rank had been given him directly in Toronto, where there was a very important 'ndrina."[6]

These innovations and the new institution of La Santa were opposed by the more traditionalist bosses such as Antonio Macrì and Domenico Tripodo. Only at the end of the so-called first 'Ndrangheta war, which took place in 1974-76 and led to the deaths of Macrì and Tripodo as well as the rise of Piromalli and the De Stefano brothers as the new leaders of the Reggio Calabria 'ndrine, was the new institution fully recognized.[6]

Drug trafficking and Getty kidnap

In 1973 he was charged of heroin trafficking when an undercover operation by the US Federal Bureau of Narcotics (FBN) targeting Saverio Mammoliti revealed that Mammoliti needed permission of Macrì and "Don Mommo" Piromalli.[4][9][10]

On March 23, 1974, police arrested Piromalli and charged him helping to mastermind the kidnapping of John Paul Getty III, grandson of the oil tycoon and multi-millionaire J. Paul Getty, in July 1973.[11] Getty's ear was cut off and sent to the family to induce his grandfather to produce a ransom. After 158 days, the malnourished and bruised Getty was released on December 15, 1973. He was left behind at an abandoned service station, shivering in a driving rainstorm.[12]

Piromalli was picked up without resistance in Gioia Tauro during a series of early morning raids on more than a dozen homes in Calabria. A 100,000 lire banknote found in his home in January 1974 was part of the USD 2.8 million ransom paid for the release of Getty Jr.[11][13] In July 1976, Piromalli was acquitted in the trial against the kidnappers.[14] Nine men had been arrested. Two minor perpetrators were convicted and sent to prison.[12] The ransom was used to buy the trucks needed to establish a transport monopoly in the construction of the Gioia Tauro port.[15]

Business

Together with his brother Peppe Piromalli, Mommo redirected the 'Ndrangheta clan from its rural base to an entrepreneurial criminal organisation assuming dominance over several public works in the Gioia Tauro area, particularly in the construction and operation of the new container seaport.[16]

When in 1974 businesses involved in the expansion of the port and steelworks in Gioia Tauro offered a three per cent kickback to be left in peace the three leading 'Ndrangheta families at the time, Antonio Macrì, the Piromalli clan and the De Stefano clan rejected the offer and wanted to be sub-contracted on work carried in order to control the project.[17][18]

The 'Ndrangheta exploited the construction of the steelworks until the project was abandoned when the government decided there was no economic base for it. In 1977 disagreements about business interests emerged between Piromalli and the De Stefano clan. A hit squad headed by Peppe Piromalli killed Giorgio De Stefano. Some 1,000 people were killed in clan wars over the construction contracts.[19]

On February 11, 1979, Mommo Piromalli died of natural causes in a hospital in Gioia Tauro. He was succeeded as head of the clan by his younger brother Giuseppe "Peppe" Piromalli.[13][20] Piromalli also had contacts with Sicilian Mafiosi such as Angelo La Barbera and Stefano Bontate.[4]

References

  1. Paoli, Mafia Brotherhoods, p. 31
  2. Arlacchi, Mafia Business, p. 51
  3. Arlacchi, Mafia Business, p. 20
  4. 1 2 3 (Italian) Esposizione introduttiva del Pubblico ministero nel processo nei confronti di Giulio Andreotti, Direzione Distrettuale Antimafia Palermo, 1994, pp. 102-3
  5. Paoli, Mafia Brotherhoods, p. 60
  6. 1 2 3 Paoli, Mafia Brotherhoods, p. 115
  7. (Italian) Guarino, Poteri segreti e criminalità, pp. 14-15
  8. (Italian) 'Ndrangheta 2005 at the Wayback Machine (archived September 29, 2007), Nisio Palmieri, Dossier della Fondazione Cesar e dell’Associazione Sicurstrada per conto della Consulta Nazionale dei Consigli Regionali Unipol Assicurazioni
  9. Arlacchi, Mafia Business, p. 152
  10. (Italian) Gratteri & Nicaso, Fratelli di Sangue, p. 165
  11. 1 2 Getty Case Suspect Arrested in Italy, The New York Times, March 23, 1974
  12. 1 2 J. Paul Getty III, 54, Dies; Had Ear Cut Off by Captors, The New York Times, February 7, 2011
  13. 1 2 (Italian) Gratteri & Nicaso, Fratelli di Sangue, pp. 152-53
  14. 2 Getty Kidnappers Sentenced in Italy, The New York Times, July 30, 1976
  15. Arlacchi, Mafia Business, p. 87
  16. (Italian) Gioia Tauro: boss Giuseppe Piromalli, 84 anni, muore agli arresti, Giornale di Calabria, February 21, 2005
  17. Arlacchi, Mafia Business, p. 106
  18. Paoli, Mafia Brotherhoods, p. 168
  19. Spotts & Wieser, Italy, a Difficult Democracy, p. 188
  20. Paoli, Mafia Brotherhoods, p. 49
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