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Top Camorra boss turns State's evidence

Top Camorra boss turns State's evidence

Casalesi kingpin Iovine starts to help police

Naples, 22 May 2014, 18:00

ANSA Editorial

ANSACheck

- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

-     ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

(BY Laura Clarke).
    A top Camorra mobster, Antonio Iovine, has started to collaborate with anti-mafia prosecutors in the southern Campania region, Italian media reported Thursday.
    Iovine, also known as 'o ninno', is considered one of the four former bosses of the powerful Casalesi clan from Casal di Principe in the province of Caserta, whose death threats have forced anti-mafia writer Roberto Saviano into 24-hour police protection.
    The others are Francesco Bidognetti, Francesco Schiavone (aka Sandokan) and Michele Zagaria.
    Iovine, 50, is currently serving a life sentence for multiple murder and other crimes under Italy's tough prison regime for organised criminals, the so-called article 41-bis, after being captured in November 2010 following 15 years on the run.
    He was sentenced to life imprisonment in absentia in January 2010 along with Bidognetti, Schiavone and Zagaria following the 12-year so-called Spartacus maxi trial against the Casalesi clan.
    Following his decision to 'repent' Iovine is now expected to give prosecutors important information about the organisation and activities of the Casalesi and their relationship with other Camorra groups and politicians. Meanwhile, close relatives including Iovine's wife Enrichetta Avallone and his son Oreste have been transferred to a secret location outside the province of Caserta for protection.
    Avallone, 45, was returned to liberty in 2011 after serving three years on extortion charges.
    Oreste is in custody after being arrested last October along with four other alleged members of the Casalesi clan on suspicion of mafia association, extortion and drug dealing. "When last December I wrote that Antonio Iovine was considering turning State witness, I was accused of wishful thinking," wrote Saviano Thursday in a tweet.
    "It has happened," he continued.
    Meanwhile Naples Mayor and former magistrate Luigi de Magistris hailed the development.
    "That breaches are being made in Camorra clans and that there is collaboration with the judiciary are a positive thing," De Magistris said.
    "The most damaging blows to mafia organisations have been made thanks also to the collaboration of State witnesses," he added.
    De Magistris was echoed by Interior Minister Angelino Alfano, leader of the New Centre Right (NDC), a minor partner in Premier Matteo Renzi's left-right government.
    "Sincere acts of repentance assist efforts to fight the mafia," said Alfano. "This became clear thanks to the intuition of great magistrates such as Giovanni Falcone (a Palermo prosecutor assassinated by the Sicilian Mafia in 1992), and strong blows have been dealt to the mafia and to the 'ndrangheta", the crime syndicate in the southern region of Calabria, the minister added.
    "Should the same thing happen for the Camorra, this could lead to interesting investigation scenarios that might even result in its defeat," concluded Alfano.
   

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