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Italians aghast as notorious mafia killer Brusca freed

Italians aghast as notorious mafia killer Brusca freed

Gulf Times
Tuesday, June 01, 2021 10:35:30 PM UTC

Anti-Mafia police wearing masks to hide their identity, escort top Mafia fugitive Giovani Brusca as he leaves Palermo’s police headquarters to be taken to a maximum security prison. (Reuters)

Italians were outraged yesterday after a notorious mob boss was released from prison, where he served 25 years for a string of grim crimes, including assassinating a famous prosecutor and dissolving a boy’s body in acid. Giovanni Brusca, 64, was released Monday from Rome’s Rebibbia prison after serving a 25-year sentence, during which he became a state’s witness. He will now serve four years of probation. “Brusca freed — the cruellest boss,” wrote La Repubblica daily. But while some politicians and relatives of his victims denounced his release, others defended it given his co-operation with the authorities. Brusca was a key figure within the Cosa Nostra, the Sicilian mafia group. In 1992, he detonated the bomb that killed Giovanni Falcone, Italy’s legendary prosecuting magistrate who dedicated his career to overthrowing the mafia. Falcone’s wife and three bodyguards were also killed in the attack after their car drove over a section of highway outside Palermo packed with 400 kilos (882 pounds) of explosives, detonated by Brusca nearby. The wife of one of the bodyguards killed, Tina Montinaro, told Repubblica she was “indignant” at Brusca’s release. “The state is against us — after 29 years we still don’t know the truth about the massacre and Giovanni Brusca, the man who destroyed my family, is free,” Montinaro said. Falcone’s sister, Maria, told the paper she was distressed by the news. But she added: “It’s the law, a law moreover wanted by my brother and that should be respected.” Brusca was one of the most loyal operators of the head of Cosa Nostra, Salvatore “Toto” Riina. Arrested in 1996, he decided to cooperate with the authorities, admitting to hundreds of murders, Italian news media reported. One of the most grisly was the killing of 12-year-old Giuseppe Di Matteo, the son of a mafia turncoat, who was kidnapped in 1993 in retaliation for his father having collaborated with authorities. After being held in a house for over two years in squalid conditions, the boy was strangled and his body thrown into acid in what police have called “one of the most heinous crimes in the history of the Cosa Nostra”. “The law cannot be the same for these people,” the boy’s father Santino told the Corriere della Sera newspaper. “Brusca does not deserve anything.” “These people are not human,” he added, recalling how Brusca “as well as my son, also killed a 23-year-old pregnant woman” who had nothing to do with the mafia, “after torturing her boyfriend”. He hoped he would never meet him in the street, he added. “I don’t know what might happen.” Di Matteo himself still lives in a secret location for fear of mafia retribution. There were protests, too, from both sides of Italy’s political divide. The leader of the centre-left Democratic Party, Enrico Letta, described the news as a “punch in the stomach that leaves one speechless”. Far-right leader Matteo Salvini called Brusca a “wild beast” who “cannot get out of prison”. But Pietro Grasso, a leftist politician and former Senate president who was once on the killer’s hit-list, saw “no scandal”.
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