'Ndràngheta,ancient coins,Greek coins,looted antiquities,Sicily,tombaroli,Transnational crime
No comments
'Ndràngheta,ancient coins,Greek coins,looted antiquities,Sicily,tombaroli,Transnational crime
No comments
ancient coins,Carabinieri Tutela Patrimonio Culturale,Sicily,tombaroli
No comments
Maria Lisa Aloi
Filippo Asero
Salvatore Romano Benfatto
Giuseppe Bertolami
Vincenzo Boccadifuoco
Salvatore Bonaventura
Giuseppe Buceti
Filadelfo Calvagna
Salvatore Camonita
Giovanni Castro
Salvatore Cavallaro
Benedetto Chiara
Carmelo De Luca
Fortunata Di Dio
Giuseppe Di Mauro
Alfio Emmanuele
Giuseppe Esposito
Domenico Faranda
Gaetano Faranda
Emanuele Ferro
Vincenzo Filonardi
Filippo Franceschino
Mario Gagliano
Vittorio Emanuele Guzzetta Bongiovanni
Giuseppe Salvatore Insigna
Leandro Insolia
Massimiliano Insolia
Enrico Lo Verde
Massimo Lucca
Settimo Carmelo Minnella
Umberto Moruzzi
Adriano Nicotra
Michele Consolato Nicotra
Salvatore Palumbo
Andrea Panicotti
Gianfranco Paternò
Nicolò Petronio
Giuseppe Pezzino
Sergiu Ionica Pop
Antonio Portale
Simone Adriano Petrin
Alessandro Privitera
Giuseppe Rapisarda
Vincenzo Rau
Antonio Francesco Rotondo
Francesco Salvia
Santo Sambataro
Vito Spitaleri
Vito Stancanelli
Giuseppe Strano
Pietro TomaselloSalvatore Tomasello (born 1957)Salvatore Tomasello (born 1967),
Giuseppe Sebastian Viola
antimafia,Castelvetrano,Centuripe,cosa nostra,Matteo Messina Denaro,Selinunte,Sicilian Mafia,Sicily
No comments
Filed by the Court's yesterday, the kingpin's first formal judicial interrogation after his arrest took place on February 13, 2023. In the official transcript of this exchange, which covers 69 pages, some heavily marked with redactions, we learn interesting details regarding some of the 62 year old mafioso's conversations and admissions, both given and made during his hour and forty minute interrogation with the Court's magistrates last winter.
In some of his documented statements, Matteo Messina Denaro appears to have been extremely blunt about what he was willing to admit to and what he was not, regarding critical aspects of his criminal life and life on the run, stating:
"Listen, there will be things I don't answer, things I answer and I'll explain why I'm answering, and things I'll explain why I don't want to answer ” , while “ if I'm lying and it's obvious that I'm lying, let me pass, it means that I do not want to answer."
During his interrogation, the crime boss, denied to prosecutors that he had ever profited from drug trafficking or that he had any involvement in the more than 50 murders of which he has already been convicted. This despite the fact that in 2012, while still a fugitive at large, Matteo Messina Denaro was one of five people sentenced to life imprisonment, in part, for his role in the kidnap, torture, and murder of 12-year-old Giuseppe Di Matteo.
Di Matteo was the son of a mafia turncoat. Held in captivity for 25 months before his murder, according to Messina Denaro's reconstruction, he was just the instigator of the kidnapping of the child, and not responsible for his murder, though he admitted. "Listen, I'm not a saint..."
Denying that he was a Made Man, (a fully initiated member of the Mafia) Messina Denaro stated: "I feel like a man of honour but not as a mafioso. I know Cosa Nostra from the newspapers". He also told the magistrates that he had evaded capture until January, in part by steering clear of technology because he saw its usage as a vulnerability, though this would become part of his undoing as his health worsened and he required the use of a mobile phone to stay in contact with the medical community.
When discussing his life as a fugitive, using the name of Andrea Bonafede while hiding in plane sight in Campobello di Mazara, Massino Denaro told his judicial interrogators that they had only captured him because he had been struck down with liver cancer and that this health related crisis required him to undergoing medical treatment at La Maddalena clinic. Describing how he had been able to stay under the radar, he rationalised:
"I followed an old Jewish saying, 'If you want to hide a tree, plant it in a forest."
But with worsening health, planting himself in the heart of the town while undergoing cancer therapies made the boss more visible. When asked about those who helped him remain hidden and with whom he had interacted while hiding in the Sicilian town, Denaro added "if you have to arrest all the people who had something to do with me in Campobello, I think you have to arrest two to three thousand people: that's what it's all about".
But while the Cosa Nostra boss denied his violent and drug-related crimes, during his interrogation he openly claimed that the Messino Denaro family supported itself through the buying and selling illicit artefacts, many of which were plundered from Selinunte, the rich and extensive ancient Greek city of Magna Graecia located in the territory of his home town of Castelvetrano, in southwest Sicily.
He told prosecutors that his father, Francesco Messina Denaro was an art dealer. When asked if his father was a man of honor in the mafia sense he told the magistrates that he never asked him that question, then underscored "I hope that he had been, at least his life would have had meaning".
Known as "Don Ciccio," Matteo Messina Denaro's father died as a fugitive, having been identified as the mafia boss who headed the Castelvetrano family from 1981 until 1998. His father was a close ally to the Corleone faction loyalists led by Salvatore "Totò" Riina and Bernardo Provenzano.
Speaking further about his father's illicit ancient art involvement Messina Denaro was documented as admitting:
"My father didn't go digging in Selinunte though. At that time there were a thousand people and all of them, even the women, they dug at night. Those who didn't dig at night, dug during the day with the Superintendency of the State, but what else did they do (now maybe it can't be done anymore), that when with the axe they saw something coming out with their foot they covered it up and then at night they went back to it take it.
In general, my father bought 100% of these things which were then sold in Switzerland and then arrived from Switzerland everywhere in Arabia in the United Arab Emirates, in America. We used to see things that passed through my father's in American museums, I don't know how they got there in museums but then it all started from Switzerland"
The crime boss also spoke knowledgeably about workshops of counterfeiters in Sicily, involved in the enhancement of Greek polychrome vases dug up by tomb-robbers who plundered the Hellenistic necropolis of Centuripe. He explained to the Court's prosecutors that looters working in and around the province of Enna were known to add forged figural imagery to undecorated ancient vases, reburying them for several years in order to age their augmentation so that the terracotta vases brought higher prices when sold onward on the black market.
Using a lekythos (a type of ancient Greek vessel used for storing oil) as his example, the Mafia boss stated that an ancient vase without a figure might be worth 2 to 3 million lire, while the object's value rose to 20-30 million or 40 million when the artefact depicted embellished imagery that passed as part of the original vase maker's artistry. Messina Denaro also told the magistrates that in 1978 he found an ancient vase full of coins and spoke in a semi-informed way about how looters discovered and sold some of the ancient material in circulation via the Messino Denaro clan.
He told the magistrates that silver coins could be found using metal detectors when coins were scattered on the ground but that finding vases required grave-robbers. He also added that these graves also on occasion contained hoards of coins, often in excellent condition, having been buried with the tomb's occupants.
He told the magistrates that his father had purchased seven such hoards, while an 8th was traded directly to dealers in Switzerland by the hoard's finder. Messina Denaro admitted that in one such case, his father paid for one hoard of silver coins in instalments, as he didn't have the 800 million lire in his pocket that the finder was asking for the haul. To obtain this grouping of coins, Francesco Messina Denaro wrote the seller a check for the entire amount, which was held as a guarantee by the finder and then torn up once the negotiated asking price had been paid in full. He stated that his father then broke up the hoard, selling it off piecemeal.
While portions of Matteo Messina Denaro's interview imply that his life on the lam was financed by his father's illicit antiquities trade, rather than his own more serious and violent crimes, the unredacted portion of the interrogation does not appear to identify the Swiss-based receiver of the Cosa Nostra's looted ancient material which was laundered via Switzerland before ending up in museums.
Readers of ARCA's blog can make an educated guess who at least one of those traffickers might be, but we will have to wait to see what other reports come out in the days, weeks, and years to come. One thing is for sure, the crime boss has ruled out repenting and in agreeing to answer questions, only admitted to what he could not deny.
Suffering from cancer, Matteo Messina Denaro has remained under treatment in an Italian penitentiary since the day of his arrest where a room for chemotherapy has been set up for his required cancer treatment. Several hours before a scheduled surgery, on August 8th he was transferred from prison to the San Salvatore hospital in L’Aquila, amidst tight security measures related to the 41bis regime where he was operated on for an obstruction “not closely related to cancer.” According to the guarantor of prisoners in Abruzzo, Gianmarco Cifaldi the mafia boss is currently in intensive care as a standard precaution.
Messina Denaro's defense council recently argued that his health conditions are not compatible with Italian law, Article 41-bis of the Prison Administration Act, also known as carcere duro ("hard prison regime"), arguing that he requires medical assistance 24 hours a day. Cifaldi, however, reiterated that the right to health is already guaranteed through the use of qualified medical personnel, and that all state agencies are operating in compliance with the Italian Constitution.
Currently Article 41-bis of the Prison Administration Act is applied to people imprisoned for crimes such as mafia-type association under 416-bis (Associazione di tipo mafioso), drug trafficking, homicide, aggravated robbery and extortion, kidnapping, terrorism, and attempting to subvert the constitutional system. It is suspended only when a prisoner co-operates with the authorities, when a court annuls it, or when a prisoner dies.
By: Lynda Albertson
extradition,illicit antiquities,illicit art trade,illicit cultural property,illicit trade in antiquities,illicit trafficking,Italy,Sicily,UK,William Veres
No comments
extradition,illicit antiquities,illicit art trade,illicit cultural property,illicit trade in antiquities,illicit trafficking,Italy,Sicily,UK,William Veres
No comments
![]() |
| Screenshot of William Veres from the documentary “The Hunt for Transylvanian Gold |
Antiquities; Looting; Smuggling; Collecting;,illicit antiquities,illicit trade in antiquities,Italy,Sicily
No comments
![]() |
| Image Credit: Carabinieri |
Europol,fakes and forgeries,illicit antiquities,illicit art trade,illicit cultural property,illicit trade in antiquities,illicit trafficking,Italy,Sicily,William Veres
No comments
![]() |
| Image Credit: Carabinieri TPC |
![]() |
| Gaetano Patermo |
![]() |
| Angelo Chiantia (Left) and Simone Di Simone (Right) |
![]() |
| William Veres |
Europol,fakes and forgeries,illicit antiquities,illicit art trade,illicit cultural property,illicit trade in antiquities,illicit trafficking,Italy,Sicily,William Veres
No comments
![]() |
| Image Credit: Carabinieri TPC |
antimafia,art and organized crime,Becchina,Becchina archive,Gianfranco Becchina,Italy,organized crime,Sicilian Mafia,Sicily
No comments
Vincenzo Panicola - Mafia associate. -Incarcerated. Brother-in-Law of fugitive Castelvetrano boss, Matteo Messina Denaro. Husband of Patrizia Messina Denaro, sister of the boss. Worked with mafia associate to the Castelvetrano family, Giuseppe Grigoli. Convicted in 2013 to ten years in prison. Several firms, including an olive-oil company belonging to him and his wife, were impounded and a number of bank accounts frozen.
Caravaggio,Palermo,Sicily,The Palermo Nativity
No comments
![]() |
| Cicero's bust in the Musei Capitolini ["Cicero - Musei Capitolini" by Glauco92 - Own work. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons].jpg |
![]() |
| "Michelangelo Caravaggio, Nativity with San Francesco and San Lorenzo" |
![]() |
| Via Vittoria Emanuele, Palermo, Sicily [Arthur Tompkins].jpg |