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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
World
Angelo Amante

Italian police seize £173m worth of gold and luxury villas tied to Sicilian Mafia boss

Matteo Messina Denaro is escorted out of a Carabinieri police station - (Reuters)

Italian authorities have seized assets and companies valued at more than €200 million (£173 million) as part of to the financial empire of the late mafia boss Matteo Messina Denaro.

Messina Denaro, a prominent leader within the Sicilian Cosa Nostra, was apprehended in 2023 after three decades evading justice. His criminal career included a central role in the mafia's brutal war against the state during the 1980s and 1990s, notably the assassination of top prosecutor Giovanni Falcone.

Nicknamed "U Siccu" (the skinny one), Messina Denaro died of cancer just months after his arrest, leaving prosecutors with the complex task of unravelling his vast criminal proceeds and identifying those who aided his long flight from justice.

Police described the recent operation as the culmination of an intricate investigation that traced a substantial pool of assets generated by the reinvestment of drug trafficking profits accumulated since the 1980s across numerous European and non-European nations.

Palermo chief prosecutor Maurizio de Lucia stated: "We believe we have identified a significant portion of the investments made by the mafia, including abroad."

The son of a mafia boss, Messina Denaro hailed from Castelvetrano in western Sicily, where he led the local Cosa Nostra clan. His close ties to powerful boss Salvatore "Toto" Riina implicated him in the 1993 bomb attacks in Florence, Rome, and Milan, which claimed 10 lives, and he was believed to be responsible for numerous murders throughout the 1990s.

The seized assets included gold and luxury properties, reflecting the opulence of his illicit gains.

The investigation, which led to three arrests, spanned locations including Switzerland, Luxembourg, and the Cayman Islands, but primarily focused on the small principality of Andorra in the Pyrenees.

Authorities tracked funds in Andorra to a woman from Campobello di Mazara – the Sicilian town where Messina Denaro maintained his final hideout – who was married to an individual with a history of drug offences. This connection led investigators to suspect the funds were directly linked to drug trafficking.

Prosecutors identified eight companies tied to the money laundering network: five in Spain, two in Gibraltar, and one in the Cayman Islands. The group also held a "very significant" stake in a Lebanese bank, alongside substantial gold reserves and luxury real estate.

Giovanni Melillo, Italy's national anti-mafia prosecutor, underscored the critical importance of targeting the mob's financial power. He stated: "(It) means continuing the dismantling process needed to prevent the emergence of structures once again capable of projecting, on a global scale, Cosa Nostra's full intimidating power and economic influence."

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