Judge's Call to Mother Marked Him for Mafia Hit

Paolo Borsellino was killed by a car bomb in 1993 near his mother's house.
Judge Borsellino
The Sicilian Mafia listened to the telephone calls of judge Paolo Borsellino before slaying him, gaining vital intelligence that assisted them in committing the hit in July 1992.

This is based on a conversation mob boss Totò Riina had with a fellow prison inmate that was recorded by the authorities, Reuters sources said.

Borsellino and five of his security officers were killed by a car bomb near his mother's house.


"We knew he was meant to go there because he said, 'Mom, I'm coming tomorrow,'" said Riina, who was one of the most feared of Cosa Nostra bosses. He held power from the early 1980s until his 1993 arrest.

Many Italians consider Borsellino a secular martyr, as is the case with his friend and colleague, Giovanni Falcone, who was assassinated about two months before Borsellino.

Riina, called The Beast

On May 23, 1992, Mafia hit men detonated a roadside bomb that killed Falcone, his wife, and three bodyguards as they drove near Palermo, Italy. The assassination was payback for all the organized criminals Falcone had put behind bars as a prosecutor and judge.

To mark the 20th anniversary of his murder, a tribute was held at FBI Headquarters to remember Falcone as a courageous opponent of the Mafia—and one of the earliest advocates of international cooperation in the fight against organized crime.

Director Robert S. Mueller, who was joined by two former FBI Directors and several Italian dignitaries in paying tribute to Falcone, noted, “Long before ‘globalization’ became part of our vernacular, Judge Falcone recognized that no one department or country could fight crime alone. He went to great lengths to cultivate strong relationships—friendships—with partners here in the United States and around the world.”

The FBI’s special relationship with Falcone was forged decades ago through two major cases in the U.S. and Italy at a time when the Mafia was powerful in both places. Louis Freeh, a federal prosecutor in New York City who would later become Director of the FBI, was cracking down on the Mafia. In a case known as the Pizza Connection, the FBI, the NYPD, and federal prosecutors teamed with Falcone and Italian authorities to bust an international heroin smuggling ring that laundered drug money through pizza parlors. The 1985 trial cemented Freeh and Falcone’s personal and professional relationships. At the same time in Italy, Falcone was prosecuting his own Mafia trial—the Maxi Trial—which put hundreds of mafiosi behind bars.

Although the Mafia for years threatened Falcone and his family and assassinated his Italian colleagues, “he carried on,” said Michael Kortan, assistant director of the FBI’s Office of Public Affairs. “He was a champion of the rule of law.”

Freeh remembered that although Falcone’s life was under constant threat, he always felt safe in the U.S. surrounded by his American law enforcement colleagues. “He loved the FBI,” Freeh said, adding that the Mafia made a “serious miscalculation” by killing Falcone. Instead of intimidating the Italian police, they—and the FBI—“rallied to the investigation of his murder.”

After Falcone’s assassination, then-FBI Director William Sessions introduced the idea of a Falcone Memorial Garden at the FBI Academy in Quantico, Virginia. Two years later, then-Director Freeh saw the plan through and dedicated a bronze memorial to Falcone at Quantico.

Prosecutor Liliana Ferraro, a friend and colleague of Falcone who took his seat after his assassination, said, “The Italian police and the FBI continue to work closely together against common enemies. As they fight organized crime together, they still use many lessons from Falcone, such as the importance of international cooperation and the protection of key witnesses.”

She added that Falcone “believed in friendship, loyalty, justice, and cooperation. On those shared values, ​​we have developed a strong partnership that has enabled our countries to fight with success against organized crime and terrorism.”

“Judge Falcone always understood that there was strength in numbers,” Mueller said, “and that defeating the Mafia would require true solidarity. Due to his foresight, we have dealt a devastating blow to organized criminal syndicates.”

The relationships that Falcone forged years ago between the Italian National Police and the FBI “have borne tremendous fruit in this age of international crime and terrorism,” Mueller added. “Those friendships have set the standard for global cooperation among law enforcement.”


Comments

  1. Doesn't the Gambino family have some interests in New Orleans along side the Marcello clan?

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  2. The article says as recently as 1995 the Gambino and Genovese families worked with the Marcello organization in partnership to defraud Bally Gaming and infiltrate video poker gaming in Louisiana. Who knows what's going on today. Could be the cops stumbled into a major operation. These guys weren't driving around loaded up like that for nothing. I've heard there's a distinct lack of informants these days and that the Mafia overall is larger and stronger than its ever been, even the DeCavs in New Joisey. Gullo intrigues me. He's 72 and this is his first run in with the law!

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