Rome prosecutors on Wednesday
requested the indictment of former rightist militant and
ex-gangster Massimo Carminati, former rightist Gennaro Mokbel
and rightwing Il Tempo newspaper editor Gian Marco Chiocci in
the third tranche of a probe into political-business
racketeering in the Italian capital dubbed 'Middle World'.
Another 18 indictment requests were also made.
Chiocci is accused of aiding and abetting, judicial sources
said.
The 21 defendants are not accused of mafia association - a
charge that was also dropped in the main tranche of the case
which reached a first verdict last summer.
The main part of a probe reached verdicts on July 20.
The case was first dubbed 'Capital Mafia' but then renamed,
after mafia charges were dropped, after Carminati's nickname for
the demi-monde he operated in.
The former gangster and ex-member of the NAR right-wing
terrorist group was found guilty by a Rome court over
allegations he was part of an organisation that muscled in on
city contracts worth millions.
He was sentenced to 20 years in prison.
Another ringleader of the so-called Capital Mafia, leftwing
cooperatives chief Salvatore Buzzi, got 19 years.
The accusation of mafia association was scrubbed for 19 of
the 46 defendants in the so-called Capital Mafia case, including
ringleaders Carminati and Buzzi, by the ruling.
Carminati said he was "satisfied" with the 20-year sentence.
Carminati did not get a longer term, 28 years, because the
charge of mafia association was scrubbed.
Carminati said "now they must immediately remove me from 41
bis", referring to the tough prison regime for mafiosi.
Carminati's lawyer Giosue' Naso said the judges said "the
mafia doesn't exist in Rome, as we've been saying for 30
months".
He said that, despite this, the verdicts were "absurdly and
unusually severe".
He said Rome Chief Prosecutor Giuseppe Pignatone was
"certainly the beaten one", adding "I don't know if there are
any winners".
Capital Mafia prosecutor Paolo Ielo said after securing a
total of 250 years in jail for the defendants that "sentences
must be respected" even though judges scrubbed the charge of
mafia association and left only simple conspiracy in their
sentences.
"The judges turned us down on some points but sentences must
be respected," he said, adding "we will wait for the explanation
of the verdict".
Former Rome migrants panel chief Luca Odevaine got six and a
half years while former Rome council assembly chair Mirko
Coratti of ex-pre,ier Matteo Renzi's centre-left Democratic
Party got six years.
The former Rome city council whip for three-time former
premier and media mogul Silvio Berlusconi's now-defunct People
of Freedom party, Luca Gramazio, got 11 years.
Buzzi's wife and secretary were also found guilty in the
trial.
The wife, Alessandra Garrone, got 13 and a half years for
helping her husband commit his crimes.
The secretary, Nadia Cerrito, who kept Buzzi's books,
received a five-year sentence.
Three of the 46 defendants were acquitted.
They were Rocco Rotolo and Salvatore Ruggiero, for whom
prosecutors asked 16 years in jail, and the former general
manager of waste and rubbish company AMA, Giovanni Fiscon, for
whom a five-year term was asked.
Prosecutors said Rotolo and Ruggiero had acted as go-betweens
between Capital Mafia ringleaders and the Calabria-based
'Ndrangheta mafia.
Rome Mayor Virginia Raggi was in court for the reading out of
the sentences. The city is a civil plaintiff.
"Today is a victory for Rome's citizens," she said.
Carminati and Buzzi were caught on a wiretap saying they
could make more out of contracts for Roma and migrant camps than
they could by dealing drugs.
The contracts the gang illicitly obtained also included those
for public transport and the upkeep of the city's green areas.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © Copyright ANSA