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SISDE, DAP broke protocol says COPASIR

SISDE and DAP 'acted outside their mandates' says COPASIR

Redazione Ansa

(ANSA) - Rome, April 1 - Italy's parliamentary intelligence services oversight committee (COPASIR) said Wednesday the domestic secret service agency formerly known as SISDE and DAP national prison department broke the law in a 2003-2004 operation called Butterfly.
    The two agencies are accused of colluding to bypass the judiciary to mount the operation, which entailed approaching organized crime bosses being held under the maximum security 41-bis prison regime.
    SISDE - which has since been reformed and renamed AISI - interpreted the law "in an arbitrary way" and DAP took on a role "that is incompatible with its prerogatives and lies outside the assigned perimeter", COPASIR said in its report.
    Former SISDE chief Mario Mori in 2014 reportedly said Operation Butterfly was activated in fear of a possible new wave of Mafia massacres against civilian and official targets at a time of frequent protests - both within and outside prison walls - against the tough 41-bis regime. The regime reserved for Italy's most dangerous criminals suspends some prison regulations and calls for the inmates to be held practically in isolation and almost entirely cut off from the outside world in order to prevent further criminal activity.
    SISDE decided to question eight mob bosses who were being held in maximum security, and since they couldn't do so by law they asked DAP agents to do so in their stead.
    The operation was shut down after a year and a half because it gave no results, Mori said.
    Premier Matteo Renzi last year declassified Operation Butterfly, which one MP called "an anomalous collaboration between the secret services and the prison administration with no judiciary oversight".
   

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