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The Brenta's Mafia #642155
03/30/12 07:42 AM
03/30/12 07:42 AM
Joined: Nov 2010
Posts: 7,233
naples,italy
furio_from_naples Offline OP
furio_from_naples  Offline OP

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Posts: 7,233
naples,italy
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mala_del_Brenta

The Mala del Brenta was a criminal organisation based in the Veneto, north-eastern Italy.

The criminal organization's structure is believed to be based upon some elements of the Cosa Nostra and Camorra model.[1] It is considered by the Italian government and Prefecture of Venice as including all the characteristics of Article 416 bis-cp,[2] the legislative definition of a mafia-type organisation with Mafia (Cosa Nostra, 'Ndrangheta, Camorra) affiliations within Italy.[3] It has been referred to by several different names including: Mafia del Brenta, Malavita del Brenta, Mala or Mafia del Piovese.
In the 1960s and 1970s a number of high ranking members of the Sicilian Mafia were sent in solitary confinement in various provincial towns in the Veneto, mostly around the cities of Vicenza, Padua and Venice, in an attempt to isolate powerful sicilian ringleaders from other members in the Mafia. The most notable Sicilian mafiosi included: Salvatore Contorno, Gaetano Fidanzati, Antonino Duca and Gaetano and Salvatore Badalamenti, and Giuseppe Madonia.[4] Veneti malavitosi, or underworld figures and bandits from the Veneto, learned from these Sicilians the necessary means for organising themselves and taking the reins of control from the successive two decades. What started as a small gang of criminals controlling racketeering along the Riviera del Brenta between Padua and Venice, became an international syndicate under the "boss" Felice Maniero.[2]

[edit] Criminal panorama of Veneto

Before the arrival of these high-calibre sicilian mobsters, Veneto's crime problem was restricted to various disorganised gangs operating throughout the region. In the 1980s, just before the emergence of the Mala del Brenta there were already a few organized crime syndicates that would later be incorporated under the central authority of the Mala del Brenta. These organizations included:
"Clan Giostrai". These were various affiliated groups of nomad criminals mostly from the provinces of Vicenza, Padova and Venice, of whom a number had a relation to the carnival fair businesses, and where involved in bank heists and robberies, drug trade and more notably kidnapping for ransom.
The "Mestrini" group, based in Mestre, on the immediate Venetian mainland, a powerful group with strong ties to the Mala del Brenta, their most lucrative trade was drug trafficking, but the group was involved in a vast array of criminal enterprises. Most notably the ownership of many abusive water taxis that would bring foreign tourists to shops and hotels in venice that were owned by the clans associates. The "zoccolo duro" or top capos of the organisation were: Gino Causin, Gilberto "Lolli" Boatto, Paolo Tenderini, Roberto "Paja" Paggiarin and Paolo Pattarello.
The "Veneziani", the old criminal underworld of Venice, engaged in the same activities of the "Mestrini", the group was headed by the Rizzi brothers and Giancarlo Millo, nicknamed "The Martian".
The San Donà di Piave cartel, under the leadership of Silvano Maritan, nicknamed "The President", protegè of the confined Cosa Nostra boss Salvatore Contorno, the rivalry with another cartel based in the same area caused a number of violent confrontations and subsequently placed Maritan as capo of the eastern part of the province of Venice, that is until he gave up a percentage of his assets to Felice Maniero.

[edit] Growth of Maniero

Maniero born in the impoverished village of Campolongo Maggiore, in the mainland province of Venice started his own crew of local gangsters, composed of family members and childhood friends that would later hold the reins of his criminal empire. While becoming a major criminal presence in the area, he was befriended by a number of prominent Sicilian mafiosi who backed him up in his vision of uniting Veneto organised crime.

Maniero's establishment subsequently controlled all criminal ventures in the region, all other organised crime groups in the region had been subjugated by the group originating from Campolongo Maggiore and backed up by the Sicilians and also members of the Camorra. All except the exponents of the "Veneziani" clan, the Rizzi brothers, were feeling menaced by the mainland syndicates under Maniero, but the other "Veneziano" capo Millo, was a personal friend of Maniero, and preferred collaborating with "Angel Face" and his allies. While dining at a restaurant, Millo was shot and killed on March 17, 1990 by the Rizzi brothers, a violent feud ensued, between the Mala del Brenta and the "Veneziani", after six months, the Rizzi brothers and an associate were treacherously muredered in an ambush diguised as a meeting to discuss peace terms, Maniero placed Giovanni Giada as head of the Mala del Brenta in the venetian lagoon. He was now in firm control of all Veneto

[edit] Affiliations and criminal activity

The organisation has had a number of high-level political connections outside Italy (Croatia and Yugoslavia, Malta, Hungary and Austria).[3] At one point, Maniero was a personal friend of the son of the former Croatian president Franjo Tuđman and was involved in the supply of guns to Croatia, in the early 1990s.[4]

The organisation had a firm hold of nearly every criminal venture in the region, from money laundering to loansharking and extortion, but its major source of income was drug dealing; the group bought massive amount of cocaine directly from the Sicilian and Colombian Mafia, as well as heroin from Turkish drug baron Nvo Berisa, who helped a number of venetian mobsters in hiding in Turkey including Felice Maniero and Antonio Pandolfo, the group's second in command.

Its members are exclusively native to the Veneto region, but with a number of associates operating in the region from Cosa Nostra, Camorra and it is believed from the Ndrangheta as well.[5] It is also known that Brenta mafiosi have colluded with Stidda members on a number of occasions involving a number of fraudulent scams at a Maltese casino in 2002.[6]

[edit] Downfall

The organisation was thought to be dismantled in late 1994, due to revelations that the former boss Maniero was captured by a task force of 400 policemen issued with the sole task of bringing Maniero and his associates down. After being arrested in Turin in 1993 (having previously evaded the Padua and Vicenza prisons) together with many of the top members of the syndicate.

Maniero, faced with life imprisonment, turned informant, helping the Italian police dismantle the organisation he himself had created, contributing to the arrest of more than 400 of the mob's members, as well as a number of judges, policemen, and local Venetian businessmen that had aligned themselves with the organisation.

Although it has been revealed that Maniero continued a number of criminal activities and many of his former henchmen re-organised the Mala del Brenta to ensure survival, it is now called Nuova Mala del Brenta or Nuova Mafia Veneta and it still influences many criminal ventures in the region, ranging from robberies and bank heists to arms and drug trafficking.

[edit] Recent years

In August 1996, the members of the re-instated gang, coordinated a spectacularly successful heist at the "Mirabilandia" theme park securing 350 billion lira in an attempt to get the group back on its feet after the revelations of Maniero and other turncoats

In May 2005, Francesco Tonicello a member of the old Mala del Brenta, was arrested in London after having been on the run for a number of years as one of Italy's most wanted men. A master forger, he worked under 11 aliases and fenced priceless artworks, antiques and gold for Venetian godfather "Angel Face" Maniero, as well as participating in a brutal double homicide.

In April 2005, the carabinieri kill Luigi Quatela a top member of the syndicate in Chiampo, in the province of Vicenza

In August 2006, the massive "Ghost Dog" operation undergoes, Italian police arrest over 60 exponents of the criminal organization, including policemen on the group's payroll. After two years of investigation, and the precious reveletians of the turncoats Stefano Galletto and Giuseppe Pastore, police deal a severe blow to the organisation, arresting local gang leaders in the provinces of Venice, Padua, Vicenza and Verona, most notably Achille Pozzi, from Padua, and Giorgio Fontana from Vicenza, together with their respective henchmen.

In July 2007, the Carabinieri busted a criminal group composed of ex Mala del Brenta associates and nomad criminals from the province of Vicenza, they were trying to form a new group made up of the older elitè members of mala del Brenta who had escaped or finished prison sentences and Vicenza and Bassano criminals engaging in drug trade and robberies, the group had been responsible for five gangland killings in the last three months, but turncoat Maich Gabrielli helped dismantle the group after witnessing the murder of 26-year-old cousin Emanuele Crovi.

In August 2007, a seventeen year old Tunisian boy was kidnapped as a result of hostilities between immigrant drug dealers. Beaten and held hostage for several days in Padua's periphery, his kidnappers were two Albanians and an Italian slightly older than he was. When the Carabinieri came to liberate the hostage a gunfight ensued, with a Carabiniere remaining wounded, the juvenile criminals succeeded in escaping in a car whose number plates belonged to Lucio Calabresi, a capo of the Nuova Mala del Brenta, when the Carabinieri deepened their investigation into the incident, they uncovered a series of a new alliances between the syndicate and a number of immigrant youth gangs present in the city of Padua.

In October 2007, Italian police arrest Ercole Salvan, member of the syndicate, and one of the most feared bandits of the region, hailing from Cittadella (Padova), he had been on the run since the murder of a truck driver during a highway robbery.

In November 2007, a taskforce of about a hundred Italian and Spanish policemen, interrupt a steady flow of cocaine, from South America via Spain to North-Eastern Italy controlled by one of the organisations top members, the infamous Silvano Maritan, head of the San Donà di Piave cartel, already one of the head figures in the "old" mala del Brenta. After exiting prison in 2001, he took control of the drug trade in eastern veneto, supplying cocaine in a nuber of discos all along the venetian coastal resorts.

In May 2008, Italian investigators uncovered a plan to free bosses Lucio Calabresi and Mariano Magro from their prison in Vicenza. The man who intended to do this was Rafaele Vassallo, the plan was to subsequently murder a judge, two police captains, turncoat Stefano Galletto and his family and finally Felice Maniero in a series of terrorist attacks to be carried out with explosives and rocket launchers. A warehouse full of armaments was found in Padua's industrial area, and the would-be ideators of the plan were arrested.

In November 2008, the Carabinieri busted an unusual criminal join-venture made of former Far Right and Far Left terrorists, associates of the old Milan organized crime and Nuova Mala associates, above all Fiorenzo Trincanato, once one of Felice Maniero's enforcers. This group is believed to be involved with drug trafficking in the Northern Italy, controlling cocaine trade from Veneto to Liguria.

Re: The Brenta's Mafia [Re: furio_from_naples] #960687
01/02/19 08:02 PM
01/02/19 08:02 PM
Joined: Mar 2016
Posts: 23,819
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Hollander Offline
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Croatia arrests wanted Italian former mafia member
AFP/The Local
news@thelocal.it
@thelocalitaly
2 January 2019
17:17 CET+01:00

Croatian police said on Wednesday January 2nd that they have arrested a former member of a mafia group sought by Italy, where he was convicted for drugs trafficking.
The 72-year-old man was arrested in the capital Zagreb on Monday December 31st on a European arrest warrant issued by Italy, where he is to serve a 10-year jail term, an interior ministry statement said.

The man was convicted as a "member of a criminal organisation and ... for trafficking of larger quantities of heroine and cocaine."

State-run HRT television identified the man arrested as Claudio D'Este, formerly a member of the powerful Venice-based Mala del Brenta mafia group.

D'Este was reportedly arrested as he was coming out of his home in the Croatian capital Zagreb with his family on December 31st, reports Italian news agency Ansa.

He was reportedly linked to a Venetian mafia gang run by a man by the name of Felice Maniero in the 1980s and 1990s which imported hard drugs, cocaine and heroine, to the northeast of Italy.

D'Este was arrested in the 1970s and mid 1990s, but fled Italy after serving two years of a sentence between 1997 and 1999, reports local daily La Nuova di Venezia e Mestre.

https://www.thelocal.it/20190102/croatia-arrests-wanted-italian-former-mafia-member


"The king is dead, long live the king!"
Re: The Brenta's Mafia [Re: furio_from_naples] #1002669
01/04/21 06:40 AM
01/04/21 06:40 AM
Joined: Mar 2016
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Hollander Offline
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Extortions, fires to scare debtors: 7 arrests in the Venetian. At the head was Luciano Maritan, nephew of the former boss of Mala
NORTHEAST > VENICE
Monday 4th January 2021

SAN DONA 'DI PIAVE - The carabinieri of San Donà di Piave are carrying out 7 precautionary measures at the conclusion of an investigation by the lagoon prosecutor for arson , extortion and drug dealing. The soldiers of the Portogruaro, Mestre and Chioggia Companies and the 4th Veneto Battalion and the dog units of the Torreglia (Padua) Nucleus are also involved in the operation. At the head of the gang was Luciano Maritan , nephew of the former boss of Mala del Brenta Silvano. But that's not enough, among the people arrested there is also Maritan's father, Silvano's brother. And the latter, albeit in prison, would be involved in the case.


"The king is dead, long live the king!"
Re: The Brenta's Mafia [Re: furio_from_naples] #1002678
01/04/21 10:25 AM
01/04/21 10:25 AM
Joined: Jul 2012
Posts: 2,089
TheKillingJoke Offline
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TheKillingJoke  Offline
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Didn't know these guys still have any power. The last couple of years it seemed like - in terms of power and prevalence - they're way below the Sicilian mafia, Ndrangheta, Camorra, SCU...or even the Abruzzo Sinti clans in Rome.

Re: The Brenta's Mafia [Re: TheKillingJoke] #1002691
01/04/21 01:49 PM
01/04/21 01:49 PM
Joined: Nov 2010
Posts: 7,233
naples,italy
furio_from_naples Offline OP
furio_from_naples  Offline OP

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Posts: 7,233
naples,italy
Originally Posted by TheKillingJoke
Didn't know these guys still have any power. The last couple of years it seemed like - in terms of power and prevalence - they're way below the Sicilian mafia, Ndrangheta, Camorra, SCU...or even the Abruzzo Sinti clans in Rome.


The Mala del Brenta was a low organizated gruop so there are still there but not with the same power.

Re: The Brenta's Mafia [Re: furio_from_naples] #1002695
01/04/21 02:41 PM
01/04/21 02:41 PM
Joined: Feb 2011
Posts: 2,446
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m2w Online content
Underboss
m2w  Online Content
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Underboss
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it doesn't exist enymore, as the cleveland family there are some members still criminally active, but the gang is gone long before

Re: The Brenta's Mafia [Re: m2w] #1002704
01/04/21 05:18 PM
01/04/21 05:18 PM
Joined: Nov 2010
Posts: 7,233
naples,italy
furio_from_naples Offline OP
furio_from_naples  Offline OP

Joined: Nov 2010
Posts: 7,233
naples,italy
Originally Posted by m2w
it doesn't exist enymore, as the cleveland family there are some members still criminally active, but the gang is gone long before


Its what I said.

Re: The Brenta's Mafia [Re: furio_from_naples] #1002738
01/05/21 12:44 AM
01/05/21 12:44 AM
Joined: Mar 2016
Posts: 23,819
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Hollander Offline
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Similar to Banda della Magliana in Rome powerful in the roaring 80s and 90s, now defunct, but some of their offspring is still involved in crime as a way of life.


"The king is dead, long live the king!"
Re: The Brenta's Mafia [Re: Hollander] #1002756
01/05/21 05:00 AM
01/05/21 05:00 AM
Joined: Nov 2010
Posts: 7,233
naples,italy
furio_from_naples Offline OP
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Posts: 7,233
naples,italy
Originally Posted by Hollander
Similar to Banda della Magliana in Rome powerful in the roaring 80s and 90s, now defunct, but some of their offspring is still involved in crime as a way of life.


The Carminati oc group is an evolution of the Banda della Magliana and the low ranking men that was young young in the 1970s-1980s now is continue to run the same racket plus the Magliana was divided in gruops and never had a boss,so after the big dogs was killed,convincted or flipped in the early 1990s who remained on the streets continued to make money.

Last edited by furio_from_naples; 01/05/21 05:05 AM.
Re: The Brenta's Mafia [Re: furio_from_naples] #1024768
12/01/21 07:50 AM
12/01/21 07:50 AM
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Hollander Offline
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New Mala del Brenta in Veneto, 39 arrests and 80 warranties
Papillon investigation, the historic bosses of the gang return to prison. The clan's goal: to manage the great routes of the tourist flow of the lagoon. Zaia: "Victory of legality

Venice, 30 November 2021 - Some "historical" elements of the Banda Maniero , of that Mala del Brenta that raged in Venice and Veneto 40 years ago, then dismantled by the repentance of its boss, return to prison at the age of 70 . Released from prison after serving their sentences in the 90s, they tried to return to the old "job", that of drug dealing , extortion from tour operators and intimidation . But this time there were investigators waiting for them, who have followed them for the past six years and in the end they put an end to their attempt to revive the gang.

The blitz of the Carabinieri del Ros went on target overnight with the execution, in Venice and Veneto, of 39 arrests and warranties for about eighty people . The "menstrin i" group of Mala was targeted , the one that had contracted drug trafficking together with extortion in the city and mainland, and which was also responsible for one of the most brutal executions within the gang, that of the Rizzi brothers and Franco Padoan , killed on 10 March 1990 on the bank of the Brenta river in Galta di Vigonovo , in the Padua area.

The “historical” names are those of Gilberto Boatto known as “Lolli”, Paolo Pattarello , Gino Causin , plus other lieutenants such as Loris Trabujo , suspected of extortion from Venetian motorboats . But Antonio "Mario" Pandolfo , right arm and armed man of Felice Maniero, also appears among the suspects .

They lived with the other Venetian mafias
Around them, starting from 2015, a group that has slipped into a space left free by the other mafias that have been operating in Veneto for some time: the ' Ndrangheta , the Camorra, the Nigerian mafia. A coexistence that the anti-mafia prosecutor of Venice, Bruno Cherchi , defined as “peaceful”, where everyone carves out their own market without disturbing the others.

"They have aged a little, it is true - commented the magistrate - but it is also true that they are always very dangerous , with a great capacity for aggregation, and once released from prison, to
resume relationships, especially dealing and supply. of narcotic substance from South American countries , and the criminal activity against the Venetian environment ".


"The king is dead, long live the king!"
Re: The Brenta's Mafia [Re: furio_from_naples] #1024771
12/01/21 09:36 AM
12/01/21 09:36 AM
Joined: Nov 2010
Posts: 7,233
naples,italy
furio_from_naples Offline OP
furio_from_naples  Offline OP

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Posts: 7,233
naples,italy
The only interesting thing that nobody said is that for long time,the idea that an organized group can born in the rich North East of Italy and be made by northern people and not by people from South transplanted in North East.
And this because the people from South are criminal by nature while the people from North East are always honest.
I hope they would managed to kill this motherfucker of Maniero.

Re: The Brenta's Mafia [Re: furio_from_naples] #1024777
12/01/21 12:21 PM
12/01/21 12:21 PM
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Jimmybrown Offline
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Would Turin fall under the north east region?

Re: The Brenta's Mafia [Re: furio_from_naples] #1024780
12/01/21 12:30 PM
12/01/21 12:30 PM
Joined: Jun 2011
Posts: 1,526
LuanKuci Offline
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LuanKuci  Offline
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Turin is North West, and it’s traditionally Southern-controlled, organized crime-wise.

Despite the stereotype the North of Italy had plenty of poverty well into the 1960s. That’s why some of the first immigrants to reach the New World as well as Germany, Switzerland, Belgium, were from the North. The Veneto region in the north east along with Friuli-Venezia-Giulia were two of the poorest areas in all of Italy well into the 1960s.

They always had some low brow underworld but what powered them up were a specific number of southern mafiosi who were sent (“exiled”) to the region in the 1960s-1970s. They groomed some local hoodlums into straight up mobsters.

It’s worth to say that, similarly to the American Mob, every few years you have these big takedowns and the media and the law shout how they managed to “eradicate” the “new” Mala. Although they won’t reach the level of influence and power they held between the 1970s and the early 1990s, they regularly demonstrate their ability to re-organize and create alliances with other groups, from the Neapolitans to the Albanians.

Presently they are a loosely associated network of racketeers, drug dealers, robbers and loan sharks.

Some higher level guys among the arrested were former “lieutenants” in the original power structure. They had enough pull to touch bases with Southern mobsters based in Brescia to organize the assassination of rat boss Felice Maniero. The attempt was foiled when Maniero was arrested and put on trial for domestic violence, (for which he was convicted in October 2021), and sentenced to four years.

Re: The Brenta's Mafia [Re: furio_from_naples] #1024783
12/01/21 02:55 PM
12/01/21 02:55 PM
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Posts: 1,564
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DillyDolly Offline
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I don't care what anyone says, the Mala del Brenta is still here, hopefully people can stop saying that they're extinct because it's quite obvious they're not.

Re: The Brenta's Mafia [Re: furio_from_naples] #1024848
12/02/21 08:41 PM
12/02/21 08:41 PM
Joined: Mar 2016
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Hollander Offline
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The major cities in northern Italy had always an underworld Milano, Torino, Venezia, Florence, Rome etc..


"The king is dead, long live the king!"

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