Behind the feud of Fuorigrotta the direction of the Licciardi clan, the hypotheses on the ambush of the boss Troncone
Investigations continue on the ambush against the boss Troncone in Naples: the clans of Bagnoli, backed by the Licciardi of Secondigliano, could be involved in the Fuorigrotta feud.
Edited by Nico Falco

The commando that attempted to kill the boss Vitale Troncone , in Fuorigrotta, may have been armed by the clans of Bagnoli, supported by the Licciardi of Secondigliano, and it is not excluded that it may be the answer to the fire that destroyed a pub. It is one of the hypotheses on which investigators are working to shed light on the ambush of 23 December, when the 53-year-old, believed to be the head of the homonymous Camorra group active in the Phlegraean district, was wounded by 2 gunshots, one by one. leg and one in the cheekbone, in front of the family bar, in via Caio Duilio; admitted first to the San Paolo and then to the Ospedale del Mare, where he is still today, Troncone is in serious condition.

The ambush would be part of the feud that broke out in Fuorigrotta . A clear objective, hegemony over the Neapolitan district, but actors still to be defined: certainly the criminal groups in the area, but it is possible that those of the nearby Torretta di Mergellina and those of the Rione Traiano are also involved in some way. And that the clans of Bagnoli also play a role in the clans: in particular the Esposito-Nappi who, despite the recent arrest of the chieftain Massimiliano Esposito, known as the Scognato, and the repentance of his right arm, would still have a strong influence on the territory, above all thanks to the alliances with other historical groups of the Camorra; "strong shoulder" of the Bagnoli clans, in the past linked to the Giannellis and later to the Esposito-Nappi family, would be the powerful Licciardi clan of Masseria Cardone , at the top of the Secondigliano Alliance.


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