What was your never object to your family?
Leaders within Sicily mafia Cosanostra reportedly complained that nearly 150 people associated with the group were arrested this week, and mob recruits said they were not the old ones.
“The level is low, today they arrest someone and if he gets turned into a turn court, they arrest another… miserable low level,” says Giancarlo Romano, former Cosa Nostra boss. , who spoke in a conversation he was eavesdropped before being killed in a gunshot last year. To BBC News.
Romano also revealed that he was a nostalgic for Francis Ford Coppola’s 1972 classic “The Godfather” about a fictional mob family in New York.
Japanese mob boss pleads guilty in New York to conspiracy to transport nuclear material to Iran
Sicily officer Carabinieri. (Valeria Ferraro/Anadoru via Getty Images)
“When I see the ‘Godfather’, the connections he had… he was very influential because of the strength he built on the political level,” Romano told his peers.
He continued, “But we – what can we do? We’re on our knees. I think we’re in business, but it’s the others who do that. Just a gypsy.”
According to the Guardian, the gang also looks like actor Robert De Niro, who played Vitcoleone in “The Godfather Part II,” and who Spider-Man revealed them as the other eavesdroppers as nicknames to each other.
This week, Sicilian officers carried out an early morning attack and served 183 arrest warrants for those believed to be linked to Cosanostra for crimes ranging from the Mafia Association to extortion and attempted murder. Of these, 36 were already in custody.
Raids like this week undermined Cosa Nostra, but Italian officials have warned that they are still a threat.
The former mafia hitman has been sentenced to 25 years for murder of Boston crime boss James “Whity” Bulgar
“The investigation that led to Tuesday’s arrest shows that Cosa Nostra is alive and is communicating with a whole new communication channel,” said Maurizio de Lucia, a prosecutor in the capital of Palermo, Sicily, held a press conference. And he said at a press conference where Mafia refers to the use of encrypted apps. To communicate with each other. “It’s doing business and trying to rebuild that army.”
Domenico La Padura, along with Italian police in Carabinieri, told The New York Times this week that Cosa Nostra is “far from dead.”
He said he managed to survive by finding “new energy and new strengths” in 21st century detective ventures like new recruits and online gambling.


Palermo, the capital of Sicily. (Frank Bienold/Lightrocket via Getty Images)
Cosa Nostra “is strongly linked to the father of the founding and the rules of his ancient ritual,” Carabinieri told The Times, saying that using encrypted devices “minimizes the need for traditional meetings and gatherings. It limits the need to suppress it.”
John Dickey, who wrote “The Mafia Republic: The History of the Italian Crime Curse and the Sicily Mafia,” told the telegraph that Italian authorities were “great” to watch the mafia.
“The Mafia Dons boast about how good their potential is, while also boasting that they are being eavesdropped,” he revealed.
Dickie also agreed that Cosa Nostra appears to be “decaying.”
“You just need to read the phone tap that your boss says, ‘Not like that before,'” he said. “This is the fifth time the bosses tried to reorganize Cupola since the early 1990s. Every time they were thwarted, the authorities were on board.”
Click here to get the Fox News app
He continued, “These arrests mean that Cosa Nostra has another big job to rebuild, and they show that the state is still stronger than the Mafia.”