Current:Home > MyOn the run for decades, convicted Mafia boss Messina Denaro dies in hospital months after capture -FutureWise Finance
On the run for decades, convicted Mafia boss Messina Denaro dies in hospital months after capture
View
Date:2025-04-16 13:55:36
ROME (AP) — Matteo Messina Denaro, a convicted mastermind of some of the Sicilian Mafia’s most heinous slayings, died on Monday in a hospital prison ward, several months after being captured as Italy’s No. 1 fugitive and following decades on the run, Italian state radio said.
Rai state radio, reporting from L’Aquila hospital in central Italy, said the heavy police detail that had been guarding his hospital room moved to the hospital morgue, following the death of Messina Denaro at about 2 a.m. Doctors had said he had been in a coma since Friday.
Reputed by investigators to be one of the Mafia’s most powerful bosses, Messina Denaro, 61, had been living while a fugitive in western Sicily, his stronghold, during at least much of his 30 years of eluding law enforcement thanks to the help of complicit townspeople. His need for colon cancer treatment led to his capture on Jan. 16, 2023.
Investigators were on his trail for years and had discovered evidence that he was receiving chemotherapy as an out-patient at a Palermo clinic under an alias. Digging into Italy’s national health system data base, they tracked him down and took him into custody when he showed up for a treatment appointment.
His arrest came 30 years and a day after the Jan. 15, 1993, capture of the Mafia’s “boss of bosses,’’ Salvatore “Toto” Riina in a Palermo apartment, also after decades in hiding. Messina Denaro himself went into hiding later that year.
While a fugitive, Messina Denaro was tried in absentia and convicted of dozens of murders, including helping to plan, along with other Cosa Nostra bosses, a pair of 1992 bombings that killed Italy’s leading anti-Mafia prosecutors — Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino.
Prosecutors had hoped in vain he would collaborate with them and reveal Cosa Nostra secrets. But according to Italian media reports, Messina Denaro made clear he wouldn’t talk immediately after capture.
When he died, “he took with him his secrets” about Cosa Nostra, state radio said.
After his arrest, Messina Denaro began serving multiple life sentences in a top-security prison in L’Aquila, a city in Italy’s central Apennine mountain area, where he continued to receive chemotherapy for colon cancer. But in the last several weeks, after undergoing two surgeries and with his condition worsening, he was transferred to the prison ward of the hospital where he died.
His silence hewed to the examples of Riina and of the Sicilian Mafia’s other top boss, Bernardo Provenzano, who was captured in a farmhouse in Corleone, Sicily, in 2006, after 37 years in hiding — the longest time on the run for a Mafia boss. Once Provenzano was in police hands, the state’s hunt focused on Messina Denaro, who managed to elude arrest despite numerous reported sightings of him.
Dozens of lower-level Mafia bosses and foot soldiers did turn state’s evidence following a crackdown on the Sicilian syndicate sparked by the assassinations of Falcone and Borsellino, bombings that also killed Falcone’s wife and several police bodyguards. Among Messina Denaro’s multiple murder convictions was one for the slaying of the young son of a turncoat. The boy was abducted and strangled and his body was dissolved in a vat of acid.
Messina Denaro was also among several Cosa Nostra top bosses who were convicted of ordering a series of bombings in 1993 that targeted two churches in Rome, the Uffizi Galleries in Florence and an art gallery in Milan. A total of 10 people were killed in the Florence and Milan bombings.
The attacks in those three tourist cities, according to turncoats, were aimed at pressuring the Italian government into easing rigid prison conditions for convicted mobsters.
When Messina Denaro was arrested, Palermo’s chief prosecutor, Maurizio De Lucia, declared: “We have captured the last of the massacre masterminds.”
veryGood! (23819)
Related
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- U.S., European heat waves 'virtually impossible' without climate change, new study finds
- Consumer Group: Solar Contracts Force Customers to Sign Away Rights
- American Climate Video: Al Cathey Had Seen Hurricanes, but Nothing Like Michael
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- Teen who walked six miles to 8th grade graduation gets college scholarship on the spot
- Government Think Tank Pushes Canada to Think Beyond Its Oil Dependence
- Special counsel asks for December trial in Trump documents case
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- 21 of the Most Charming Secrets About Notting Hill You Could Imagine
Ranking
- Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
- Hailee Steinfeld Steps Out With Buffalo Bills Quarterback Josh Allen
- A federal judge has blocked much of Indiana's ban on gender-affirming care for minors
- America Now Has 27.2 Gigawatts of Solar Energy: What Does That Mean?
- What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
- What to Make of Some Young Evangelicals Abandoning Trump Over Climate Change?
- Two years after Surfside condo collapse, oldest victim's grandson writes about an Uncollapsable Soul
- Untangling the Wildest Spice Girls Stories: Why Geri Halliwell Really Left, Mel B's Bombshells and More
Recommendation
IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
Cause of death for Adam Rich, former Eight is Enough child star, ruled as fentanyl
Coach Outlet Memorial Day Sale 2023: Shop Trendy Handbags, Wallets & More Starting at $19
Colorado Settlement to Pay Solar Owners Higher Rates for Peak Power
Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
Proof Blake Shelton and Gwen Stefani's Latest Date Night Was Hella Good
A smarter way to use sunscreen
Checking in on the Cast of Two and a Half Men...Men, Men, Men, Manly Men