Italy shocked as infamous Mafia boss Giovanni Brusca is freed after 25 years

Authored by wantedinrome.com and submitted by beceladon

Mafia turncoat who revealed secrets of Cosa Nostra has been freed from Rome prison.

There was anger and disbelief in Italy last night at the news that one of the Sicilian Cosa Nostra's most infamous killers has walked free after serving 25 years in jail.

The release of former Mafia boss Giovanni Brusca, who turned state's evidence after his 1996 arrest, has provoked outrage among the public, politicians and the relatives of his victims.

Brusca, who once stated that he had committed or ordered more than 150 murders, is most notorious for the 1992 Capaci bombing in which five people were killed including anti-mafia magistrate Giovanni Falcone.

In 1996 Brusca ordered the strangling of a 14 year-old boy, son of a fellow-mobster who had turned informer, after holding him hostage for 779 days.

The boy's body was then dissolved in a barrel of acid, in a horrific act of revenge against his father, Santino Di Matteo.

A ruthless killer known as 'U verru (Sicilian dialect for "The Pig"), Brusca was arrested in 1996, five months after the murder of young Giuseppe Di Matteo.

He had already been sentenced to life in prison in absentia for Mafia association and multiple murders, and following his arrest he turned 'pentito' and began to collaborate with prosecutors.

His release last night was condemned by Tina Montinaro, the widow of Falcone's police escort officer Antonio Montinaro who was blown up in the Capaci bombing.

"I am outraged, I am truly outraged. The state is rowing against us" - she told Italian news agency Adnkronos - "The whole of Italy should be outraged."

Maria Falcone, sister of the slain judge, said of the news: "From a human point of view it pains me, but this is the law, a law that my brother himself wanted and therefore it should be respected."

Politicians also expressed their outrage after Brusca walked out of Rome's Rebibbia jail yesterday evening, 45 days before the conclusion of his sentence.

Matteo Salvini, leader of the right-wing Lega party, said: "This is not the justice that Italians deserve," while Rome mayor Virginia Raggi described Brusca's release as "an unacceptable disgrace, an injustice for the whole country."

shainotshai on June 3rd, 2021 at 11:48 UTC »

We don’t know how many people he killed, but he said it’s less than 200 and more than 100. So, if we use an average of 150 people, then he spent in prison 2 months for each of them.

Edit: Just to add to how fucked up this is. 2 months is only the 8% of the time (25 months) Giuseppe di Matteo (kid dissolved in acid) suffered from his abduction to his murder.

Edit 2: A lot of people seem confused to why he's out, so I did some research (correct me if I'm wrong). He is "free" because of a law which helps them make a deal with the government for informations about the insides of the mafia organizations. According to some people, these collaborations between the pentiti and the government is one, if not the only, way the government gets concrete results because a lot of people were arrested thanks to them. Also, it's important to note that one of the people who wanted this law was Giovanni Falcone. He was the judge killed by Giovanni Brusca who is now released from prison.

MirkoBell8 on June 3rd, 2021 at 11:28 UTC »

I ensure you Italy is not shocked. Brusca was a "collaboratore di giustizia", an informator who helped capturing and sending to jail several bosses and Mafia's lieutenant in these years cooperating with secret services and police. This type of collaboration (and discount in jail years) was supported and strengthened by Giovanni Falcone, one of the Italian heroes of antimafia, murdered by the very same Giovanni Brusca in 1992.

To answer to some questions here below, yes, Brusca will be protected against Mafia's retaliations with an Italian secret services protection program.

The_SugarPlum_Fairy on June 3rd, 2021 at 06:09 UTC »

Wouldn’t he now be targeted by the mob since he was a rat?