Giuseppe Guttadauro (born August 18, 1948 in
Bagheria
Bagheria (; scn, Baarìa ) is a town and ''comune'' in the Metropolitan City of Palermo in Sicily, Italy, located approximately 10km to the east of the city centre.
Etymology
According to some sources, the name ''Bagheria'' (by way of old Sicil ...
,
Palermo province of
Italy) is an Italian
Mafia boss and a high-profile surgeon from the Rocella neighbourhood in
Palermo
Palermo ( , ; scn, Palermu , locally also or ) is a city in southern Italy, the capital (political), capital of both the autonomous area, autonomous region of Sicily and the Metropolitan City of Palermo, the city's surrounding metropolitan ...
. Born in
Bagheria
Bagheria (; scn, Baarìa ) is a town and ''comune'' in the Metropolitan City of Palermo in Sicily, Italy, located approximately 10km to the east of the city centre.
Etymology
According to some sources, the name ''Bagheria'' (by way of old Sicil ...
, he became the regent of the
Brancaccio mandamento after the arrest and subsequent incarceration of the Mafia boss
Gaspare Spatuzza in 1998.
Ruling Brancaccio
According to
Antonino Giuffrè, a
pentito collaborating with the state, Guttadauro was an ally of
Bernardo Provenzano in his attempts to reverse his former ally
Totò Riina’s strategy of violence against the Italian state. “To initiate the process of remodeling the image of Cosa Nostra,” Giuffrè explained, “Guttadauro made contacts in business and started a debate on how best to apply peacefully the process of silent reconstruction of Cosa Nostra.”
[Longrigg, ''Boss of Bosses'']
p.168
/ref>
Guttadauro’s grand Palermo villa served as a meeting point for both mafiosi and the people that counted in public life. According to prosecutor Roberto Scarpinato: “… first of all members of the military Mafia would come to receive instructions regarding protection rackets, drug trafficking, and other crimes. Then, almost as if Guttadauro was doing a double shift, members of the city’s bourgeoisie would arrive, including doctors, lawyers, and politicians. These would fine-tune regional and national political strategies that were invariably designed to subjugate public institutions to the predatory interests of the friends of friends. This was achieved by bloodless, but effective, methods involving financial backing and collective resources of every type.”
Guttadauro also had business acumen. He planned the vast development of a shopping centre and multiplex in Brancaccio, selling his own land, but making sure he would be the guarantor for protection of the site. This way he could guarantee the employment of a significant amount of mafiosi.[
]
Arrest
Guttadauro was arrested in November 2002. His wife Gisella Greco and son were arrested on December 6, 2002 in a vast operation against the Mafia (Operation Ghiaccio), in which Guttadauro received another arrest warrant. His wife and son allegedly continued to run illicit business in his absence and acted as a conduit for his messages to other Mafia bosses on the outside.[Mafia, 44 arresti a Palermo]
La Sicilia, December 6, 2002
ABC News, December 7, 2002
Police had bugged
Bugged may refer to:
* ''Bugged!'', a 1997 horror-comedy film distributed by Troma
* ''Bugged'' (album), a 2000 album by Babybird
* "Bugged" (''Blood Ties''), an episode of ''Blood Ties''
* "Bugged" (''Family Matters''), an episode of ''Family ...
Guttadauro’s apartment and he was overheard discussing political appointments with the city's public health councillor Domenico Miceli
Domenico is an Italian given name for males and may refer to:
People
* Domenico Alfani, Italian painter
* Domenico Allegri, Italian composer
* Domenico Alvaro, Italian mobster
* Domenico Ambrogi, Italian painter
* Domenico Auria, Italian archit ...
, himself a doctor. (Miceli was sentenced to eight years for mafia association in December 2006)[Patients die as Sicilian mafia buys into the hospital service]
The Guardian, January 1, 2007 Guttadauro learned that his home was being "bugged" from another doctor. The colleague alleged that he, in turn, had been tipped off by the President of the Sicilian region Salvatore Cuffaro.[
]
Supporting Cuffaro
Before Guttadauro discovered the eavesdropping, he was recorded apparently describing how the Mafia had funded Cuffaro's 2001 election campaign. According to a transcript, he told his brother-in-law that Cuffaro was handed packages of cash "in the least elegant, but most tangible way possible".[Sicilian governor on mafia charge]
The Guardian, September 3, 2004
The inquiry set up to trace the origin of leaks during an investigation into Guttadauro led to the questioning of Cuffaro by the Palermo prosecuting office,
''The Independent'', June 28, 2003 and in September 2004 to an indictment charging Cuffaro with aiding and abetting the Mafia.[ Cuffaro refused to resign when sent for trial, saying he would only do so if convicted. In the meantime he was re-elected as President in 2006 regional election defeating Rita Borsellino, the sister of the late judge Paolo Borsellino, killed by the Mafia in 1992. On October 15, 2007, the prosecution requested eight years' imprisonment for Cuffaro for passing confidential information to the so-called moles in the Palermo Antimafia directorate.][Mafia, chiesti otto anni per Cuffaro]
Corriere della Sera, October 15, 2007 Cuffaro was sentenced to seven years in prison for favouring the Mafia.[Talpe Dda, Cuffaro condannato a 7 anni in appello; "L'ex governatore ha favorito Cosa Nostra"]
La Repubblica, January 23, 2010[Sicily senator Salvatore Cuffaro jailed in mafia case]
BBC News, January 23, 2011
Conviction and release
Guttadauro was sentenced to 13 years and four months. He was released on March 2, 2012, receiving a reduction of 800 days of his sentence for good behaviour.
La Repubblica, March 3, 2012
2022 arrest
In February 2022, the Italian police arrested Giuseppe Guttadauro, who was placed under house arrest, and his son Mario Carlo, who ended up in prison. They are accused of mafia-type association.
References
* Briquet, Jean-Louis & Alfio Mastropaolo (2007).
The Center-Left's Poisoned Victory
', New York/Oxford: Berghahn Books,
* Longrigg, Clare (2008).
Boss of Bosses: A Journey into the Heart of the Sicilian Mafia
', New York: Thomas Dunne Books,
External links
* from La Mafia è Bianca
{{DEFAULTSORT:Guttadauro, Giuseppe
1948 births
Living people
People from Bagheria
Sicilian mafiosi
Gangsters from the Metropolitan City of Palermo