Sneha Girap (Editor)

Raffaele Amato

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
Italian


Name
  
Raffaele Amato

Raffaele Amato Camorra arrestato il capo degli quotscissionisti

Born
  
11 November 1965

Other names
  
"Lo Spagnolo" (The Spaniard),"'o Lell","Lell o' chiatt'" (Lell the Fat),"'a vecchiarella"


Similar
  
Paolo Di Lauro, Marco Di Lauro, Edoardo Contini

Saviano jo crec que raffaele amato viu a barcelona


Raffaele Amato (born in Naples on November 11, 1965) is an Italian Camorra boss and head of the Scissionisti di Secondigliano, a Camorra clan from Naples. He is known by multiple nicknames in the Neapolitan criminal underworld, including "Lo Spagnolo" (The Spaniard), "'o Lell", "Lell o' chiatt'" (Lell the Fat One) and "'a vecchiarella".

Contents

Raffaele Amato httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenff3Raf

L estradizione a napoli del boss raffaele amato intervista a vittorio pisani 7 7 09


Background

Raffaele Amato ARRESTI AMATO YouTube

The Scissionisti are also known as "Spagnoli" (Spaniards) because of their endless trips ferrying cocaine from Galicia in Spain. Amato, Cesare Pagano and his clan were once a faction within the Di Lauro clan, headed by Paolo Di Lauro. However, after Di Lauro became a wanted fugitive in 2002 and his son Vincenzo's arrest in 2004, Cosimo Di Lauro took charge of the clan. Cosimo wanted to centralize the drug dealing operation that had been run as a franchise in which dealers paid the Di Lauros a fee for doing business and were allowed to buy the drugs from any available source. He also removed older gangsters and replaced them with young toughs new to the business.

Split

Raffaele Amato Amato capoclan scissionisti in carcere violati i miei diritti

In defiance, Amato later split from the Di Lauro clan in October 2004, disputed the new rules, fled to Spain and organized a revolt against his former bosses. From there, he tried to assert the Scissionisti's control over drugs and prostitution rackets in the areas, that included Secondigliano and Scampia as its nerve centres. The war, known as the Scampia feud (Italian "faida di Scampìa"), resulted in over 60 murders in 2004 and 2005. The feud caused widespread public revulsion against the Camorra and led to a major crackdown by the authorities.

2005

Raffaele Amato Raffaele Amato Camorra Pinterest Mafia

On February 26, 2005, Amato was arrested along with five other clan members by the Catalan police while leaving a casino in Barcelona. His arrest came one month after that of his arch-enemy and former boss Cosimo Di Lauro. Amato was eventually extradited to Italy, where he had been accused of murder and drug trafficking. The Italian Interior minister, Giuseppe Pisanu hailed his capture as "a signal to the people of Naples that we are winning the fight against the Mafia". He stated that his capture meant the two Camorra factions blamed for the spate of killings in Naples have both been decapitated. Furthermore, Pisanu urged more witnesses to break Omertà, the Camorra code of silence and step forward with evidence.

Raffaele Amato Raffaele Amato Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

In 2006, he was released because the limits of his temporary arrest expired. He became a fugitive again.

2009

Raffaele Amato Preso il boss Elio Amato cognato di Cesare Pagano InterNapoliit

On February 26, 2005, Amato was arrested in the Spanish city of Barcelona in a joint operation between Italian and Spanish police. Prior to his arrest he had been living under a false name on the Costa del Sol. He is accused of eight homicides between 1991 and 1993 during the so-called Mugnano feud, and of being "the principal, or one of the principal importers of cocaine into Italy".

He was extradited to Italy and received a 20-year jail sentence on May 19, 2010, in the trial against 48 members of the Amato-Pagano clan. He was charged with Mafia association, drug and arms trafficking and money laundering. He will be stripped of € 20 million in assets in property, businesses and bank accounts in Italy, Spain and Monaco.

References

Raffaele Amato Wikipedia