On-run Mafia chief leaving buried notes for henchmen, according to investigators
The convicted Cosa Nostra boss also comes and goes from Sicily, possibly thanks to high-level protection, investigators added after detaining some of his alleged accomplices.
In early morning raids in the countryside of western Sicily, police took into custody 11 men investigators contend helped Messina Denaro wield power despite being at large since 1993.
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Hide AdInvestigators described how Messina Denaro, 53, disdains telecommunications and relies on handwritten notes, or “pizzini”, to relay orders.
The notes were wadded tight, covered in tape and hidden under rocks or dug into soil until go-betweens retrieved them. The messages were ordered destroyed after being read.
Messina Denaro was convicted in absentia as a mastermind of 1993 bombings in Rome, Florence and Milan. The attacks were aimed at intimidating investigators after “Boss of Bosses” Salvatore Rina was arrested in Palermo following two decades as a fugitive.
Since the 2006 arrest of Bernardo Provenzano, after 43 years in hiding, Messina Denaro became the most-wanted Mafia chieftain. Police used eavesdropping devices and video cameras hidden in trees near farmhouses to help discover the message-delivery system.