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- <text id=92TT1740>
- <title>
- Aug. 03, 1992: Getting Away With Murder
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Aug. 03, 1992 AIDS: Losing the Battle
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ITALY, Page 52
- Getting Away With Murder
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Fighting the Mafia will continue to be a deadly business for
- prosecutors until Rome declares all-out war
- </p>
- <p>By John Moody/Palermo
- </p>
- <p> A bomb goes off, six people die, their loved ones weep.
- For the second time in two months, furious Italians beat the
- air with their fists. This, they shout, is too much; the time
- has come to face down the Mafia, the romanticized clan of
- criminals they love to hate but refuse to confront. THIS IS
- ALL-OUT WAR! the headlines scream. What was rarely said last
- week, as a shocked and shamed Italy tensed for the next blow,
- was that the Mafia has evolved into the world's foremost crime
- organization because in its war with the state, only one side
- is using real weapons.
- </p>
- <p> When a 176-lb. remote-controlled bomb obliterated
- anti-Mafia prosecutor Paolo Borsellino and five police
- bodyguards last week, no one could miss the message: the Mob
- would kill anyone, anywhere, in its campaign of intimidation.
- The brave efforts of a handful of Sicilian judges and
- prosecutors like Borsellino and Giovanni Falcone, assassinated
- in a similar blast in May, had won only feeble support from
- Rome. Nonetheless, the courts managed to put more than 400
- suspected mobsters on trial and convict the vast majority of
- them. But now the Mafia has challenged the prosecutors to back
- off, and its bloody taunt has thrust the country into a crisis
- of confidence, adding fear of civil disorder to serious economic
- troubles. Commented the Corriere della Sera: "We have chosen
- leaders who are very capable of shedding tears but perfectly
- incapable of assuming grave duties." The month-old government
- of Prime Minister Giuliano Amato found its attention painfully
- distracted from the job of repairing the budget deficit, public
- debt and unemployment that threaten its status in the European
- Community.
- </p>
- <p> Italians wondered how many deaths would be enough to prod
- the national government into effective action against the
- criminals it has long tolerated. A week before his death,
- Borsellino told friends, "The TNT for me has already arrived in
- Palermo." With estimated annual profits of $20 billion at stake,
- the Mob had decided that he knew too much about its inner
- workings to live.
- </p>
- <p> This crime, like those before it, was ringingly denounced
- by politicians, law-enforcement officials, trade unions and the
- media. But few doubted the Mafia would strike again at will,
- without fear of retaliation. The criminals' arrogance is fed by
- the feckless response that greets each new barbarism.
- Protesting Borsellino's death, unions staged a nationwide
- 10-min. work stoppage. Jailed Mafia bosses were clapped into a
- remote island prison, denied visitors and the use of phones from
- which they run their businesses. At the Mass for Borsellino's
- bodyguards, President Oscar Luigi Scalfaro and Prime Minister
- Amato had to be hustled out of the packed cathedral by uniformed
- police to protect them from the jeering crowd. "Get the Mafia
- out!" the throng cried, referring to a system that has allowed
- hardened criminals to humiliate and terrorize the country for
- decades.
- </p>
- <p> Thanks to effective federal and state laws, the U.S. has
- made strides against organized crime, convicting 24 Mafia
- bosses and dozens of lesser mobsters since 1981. The FBI has
- made extensive use of methods normally barred by Italy's
- Napoleonic legal code: electronic surveillance, undercover
- agents, use of informants, reduced sentences for cooperative
- witnesses. Nor did Italy have the all-important Racketeer
- Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) laws, under which
- many American mobsters have been jailed, or a witness-protection
- program to encourage insider testimony.
- </p>
- <p> Only now is Italy beginning to acquire some of these
- tools. The strong-arm tactics of the Fascists, who disregarded
- constitutional rights and democratic principles to jail
- suspected mobsters, succeeded in quashing the Mob for a time.
- But memories of that dictatorship left Italy with a postwar
- constitution designed to prevent strong government. After
- Falcone's death in May, Rome issued decrees to punish Mob
- suspects who refuse to cooperate and gave police expanded powers
- to make arrests. Last week the Senate converted some of those
- into law. Borsellino's murder has stirred calls for martial law
- and a return to the death penalty. While such notions are
- gaining support, they have no chance of succeeding.
- </p>
- <p> Most of the country's means to confront organized mobsters
- remain ineffectual. Strikes, speeches and taking phones away
- from prisoners mock the dedication of Falcone, Borsellino and
- their colleagues. A sweeping crime law modeled on the RICO acts
- would be a useful start. But until the state applies the same
- determination and courage that enabled it to stamp out the
- political terrorism of the 1970s, the battle against the Mafia
- will be one-sided, and the odds against the good guys will grow
- longer.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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