Italian Police Bust Gang with Hand in Illegal Gambling, Money Laundering
Posted on: May 2, 2022, 06:10h.
Last updated on: May 2, 2022, 04:58h.
Following an extensive investigation, Italian police have dismantled an illegal gambling and money laundering outfit. More than 71 people face charges for their role in the multibillion-dollar enterprise.
Laundering dirty money through a complex betting system, especially in sports and gambling. That’s the basis of indictments the Public Prosecutor’s Office of Salerno, Italy, used when it charged 18 suspects, according to local media outlet Calabria 7. However, the enterprise was busy doing much more than just laundering money.
The alleged criminals face accusations of mafia-type criminal association. This link led to the building of an empire that committed a series of crimes in the field of illegal games and bets, money laundering, and reuse of proceeds of crime in economic activities, according to the indictment.
In addition, the accused committed the acts to facilitate various criminal organizations contiguous to the Camorra, the Casalesi, and other mafias.
Walls of Gomorrah Crumble
A police investigation uncovered the extent of the operations and many of the leaders. Among the suspects are Giuseppe Carnovale, known as Pepo in the underground world, and Luigi Giuseppe Cirillo. The latter is the son of the late boss of a mafia organization operating out of Salerno.
The investigators believe Cirillo was the head and promoter of the alleged organization. He used a holding company to hide the activity, including illicit online gaming domestically and abroad. The business allegedly has ties to the leaders of the Casalesi mafia out of southern Italy, a group that became the subject of a novel by Roberto Saviano, Gomorrah.
According to the prosecutors’ hypotheses, Carnovale covered the administration of the operation starting in July 2016. He managed the commercial activity at the national level but did not the direct control over the percentages distributed to the various management levels of an illegal online gambling platform.
He also controlled the integration and movement of some sites within the system. Carnovale is from Calabria, which has a troubled past with organized crime. Also, according to the accusatory hypotheses, the association earned €5 billion (US$5.26 billion) in two years. Most of that was for the Casalesi clan.
According to the investigators, some suspects belong to gangs of the Camorra and other mafias operating on Italian territory. The organization had set up a complex international system that allowed them to launder the dirty money of the Camorra through illegal betting and gambling that they managed themselves, allowing the clans to obtain clean money.
Day in Court
The Court of Salerno has set the preliminary hearing for June 6. As the investigation continues, there are at least 71 people facing charges that run the gambit – from petty crimes to money laundering and murder. However, the penalties can be more severe because the activity is related to organized crimes.
So far, the investigation has found 11 websites and two offices the group used to conduct its operations. However, more details may surface as the accused look to cut a deal.
The case is reminiscent of Operation Double Game from last year. That investigation dismantled a mafia-led enterprise that conducted illegal gambling and money laundering across the European Union.
That scandal led to the arrest of over 336 people. More than a few gave up what they knew to protect themselves from prosecution.
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