How the MAFIA will cash in on Italy’s coronavirus collapse, by monopoly on small and medium business

As Italy mourns thousands of coronavirus dead, and survivors brace for life in an economic wasteland, one rung of society looks set to win big: organised crime.

‘The Italian mafia can turn threats into opportunities,’ top government anti-mafia investigator Giuseppe Governale told AFP.

Nearly 10,800 people have died in Italy of the flu-like disease, which has forced the country into a lockdown that is devastating the Eurozone’s third largest economy.

From the historic Cosa Nostra in Sicily, to the immensely powerful ‘Ndrangheta in Calabria and trigger-happy Camorra in Naples, Italy’s mafias were ‘caught on the back foot by the virus, but are now organising themselves,’ Governale said.

Italian army soldiers wearing protective suits transport coffins to the cemetery of Cinisello Balsamo near Milan after they were removed from overloaded Bergamo 

Medical staff attend to coronavirus patients in the intensive care unit in Milan, in the region of Lombardy which has been hardest hit by the crisis

Medical staff attend to coronavirus patients in the intensive care unit in Milan, in the region of Lombardy which has been hardest hit by the crisis 

The Economist Intelligence Unit said Thursday it expected Italy’s GDP to contract by a colossal 7 percent for the year. Italian experts say some 65 percent of Italian small and medium businesses are at risk of bankruptcy.

That is music to the ears of the country’s mobs, who use extortion and usuary to feast on ailing businesses.

‘Just look at the portfolio of the mafias, to see how much they can earn from this pandemic,’ Italian anti-mafia author Roberto Saviano said in an interview in the Repubblica daily this week.

‘Where have they invested the last few decades? Multi-service companies (canteens, cleaning, disinfection), waste recycling, transportation, funeral homes, oil and food distribution. That’s how they’ll make money.

‘The mafias know what you have, and will need, and they give it, and will give it, on their own terms.’

Medical staff wearing face masks and blue protective suits treat a coronavirus patient in an intensive care unit at the San Raffaele hospital in Milan

Medical staff wearing face masks and blue protective suits treat a coronavirus patient in an intensive care unit at the San Raffaele hospital in Milan  

An Italian priest wearing a face mask hands out bags of food to homeless and poor people who were queuing up in Italy

An Italian priest wearing a face mask hands out bags of food to homeless and poor people who were queuing up in Italy  

Saviano pointed to the last big epidemic in Italy, the 1884 Cholera outbreak in Naples, which killed more than half of the city’s inhabitants.

The government paid out vast sums for a clean-up – which went straight into the pockets of the Camorra.

The mafia ‘is already carefully planning ahead to when the economy will start to be rebuilt,’ said Governale, who heads up Italy’s anti-mafia investigation directorate (DIA).

‘There will be a lot of money going around.’

The 62-year old Sicilian said his team was preparing a plan to combat mafia infiltration.

‘They will be looking for loopholes in the system. We’ll have to keep our eyes open for… suspicious operations, the creation of new companies, dummy corporations.’

An Italian soldier holds his weapon while wearing gloves and a face mask as police and the army guard access to the town of Nerola

An Italian soldier holds his weapon while wearing gloves and a face mask as police and the army guard access to the town of Nerola

An armed Italian soldier looks on as a woman walks towards a vehicle in the town of Nerola. The town, around 30 miles north of Rome, has been designated as a 'red zone'

An armed Italian soldier looks on as a woman walks towards a vehicle in the town of Nerola. The town, around 30 miles north of Rome, has been designated as a ‘red zone’

Giuseppe Pignatone, a former mafia-hunter in Reggio Calabria, said the epidemic would ‘inevitably make the judiciary’s job more difficult over the coming weeks and years’.

The trials of hundreds of defendants have ground to a halt.

The redirection of police resources over the crisis could also contribute to the mafia blossoming, as officers ‘already weighed down by new roles may have to face public order problems,’ he said.

According to the Stampa daily, Italy’s secret service has warned the government of potential riots in southern Italy – fomented by organised crime groups – should the virus epicentre move from north to south.

Doctors stand over the bed of a coronavirus patient in Rome, in a country where hospitals have been facing medical shortages because of the crisis

Doctors stand over the bed of a coronavirus patient in Rome, in a country where hospitals have been facing medical shortages because of the crisis 

Mobsters were believed by some crime experts to have orchestrated revolts in jails across the country early on in the epidemic, with prisoners fearful of catching the disease in overcrowded facilities demanding early release.

‘Very worryingly, some with lighter sentences are being allowed out,’ Nicola Gratteri, a leading prosecutor in the ‘Ndrangheta stronghold of Calabria, told AFP.

Rights group Antigone said over 2,500 prisoners had been released since February 29 to ease overcrowding.

‘People linked to the ‘Ndrangheta have already been released and put under house arrest,’ he said.

‘That presents a real danger’.

Mafia’s revenue hit by Covid-19 impact on US businesses

Reliable sources of income for the Mafia, including construction work, restaurant extortion and illegal gambling rackets, have suffered millions of dollars in losses due to the impact of Covid-19 on business, according to the New York Post. 

The stopping of the NBA, MLB, March Madness, the NHL, MLS, horse-racing and professional golf, have disrupted the organized crime industry’s reliance on illegal gambling. 

‘There’s never been a time when they weren’t making money through gambling’, one source said.

‘Since the days of Lucky Luciano, when the Five Families started. This is historic’ they added.  

One insider claimed a lot of criminal people live off that revenue and that profits being lost are estimated to be in the region of eight figures.

With the closure of restaurants, eateries and bars due to Covid-19, extortion of such venues has also dropped off.

Construction rackets valuable to the Mob had also brought in money – that was until New York governor Andrew Cuomo stopped all non-essential work on Friday.

One law-enforcement source said construction was a ‘big deal’ because it has lots of branches for the Mafia.

Adding that gangsters don’t just profit from the construction jobs, but related industries such as trucking and import/export.

Insiders claimed lack of business could mean the Mafia are forced to rely more on the sale of narcotics, which seems unharmed by Covid-19.