12 December 1985, at 8 p.m. in the Sicilian town of Villafranca Tirrena, 17-year-old Graziella Campagna leaves the "Regina" laundry, where she works to help support her parents & 7 siblings, and waits for a bus home to the nearby village of Saponara. She never arrives [Thread] >> Image
Investigators quickly establish that Graziella didn't board the bus, as neither the driver nor any of the passengers remember seeing her, even though she is a regular user of the service and known to many of them >> 1
A hairdresser, Maria Bisazia, who works in a salon adjacent to the bus stop, reports hearing a scream at the time of Graziella's disappearance but, when she looked out onto the street, she saw nothing, just passing cars >> 2
Investigators are at a loss to find a possible motive for Graziella's disappearance. She is quiet, intoverse and dedicated to her large family, travelling back and forth to work in the laundry 6 days a week for just 150,000 lire a month, cash in hand, to help out >> 3
Two days later, a family out for a walk, finds Graziella's body at a local beauty spot in the hills, Forte Campone (photo). She has been shot five times with a sawn-off shotgun, in the shoulder, stomach, face, arm (probably trying to shield herself) & a shot to the head >> 4 Image
This final element indicates a mafia murder but nothing in Graziella's background or that of her family suggests even a tenuous link to the mafia. Her older brother Pietro is a Carabiniere but he works in Calabria and, again, investigators draw a blank >> 5
The murder remains unsolved until, in 1987, two mafiosi, Gerlando Alberti Jr. & Giovanni Sutera are arrested, after years on the run. Reconstructing their time in hiding, it's discovered that, when Graziella was murdered, they were living in Rometta Marea, near Villafranca >> 6 ImageImage
Not only, they were also habitual clients of the "Regina" laundry, where Graziella worked. They used false identities: Alberti Jr. passed himself off as an engineer called Eugenio Cannata & Sutera as a surveyor called Gianni Lombardo, his cousin >> 7
They said they were staying in the area to work on a construction project. But how did Graziella cross their path? Three days before disappearing, Graziella, checking the pockets of a coat Alberti Jr. has brought in for cleaning, finds a notebook he's left there by mistake >> 8
This notebook reveals his real name & contains names & numbers of associates & details of drug deals. Graziella only looks briefly at its contents & probably doesn't realise its significance. She mentions it to her colleague Agata Cannistrà, who rips it out of her hands >> 9
Graziella thinks nothing of it, but just mentions to her mother it is strange that Engineer Cannata isn't his real name. Alberti Jr., however, is in a total panic. He knows or finds out that Graziella's brother is a Carabiniere & is afraid she will refer details to him >> 10
Alberti Jr. is a ruthless person, just like his uncle of the same name, who was an associate of Pippo Calò and responsible for numerous murders, including the journalist Mauro De Mauro and Judge Pietro Scaglione, as well as being involved in heroin trafficking >> 11
Thus, Graziella's fate is sealed. Her family's ordeal, however, is to last 24 more years until they finally obtain justice, thanks to Italy's Byzantine justice system.
Alberti Jr. & Sutera are first indicted for Graziella Campagna's murder on 1 March 1989 >> 12
Just 9 days later, the Court annuls the indictment for a technicality: it has not been notified to the defendants. The new indictment process takes a year, only for the case to be dismissed by Judge Marcello Mondello (photo) >> 13 Image
Mondello will later be arrested & tried for 'associazione mafiosa', his ruling in favour of Alberti Jr. & Sutera being one of the 'favours' he granted. He is found guilty in two trials and on appeal but the Supreme Court of Cassation orders a new appeal trial >> 14
At this point, 20 years have passed & the Statute of Limitations comes into play. Several judges from the Court & Court of Appeal in Messina & law enforcement officers were tried for mafia in the 1980s & 1990s, partly explaining Alberti Jr. & Sutera's choice of hiding place >> 15
Thanks to the efforts of Graziella's Carabiniere brother, who carries out investigations privately, and a TV programme in 1996, the case is reopened. In December 1998 a new trial opens against Alberti Jr. & Sutera for murder >> 16
In addition, the owner of the laundry where Graziella worked, Franca Federico, her husband Francesco Romano, her brother Giuseppe Federico & sister-in-law Agata Cannistrà (who ripped the notebook, never recovered, from Graziella's hands) are tried for aiding & abetting >> 17
On 11 December 2004, Gerlando Alberti Jr. & Giovanni Sutera are sentenced to life imprisonment for murder, while Franca Federico & Agata Cannistrà are given two years each for aiding & abetting. Francesco Romano & Giuseppe Federico are found not guilty >> 18
Incredibly, Alberti Jr. is released from prison in September 2006 because Judges from the Court of First Instance fail to deposit the motivations for their judgment within the time limit, so he can no longer be held on remand. Sutera stays in prison on other charges >> 19
On 18 March 2008, the Messina Court of Appeal confirms the life sentences for Alberti Jr. & Sutera but the convictions for aiding & abetting fall victim to the Statute of Limitations. However, Federico & Cannistrà are ordered to pay damages to the Campagna family >> 20
On 18 March 2009, the Supreme Court of Cassation confirms the sentences of the Court of Appeal and the legal process finally comes to its conclusion. Even now, however, the suffering of Graziella Campagna's family is not completely over >> 21
Less than 9 months later, just days before the anniversary of Graziella's death, Gerlando Alberti Jr. is released from prison in Parma on grounds of health & placed under house arrest. This decision is overturned in May 2010 and Alberti returns to prison, where he remains >> 22
As for Giovanni Sutera, he is released on parole in 2015, without the Campagna family being informed. They only learn that he was free when the media carries news of his arrest and return to prison for drug trafficking in 2018// 23

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Nicholas Whithorn

Nicholas Whithorn Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @NickWhithorn

13 Dec
It's that time of year again, when 'Il Sole 24 Ore' (Italian equivalent to the Financial Times) publishes its annual Quality of Life Table for Italy's 107 Provinces. As usual, top ten all in the north, bottom ten all in the south. It's all so bloody depressing [Thread] >> 1
Top ten:
1. Trieste
2. Milan
3. Trento
4. Aosta
5. Bolzano
6. Bologna
7. Pordenone
8. Verona
9. Udine
10. Treviso

Bottom ten:
98. Siracusa
99. Taranto
100. Caserta
101. Reggio Calabria
102. Catania
103. Caltanissetta
104. Vibo Valentia
105. Trapani
106. Foggia
107. Crotone
>> 2
That means the top ten includes:
3 from Friuli Venezia Giulia;
2 from Trentino Alto Adige;
2 from Veneto;
1 from Lombardia;
1 from Emilia Romagna;
1 from Valle d'Aosta.

Bottom ten includes:
4 from Sicily;
3 from Calabria;
2 from Puglia;
1 from Campania.
>> 3
Read 14 tweets
5 Dec
As Italy will be choosing a new President of the Republic next month (see thread linked below on how the election works & possible candidates), here is a thread looking at the 12 Presidents the country has had since becoming a Republic in 1946 >> 1
On 2 &3 June 1946, Italians voted in a referendum on the form of government, choosing a Republic over Monarchy by 54.3% to 45.7%. On the same days, they elected a Constituent Assembly tasked with writing a new Constitution, which met for the first time on 25 June 1946 >> 2 Image
On 28 June 1946, the Assembly elected Enrico De Nicola (photo) as the Provisional Head of State. At this stage he did not yet have the title of President of the Republic, as there was still no Constitution creating the post >> 3 Image
Read 101 tweets
1 Nov
In just over 2 months' time, on 4 January 2022, the Italian Parliament will be convened in joint session to elect a new President of the Republic and Italian media are full of speculation. This is a brief guide to how the system works & some of the possible candidates [Thread] >>
Under art. 84 of the Constitution, the only requisites for office are Italian citizenship, being minimum 50 years old, being registered to vote, not being legally incapacitated, not being banned from public office, not being imprisoned or subject to other preventive measures >> 1
The "electorate" is made up of 1,009 people: 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies, 321 Senators (inc. 6 Life Senators) & 58 representatives from Italy's 20 Regions (3 for each region, except Valle d'Aosta, which sends only 1), chosen among members of Regional Assemblies) >> 2
Read 49 tweets
23 Sep
I first heard of Salvo D'Acquisto when I taught a course in a school named after him and looked up his story [Thread] >> 1
Salvo D'Acquisto is born into a poor family in the Vomero district of Naples on 15 October 1920, the eldest of 5 children. His father fought with the Bersaglieri in World War I & now works in an oxygen production plant, hampered by an injury suffered in an industrial accident >>2
The family is also very devout and Salvo attends schools run by the Salesians. He leaves school in 1934 and finds work in a workshop run by one of his uncle's to help out the family financially. In 1939, he is called up for military service and chooses to join the Carabinieri >>3
Read 29 tweets
13 Sep
At 1.30 a.m., in the night between 13 & 14 September 1943, the various units of Italian troops (12,000 in all), mostly conscripts of the Acqui Division, occupying the Greek island of Cephalonia, receive an unusual message from their Commander, General Antonio Gandin [Thread] >> 1
It reads, "General Gandin hereby calls a referendum & invites officers & men to choose from the following alternatives: 1) continue fighting alongside the Germans; 2) surrender; 3) fight against the Germans. Results of the referendum must reach Divisional HQ by 10 a.m. >> 2
To understand what brings about such an extraordinary order in a military context & the terrible events that ensued as a consequence, we first need to look at what happens from 25 July 1943 onwards. On that date Mussolini is deposed by the Grand Council of Fascism & arrested >> 3
Read 140 tweets
12 Sep
12 September 1942, what is known as the "Laconia Incident" in Britain, or "Laconia Tragedy" in Italy, takes place in the South Atlantic, near Ascension Island. Learning the details of this terrible event, it becomes clear why the denomination is different [Thread] >> 1
RMS Laconia (photo), an ocean liner converted into a troop ship, sets sail from Suez on 12 August 1942, heading for England. It is carrying 463 crew members, 286 British troops, 80 women & children (family members of British troops/crew) & 103 Polish soldiers >> 2
The Polish soldiers are responsible for guarding the largest contingent of passengers: 1,800 Italian prisoners of war. The holds of the ship have been converted to transport 900 prisoners but for this trip double the number have been "crammed" into the limited space >> 3
Read 24 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!

:(