Authors: Clare Longrigg
see also
Liggio
,
Luciano
; Provenzano, Bernardo
Riina, Salvo (son of Salvatore Riina),
194
,
199–200
Riolo, Giorgio,
206
,
210–11
,
213–15
Rizzotto, Placido,
13–14
Rocca Busambra (nr Corleone),
18
,
20
Rome:
San Giovanni bombing,
121
ROS (Ragruppamento Operativo Speciale),
130
,
138
,
140
,
202
,
210
,
214
Rotolo, Nino,
159
,
160
,
174
,
244–7
,
266
Ruffino, Giuseppe,
13
,
21
Russo, Giuseppe,
35
,
72
Sabella, Alfonso:
on Salvatore Riina,
41–2
,
69
,
71
hunt for bombers,
118
Salvatore Barbagallo’s collaboration,
125
and Villabate feud,
125–6
issuing of arrest warrants,
129
and Vito Vitale,
142
Provenzano and Mafia prisoners,
244
Sabella, Marzia,
8–9
,
257–9
Salvo family,
29
Salvo, Ignazio,
122
Salvo, Nino,
32
San Giuseppe lato (town),
22
,
30
,
36
,
112
,
136
,
142
Santa Maria di Gesù (town),
75
,
80
Santa Teresa Clinic (Bagheria),
222
Santapaola, Nitto (‘the Hunter’),
56
,
103
,
234
Santino, Umberto,
154
scappati
(fugitives)
see
Inzerillo family
SCO (Servizio Centrale Operativo),
152
,
233–4
Segno
(Catholic magazine),
150
Sicilian Vespers (anti-Mafia operation),
108
Siino, Angelo (‘the Builder’),
56
,
63
,
67
,
108
,
156
,
222
Socialist Party (PSI),
74–6
,
77
,
156
,
167
Southern League (political group),
162–3
Spera, Benedetto:
as ally of Provenzano,
123
struggle with Pieruccio Lo Bianco,
126
,
178
as fugitive,
176–7
,
178
rivalry with Ciccio Pastoia,
179–80
,
225
arrest,
182
Splendor (Angelo Provenzano’s launderette),
94
,
189
,
194
,
196–7
,
240
Stanfa family,
209
Streva, Francesco,
17–18
Tavolino (‘Round Table’; Mafia public works cartel),
63–4
Terranova, Cesare,
20
,
37
Tolentino, Angelo,
176–7
,
205
‘Tractor, the’
see
Provenzano,
Bernardo
Trapani (town),
49
,
59
,
74
,
82
,
89
Trioio, Ugo,
35
Troia, Gaspare,
220
,
222
,
224
,
229
,
230
Troia, Salvatore,
222–3
,
224
Ucciardone prison (Palermo),
107
UDC (centre-right political party),
213
Umina, Carmelo,
202
,
207
Umina, Salvatore,
207
Vaccaro, Lorenzo,
135
Vaccaro, Mimmo,
133
Valguarnera (town),
101
via Bernini (Palermo),
113
via Colletti (Corleone),
87
via Libertà (Palermo),
63
via Marconi (Ficarazzi),
226
via Scorsone (Corleone),
193
viale Lazio massacre (Palermo),
23–4
,
47
viale Strasburgo (Palermo),
50
Vicari (village),
207
Villa Cattolica (Bagheria),
53
Villa dei Mostri (Bagheria),
57
Villa Valquarnera (Bagheria),
57
Villabate (town),
58
,
124–6
,
156
,
169–72
Violante, Luciano,
118
,
269
Virga, Domenico,
207
,
208
Vitale, Giusy 103,
114
Vitale, Leonardo,
103
,
114
Vitale, Vito,
103
,
114
,
142–3
The author of
Mafia Women
and
No Questions Asked,
Clare Longrigg is perhaps the leading British expert on the Mafia. In this new biography, she draws on her vast experience and wide range of contacts to paint a portrait of a secretive and immensely powerful man, who for decades controlled the Mafia with an iron hand.
Bernardo Provenzano after his arrest on 11 April 2006, after forty-three years on the run. ‘You don’t know what you’re doing’, he told police.
The sheep farm near Corleone where Provenzano lived for a year before he was finally arrested. The two men are by the door to his hideout. The owner had put up a TV arial for him, and built on a new bathroom.
Bernardo Provenzano (known as ‘the Tractor’): police mugshot after his arrest for stealing cheese and cattle rustling in 1958, aged twenty-five. During his four decades as a fugitive this was the only image the police had to go on.
Bernardo Provenzano (by now known as ‘the Accountant’): police mugshot, 2006, aged seventy-three. He had been convicted in his absence of twenty-one murders and been given three life sentences.
Provenzano before leaving for his brief military service in the air force, 1954. He was dismissed after only six months on grounds of ill health, with a record of good conduct.
Totò Riina as a young man, pictured on his ID card. He and Provenzano grew up in Luciano Liggio’s gang of cattle rustlers and became his joint lieutenants in the Corleone mafia.
Totò Riina, already a wanted criminal, in Venice in the 1970s. Riina and his family lived in hiding for decades as he and Provenzano built their empire, straying from home only on exceptional occasions and, apparently, holidays.