Blog dedicated to reporting on Mexican drug cartels
on the border line between the US and Mexico
.

Tuesday, January 17, 2023

Matteo Messina Denaro, Italy's Most-Wanted Mafia Boss, Arrested After 30 Years on the Run

"Socalj" for Borderland Beat


One of the world's most wanted criminals for the last 3 decades was captured near his hometown in Palermo, Sicily, Italy this week. It was discovered he had been receiving treatment for cancer at a nearby clinic under the assumed name of Andrea Bonafede. Matteo Messina Denaro, his real identity, is said to be one of, if not the top boss of the Sicilian Mafia. He has been running operations while on the run from charges of multiple assassinations, kidnapping, murders, narcotics trafficking, and other crimes that he was convicted of in absentia.


Matteo Messina Denaro was captured at a private clinic in Palermo, Sicily, where he was receiving treatment for cancer.

Arrest in Palermo

Matteo Messina Denaro was captured at La Maddalena clinic in Palermo, an upscale medical facility known for treating cancer patients. Italian media said he was undergoing treatment there for a year.  Investigators said he was unarmed, “he didn’t resist at all,” Carabinieri Col. Lucio Arcidiacono told reporters.

Palermo Chief Prosecutor Maurizio De Lucia told reporters that the fugitive had used the alias Andrea Bonafede and had an Italian ID card in that name. He used the alias to book a morning appointment at the clinic. The doctor providing him treatment is currently under investigation as to whether he knew of the man's true identity. Authorities have said he is well enough to continue with proceedings and answer for his crimes while receiving treatment in prison hospitals.


Police searched the apartment listed under the false alias, Denaro's final hideout.

Hiding in Plain Sight

Perfumes, designer clothes, and Viagra pills were found in an apartment that investigators believe was his most recent hideout. The apartment is in a modest building near the center of Campobello di Mazara, a town in the Western Sicilian province of Trapani, just a few miles from his hometown of Castelvetrano. The town was home to his alleged aide Giovanni Luppino, who was arrested with him. "He had a regular life, he went to the supermarket," said magistrate Paolo Guido of Denaro.


Neighbors described him as a friendly person. "I live on the first floor of the building, sometimes I have seen this person, greeted him, and nothing else. He responded in a cordial manner," Rosario Cognata told Italian media. Fellow cancer patients said he wore designer scarves and hand-painted shirts. He would chat with them during chemo and sometimes gave them bottles of olive oil. 

Six years ago, Italian authorities confiscated €13 million worth of olive groves and bottling facilities linked to Messina Denaro in the countryside near Trapani. He was wearing a watch worth at least €38,000 when he was arrested.


Denaro as depicted in his last driver's license photo.

Background

Also known as "Diabolik" and "'U Siccu" (The Skinny One), Denaro was born in the Sicilian town of Castelvetrano in 1962. He was born the son of a Mafioso. He followed his father and at 15 he was already carrying a gun. Police believe he carried out his first killing when he was 18. He never married, but was known to have a number of lovers. Denaro wrote that he had a daughter, but had never met her. He is also believed to have a son, but little is known about him. He liked wearing designer clothes, expensive sunglasses, and Rolex watches, he loved video games and had a taste for luxury foods. 

He was also a ruthless killer who once claimed to have murdered enough people to fill a cemetery.

The Castelvetrano Clan was allied to the Corleonesi, headed by Salvatore "Toto (The Beast)" Riina, who became the undisputed "boss of bosses" thanks to his ruthless pursuit of power. In 1987 the state convicted 338 Mafiosi in a “Maxi-Trial,” and Riina was finally captured on January 15, 1993. After the fall of Riina in 1993, Denaro and many other Mafiosi went on the run. A decade later, with Bernardo Provenzano's arrest, it was said that Denaro rose to the top of the Corleonesi and the Sicilian Mafia Commission having been the protege of Riina. But his spot at the top has been questioned.

“He was never the boss,” says Principato. “He was a member of the commission, but that’s a different thing. He never took over Palermo, but remained the regional boss in Trapani.” Prosecutors have always doubted that Messina Denaro became the "Boss of Bosses" after Provenzano's capture, saying it was more likely that he was simply the head of Cosa Nostra in western Sicily. It is likely that the last leader to hold anything close to that title was "Toto" Riina who seized power over the Sicilian Mafia before his eventual arrest imprisoned him in 1993. Instead, the Sicilian Commission balances out the power and lessens the risks of a top leader being captured or killed.

2023 Carabinieri arrest photo of Denaro.

20 Life Sentences

Italian Police say he was heavily involved in planning the 1992 murders of anti-mafia prosecutors Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino, crimes that shocked both Sicily and Italy sparking a further crackdown that led to Mafia boss "Toto" Riina's arrest in 1993.

He was also held responsible for subsequent bombings in Rome, Florence, and Milan in 1993 that killed 10 people in an apparently failed bid to force the government to halt its attack on the Sicilian Mafia. Those bombings resulted in several fatalities and damaged the Uffizi Galleries in Florence, two major churches in Rome, and an art gallery in Milan.

He was also found guilty of helping organize the kidnapping of 12-year-old Giuseppe Di Matteo, to try to dissuade the boy's father from giving evidence against the Mafia. The boy was held for two years before he was strangled and his body was dissolved in acid. 

Messina Denaro went into hiding in 1993 as a growing number of turncoats or "Pentiti," started providing details of his involvement. He started communicating with other Mafiosi via "Pizzini," small pieces of paper sometimes written in code distributed by messengers. Many of these notes were found with Bernardo Provenzano in 2006 when police caught him. Provenzano led the Sicilian Mafia following Riina's arrest. In a letter to a contact, Messina Denaro said he couldn't believe how careless Provenzano had been. "When I receive a letter, even from family members, I reply as quickly as possible and immediately burn the one that arrived," he wrote.



He was tried and sentenced to life in jail in absentia in 2002 over numerous murders.
  • The 1992 killing of anti-Mafia prosecutors Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino

  • The killing of Antonella Bonanno, the pregnant girlfriend of a rival Mafia boss

  • The kidnapping and killing of Giuseppe Di Matteo, the 11-year-old son of a mafioso-turned-state witness
He was convicted again in 2020. 
  • 1993 bomb attacks in Milan, Florence, and Rome, which killed 10 people
The Mafia boss also oversaw racketeering, illegal waste dumping, money laundering, and drug trafficking for the Sicilian crime groups. Although Messina Denaro had been a fugitive since 1993, he was thought to have still been issuing orders to his subordinates from various secret locations.


Age progression Photofit of Messina Denaro done in 2007, based on the 20-year-old photo from his driving license.

30 Years on the Run

Over the decades, Italian investigators often came close to catching Messina Denaro by monitoring those closest to him. This resulted in the arrest of his sister Patrizia and several other of his associates in 2013. Italian police also seized valuable businesses linked to Messina Denaro, leaving him increasingly isolated.

Matteo's sister Patrizia was sentenced to 14 years in prison for being a member of the Mafia. 

As police repeatedly swept Sicily looking for clues about his whereabouts, more correspondence emerged showing they were dealing with someone who saw himself very differently from the way he was portrayed by his foes. "I only care about being a fair man, I have made fairness my philosophy of life and I hope to die a fair man," he wrote in a letter dated Feb. 1, 2005, found in an abandoned hideout.

In an eavesdropped recording from prison, Riina is heard complaining about his one-time protege, apparently perturbed by the news he was investing in wind farms and angered he hadn't taken more charge like he had. "The only guy who could do something because he was straight... didn't do anything," Riina told a fellow inmate.

Besides hideouts in Sicily, he traveled abroad while a fugitive, including to Marseille, France, where he underwent surgery, according to investigators. During his years on the run, he had a series of lovers and passed time by playing video games, according to Italian media reports. One of his girlfriends was arrested and convicted of having hidden him for a time.


“If you asked, where is Matteo Messina Denaro, people would say, he’s either dead, or he’s in the province of Trapani,” said Giacomo di Girolamo, author of a biography of Denaro called The Invisible. “He wasn’t one of those Mafiosi who would go abroad, to Brazil or Northern Europe. He didn’t need to build himself a bunker like the heads of the ‘Ndrangheta in Calabria. He was protected in his territory.”

However, few photos of Messina Denaro exist until now and police relied on digital composites to reconstruct his appearance in the decades after he went on the run. A recording of his voice was not released until 2021. In September 2021, a Formula 1 fan from Liverpool was arrested at gunpoint in a restaurant in the Netherlands after being mistaken for Messina Denaro.

Several of his collaborators were arrested in 2020, making him more vulnerable. Police wiretapped the homes of his family members, and only spoke generally of “people with cancer” and “cancer surgeries.” Names were never mentioned, assuming they knew that the phones were being tapped. This was enough for police to assume that Denaro was seeking treatment of some sort.

Investigators then gathered the details of all male cancer patients born in 1962 near Trapani, in western Sicily, and slowly narrowed down the search to five suspects. They identified a man who had booked a treatment under the name of Andrea Bonafede, the nephew of deceased Mafia boss Leonardo Bonafede. But after analyzing Bonafede’s phone records, they discovered that he was far from the clinic where he was meant to be having surgery one day, confirming that Denaro was likely using the name as an alias.


"Lucky" Luciano founded the American Mafia's Commission. One of his early arrests was for dealing heroin, and after being deported to his native Italy, helped set up a heroin pipeline back to the US.

The Mafia's Long Drug Trafficking History

Drug trafficking has been a core part of the Sicilian Mafia, also known as Cosa Nostra since as far back as it became illegal. The notorious "French Connection" between the US, Corsican, and Sicilian Mafia groups was made by Commission founder Salvatore/Charles "Lucky" Luciano and Joseph Bonanno with their Italian counterparts. The connection was formalized during the "Palermo Meeting" in 1957. But the groups had been involved years prior. In July 1949, police in Rome arrested Luciano on suspicion of involvement in the shipping of narcotics to New York. After a week in jail, he was released with no charges being filed. 

This meeting set the stage for the Sicilian clans to be the primary controllers of the heroin trade and a Sicilian Mafia Commission was formed on the advice of their US counterparts. The Sicilians would procure opium from Asia and Turkey, and process it into heroin at Corsican labs in France before smuggling it into Canada with future Bonanno leader Carmine Galante, and also into New York to the various LCN families, and through Cuba as well until Fidel Castro kicked the Mafia out of the country following the 1959 Revolution.

The American Mafia/La Cosa Nostra began to distance itself from narcotic sales due to increased law enforcement pressure; even putting in a rule that any member caught dealing would be killed. But the bosses turned a blind eye so long as their cuts kept coming in. For even more deniability, Italian Mafiosi were given permission by the New York bosses to operate on US soil as evidenced in cases such as heroin imported as part of the 'Pizza Connection,' of which slain Judge Giovanni Falcone was a part of investigating. US families focused more on corrupting legitimate businesses and unions, gambling, loan sharking, stock fraud, cargo theft, and other more traditional organized crime schemes.



But in Italy, drug trafficking and local street sales became their main source of income allowing groups like the Mafia, Camorra in Naples, and 'Ndrangheta in Calabria to gain power and push their way into politics and legitimate businesses.

The massive crackdown on the Sicilian Mafia following those bombings allowed other groups such as the 'Ndrangheta to grow. The Calabrians funded their start in drug trafficking after kidnapping for ransom an heir to the Getty family oil fortune in 1973 for $2.2 million.

Unlike Sicily’s crime syndicates, the ’Ndrangheta draws its members based on family ties, leaving it less vulnerable to those who cooperate with investigators. The ’Ndrangheta clans are now some of the world’s most powerful cocaine traffickers. They have gained more ground in Europe due to their connections with South American cartels.


Raffaele Imperiali was second to Messina Denaro of Italy's most wanted, he recently began cooperating with authorities. It is highly unlikely there is any connection to this arrest.

Recently, longtime Camorra cocaine broker Raffaele Imperiali, who was number two on the list of Italy's most wanted fugitives, was captured in Dubai and cooperated with Italian authorities. His capture was part of several operations to bring down the so-called "Super Cartel" made up of several European organized crime groups. The Super Cartel was said to be responsible for importing a third of Europe's cocaine.


But the Sicilian Mafia still maintains drug trafficking operations heavily across Europe. This was seen recently in a Europol operation dismantling multiple drug trafficking networks based in Germany. Nearly 100 people connected to the Sicilian Mafia were arrested. Their trafficking includes cocaine, synthetic drugs, and heroin.

Other illegal businesses include their infiltration of public works contracts including construction and waste disposal as well as the extortion of small businesses for protection money. Their strategy of survival is no longer violence against the state; Cosa Nostra is lying low, opting to “co-penetrate the social and economic fabric of Italy,” Italy’s anti-Mafia prosecutor, Giovanni Melillo said.


Public & Political Reactions

"It is a day of celebration when we can tell our children that the Mafia can be beaten," said Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, who flew to Sicily when news of the arrest broke, underlining the importance of the capture.

"We have not won the war, we have not defeated the Mafia but this battle was a key battle to win, and it is a heavy blow to organized crime," said Meloni. Meloni also thanked the authorities for their work adding: "This is a great victory for the state." Italian police and the public in the area were seen applauding and celebrating the capture.

Italy's president, Sergio Mattarella, whose brother Piersanti was killed by Cosa Nostra in 1980, congratulated the Minister of the Interior and the Carabinieri Military Police. 

University of Essex criminology professor Anna Sergi told the BBC that Messina Denaro's arrest was "symbolic not just because he was the boss of Cosa Nostra, but because he represents the last fugitive the Italian state really wanted to get its hands on." But she questioned the timing of it after his 30 years on the run and being treated at the same clinic for over a year. The state of his health might have been seen as a sign of weakness and he was given up in a power play and/or a favor to Italian authorities.

Gian Carlo Caselli, a Judge, and former Prosecutor General said that the arrest of Messina Denaro was an "exceptional... simply historical event" that might lead to significant developments in the ongoing inquiries into the 1993 bomb attacks that killed 10 people across Italy. “We captured the last of the massacre masterminds” of the 1992-1993 Mafia killings, Prosecutor De Lucia said. “It was a debt that the Republic owed to the victims of those years.” 

Whether Denaro continues to exert any influence at all on Cosa Nostra will probably depend on his health. "Toto" Riina continued to run the organization from inside of prison, in spite of high-security conditions and limited visitors. “It would be a mistake to think that with today’s arrest, the fight against the Mafia is finished. Experience should teach us that Cosa Nostra is capable of regrouping, reorganizing, and relaunching itself. Making connections with business, and in some cases, politics has always been in the DNA of Cosa Nostra. I believe Matteo Messina Denaro knows a lot about those connections, and it would be a great step forward if he decided to collaborate with justice, and tell the truth about what he knows.” stated Nino di Matteo, a former Anti-Mafia Prosecutor in Palermo.


64 comments:

  1. Ovidio Guzman snitched

    ReplyDelete
  2. Ndrangheta is now the main power in Italy,but still they are nothing compared to the Mexican Cartels or Russians

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. They all work together hand in hand… Sicily is a large island and economic power in itself, but also the perfect hub for transporting large amounts of drugs throughout the country.. and the world

      Delete
    2. Yes, compared to the amount of lethal drugs mexican cartels pump into America the Italian Mafia are inferior.

      Delete
    3. So being number one flooding communities with drugs and murder is the reason to be proud.

      Delete
    4. Uh they’re a pretty big deal in the European cocaine trade which is itself, a pretty big deal right now… Next you’ll tell me Balkans aren’t relevant either or ‘small time’. Both are way more relevant than the Russians..

      Delete
    5. Mexican cartels are nothing compared to the colombians.

      Delete
  3. Vicente zambada snitching to this day

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Get a life… and you really shouldn’t be on this site at your age.

      Delete
  4. Excellent reporting, Socal!!

    The last of the big bosses from Sicily has fallen… and I could tell by his mugshot that he was gravely ill.

    He probably let himself be arrested, so that he could “honorably” retire and pass on the torch, as opposed to being forever known as some despot tyrant who died on the run from being terminally ill…

    My guess is the next in line will absolutely be someone from Trapani, and we may never know who it is, as it seems like there is a new (or old) modus operandi for the organized crime groups throughout Italy…

    No more big name super bosses that are household names, the next in line will truly be men in the shadows.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You must make a lot of money with your super duper guesses.

      Delete
  5. Like Ovidio he fell behind on his mordida.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Ovidio isn't really a comparison. This guy was a criminal genius ovidio was a criminal Jack ass

      Delete
    2. @4:32 lol at the cjng sicario criminal who wears clothes that the sally ann wouldn't accept.

      Delete
    3. 2:27
      You got that right Truther.

      Delete
    4. 4:32 this guy is fool..ovidio is on other level

      Delete
    5. Not really 7:54 do your homework try google

      Delete
    6. Hahaha , Ovidio on another level. In 2010 this guy los 2 billion dollars invested in new energy sources, green deal.

      Mafia left drugs to go in high business. He surrendered. He is terminaly ill, he would not be arrested otherwise

      Delete
  6. Italian mafia began America's addiction to drugs primarily in black hoods and now the Mexican Cartels have taken deadly highly addictive drugs into every hood in America!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Ya ones that nobody wants though like meth and fentanyl. Come back with this “addiction” logic when cartels start flooding the streets with actual choice drugs like oxycodone or normal amphetamine.

      The whole fentanyl/meth dynamic is keeping A LOT of potential customers and demographics at bay, trust me.

      Delete
    2. @ 3.23 Italian Mafia began Americas addiction to drugs? Funny man...

      Delete
    3. They did. They were the ones bringing in the H

      Delete
    4. 3:23 Hey, dont forget about colombians... lol

      Delete
    5. 758 did you seriously say drugs like meth and Fetty that no body wants... You shouldn't ever post again under your name...oh anonymous of course just a anon fucking idiot. Trust him he says just because he's a pill popper that like oxys but how do you get those in the past few yrs ..yeah so the options are everyone wanting Fenty because the black tar Mexican dirt isn't even Marketable the main shit that's been talking pts. Everyday is what you say nobody wants hmm demographically blacks have been doing crystal meth as levels never seen before as Mexicans as well, we know the whites clearly been on that for decades. Fetty is what suburbian kids needs not just want you know notjg

      Delete
    6. Omg Italians started America's addiction he says what a fucking idiot, many Italians weren't even wanting to be involved in that hard drug game until it became necessitates

      Delete
    7. 11:12 Talking about in terms normal people. Not the people sleeping on sidewalks, couches or reddit.

      Delete
    8. 11:12 Also I’m not arguing that people don’t turn to meth out of desperation. But that’s literally because of what I’m saying, because it’s the only amphetamine around and widely available here. If there was a choice on the streets these days between Benzedrine and methadrine most people would take Benzedrine and the ones who would take methadrine would probably just do it orally or at most, snort it.

      Delete
    9. @1.08- I'm aware of Sicilians smuggling Heroin, but if you think that was when Americans began to get addicted to drugs you should look a little further back dude.

      Delete
    10. @4:41 Indeed ,for most Americans the border stops at Mexico of Canada....learn your history.

      Delete
  7. Lo buscan por todos lados pero el hombre ni esta escondido

    ReplyDelete
  8. Here’s a crazy idea… just let people do their cocaine.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yeah so your mother and sister can get hooked because it’s legal now.

      Delete
    2. 9:47 The people who want to do cocaine are already doing it smartass. Where do you people get this utterly fallacious notion that legalization means more widespread use?? That’s not how this works. Also about half the people I know do coke I know maybe 1 or 2 “addicts” max.

      Delete
    3. 9:47 not how drug legalization works mate. There is no major changes to society or drug culture simply because the government regulates something instead of street dealers. Your mom and sister are already using coke. And if they’re not using coke, they’re not going to start after legalization. Most people just try drugs, they don’t even continue using them. They usually just stick to one or two main substances like weed or coffee.

      Delete
    4. When something is "legal", is commonly regulated. Better than "illegal" scheme.

      Delete
    5. more people will use it if it's legal because some people don't use it because it's illegal. i don't know the figures but there must be data on this from american weed legalisation.

      it would still cause less harm than unregulated supply though imo. but who knows.

      Delete
    6. 2:02 Data from weed legalization? Ha! First of all, weed legalization in Colorado led to lower rates of use among teens and lower rates of drunk driving. As for the country overall, both psychedelic use and weed use have been steadily increasing and have nothing to do with the laws. No one’s saying that the usage rates of certain drugs don’t change over time, but those are due to cultural reason, simple as that. Prohibition is not stopping anyone and I would in argue in some cases it’s even putting coke in front of people who wouldn’t have otherwise done it. You’re underestimating the social consequences of the black market and how that actually can increase use. And even if use did increase, I don’t consider that even a bad thing in terms of cocaine. Because if it was legal and clean product the medical complications would still be lower even if you got higher use rates. But most data suggest even when drug legalization does lead to more use the rise is only temporary and goes back down to normal levels soon after.

      Delete
  9. his assets were alledged to be worth at least 4 billion dollars and the police seized more then 1,4billion from him already. just shows how powerful and rich the italians are

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That's more or less his criminal network portfolio not his personal fortune. It will more or less be passed on to his successor.

      Delete
    2. @7:59 I don't usually say this but you need to slow down on the pipe-loads your thinking is real delusional. 4billion$. He doesn't even have 4 billion pennies.

      Delete
    3. yes he does and his was stated by italian goverment

      Delete
  10. being a criminal is so stupid

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. But being a slave to a 9-5 is genius. Is it better to live on your knees being “free” or die on your feet like a man?

      Delete
    2. there are many other ways to being successful in life there is nothing manly in being a criminal it is more manly being a person of good in a world like ours, criminals take the easy way because they want FAST success without the hard work. So who is more manly? a 9-5 is just a step in the process you don't become a mafia boss from one day to another either you start small until you get where u want to be same goes for every profession 🌀

      Delete
    3. 2:21 So just because someone isn’t a criminal means they’re “good”?

      Delete
    4. 1:10 pm so killing other people for money, ruining lives and family in the process, is better than having an honest job. I hope someone of those “free men” give you a taste of their “freedom”.

      Delete
    5. 4:45 honest job doesn’t get you laid, remember women like the bad boys

      Delete
    6. 740 I imagine that doesn’t matter once you’re locked up, read a book or something u need to smarten up don’t be a crashout

      Delete
  11. Finally got him, but since he's old and dying I doubt he'll reveal anything about the attacks on the state in the 90s. Great stuff Socalj.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. What would there even be to reveal? People act like “oh there’s always someone to snitch on” but that simply isn’t the case when you go up high enough.

      Delete
  12. A true Guido role model, mouseolinguini salutes you and your axis of evil.

    ReplyDelete
  13. I heard they turn these guys over like McDonald’s McDouble Pattie’s

    ReplyDelete
  14. He surrendered to police, he is terminally ill, he would not be arrested otherwise.

    He was never on the run. Senore was well known in Sicily, going to games , golf and enjoying life. He is done, terminal cancer.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. 11:32 Why wouldn’t he just cap himself if he was terminally ill? Does he want to die painfully?

      Delete
    2. He would never kill himself. Its deal they have with government, Provenzano was arrested in 2006 also sick and old. Its a deal. Its all a deal. He did his part. New boss is in, government has a big win. Its how things go, he did his job, enjoyed his life.

      He was going to games of Palermo, was a big fan, golfing, traveling to everywhere.

      Now its this and that, he lived in bunker hahaahaha. Its whole one big fucking show for public and media, people know

      Delete
    3. 1:57 So then what’s the “deal”? That he gets to die in his cell now with morphine?

      Delete
    4. Deal is with mafia clans, bosses surrender in old age, like Provenzano, its a win for government, it calms things, and new boss can come and business goes as usual.

      Matteo lived his life of crime. He is a criminal since like 1978 and was never arrested, he made billions and enjoyed , its done, he is sick. Now he honors his deal. Mafia deal. You go down so others can come. Its how it is.

      Delete
    5. People Palermo has 500k people, its impossible to be on the run for 30 years, utterly impossible. Im telling you, its a deal. Guy was golfing in 2020 in plain site. Its a deal. Its all a deal. You can think im shitting, but just see how small sicily is, he was there whole fucking time looking same as he did since 1993 lol.,

      Delete
    6. @1.46. Old School Roman Catholics don't commit suicide. They're Ok about murdering 12 year olds, because they have time to repent before they die, but worry they will burn in hell for eternity if they kill themselves.

      Delete
  15. And please there are many top level mafia bosses in Mexico, do not compare Ovidio with this guy.

    This guy was billionaire before 2000s, he was in big energy business and green deal. Level from drugs and this low level things. He was respected, never on the run. Never on the run. He was known, enjoyed life to fullest, in his hometown, concerts, restaurants, games, golf, never on run. Traveling everywhere.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yeah I’m pretty sure prosecutors were more on the run than him

      Delete

Comments are moderated, refer to policy for more information.
Envía fotos, vídeos, notas, enlaces o información
Todo 100% Anónimo;

borderlandbeat@gmail.com