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Storie di servitori dello Stato abili e onesti, che nella lotta contro la criminalità hanno perso la vita o sono stati traditi e abbandonati alla peggiore delle condanne, l’indifferenza e la rimozione dalla memoria collettiva.

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2013.08.20 | Lucarelliracconta 3.6 | Uomini dello Stato | Re-ed [HQ RaiPlay] 2013

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00:00:08Thank you all
00:00:49Thank you all
00:01:23Thank you all
00:01:36Thank you all
00:01:53Thank you all
00:02:25Thank you all
00:02:27Thank you all
00:02:56One day, that policeman does something, a gesture, which for many may seem natural, but for someone like
00:03:02He seems strange for a policeman, for a cop. He goes to his mother's house, throws himself on the bed and
00:03:09It makes you cry. Everyday gestures that seem exceptional.
00:03:12Thank you all.
00:03:31Thank you all.
00:03:55Here, under his fingers, instead of a gun, the aspiring commissioner has a typewriter keyboard.
00:04:05One of those big office ones, with those big keys that make a clicking sound on the sheets of paper padded with paper.
00:04:11coal.
00:04:11He's writing a letter to another policeman, he's writing a letter to another policeman, which is a gesture
00:04:25which does a simple gesture, like writing a letter.
00:04:29It happened that on the morning of June 30th, an anonymous phone call arrived at the police station, reporting a suspicious car in
00:04:36Ciaculli, near Palermo, a Juliet stops on the road to Villa Abate.
00:04:40It's a disturbing phone call, because that is the so-called season of the Giuliettas, from the car model that was most often called
00:04:46stolen, to be used as a car bomb in the first mafia war pitting rival gangs against each other.
00:04:55The Carabinieri and the police arrive, as well as the two army bomb disposal experts who easily defuse a rather rudimentary bomb made with
00:05:02a gas cylinder.
00:05:05But it's a trap. In the trunk of the Giulietta there's another bomb, the real one, which explodes, killing seven people.
00:05:22The request of the young commissioner Giorgio Boris Giuliano was accepted immediately.
00:05:27And who wants to go there to Sicily in those years, which are difficult and dangerous years, bad years of
00:05:33mafia and a mafia that kills without mercy.
00:05:41As in December 1969, when a Corleonesi fire group, led by Bernardo Provenzano, reacted in the
00:05:49offices of a company in Viale Lazio, in Palermo,
00:05:52which serves as a cover for a rival gang. And a shootout ensues which leaves six dead and
00:05:57two injured.
00:06:01A mafia that mercilessly kills even men of the State, as in May 1971, when it killed the prosecutor
00:06:07head of the Republic of Palermo, Pietro Scaglione.
00:06:10Prosecutor Scaglione had just left the Capuchin cemetery in Palermo, where he was going to pray on his wife's tomb,
00:06:16when a fire team, led by Luciano Liggio, riddled the prosecutor's Fiat 1100 with bullets, killing both him
00:06:23that his driver, prison officer Antonino Lorusso.
00:06:29A mafia that kills without mercy and very often wins. As in the trial of the 114, which in Catanzaro puts under
00:06:37investigation 114 people,
00:06:39including bosses of the caliber of Stefano Bontate, Gaetano Badalamenti, Tommaso Buscetta, and Pippo Calò. He sent some to trial
00:06:4675 and then acquits almost all of them, due to insufficient evidence.
00:06:51Sicily is not an easy place and neither is Palermo, which in those years experienced enormous growth.
00:06:56doubling the population.
00:07:04But it's the right place for a policeman who wants to go to the front line to do his job, and
00:07:09that's where Commissioner Giuliano is sent.
00:07:18As soon as he arrives, however, they put him behind a desk, in an administrative office, to deal with paperwork and documents.
00:07:24It's not the right place. It's not the right place for someone like Commissioner Giuliano, who is a policeman.
00:07:29very particular.
00:07:30Someone like him doesn't stay behind a desk for long, and not just because he naturally speaks English.
00:07:37Commissioner Giuliano is decisive and determined. He has the intuition and instinct of a detective novel, and he knows the
00:07:45more modern investigative techniques.
00:07:47She knows how to manage communication and relationships with journalists, and she loves her job.
00:07:52Boris didn't like journalists, but he was a modern policeman and was aware of the indispensable role of information.
00:08:00We had great respect for Boris Giuliano, I repeat, because Boris was able to convey his desire for justice.
00:08:12And it was a desire for justice that took into account the dignity of people.
00:08:16He investigated, he arrested people, but without hurting them.
00:08:28And in fact a few weeks later he goes on to lead the homicide squad, which is important, because in Palermo in those years
00:08:34there are always many murders.
00:08:35And a few years later he ends up leading the entire mobile squad.
00:08:39I remember a phone call to the police commissioner at the time, during which he clearly said
00:08:46Commander, this is how I work. If you don't like it, find another squad leader.
00:08:53It was unthinkable at that time that an official would address someone in this way, but that's how he was.
00:08:59Commissioner Giuliano, Boris Giuliano, as his colleagues and journalists call him,
00:09:04he is in Palermo fighting crime, which means the daily crime of drug dealers, pickpockets and thieves,
00:09:12but also the equally daily one of the mafia.
00:09:20And there he understands a couple of very important things.
00:09:23The first is that the mafia, Cosa Nostra, has changed and is still changing.
00:09:27At the end of the 70s, the Sicilian mafia also obtained from its American cousins
00:09:38the exclusive right to produce heroin.
00:09:42This involved sourcing the base morphine from Eastern countries,
00:09:49from Asian and Far Eastern countries, which was processed in Palermo's laboratories.
00:09:58In essence, Cosa Nostra became the only concessionaire in the world,
00:10:02the only drug distribution agency in the world.
00:10:09Cosa Nostra organizes itself, the provincial commission, the cupola, is born.
00:10:13And bosses like Stefano Bontade in Palermo and like Tottori Ina and Bernardo Provenzano in Corleone emerge.
00:10:22Boris Giuliano and the Palermo mobile squad, with his collaborators and Bruno Contrada,
00:10:27who directed it before him, are not the only ones investigating this new reality.
00:10:31There are also the Carabinieri.
00:10:33There is the cornello dalla chiesa, head of the region.
00:10:36There is Captain Giuseppe Russo, commander of the Palermo investigative unit.
00:10:40And there will be Captain Emanuele Basile, commander of the Monreale company.
00:10:46Commissioner Giuliano, however, has an intuition that turns out to be very important.
00:10:51An idea, a concept, a fundamental investigative method.
00:10:55It was one of the first, in fact, from what I remember and from what I know,
00:11:02he was the first investigator to follow the trail of drug trafficking money.
00:11:10Follow the money, as Judge Giovanni Falcone will say later,
00:11:15who with his investigations will take up Boris Giuliano's intuition.
00:11:19Follow the money.
00:11:20If a drug shipment is traveling in one direction,
00:11:23There will also be traces of money traveling in the opposite direction.
00:11:30It's not an easy thing.
00:11:32Specific skills are required.
00:11:34You need to know how banks and financial companies operate,
00:11:37how money moves, how it disappears and then disappears.
00:11:40And above all, since the traffic is international and goes beyond the borders of the State,
00:11:45collaboration with the police forces of other countries is needed.
00:11:49Especially with the United States, with the DEA and with the FBI.
00:11:52There were not many weapons available to those fighting the mafia in those years.
00:11:57There is no specific crime that concerns her.
00:11:59416 bis, mafia-style criminal association,
00:12:04It will only arrive in 1982.
00:12:06For some, for intellectuals, magistrates, men of institutions,
00:12:11there isn't even the mafia.
00:12:12It doesn't exist.
00:12:13It's an invention to discredit Sicily.
00:12:15It's a sociological problem.
00:12:18There is no law on collaborators of justice
00:12:21and there aren't even any so-called repentants.
00:12:24The only one, the first one who presented himself to the investigators
00:12:28to talk about Cosa Nostra, his name is Leonardo Vitale.
00:12:31It describes the entire organization, from the organizational chart to the initiation rituals.
00:12:36He is only partially believed and ends up in a mental hospital.
00:12:38And when he gets out, many years later, he is killed.
00:12:44There are not many weapons that Commissioner Giuliano and his men have at their disposal,
00:12:48but they still get the results.
00:12:50Boris Giuliano has put together a good team,
00:12:53which he directed with methods that were, for the time, very modern.
00:12:56The results are coming and there are many pieces,
00:13:00many pieces of a mosaic that slowly comes together.
00:13:06Like when, investigating as manager of the Amici team
00:13:09together with Bruno Contrada, then head of the Mobile,
00:13:12on the disappearance of the journalist of the hour Mauro De Mauro in 1970,
00:13:16the police come to the hypothesis that De Mauro was killed by Cosa Nostra,
00:13:21for what he had discovered about the death of Enrico Mattei,
00:13:24the president of ENI, killed a few years earlier by a bomb on his plane.
00:13:32Or like when, starting from some checks found in the pockets of the boss Giuseppe Di Cristina,
00:13:38killed by a rival gang,
00:13:40Boris Giuliano arrives at a bearer passbook,
00:13:42on which there are several hundred million lire.
00:13:50It is registered to a certain Joseph Bonamico, but that is not true.
00:13:54It's Michele Sindona, who with his private bank
00:13:57he is investing and laundering Cosa Nostra money.
00:14:00Follow the money, precisely.
00:14:04Giorgio Boris Giuliano is good.
00:14:06He looks like one of those cops from the movies.
00:14:09He wears that big mustache and they call him the sheriff.
00:14:11He looks tough, even though he's not.
00:14:13He had very little free time.
00:14:15I remember that in the middle of the night a phone call could come in
00:14:19and he had to run because maybe a murder had occurred
00:14:22and then he went out.
00:14:23But that didn't stop him from accompanying us to school the next morning,
00:14:27as if nothing had happened.
00:14:30And then try to spend more free time with us,
00:14:32because the time he spent with us at home
00:14:35it was a time exclusively ours.
00:14:38In April 1979 there is a robbery
00:14:41the savings bank in Via Mariano Stabile, in Palermo,
00:14:45during which the security guard Alfonso Sgroi was killed.
00:14:54Giuliano and his mobile squad investigate,
00:14:57they find an eyewitness who recognizes Pino Greco,
00:15:00a Cosa Nostra boss,
00:15:01and receive an anonymous phone call
00:15:03which takes them to a car upholstery shop
00:15:05in the course of a thousand.
00:15:12It's not just a wallpaper,
00:15:14it's a Cosa Nostra hideout.
00:15:23In there,
00:15:24the men of Giuliano's mobile squad
00:15:26three men from the Greco-Marchese clan are arrested
00:15:29and they find weapons, bulletproof vests
00:15:31and money that comes from the robbery
00:15:34at the savings bank.
00:15:37The next day,
00:15:39at 113,
00:15:40a phone call comes in.
00:15:45Giuliano will die.
00:15:47Giuliano will die.
00:15:49This is a threat that must be taken seriously.
00:15:51Also because in those years
00:15:52and in the following ones,
00:15:54Cosa Nostra kills all those
00:15:56that are an obstacle to her.
00:15:57So many investigators,
00:15:59too good
00:15:59and overzealous.
00:16:04In August 1977
00:16:06the colonel is killed
00:16:08of the Carabinieri Giuseppe Russo
00:16:09and on vacation
00:16:11he's walking
00:16:11for the square of Ficuzza
00:16:13together with a friend,
00:16:14Professor Filippo Costa,
00:16:16when four people
00:16:17they get out of a car
00:16:18and kill them both.
00:16:22Captain Emanuele Basile
00:16:24instead he gets killed
00:16:25in May 1980.
00:16:27It is in the square of Monreale
00:16:28with his wife and little daughter
00:16:30that is waiting to see
00:16:31the fireworks
00:16:32of the feast of the Holy Crucifix.
00:16:34They shoot him in the back.
00:16:39Julian will die.
00:16:40It's a threat
00:16:41to be taken seriously.
00:16:43He always remained cheerful
00:16:45because he didn't let it show
00:16:48his sadness,
00:16:49his worries,
00:16:50the anguish
00:16:50which surely must have had
00:16:51in the last period.
00:16:52So much so that
00:16:54my brother will say too
00:16:56who was 12 years old at the time
00:16:57which was taking place
00:16:58of the investigations
00:16:59particularly dangerous.
00:17:00But this never made him lose
00:17:02this love for simple things,
00:17:05for his family.
00:17:06He had the collaboration
00:17:07of my mother
00:17:08who was a woman
00:17:11formidable
00:17:12because she was there for him
00:17:14Always
00:17:14and which allowed him
00:17:20to make a life
00:17:22very difficult
00:17:23what was that
00:17:24of a policeman in Palermo
00:17:25in the 70s.
00:17:26Giuliano doesn't give up
00:17:27and other pieces
00:17:29they add to the mosaic.
00:17:30In June 1979
00:17:32two suitcases are found
00:17:33that seem forgotten
00:17:35on the conveyor belt
00:17:36of the international airport
00:17:38of Punta Raisi
00:17:38where does the flight depart from?
00:17:40which connects Palermo
00:17:41in New York
00:17:41and that the people of Palermo
00:17:43ironically
00:17:43they call it their own
00:17:44the godfather.
00:17:51Inside those two suitcases
00:17:52there are two aprons
00:17:54as a pizza chef
00:17:54with written above
00:17:55Gambino Pizzeria
00:17:56which also has the name
00:17:57of one of the five families
00:17:58of Cosa Nostra
00:17:59that rule New York.
00:18:01But inside those suitcases
00:18:02there are not only
00:18:03pizza chef aprons
00:18:04there are also
00:18:05a lot of money
00:18:06There are
00:18:07500,000 US dollars.
00:18:16Follow the money
00:18:17The next day
00:18:18the American police
00:18:19seizes a large quantity
00:18:21of drugs in New York
00:18:22laying the foundations
00:18:24for an operation
00:18:25which will be called
00:18:25Pizza Connection
00:18:27and that will bring
00:18:28the DEA and the FBI
00:18:29to put behind bars
00:18:30bosses like Gaetano Badalamenti.
00:18:33Giuliano doesn't give up.
00:18:34In July 1979
00:18:36two men
00:18:37they forget
00:18:38a gun
00:18:39under the coffee table
00:18:40of a bar.
00:18:40A passerby
00:18:41warns immediately
00:18:42the police
00:18:43and when the two
00:18:44they come back to recover
00:18:45the gun
00:18:45find the agents
00:18:46to arrest them.
00:18:49They are not two
00:18:50any criminals
00:18:51I'm Antonino Marchese
00:18:53of the family
00:18:53of Corso dei Mille
00:18:54and Antonino Joè
00:18:55what will be
00:18:56the artificer
00:18:57of the massacre
00:18:57of Capaci.
00:19:01The investigations
00:19:02of the mobile squad
00:19:03by Giuliano
00:19:04are addressed
00:19:05from a bill
00:19:06of Enel
00:19:06found
00:19:07on Joè
00:19:08to an apartment
00:19:09in Pecori Street
00:19:10Giraldi.
00:19:11It's a den
00:19:12of Cosa Nostra
00:19:12that too
00:19:13and there
00:19:13the men
00:19:14by Giuliano
00:19:15they find weapons
00:19:16ammunition
00:19:16and 4 kg
00:19:17of heroin.
00:19:21There is also a document
00:19:22a medical certificate
00:19:23for release
00:19:24of the driving license
00:19:25driving
00:19:25registered to a certain
00:19:26Francesco Nuccio
00:19:30but on the document
00:19:31Julian
00:19:32see a photo
00:19:33that doesn't convince him
00:19:34because he's not just good
00:19:35and the commissioner is tenacious
00:19:36also good memory
00:19:37and in fact
00:19:38between the cards
00:19:39of criminals
00:19:39find the man
00:19:40to whom it belongs
00:19:41that photo
00:19:42which is not called
00:19:43Francesco Nuccio
00:19:44but Leoluca Bagarella
00:19:45boss of the Corleonesi
00:19:46brother in law
00:19:47and right arm
00:20:03by Totorina
00:20:03the pieces of the mosaic
00:20:05they are getting together
00:20:06indicating Palermo
00:20:08as one of the bases
00:20:09of international traffic
00:20:10of drugs
00:20:11that on the other side
00:20:12of the ocean
00:20:12the investigators
00:20:13of the DEA
00:20:14and the FBI
00:20:15they are discovering
00:20:16when the mafia
00:20:18he stops
00:20:19a family member
00:20:20or it is seized
00:20:22a load of drugs
00:20:23sometimes it is said
00:20:25that you do it
00:20:25the tickling
00:20:26when instead
00:20:26you leave it
00:20:27in underwear
00:20:28excuse the expression
00:20:30it means that
00:20:30yes it is
00:20:31taking away
00:20:34the whole resource
00:20:35financial
00:20:36and that
00:20:37and that
00:20:37it was the goal
00:20:38which began
00:20:40with the era
00:20:41by Boris Giuliano
00:20:42and then
00:20:42will find
00:20:43the climax
00:20:44and really
00:20:45an apotheosis
00:20:46with the investigations
00:20:48by Giovanni Falcone
00:20:48Giuliano is too good
00:20:50Giuliano doesn't look in the face
00:20:51to no one
00:20:52Giuliano breaks his shoulder blades
00:20:53is putting together
00:20:55too many things
00:20:56mafia and heroin
00:20:57Mafia and the United States
00:20:58mafia and finance
00:20:59mafia and politics
00:21:00and this
00:21:01for our sake
00:21:02it's too much
00:21:02in the morning
00:21:03where he was killed
00:21:06Boris Giuliano
00:21:08I found myself
00:21:09in the editorial office
00:21:10to the newspaper
00:21:11The Hour
00:21:11it was summer
00:21:13our
00:21:15it was a newspaper
00:21:16in the afternoon
00:21:17and at a certain point
00:21:18the power plant
00:21:20operational
00:21:21of the police
00:21:23reported
00:21:23a shooting
00:21:25shooting
00:21:26at the Lux Bar
00:21:26from Palermo
00:21:29and for us
00:21:31it was almost routine
00:21:32why in Palermo
00:21:33a murder
00:21:34almost a day
00:21:37we knew
00:21:38these rhythms
00:21:39of crime
00:21:41a few minutes later
00:21:43the first flying squad
00:21:44who arrived
00:21:46on the way
00:21:47by Blasi
00:21:49communicated
00:21:50that it was about
00:21:52I still have
00:21:53the voice
00:21:55that comes back to me
00:21:57it is about
00:21:58by Dr. Giuliano
00:21:59he said
00:22:00this voice
00:22:00cold and metallic
00:22:02and there
00:22:03at that moment
00:22:03we looked at each other
00:22:06with colleagues
00:22:06we were different colleagues
00:22:08around the radio
00:22:10and we didn't believe it
00:22:14we didn't believe it
00:22:15Why
00:22:15for us
00:22:17Boris was immortal
00:22:19era
00:22:20he was the policeman
00:22:21that could not be
00:22:23not cheated in any way
00:22:25because he was the best
00:22:26on this
00:22:28we were joking
00:22:29many times
00:22:30with the same
00:22:32commissioner
00:22:33who was making fun of us
00:22:35and he told us
00:22:36you think
00:22:37which is difficult
00:22:39kill me
00:22:39it doesn't take anything
00:22:41just wait for me
00:22:41under the house
00:22:42on the morning of July 21st
00:22:441979
00:22:45Boris Giuliano
00:22:46he's having breakfast
00:22:48in the Lux bar
00:22:48of Via De Blasi
00:22:49in Palermo
00:22:50it's early
00:22:52and the Juliet on duty
00:22:53who has to come and get her
00:22:54it hasn't arrived yet
00:22:55Usually
00:22:56he stops with the children
00:22:57to buy him snacks
00:22:58before taking them to school
00:23:00but it's July
00:23:00the children are on vacation
00:23:02and Boris Giuliano
00:23:03it's just
00:23:03order a coffee
00:23:05and he doesn't notice
00:23:06of that man
00:23:06stocky and robust
00:23:08who entered the premises
00:23:09just after him
00:23:10on the morning of July 21st
00:23:11I was getting ready
00:23:14to leave the house
00:23:16and I was warned
00:23:19from the official on duty
00:23:21of the operations room
00:23:22the scene that presented itself to me
00:23:24before the eyes
00:23:27the pain
00:23:31I don't know if I should also mention anger
00:23:33but above all
00:23:35he came inside me
00:23:38a sort of
00:23:40of emotion
00:23:42that I didn't know though
00:23:43to explode
00:23:44but it imploded inside
00:23:47all this state of mind
00:23:50in the meantime
00:23:51then came the other officials
00:23:54I was a little petrified
00:23:57I have to tell the truth
00:24:01maybe I thought
00:24:02I thought maybe I was dreaming
00:24:05I stayed a while
00:24:07so stunned
00:24:07the pain
00:24:09the sorrow
00:24:10it was really huge
00:24:11but at the same time
00:24:12I couldn't
00:24:13to
00:24:15I couldn't cry
00:24:17I couldn't
00:24:17to demonstrate
00:24:19my pain
00:24:20seeing my boss
00:24:22Like this
00:24:24riddled with blows
00:24:25the man who entered the Lux bar
00:24:27just after Giuliano
00:24:28It's Leoluca Bagarella
00:24:30one of the most ruthless killers
00:24:31of the Corleonesi
00:24:34wait for Giuliano
00:24:35go to the checkout
00:24:35to pay for the coffee
00:24:36and then
00:24:37he pulls out an automatic
00:24:387.65 caliber
00:24:39and shoot Giuliano's temple
00:24:41that falls to the ground
00:24:44then lower the bar
00:24:45and unloads on him
00:24:47six more shots
00:24:48July 21, 1979
00:24:50at 8 in the morning
00:24:52we were there
00:24:53in the province of Catania
00:24:55it was the country
00:24:56of my grandparents
00:24:57where we spent
00:24:58our summer holidays
00:25:00in a few days
00:25:02there should have been
00:25:03reach
00:25:03our father
00:25:05I remember that
00:25:06we listened to the radio
00:25:07it was around 8 o'clock
00:25:08and the chronicler
00:25:10gave as breaking news
00:25:12that of death
00:25:14of my father
00:25:15he said as breaking news
00:25:17just arrived in the editorial office
00:25:18he was killed
00:25:19the head of the mobile unit
00:25:20with 7 gunshots
00:25:22behind
00:25:23this is that
00:25:24that I remember
00:25:26then of course
00:25:27our life
00:25:28it has completely changed
00:25:29nothing was more
00:25:30as before
00:25:32when Boris was killed
00:25:33the first to rush
00:25:36to the mobile squad
00:25:37to bring
00:25:39the memory
00:25:40the sign of mourning
00:25:41it was the small-time criminality
00:25:44of Ballarò
00:25:45which was the neighborhood
00:25:46where it stood
00:25:47the barracks
00:25:47where the team was
00:25:48Palermo mobile
00:25:49I remember perfectly
00:25:51the queue
00:25:52of petty criminals
00:25:54of petty criminals
00:25:55who were crying
00:25:56and that
00:25:59they regretted
00:26:00a person
00:26:01who had them
00:26:02sent often
00:26:02in jail
00:26:03Why
00:26:03on that
00:26:04there was no discussion
00:26:05with death
00:26:05by Boris Giuliano
00:26:06many things change
00:26:07and not only
00:26:08for his family
00:26:09when the mafia
00:26:10kills a policeman
00:26:11like Julian
00:26:12the boss
00:26:13of the mobile squad
00:26:14of a city like Palermo
00:26:15he does it to get rid of
00:26:16an enemy
00:26:17a cumbersome obstacle
00:26:18an investigator
00:26:19that is discovering
00:26:20too many things
00:26:21but he also does it
00:26:22to give a signal
00:26:23to scare
00:26:24how is it done?
00:26:25with the excellent murders
00:26:26precisely
00:26:27or with the massacres
00:26:28the death of
00:26:29Boris Giuliano
00:26:30it is a consequence
00:26:31of a
00:26:32how to say
00:26:33of a cultural state
00:26:35of the institutions
00:26:37of that era
00:26:39there was
00:26:40a component
00:26:41of malice
00:26:42and there was
00:26:42a component
00:26:43of guilt
00:26:44that was a moment
00:26:46in which
00:26:46everything came
00:26:47underrated
00:26:48but it is also
00:26:49a moment
00:26:50in which
00:26:50the underestimation
00:26:51it could have been
00:26:53Daughter
00:26:55of an interest
00:26:55private
00:26:56because there was someone
00:26:57who had an interest
00:26:59to hide
00:27:00the results
00:27:02and the intuitions
00:27:03of work
00:27:03investigative
00:27:04by Giuliano
00:27:05that it wasn't
00:27:05attention only
00:27:07by Boris Giuliano
00:27:08Why
00:27:08the mobile squad
00:27:10by Boris Giuliano
00:27:11it was at that moment
00:27:13the best office
00:27:15investigative
00:27:16of Sicily
00:27:17after death
00:27:18by Boris Giuliano
00:27:19the mobile squad
00:27:19passes into other hands
00:27:21but he doesn't find it
00:27:21the same momentum
00:27:22investigative
00:27:23the same decision
00:27:24subsequent managers
00:27:26they have other ideas
00:27:27another style
00:27:28and many of the collaborators
00:27:29tighter
00:27:30by Giuliano
00:27:30they're leaving
00:27:31they leave Palermo
00:27:32for assignments
00:27:33in other cities
00:27:47our thing though
00:27:49he never stops killing
00:27:50in the following years
00:27:51every time
00:27:52which is located in front
00:27:53an investigator
00:27:54too good
00:27:54who is discovering too much
00:27:56kills him
00:27:57how he killed
00:27:57Boris Giuliano
00:27:58my father
00:27:59he was left alone
00:28:00he was left alone
00:28:01because their work
00:28:04it remained in the drawers
00:28:05of the prosecution
00:28:06and then
00:28:08and so this
00:28:09it's clear
00:28:10that if a man
00:28:11a group of people
00:28:12alone
00:28:12they carry out investigations
00:28:13but then they don't come
00:28:14carry out those that are
00:28:16the decisions
00:28:16consequential
00:28:17from those investigations
00:28:18why do we continue to do so?
00:28:19to say to investigate
00:28:20because it wasn't enough
00:28:21what had been done
00:28:22then send
00:28:23a devaluation target
00:28:24of the evidence
00:28:24that they brought
00:28:26it's obvious
00:28:27which then he turned out to be
00:28:28like a persecutor
00:28:29of the mafia gangs
00:28:31and then
00:28:31was immediately eliminated
00:28:33if his investigations
00:28:34had been
00:28:35indulged
00:28:35and then he understood
00:28:36the judge will write
00:28:37Paolo Borsellino
00:28:38probably
00:28:39the organizational structures
00:28:41of the mafia
00:28:41they would not have happened
00:28:42so enormously enhanced
00:28:44and many crimes seized
00:28:46they would not have been consumed
00:29:04it's bad to be right
00:29:06and not get it
00:29:07or worse
00:29:08get into trouble
00:29:09precisely for that reason
00:29:09it's a thing
00:29:10that makes you cry
00:29:11cry with anger
00:29:12and disappointment
00:29:13even if you are a man
00:29:15of the State
00:29:15a policeman
00:29:16for the commissioner
00:29:17Pasquale Iuliano
00:29:19like Julian
00:29:20but with the J
00:29:20Julian
00:29:21it all begins
00:29:22with a bomb
00:29:27an explosion
00:29:29that suddenly
00:29:29shakes the tranquility
00:29:30of the university area
00:29:31Paduan
00:29:32late one evening
00:29:33April 1969
00:29:36someone
00:29:36he put a charge
00:29:37of explosives
00:29:38in the rector's office
00:29:39of the university
00:29:40Renato O'Poker
00:29:41the bomb
00:29:42he didn't kill
00:29:42nor did anyone get hurt
00:29:43but the rectorate
00:29:44it blew up
00:29:49it's not the first
00:29:50and it won't be the last one either
00:29:52both in Padua
00:29:52than in the rest of Italy
00:29:53these are difficult years
00:29:55those on horseback
00:29:56between the 60s
00:29:56and the 70s
00:29:57years of attacks
00:29:59of bombs
00:29:59and massacres
00:30:00the beginning
00:30:01of the one that then
00:30:02will be called
00:30:03the strategy of tension
00:30:09these are the years
00:30:09where politics is done
00:30:10with the bombs
00:30:11that intertwine
00:30:12with those immediately
00:30:13subsequent
00:30:13the years of lead
00:30:14when politics will be done
00:30:15with guns
00:30:19in Padua
00:30:20they had already exploded
00:30:21of bombs
00:30:22at the Communist Party headquarters
00:30:23for example
00:30:24or to the editorial staff
00:30:25of the Gazzettino
00:30:39even the bomb
00:30:40to the rectorate
00:30:40like the others
00:30:41has a clear political matrix
00:30:43and in fact
00:30:44to investigate
00:30:44it is the political office
00:30:45of the Police Headquarters
00:30:46but it's not enough
00:30:47it takes someone
00:30:48that he knows well
00:30:49the criminal reality
00:30:50of the territory
00:30:51it takes someone
00:30:52that hunts down
00:30:53to the thieves
00:30:53someone like the commissioner
00:30:55Pasquale Iuliano
00:30:56and in fact
00:30:58the police commissioner
00:30:58the investigation passes
00:30:59to the mobile squad
00:31:00when he talks about himself
00:31:02that's how it defines itself
00:31:03Dr. Iuliano
00:31:04one who hunts
00:31:05to the thieves
00:31:06It is not true
00:31:07it's not just this
00:31:08he is very smart
00:31:09Dr. Iuliano
00:31:10a young official
00:31:11enthusiastic about his work
00:31:20he arrived in that city
00:31:22that he has learned to know
00:31:23and also to love
00:31:24because he likes it
00:31:25bring the children
00:31:26to play
00:31:26in the herb square
00:31:27even if he doesn't know her
00:31:28only
00:31:29for beautiful things
00:31:30that beautiful city in the north
00:31:31he is one
00:31:32who hunts down thieves
00:31:33but
00:31:34he likes it anyway
00:31:44the results
00:31:45they're coming soon
00:31:46Dr. Iuliano
00:31:47knows how to follow
00:31:48investigative leads and insights
00:31:50and how to move
00:31:51the informants
00:31:51on the territory
00:31:52and in fact
00:31:53after a while
00:31:54a man arrives
00:31:55what is called
00:31:55Nicholas Pezzato
00:31:56and that is an old acquaintance
00:31:58known to these offices
00:31:59as they used to say then
00:32:00for a series
00:32:01of petty crimes
00:32:04Piebald
00:32:05frequents the environments
00:32:06politicians
00:32:06of the far right
00:32:07from which one suspects
00:32:09let the bombs come
00:32:10and is willing
00:32:11to act as an informant
00:32:12for a fee
00:32:12for a fee
00:32:13as they used to say then
00:32:18the commissioner
00:32:19contracted with Pezzato
00:32:21and with the police headquarters
00:32:21find a compromise
00:32:22on the price
00:32:23and the agreement
00:32:24it's done
00:32:26Piebald
00:32:27collects information
00:32:28and brings them
00:32:29to Dr. Iuliano
00:32:30behind the attack
00:32:31to the office
00:32:32of the rector
00:32:32and also to other bombs
00:32:33exploded in the area
00:32:34there would be
00:32:35some young people
00:32:36neo-fascists
00:32:37of Padua
00:32:39a city councilor
00:32:40of the MSI
00:32:41what is called
00:32:42Massimiliano Facchini
00:32:43a bookseller
00:32:44what is called
00:32:44John Ventura
00:32:45and a solicitor
00:32:47what is called
00:32:48Franco Freda
00:32:57They are all part of
00:32:58of an organization
00:32:59aversive
00:33:00far right
00:33:01what is called
00:33:01New Order
00:33:31the investigations
00:33:32above all
00:33:33especially that one
00:33:33by Massimiliano Facchini
00:33:34which is a palace
00:33:35stately
00:33:36in the square
00:33:36insurrection
00:33:37of those
00:33:38with the goalkeeper
00:33:41and at that point
00:33:43what happens
00:33:43one thing
00:33:45one evening in June
00:33:47from the palace
00:33:48of Via Insurrezione
00:33:49a boy comes out
00:33:50the men
00:33:51of the commissioner
00:33:51Julian
00:33:52they stop him
00:33:52they search him
00:33:53and they find them
00:33:54a package
00:33:54with inside
00:33:55a bomb
00:33:55and a gun
00:33:56right
00:33:569mm caliber
00:34:00it seems like the square
00:34:01of the circle
00:34:02instead no
00:34:02because as soon as
00:34:03he is being questioned
00:34:04that boy
00:34:05he says that to give him
00:34:06that bomb
00:34:06and that gun
00:34:07it was just
00:34:08piebald
00:34:08the informant
00:34:09by Dr. Iuliano
00:34:13It is not true
00:34:14piebald denies
00:34:15On the contrary
00:34:15repeats the accusations
00:34:16against the group
00:34:17by Porters
00:34:17Freda and Ventura
00:34:18who are arrested
00:34:22and it is at this point
00:34:23what happens
00:34:23one more thing
00:34:24Nicholas Pezzato
00:34:25he is arrested
00:34:26and it is put
00:34:27in the cell
00:34:28with people
00:34:28which accuses
00:34:29the next day
00:34:30asks to speak
00:34:31with the magistrates
00:34:32and change version
00:34:33It is true
00:34:34it was him
00:34:35to give that bomb
00:34:36and that gun
00:34:36to that boy
00:34:37and he did it
00:34:38on order
00:34:39by Dr. Iuliano
00:34:40it doesn't exist
00:34:41no cells
00:34:42terrorist
00:34:42there are no attacks
00:34:43in preparation
00:34:44it's all an invention
00:34:46by Dr. Iuliano
00:34:46that ends
00:34:47under investigation
00:34:48the perception
00:34:49that we have had
00:34:50of what then
00:34:51it actually happened
00:34:52to my father
00:34:53Obviously
00:34:53I repeat
00:34:54it's always
00:34:55in reason
00:34:56of what could have been
00:34:57our tender age
00:34:58between me and my brother
00:34:59bigger
00:35:00he is three years old
00:35:00more than me
00:35:02maybe he sensed
00:35:03more than me
00:35:03from this point of view
00:35:04but it's clear
00:35:06that when we
00:35:07we saw
00:35:08for the first time
00:35:09the photography
00:35:10of our father
00:35:10on a newspaper
00:35:12it's obvious
00:35:13that at that point
00:35:13we realized
00:35:14that something
00:35:15it didn't work
00:35:15there is something
00:35:16that's not going well
00:35:17with a rapidity
00:35:18exceptional
00:35:19Dr. Iuliano
00:35:19he is put under investigation
00:35:21and it also ends
00:35:22under a violent
00:35:23press campaign
00:35:24who accuses him
00:35:25there is also
00:35:26a pamphlet
00:35:26justice
00:35:27it's like the rudder
00:35:28wherever you turn it goes
00:35:29which attacks him directly
00:35:34overwhelmed
00:35:35from the controversies
00:35:36the commissioner
00:35:37is suspended
00:35:37from the salary
00:35:38and from the service
00:35:39indicted
00:35:40placed on leave
00:35:43Dr. Iuliano
00:35:45he's a good cop
00:35:46one who hunts
00:35:47to the thieves
00:35:47but it is also
00:35:48a young official
00:35:4937 years old
00:35:50who has no friendship above
00:35:51which does not have
00:35:52political cunning
00:35:53of some of his colleagues
00:35:54it is located in front
00:35:55to all this movement
00:35:56against him
00:35:57to something
00:35:58which seems
00:35:59much bigger
00:35:59much stronger
00:36:00of a simple policeman
00:36:02I remember
00:36:03of a particular episode
00:36:05that really
00:36:05it gives you the shivers
00:36:07and that's when
00:36:08once
00:36:08we went home
00:36:09of my grandmother
00:36:10the mother
00:36:11of my father
00:36:11and there I was really little
00:36:14I had perhaps
00:36:145 years
00:36:15in fact they were
00:36:16just happened
00:36:175-6 years
00:36:19and we went home
00:36:20of my grandmother
00:36:21the mother
00:36:21dad's
00:36:22and my father
00:36:23he threw himself on a bed
00:36:25crying
00:36:26saying
00:36:26they framed me
00:36:27must have felt
00:36:29betrayed
00:36:30Dr. Iuliano
00:36:30betrayed
00:36:31from the institutions
00:36:32betrayed
00:36:33from his country
00:36:33even from that one
00:36:34beautiful city
00:36:35that he liked so much
00:36:36now it's just
00:36:37a cop
00:36:38stranger
00:36:39helpless
00:36:39isolated
00:36:40beaten
00:36:41from a dark power
00:36:41stronger than him
00:36:42by young delinquents
00:36:44more brazen
00:36:44more unpunished
00:36:45and smarter than him
00:36:46he joined the police
00:36:48to defend society
00:36:49he went to that one
00:36:50beautiful city in the north
00:36:51to defend its citizens
00:36:52and he knows he's right
00:36:53but they framed him
00:37:01but a witness
00:37:02which could exonerate
00:37:04Dr. Iuliano
00:37:05from the accusation of having invented
00:37:06everything to fit in
00:37:07the neo-fascists
00:37:08there would be
00:37:15it's the doorman himself
00:37:16of that little building
00:37:17in the process of insurrection
00:37:18number 15
00:37:19his name is Alberto Muraro
00:37:21he is a former carabiniere
00:37:22and tells the judges
00:37:24that that evening
00:37:25the boy stopped
00:37:26with the gun and the explosive
00:37:27did not meet
00:37:28with no one at all
00:37:29and much less
00:37:30with the informant
00:37:31by Dr. Iuliano
00:37:38moreover
00:37:38he says that the boy
00:37:40with the gun and the explosive
00:37:41he was coming right away
00:37:42from an apartment
00:37:43of the building
00:37:43the inhabited one
00:37:44by Massimiliano Facchini
00:37:49then suddenly
00:37:51the doorman changes his mind
00:37:52and retracts everything
00:37:53It is true
00:37:54he saw the boy
00:37:55meet up with another young person
00:37:57and he didn't see anyone
00:37:58leave any apartment
00:37:59the magistrate
00:38:01he is not convinced
00:38:02from the retraction
00:38:03and summons
00:38:04Mr. Muraro
00:38:05for September 15th
00:38:061969
00:38:10September 13, 1969
00:38:12there is a man who flies
00:38:14arms outstretched
00:38:15the face leaning forward
00:38:16legs behind
00:38:17expanses
00:38:18it really seems like it
00:38:18that is flying
00:38:19and instead it falls
00:38:20falls
00:38:21Mr. Muraro
00:38:22building caretaker
00:38:23at number 15
00:38:24of Insurrection Square
00:38:25fly down the trumpet
00:38:26of the stairs
00:38:26and crashes into the atrium
00:38:28three floors below
00:38:29dying instantly
00:38:30an accident
00:38:31the investigation will say
00:38:32of the judiciary
00:38:33the balustrade
00:38:34of the landing
00:38:35which was too low
00:38:39somehow
00:38:40Mr. Muraro
00:38:40his end
00:38:41he had predicted it
00:38:42a few days before
00:38:43to a friend
00:38:43he had said
00:38:44you will end up finding me
00:38:46precipitate
00:38:46in the stairwell
00:38:47after they gave me
00:38:49a blow to the head
00:38:54even the doctor
00:38:54Julian
00:38:55now he's scared
00:38:56above all
00:38:57for his family
00:38:58from what I've known
00:38:59for which I met
00:39:00my father
00:39:01I can tell you
00:39:02who was not a man
00:39:03who was afraid
00:39:05if he was afraid
00:39:06he had it
00:39:07just for us
00:39:08for us
00:39:08for his wife
00:39:10and for those
00:39:11which could have been
00:39:12for those who could be
00:39:13the consequences
00:39:15and therefore consequently
00:39:17his only thought
00:39:19that was it
00:39:20to place ourselves
00:39:21safe
00:39:22sheltered
00:39:22even when
00:39:24at night
00:39:25precisely
00:39:25we had to repair
00:39:27at my grandparents' house
00:39:28from Padua
00:39:29also in Ruvo
00:39:29before taking refuge
00:39:31in Ruvo di Puglia
00:39:31where he was born
00:39:32Dr. Giuliano
00:39:33leave it to the higher magistrates
00:39:35a couple of memorials
00:39:36where it summarizes
00:39:37his investigations
00:39:38Attention
00:39:39I'm coming soon
00:39:40other bombs
00:39:41they are imminent
00:39:42of the attacks
00:39:46December 12th
00:39:48of 1969
00:39:49a few months later
00:39:50at the headquarters in Piazza Fontana
00:39:52of the Agricultural Bank
00:39:53discovers a bomb
00:39:54which kills 16 people
00:39:55plus one
00:39:56who will die the following year
00:39:57and wounds 105
00:39:58it's a massacre
00:40:00the massacre
00:40:01of Piazza Fontana
00:40:10the final sentence
00:40:11which closes
00:40:12the processes
00:40:13for the massacre
00:40:13of Piazza Fontana
00:40:14attributes the bomb
00:40:16to the Venetian cell
00:40:17of new order
00:40:18and indicates
00:40:18as responsible
00:40:19Franco Freda himself
00:40:21and Giovanni Ventura
00:40:21but that
00:40:22having been acquitted
00:40:24in a previous trial
00:40:25they can no longer
00:40:26to be condemned
00:40:34the doctor
00:40:35Dr. Giuliano
00:40:35he was right
00:40:36his investigations
00:40:37they had indicated
00:40:38the right track
00:40:39and we arrive at that moment
00:40:40where he was
00:40:41to close the circle
00:40:42he was
00:40:43to be able to present
00:40:44a job
00:40:44which would have brought
00:40:46to the arrest
00:40:46of the whole group
00:40:48the arrest
00:40:48of the whole group
00:40:49he wanted to say
00:40:50make operational
00:40:51the versive group
00:40:52which he then did
00:40:53in Piazza Fontana
00:40:54six months ago
00:40:55of the season
00:40:56and then
00:40:57at least
00:40:57slow down that project
00:40:59but even if
00:41:00we saw it
00:41:00in the human gesture
00:41:01to cry
00:41:01of anger
00:41:02and bitterness
00:41:03Dr. Giuliano
00:41:04he remains a determined man
00:41:05even if it is no longer
00:41:07a policeman
00:41:07one who hunts
00:41:08to the thieves
00:41:09continues to deal with
00:41:10of the case
00:41:11meanwhile
00:41:12to defend themselves
00:41:13from the processes
00:41:13that everyone sees
00:41:15completely acquitted
00:41:16and completely exonerated
00:41:20and then
00:41:21to collaborate
00:41:22with the magistrates
00:41:23who deal with
00:41:23of the massacre
00:41:24of Piazza Fontana
00:41:25and activities
00:41:26of new order
00:41:26and other bombs
00:41:27that they will chase
00:41:28Italy
00:41:29in the following years
00:41:29the massacre
00:41:30from Peteano
00:41:31in 1972
00:41:33that of the Police Headquarters
00:41:34of Milan
00:41:34in 1973
00:41:35that of Piazza
00:41:37of the Lodge
00:41:37in Brescia
00:41:37in 1974
00:41:39that of the train
00:41:40Italicus
00:41:41of the same year
00:41:41until the massacre
00:41:42of the Bologna station
00:41:43in 1980
00:41:55the commissioner
00:41:57the commissioner
00:42:09Julian
00:42:09he was right
00:42:11I believe
00:42:12I think it remained
00:42:13a dead letter
00:42:14relatively
00:42:14to the institutions
00:42:15I don't know if he
00:42:16actually
00:42:17he was expecting a thank you
00:42:20I think it probably is
00:42:21a handshake
00:42:22from those people
00:42:23which surely
00:42:24he knew
00:42:25and had clearly identified
00:42:27Also
00:42:29indoors
00:42:30of a room
00:42:30it would have been enough
00:42:31Dr. Giuliano
00:42:32is dead
00:42:33in 1998
00:42:34at 66 years old
00:42:36in Matera
00:42:37where he was a lawyer
00:42:38even if they framed him
00:42:40even if they never told them
00:42:41said thank you
00:42:42he was right
00:42:43and he didn't give up
00:42:44and somehow
00:42:45he won
00:42:45even if the anger
00:42:47that remains
00:42:57to the journalist
00:42:58Antonio Maria Mida
00:42:59of the Future
00:43:00who interviews him
00:43:01two years ago
00:43:01he says he doesn't want to
00:43:03certainly a monument
00:43:04but at least someone
00:43:05could tell him
00:43:05Julian
00:43:06excuse us
00:43:07she was right
00:43:20normal gestures
00:43:22exceptional gestures
00:43:23human gestures
00:43:23how to cry
00:43:24or show fear
00:43:25the first memory
00:43:26what I have of Silvio Novembre
00:43:28it's photographic
00:43:29it's the image
00:43:31in which
00:43:33accompanies
00:43:34my mother
00:43:35and my brothers
00:43:39towards
00:43:40the entrance
00:43:41of the church
00:43:42where is it
00:43:42where it is held
00:43:44the funeral
00:43:44of my father
00:43:45it's the first memory
00:43:47photographic
00:43:48that is, the first image
00:43:49it is a presence
00:43:49what do I know
00:43:50to have been
00:43:51such
00:43:52already before
00:43:53of that moment
00:43:54but the moment
00:43:55in which
00:43:55I isolated it
00:43:56from a context
00:43:58and I identified it
00:44:00in my memory
00:44:01that's it
00:44:01there's that other man
00:44:03the marshal
00:44:04of the financial guard
00:44:05that for some time now
00:44:06he makes that gesture
00:44:06to put your hand in your pocket
00:44:08and tighten the football
00:44:09of the gun
00:44:09there
00:44:10on that residential street
00:44:12it is the heart of that old Milan
00:44:13which is not yet
00:44:14Milan to drink
00:44:21the marshal
00:44:22Silvio Novembre
00:44:23tighten the football
00:44:24of the gun
00:44:25why is he doing it
00:44:25the guard
00:44:26is doing
00:44:27as a spare
00:44:28to a lawyer
00:44:28banking expert
00:44:29what is called
00:44:30Giorgio Ambrosoli
00:44:31an escort
00:44:32unofficial
00:44:32out of order
00:44:33in his free time
00:44:34even if they are not
00:44:36those
00:44:36the tasks
00:44:37of a marshal
00:44:37of the financial guard
00:44:42Silvio Novembre
00:44:43join the financial police
00:44:44he serves
00:44:45in the territorial
00:44:46at various stations
00:44:47from Northern Italy
00:44:48then it goes to the tax department
00:44:49and goes to Brescia
00:44:50in 1971
00:44:51when his commander
00:44:53he is transferred to Milan
00:44:54he carries it with him
00:44:55the marshal
00:44:56why the marshal
00:44:57November
00:44:57he got better and better
00:44:58study
00:44:59he specializes
00:45:00it updates
00:45:10one day though
00:45:11something happens
00:45:18there is a man
00:45:19what is called
00:45:19Michele Sindona
00:45:20a financier
00:45:21very well known
00:45:22active
00:45:22both in Italy
00:45:23that in the United States
00:45:24owner
00:45:25of some banks
00:45:26including
00:45:26Finabank
00:45:27of Geneva
00:45:28the Frankin National Bank
00:45:29in the United States
00:45:30and the Italian private bank
00:45:37he is very active
00:45:38Michele Sindona
00:45:39he has excellent political friendships
00:45:41both in Italy
00:45:42that abroad
00:45:42is part of P2
00:45:43he has excellent relationships
00:45:45even with the Vatican
00:45:46and is highly esteemed
00:45:47Giulio Andreotti
00:45:48at an official reception
00:45:50at Telson Regis
00:45:51from New York
00:45:51defines it
00:45:52the savior of the lira
00:45:53and Pope Paul VI
00:45:54after he trusted him
00:45:56part of the Vatican assets
00:45:57he calls him
00:45:58the man
00:45:58mandate
00:45:59from providence
00:46:06but there's something strange
00:46:08in the activity
00:46:09by Michele Sindona
00:46:10and his bank
00:46:11strange movements
00:46:12of money
00:46:13even money is strange
00:46:14which appears
00:46:14and disappears
00:46:15so the judiciary
00:46:17he puts him under investigation
00:46:18and calls for his arrest
00:46:19for illegals
00:46:20profit sharing
00:46:21false communications
00:46:23and fraudulent bankruptcies
00:46:35Dr. Viola
00:46:36the public prosecutor
00:46:37which deals with
00:46:38of the procedure
00:46:39ask the guard
00:46:39of finance
00:46:40to help him
00:46:40in the investigations
00:46:41and the core
00:46:42of tax police
00:46:43of Milan
00:46:44send some financiers
00:46:45all this documentation
00:46:47then came
00:46:48how to say
00:46:49concentrated
00:46:52to the Italian private bank
00:46:54that is, in the old headquarters
00:46:56of the bank
00:46:58of the bank
00:47:00by Sindona
00:47:00the financial bank
00:47:03and then it was like this
00:47:04that I did not know
00:47:05Morrolli
00:47:06In short
00:47:07the team he is part of
00:47:09Marshal November
00:47:10it's on the fourth floor
00:47:11of the headquarters
00:47:11of the Italian private bank
00:47:13in Turati Street
00:47:14in the heart
00:47:15of the historic center
00:47:15of Milan
00:47:16a few floors below
00:47:17on the first
00:47:18there is the liquidator
00:47:20that the Bank of Italy
00:47:21he commissioned
00:47:22to shed light
00:47:23on Michele Sindona's business affairs
00:47:24he is a lawyer
00:47:25a quiet man
00:47:26and discreet
00:47:27a good man
00:47:28what is called
00:47:29Giorgio Ambrosoli
00:47:40Lawyer Ambrosoli
00:47:42has the task
00:47:42to put things in order
00:47:43the labyrinth
00:47:43of Chinese boxes
00:47:44offshore company
00:47:45and front man
00:47:46in which they get lost
00:47:47the money
00:47:48handled
00:47:48by Michele Sindona
00:47:55it's not an easy task
00:47:56and not only because
00:47:58Michele Sindona
00:47:59he is a magician
00:48:00skilled
00:48:00to wash money
00:48:01to recycle them
00:48:02and make them disappear
00:48:03it's not an easy task
00:48:05also because
00:48:05part of that money
00:48:06they were served
00:48:07to finance
00:48:08illegal activities
00:48:09all over the world
00:48:09to cover secret services
00:48:11to pay bribes
00:48:12and buy drugs
00:48:18there are many
00:48:19the missing money
00:48:20in the hole
00:48:21of the private bank
00:48:22Italian
00:48:22by Michele Sindona
00:48:23207 billion
00:48:25billions of then
00:48:26we are in the 70s
00:48:27part of that money
00:48:29Then
00:48:29they are part of our thing
00:48:35Giorgio Ambrosoli
00:48:36and the team
00:48:37of Marshal November
00:48:38they are working
00:48:39to the same matter
00:48:40they on the fourth floor
00:48:41and he on the first
00:48:42it's not an easy coexistence
00:48:50every evening
00:48:51at the end of the shift
00:48:52of work
00:48:52the financiers
00:48:53of Marshal November
00:48:54they have to close
00:48:55the documentation
00:48:56in a room
00:48:57and have it signed
00:48:58the closing report
00:48:59to the person in charge
00:49:00that is, the liquidator
00:49:01of the bank
00:49:02which is precisely
00:49:03Lawyer Ambrosoli
00:49:04that sometimes though
00:49:05he's busy
00:49:06he's working too
00:49:07and makes them wait
00:49:08then one evening
00:49:10it wasn't a good evening
00:49:12he says
00:49:12he's busy
00:49:13of a meeting
00:49:14but what a meeting
00:49:15I just have to put it on
00:49:17a signature
00:49:17I slipped in
00:49:19and I got myself signed
00:49:21this report
00:49:22now obviously
00:49:23he got angry
00:49:25and it was a bit like this
00:49:28in short a scene
00:49:32we're a bit there
00:49:36get a little angry
00:49:36one with the other
00:49:37but then
00:49:39everything is back
00:49:40everything is back to normal
00:49:42only that
00:49:43since that evening
00:49:44when I had to
00:49:45sign the minutes
00:49:46he signed it
00:49:47although
00:49:47he was busy
00:49:49very quietly
00:49:49the collaboration
00:49:50between the lawyer
00:49:51and the marshal
00:49:52it's getting narrower and narrower
00:49:56they take care of
00:49:57of the same matter
00:49:58which at the same time
00:49:59both financial
00:50:00what a criminal
00:50:01and their respective skills
00:50:03they become complementary
00:50:05so Marshal November
00:50:07he works until 5:30
00:50:08in the evening
00:50:08with his financiers
00:50:09and then goes down between the floors
00:50:11of stairs
00:50:12and stay with the lawyer
00:50:13Ambrosoli
00:50:13to work late
00:50:19it wasn't the simple one
00:50:21but simple
00:50:22which is not certain after all
00:50:23reductive
00:50:24marshal
00:50:25institutionally
00:50:26supervisor
00:50:26to a certain
00:50:27typology
00:50:28of assessment
00:50:29but a collaborator
00:50:30very precious
00:50:31of my father
00:50:32a very precious one
00:50:34not only for
00:50:35the technical capabilities
00:50:37and investigative
00:50:37but for the harmony
00:50:40the capacity
00:50:41Meaning what
00:50:41to see
00:50:43in the same way
00:50:44its function
00:50:45to be very clear
00:50:47the purpose
00:50:48to which
00:50:50it was in charge
00:50:51the protection
00:50:53of interest
00:50:54unique
00:50:56which they were deputies
00:50:58they are good
00:50:59Lawyer Ambrosoli
00:51:00and Marshal November
00:51:01he's good too
00:51:02Michele Sindona
00:51:02but they
00:51:03I am more
00:51:04and sometimes
00:51:05they are also smarter
00:51:12for example
00:51:13there is a holding
00:51:14with headquarters
00:51:15in Liechtenstein
00:51:15what is called
00:51:16Bundle
00:51:16and which guards
00:51:18many secrets
00:51:18of the Sindona system
00:51:24Lawyer Ambrosoli
00:51:26discovers
00:51:26that the bank
00:51:27private Italian
00:51:28she is the owner
00:51:29of 4,000 shares
00:51:30of the Fasco
00:51:30and from the moment
00:51:31that he
00:51:32he is the liquidator
00:51:33of the bank
00:51:33he is the owner
00:51:34of those actions
00:51:35and then
00:51:35can go
00:51:36to the assembly
00:51:37of the members
00:51:37of the Fasco
00:51:37to stick your nose in
00:51:38in business
00:51:39of the company
00:51:40after putting
00:51:41safe
00:51:41those actions
00:51:42to contribute
00:51:43to level out
00:51:43the holes
00:51:44of the bank
00:51:55they are good
00:51:57Lawyer Ambrosoli
00:52:14how is work going?
00:52:14how is work going?
00:52:15and how is he doing?
00:52:15his wife
00:52:15who is very sick
00:52:16and in fact
00:52:17he will die shortly after
00:52:18why don't you take your leave
00:52:20his colleague tells him
00:52:21there is definitely someone
00:52:22who will hire you
00:52:23in the private sector
00:52:24someone
00:52:25which can also
00:52:26send your wife
00:52:26to take care of oneself
00:52:27to take care of oneself
00:52:27in the United States
00:52:28and there I started
00:52:30Truly
00:52:30to see
00:52:31Sturo
00:52:31Why
00:52:32I say
00:52:32if you arrive
00:52:33at this point
00:52:35it means
00:52:39that was
00:52:41a warning
00:52:42very important
00:52:44Marshal November
00:52:46he's not the only one
00:52:46to have the feeling
00:52:48to be under pressure
00:52:49Lawyer Ambrosoli
00:52:51it suddenly appears
00:52:52in the center
00:52:52of a series of accusations
00:52:53that invest
00:52:54his person
00:52:55and his work
00:52:55I challenged Ambrosoli
00:52:57I challenged
00:52:57the Shroud Commission
00:52:58to find
00:52:59a single recycled penny
00:53:01and see
00:53:01this is for the layman
00:53:03to work
00:53:03can be
00:53:04can give
00:53:06can impress
00:53:07but for professionals
00:53:09as you can imagine
00:53:11that of the liquidators
00:53:13of the private bank
00:53:14including Ambrosoli
00:53:15which had the sole purpose
00:53:16to denigrate me
00:53:18with many years of research
00:53:20with hand
00:53:21all documents
00:53:22I have not found
00:53:23one name only
00:53:24and not only
00:53:25phone calls arrive
00:53:26strange phone calls
00:53:27who try to convince him
00:53:29not to put us
00:53:30so much zeal
00:53:31in the assignment
00:53:31who received
00:53:32In short
00:53:33to let it go
00:53:38we are calling from Rome
00:53:40who are in Rome
00:53:41and they point the finger
00:53:43all about her
00:53:44as if she
00:53:46who would not like to collaborate
00:53:48she but they aim
00:53:50for what
00:53:50explain it to me
00:53:51she says that she
00:53:52he doesn't want to cooperate
00:53:53to help that person
00:53:54because this is the big one
00:53:56he called
00:53:57in New York
00:53:58you understand?
00:53:59and he said
00:54:00that he had fixed
00:54:01All
00:54:01and the blame
00:54:02he gave it only to her
00:54:02and the great
00:54:03the great
00:54:04he understood me
00:54:04what not?
00:54:05big I imagine
00:54:06both Sindona
00:54:07oh no
00:54:08Mr. Anderotti
00:54:10who is Anderotti?
00:54:11Yes
00:54:12what the lawyer Ambrosoli
00:54:14and Marshal Novembre
00:54:15they are facing each other
00:54:16and they feel it
00:54:17on your own skin
00:54:18it's a power
00:54:18big and fierce
00:54:19bad
00:54:20Michele Sindona
00:54:22it's just the facade
00:54:23the face
00:54:24of a shadow
00:54:25which extends
00:54:25on an entire ocean
00:54:26our thing
00:54:27the secret services
00:54:28the P2
00:54:29big criminal finance
00:54:31diverted sectors
00:54:32of the institutions
00:54:33of politics
00:54:34and the Vatican
00:54:35there is a list
00:54:36the list of 500
00:54:37they call her
00:54:38which lists
00:54:39530 subjects
00:54:40who did business
00:54:41with Michele Sindona
00:54:42including
00:54:43the IOR
00:54:43the Vatican Bank
00:54:45straight then
00:54:46by Monsignor Marcinkus
00:54:53on the other side
00:54:54there are them
00:54:55alone
00:54:56with a couple of magistrates
00:54:57and a handful of officials
00:54:58and financiers
00:54:59even friends
00:55:00he says but you
00:55:03you risk your skin
00:55:04why does he make you do it
00:55:06for which
00:55:07a point has arrived
00:55:08That
00:55:09at least me
00:55:10also Giorgio
00:55:11but
00:55:13I didn't see anyone anymore
00:55:15Lawyer Ambrosoli
00:55:16and Marshal Novembre
00:55:17they move on
00:55:18despite it all
00:55:19on the lawyer's agenda
00:55:21by Michele Sindona
00:55:21on November 4, 1977
00:55:24it's written
00:55:25meeting with Gelli
00:55:27November replacement
00:55:37they try to transfer it
00:55:39three times
00:55:39and in the end
00:55:40they almost succeed
00:55:41to send it
00:55:42at a station
00:55:43of the Guardia di Finanza
00:55:44lost on Mont Blanc
00:55:45but the marshal
00:55:46resists
00:55:47he manages to get help
00:55:49from his commander
00:55:49and from the magistrate
00:55:50who coordinates the investigations
00:55:52and it remains
00:55:53in Milan
00:55:57Then
00:55:57in June 1979
00:55:59Lawyer Ambrosoli
00:56:01he goes down to look for
00:56:01some cards
00:56:02in the basement
00:56:03of the private bank
00:56:04and find a gun
00:56:05an automatic
00:56:067.65
00:56:07torn to pieces
00:56:08sawn
00:56:09and supported
00:56:10on a bin
00:56:10of waste
00:56:15it's one of the guns
00:56:17of the armored vehicles
00:56:17that are found
00:56:18in the safe
00:56:19of the bank
00:56:20it's a warning
00:56:21a bad warning
00:56:22because it means
00:56:24that are not safe
00:56:25not even inside the bank
00:56:26not even in the safe
00:56:27that can tear them to pieces
00:56:28like that gun
00:56:29Marshal November
00:56:31he's scared
00:56:32because he is not a fool
00:56:33and he knows
00:56:34what can happen
00:56:38then the marshal
00:56:40whenever he can
00:56:41passes by street
00:56:42to Morozzo della Rocca
00:56:43where at number 1
00:56:44where lawyer Ambrosoli lives
00:56:45in the heart of that old Milan
00:56:46which he hasn't yet
00:56:47Milan to drink
00:56:48go around those parts
00:56:50and follows the lawyer
00:56:51when it comes out
00:56:51wait until he comes back
00:56:53At home
00:56:53he's stuck in the car
00:56:54as long as he can
00:56:55to do it to him in some way
00:56:56as a spare
00:57:05and in the meantime
00:57:06tighten the football
00:57:07of the gun
00:57:08in the pocket
00:57:09but it's not enough
00:57:26Michele Sindona
00:57:28it's powerful
00:57:28and dangerous
00:57:29above all
00:57:30because he is desperate
00:57:31things
00:57:32things are going badly for him
00:57:33both in Italy
00:57:34that in the United States
00:57:39the trial in America
00:57:40it's taking a bad turn
00:57:42also thanks to the testimony
00:57:43by Giorgio Ambrosoli
00:57:44and the collected documents
00:57:46with Marshal Novembre
00:57:47the same
00:57:48that are blocking
00:57:49every rescue plan
00:57:50of the economic empire
00:57:51by Sindona
00:57:59the top management of the Bank of Italy
00:58:01which are represented
00:58:02from two other good people
00:58:03like Paolo Baffi
00:58:04and Mario Sarcinelli
00:58:05they too are victims
00:58:07of pressure and revenge
00:58:08they don't fit
00:58:09to cover up the mess
00:58:10of the Italian private bank
00:58:11Michele Sindona
00:58:13he is desperate
00:58:13and dangerous
00:58:23It's July 11, 1979
00:58:26it just passed
00:58:27midnight
00:58:28and Giorgio Ambrosoli
00:58:29after having accompanied
00:58:30some friends
00:58:31he came back home
00:58:32just parked
00:58:33the machine
00:58:34when he approaches him
00:58:35a stranger
00:58:36who calls him
00:58:36Mr. Ambrosoli?
00:58:38Yes
00:58:38Excuse me
00:58:39Mr. Ambrosoli
00:58:40and shoots him
00:58:41three shots
00:58:42of 357 magnum
00:58:52the man
00:58:53is called
00:58:54William Haricot
00:58:55and by profession
00:58:56he plays the killer
00:58:56for our American thing
00:58:57when they arrest him
00:58:59before dying
00:58:59falling from the ninth floor
00:59:01during a mysterious
00:59:02escape attempt
00:59:03from prison
00:59:03Haricot says
00:59:04that for the murder
00:59:05they had been given to him
00:59:0625 thousand dollars
00:59:07in advance
00:59:08plus another 90 thousand
00:59:18the principal of the contract
00:59:20It's Michele Sindona
00:59:21inside the morgue
00:59:23we were waiting
00:59:25there was
00:59:27that morning
00:59:29they had to do
00:59:30the autopsy
00:59:30to Giorgio
00:59:33and there was me
00:59:35and Dr. Viola
00:59:37and at a certain point
00:59:41Guido Viola
00:59:42he recommended
00:59:44in the sense
00:59:45to say
00:59:46this is a friend
00:59:48he is the liquidator
00:59:51etc.
00:59:52we took care of it
00:59:53he explained to him
00:59:54a bit
00:59:55the situation
00:59:56telling him
00:59:57In short
00:59:58to do
00:59:59as much as possible
01:00:01and this PM
01:00:03at a certain point
01:00:04he said
01:00:06but you know
01:00:06yes you are right
01:00:08but you know
01:00:11I have to go on vacation
01:00:13Then
01:00:14he says
01:00:15you know how they end
01:00:17these things
01:00:18I am
01:00:18of the crimes
01:00:20why they remain unpunished
01:00:23it happened to me
01:00:24a bit
01:00:24one thing
01:00:26which had never happened to me
01:00:27if Guido Viola is not there
01:00:29that stops me
01:00:30it ends
01:00:31that I put my hands on her
01:00:32at the funeral
01:00:33of the lawyer
01:00:34Giorgio Ambrosoli
01:00:34there are a lot of people
01:00:35but no representative
01:00:37of the State
01:00:37and no authority
01:00:38there is the governor
01:00:39of the Bank of Italy
01:00:40Paul Baffi
01:00:41and there is the deputy director
01:00:42Mario Sarcinelli
01:00:43but apart from them
01:00:44there are no other representatives
01:00:45of the institutions
01:00:46Certain
01:00:47he was a person
01:00:48That
01:00:49in Roman terms
01:00:51I would say
01:00:51he was looking for it
01:00:52there are people
01:00:54who fought
01:00:54with him
01:00:55against the evil empire
01:00:56by Michele Sindona
01:00:57there are colleagues
01:00:59of the liquidation office
01:01:00there are magistrates
01:01:01Guido Viola
01:01:02and Ovilio Urbisci
01:01:03and there is also
01:01:03Marshal November
01:01:05which is not only
01:01:06saddened
01:01:06for the loss
01:01:07of a friend
01:01:08like Giorgio Ambrosoli
01:01:16he's angry
01:01:17because the State
01:01:18he left them alone
01:01:19to fight
01:01:19against that monster
01:01:20and keep leaving them
01:01:21alone there too
01:01:22at that moment
01:01:23I
01:01:23in the morning
01:01:25of the funeral
01:01:26in church
01:01:28I was desperate
01:01:30and then
01:01:31at a certain point
01:01:34I told myself
01:01:35he says but
01:01:36what are you doing?
01:01:39to do things
01:01:40what did you do
01:01:41what are you doing
01:01:44when there is
01:01:46a state
01:01:48that lets die
01:01:49his children
01:01:50in this way
01:01:51it's at that moment
01:01:52that Marshal Novembre
01:01:53decides to leave
01:01:54the financial police
01:01:55to leave
01:01:56to close it
01:01:57with that state
01:01:58who does not protect his children
01:01:59and that he forgets them
01:02:00In my opinion
01:02:01it wasn't fair
01:02:02that I continued
01:02:03to serve
01:02:03a state
01:02:04that succeeds
01:02:07or anyway
01:02:08does not prevent
01:02:09that they be killed
01:02:11his best men
01:02:12but be careful
01:02:13because the story
01:02:14it doesn't end here
01:02:14in a letter in the will
01:02:16addressed to his wife
01:02:17and that begins
01:02:18with Anna Carissima
01:02:19Giorgio Ambrosoli
01:02:21reminds her
01:02:21from when they were involved in politics
01:02:23for the Italian monarchical union
01:02:24remember the hopes
01:02:26never made
01:02:27to do politics
01:02:28for the country
01:02:29and not for the parties
01:02:30Here you are
01:02:31suddenly
01:02:31at 40 years old
01:02:32I found myself
01:02:33to do politics
01:02:34in the name of the country
01:02:35and not of a party
01:02:36he had realized
01:02:37of the serious commitment
01:02:38which he had met
01:02:40and he still meant
01:02:41carry it forward
01:02:42and in carrying it forward
01:02:44had already evaluated
01:02:45the possibility
01:02:46that could happen to him
01:02:48something serious
01:02:49but she knew that her husband
01:02:51he could die
01:02:52and did nothing
01:02:52No
01:02:53let's say I complied
01:02:54his choice
01:02:55a courageous choice
01:02:57his
01:02:58Well
01:02:59I think that
01:03:00that it was the right one
01:03:02her husband too
01:03:05professional
01:03:06to serve
01:03:08the country
01:03:11he went to meet death
01:03:13Yes
01:03:14Pope
01:03:16leaves
01:03:16an example
01:03:19important
01:03:19of how
01:03:21it is possible
01:03:23remain free
01:03:24of how it is
01:03:26possible
01:03:27don't give up
01:03:28to flattery
01:03:29don't put
01:03:32personal interest
01:03:33in front of
01:03:34to everything else
01:03:36how it is possible
01:03:38don't bend
01:03:40to institutional isolation
01:03:43And
01:03:44even more
01:03:45how it is possible
01:03:46resist
01:03:47Also
01:03:48to death threats
01:03:49this freedom
01:03:52of which my father
01:03:53leave your mark
01:03:54it's the path
01:03:55necessary
01:03:56On the contrary
01:03:57it is the prerequisite
01:03:58to be able to
01:03:59to fully realize
01:04:01one's own responsibility
01:04:06he didn't give up
01:04:07Lawyer Ambrosoli
01:04:08Calm
01:04:09Reserved
01:04:09but he decided
01:04:10to move forward
01:04:11and do his duty
01:04:12because that's what it is
01:04:13what needs to be done
01:04:13for the good of the country
01:04:14whatever the cost
01:04:17a hero
01:04:18a bourgeois hero
01:04:19what is it called
01:04:20the beautiful book
01:04:21by Corrado Stajano
01:04:22which tells its story
01:04:23Well
01:04:24even the marshal
01:04:25November
01:04:25despite the anger
01:04:27and the bitterness
01:04:27he doesn't give up
01:04:28he will leave the guard
01:04:29of finance
01:04:30Yes
01:04:30but only after
01:04:31that will have finished
01:04:32his work
01:04:32with other officials
01:04:34of the Ambrosoli group
01:04:35Lawyer Ambrosoli
01:04:36and the marshal
01:04:37November
01:04:37more of a punch
01:04:38of magistrates
01:04:39officials
01:04:40and financiers
01:04:40alone
01:04:41against the empire
01:04:43of evil
01:04:43by Michele Sindone
01:04:44all that
01:04:44who was behind us
01:04:45how to put your hand
01:04:47in front of a locomotive
01:04:48according to a metaphor
01:04:49of the writer
01:04:49Giorgio Scerbanenco
01:04:50sometimes though
01:04:52the locomotive
01:04:53it stops
01:05:02in addition to the investigations
01:05:03on the private bank
01:05:04by Michele Sindona
01:05:05the marshal
01:05:06November
01:05:06also collaborates on those
01:05:08for the murder
01:05:08by Giorgio Ambrosoli
01:05:09they were meetings
01:05:10that were held
01:05:11after dinner
01:05:12in the living room
01:05:12at home
01:05:13they participated in it
01:05:14other people
01:05:17the lawyer
01:05:18De Dola
01:05:19the lawyer
01:05:20He's gnawing
01:05:20Giorgio Balzaretti
01:05:22my father's friends
01:05:23and I
01:05:26I was yelling in secret
01:05:27from behind the door
01:05:28and I have perfectly
01:05:30the memory
01:05:32among others
01:05:32of the stamp
01:05:34of the voice
01:05:35by Silvio Novembre
01:05:36of tranquility
01:05:38of his story
01:05:39of his narration
01:05:41of simplicity
01:05:43of the transmission
01:05:45of the message
01:05:47and of the meaning
01:05:48of what it indicated
01:05:50it's a voice
01:05:51calming
01:05:52for me
01:05:53it really is
01:05:53a voice
01:05:54calming
01:05:55Michele Sindona
01:05:56he is sentenced
01:05:56both in the United States
01:05:57that in Italy
01:05:58for part
01:05:58of his crimes
01:05:59including
01:06:00even the murder
01:06:01of the lawyer
01:06:02Giorgio Ambrosoli
01:06:02in the name of the Italian people
01:06:04the court
01:06:06seen the articles
01:06:07483
01:06:08488
01:06:09code
01:06:10criminal procedure
01:06:11declares
01:06:12Michele Sindona
01:06:12guilty
01:06:13of the crimes
01:06:14and he wrote
01:06:14to the bosses
01:06:151
01:06:152
01:06:165
01:06:176
01:06:187
01:06:19and 9
01:06:19and condemns him
01:06:21for the crime
01:06:21of murder
01:06:22aggravated
01:06:22to the penalty
01:06:23of life imprisonment
01:06:24it's a thing
01:06:31what happens
01:06:31Often
01:06:32a man
01:06:33he gets himself killed
01:06:34or suffers
01:06:34the penalties
01:06:35of hell
01:06:35to do his
01:06:36duty
01:06:36and protect
01:06:37the country
01:06:38the people
01:06:38civil society
01:06:39and civil society
01:06:41instead of protecting
01:06:42him and his memory
01:06:43he moves away
01:06:44he avoids it
01:06:44run away
01:06:45or
01:06:46he forgets it
01:06:47it seems important to me
01:06:48and I wanted to use
01:06:48Speaking of which
01:06:49of that too
01:06:50what happened
01:06:50with death
01:06:51of my father
01:06:52when it opened
01:06:54the first
01:06:54maxi-trial
01:06:55in 1986
01:06:56we have
01:06:57found
01:06:58many difficulties
01:06:59to find
01:07:01a lawyer
01:07:02that he would assist us
01:07:02as a civil party
01:07:04when my mother
01:07:05he asked
01:07:07to more people
01:07:09who knew
01:07:10to be assisted
01:07:12he was answered
01:07:13that for reasons
01:07:13ideontological
01:07:14rather than opportunities
01:07:16they couldn't do it
01:07:17except then
01:07:17find them again
01:07:18to assist
01:07:20mafiosi
01:07:21mafia students
01:07:22Perhaps
01:07:22because it's not enough
01:07:23that not to give up
01:07:24to say no
01:07:25to hold on
01:07:26and move on
01:07:27whatever the cost
01:07:28they are only
01:07:28the men of the state
01:07:30Perhaps
01:07:31to put your hand
01:07:32in front of the locomotive
01:07:33and to stop it
01:07:34we need the others too
01:07:35civil society
01:07:36we serve
01:07:37the country
01:07:38at the moment in which
01:07:38we decide to do well
01:07:40our work
01:07:40whatever it is
01:07:42we serve the country
01:07:43at the moment in which
01:07:44we decide to be
01:07:44of the citizens
01:07:45who care about
01:07:46the country's interest
01:07:47and that they behave
01:07:49consequentially
01:07:49to serve the country
01:07:51not only
01:07:52and I'm not
01:07:53and they must not be
01:07:55only and exclusively
01:07:56those who are
01:07:57institutionally
01:07:58supervisors
01:07:59upon achievement
01:08:01of the collective interest
01:08:02but a part
01:08:04instead of responsibility
01:08:05in the direction
01:08:08that the country
01:08:09takes
01:08:09he gives it to her
01:08:10each of us
01:08:12trivially
01:08:12paying in full
01:08:14the taxes
01:08:15that is, declaring
01:08:16in full
01:08:16your income
01:08:17or behaving
01:08:19in coherent terms
01:08:20with our system
01:08:22certifying the truth
01:08:24when he called
01:08:25to certify the truth
01:08:27and not
01:08:27making gestures
01:08:29of faith
01:08:30or superficially
01:08:32there are gestures
01:08:33that change your life
01:08:34they mark it
01:08:35they give her
01:08:35a particular meaning
01:08:36why they change
01:08:38the lives of others
01:08:39they save them
01:08:39make them better
01:08:41or simply
01:08:41possible
01:08:42to us
01:08:43they seem like exceptional gestures
01:08:45but for those who do
01:08:45a certain profession
01:08:46they are daily gestures
01:08:48everyday
01:08:48it means
01:08:49do your job
01:08:51one's duty
01:08:51and do it well
01:08:52whatever the cost
01:08:54I would do it exactly again
01:08:56the same things
01:08:57to us
01:09:02to us
01:09:02to us
01:09:02or
01:09:03to us
01:09:21Thank you all.
01:09:46Thank you all.
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