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L'arrivo dell'estate a Palermo è sempre vista come una liberazione, ma il vento di scirocco e lo svolgersi del maxiprocesso rendono l'estate dell'86 molto diversa. Sul pretorio, dopo cinque mesi di dibattimento, sono già sfilate centinaia di persone, boss di ogni ordine e grado, dai grandi capi ai picciotti di borgata. Si fa fatica a tenerne il conto, ci si perde a raccontarne le storie, che i giornalisti Rai continuano a produrre ogni giorno, seppure con sentimenti contrastanti. Teresa sembra aver ritrovato il sorriso, Gianni invece sta per prendere una decisione importante, e saranno proprio i suoi colleghi a indirizzarlo verso la scelta giusta. Sono i giorni in cui sfilano i parenti delle vittime, i familiari del Generale Dalla Chiesa, del Capo della Squadra Mobile Boris Giuliano, le vittime eccellenti e le vedove omertose, le madri disperate e i testimoni reticenti. Nei giorni in cui Palermo si vota a Santa Rosalia, le donne si prendono la scena, e il processo vive i suoi giorni di commozione, grazie alla dignità di Antonia Setti Carraro, madre di Emanuela, la moglie del Generale Dalla Chiesa, o alle parole rabbiose di Vita Rugnetta, madre di un uomo ucciso nella mattanza. Fino all'autunno dell'86, quando la morte di un bambino innocente sembra sconvolgere nuovamente gli equilibri tra accusa e difesa, con gli avvocati pronti a giocarsi l'ultima carta.

EP 01
https://dai.ly/xaavi0k
EP 02
https://dai.ly/xaavia6
EP 03
https://dai.ly/xaavijy
EP 04
https://dai.ly/xaavisw
EP 5
https://dai.ly/xaavj1a
EP 06
https://dai.ly/xaavjts
Playlist Maxiprocesso SerieTv
https://dailymotion.com/playlist/xc83cg
Playlist #Mafia
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Playlist #Antimafia
https://dailymotion.com/playlist/xc0t94

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Trascrizione
00:05After 24 hours of uncertainty, the major mafia trial has overcome perhaps its most dangerous obstacle.
00:13Navigation continues.
00:29Instead, I always consider them for better or for worse.
00:34Another postcard.
00:36But are you aware of the bourgeois coup of '70?
00:40So what would you like?
00:42And you're retiring?
00:43These are days of horror at the maxi trial.
00:46They put this inside the pylon.
00:48Head down and for his body.
00:51And they threw a shoe into the classroom.
00:52Look, I've made up my mind.
00:54I'll be back.
01:00I'll be back.
01:33I'll be back.
01:34I'll be back.
01:37I'll be back.
01:41I'll be back.
01:43I'll be back.
02:12Our free course is www.mesmerism.info
02:19www.mesmerism.info
03:02The summer of 1986 had exploded.
03:06People flocked to the sea while the city was submerged in waste and syringes and many children died.
03:13in the car.
03:16No accidents, no shootings, no settling of scores, no bodies dissolved in acid.
03:23They died of heroin overdoses.
03:25The Mafia didn't just kill with violence.
03:28While we continued to tell the judicial events inside the bunker courtroom,
03:33there were other mafiosi who were outside and who carried on the drug trafficking,
03:39because for years Cosa Nostra had made drugs its most important business.
03:45The main source of their income.
04:03Ra, can I talk to you for a moment?
04:09In August the trial closes and we go on vacation, right?
04:14I don't think I'll be back in September.
04:18I'm tired, Franco.
04:21I'm having problems at home and Simona keeps calling me, she gives me no peace.
04:27I don't feel comfortable here.
04:29It's just that the mafia disgusts me.
04:34And the thing that disgusts me the most is that people do nothing.
04:36It seems like nobody cares.
04:39I won't do anything to rebel, but why? Why?
04:44Don't explain that there's this thing here.
04:49You see, Gianni, you are in a position to choose and it is right that you choose.
04:54Teresa and I don't, because this is our house.
05:05Did you get there in 20 minutes?
05:07Certain.
05:08And who did you put there?
05:11Good, Spataro, one with a broken arm.
05:14Pietro Vernengo, that one broke when they arrested him.
05:17And sock, who seems like a bit of a strange guy to me.
05:21Let me see.
05:25It was in those weeks that Pietro Vernengo made his first appearance in the courtroom,
05:31mafia boss of Corso dei Mille, arrested a few days earlier in Naples.
05:35Mafioso Pietro Vernengo arrested in Naples.
05:38He was wanted for the church murder and numerous other murders.
05:43He had an arm in a cast that he had fractured while trying to escape.
05:47A member of the commission, Vernengo was defined as a heroin manager.
05:53Then it was the turn of Stefano Calzetta, one of the informants of the maxi-trial.
05:58He went up to the praetorium escorted by five carabinieri
06:02to confirm his revelations on mafia dynamics,
06:05that he would have known even without being part of it.
06:08I confirm all the statements I made to the judges below.
06:15He also confirms the reasons that led him to carry out these interrogations,
06:21to talk about these things that talk.
06:24Mr. President, I was forced, because we have one skin, we don't have two.
06:30He was forced because he believed he was the target of an attack.
06:34And where does someone who's dying go? I'm not one of those people,
06:38that there is a family that can go and take care of me.
06:41I don't have it. Where was I supposed to go? To the police.
06:45Because I believe in something.
06:47She went.
06:49However, during the various interrogations Calzetta ended up turning the script on its head.
06:54When questioned by the defense lawyers, he said he didn't remember, he didn't know anything.
06:59A small twist that would have undermined his credibility.
07:03Some water please, may I love?
07:04Yes, yes.
07:05A little water.
07:06Excuse me.
07:14My head hurts today, I don't remember.
07:19But if she doesn't know someone who has a headache, she can't remind you.
07:24But there is when I remember it and there is when I don't remember it.
07:28Could you put this into your head?
07:31Wait, I'll make a little cut here.
07:35Tommaso Spadaro, known as Masino, the boss of the Calza district, had instead reported
07:41attention on Tommaso Buscetta, who three months after his deposition continued to be
07:46one of the protagonists of the process.
07:48Well, it is noted that the defendant has a copy of the Lora newspaper, which is given on purpose.
07:54Look how good Gianni was, he framed the newspaper and let us come in to see the photo.
07:59But he is blinded by it.
08:00You are as you find a photograph of Tommaso Buscetta reported, very young, I would say.
08:08When he was arrested I couldn't give him any confidence, but I tried to keep my distance.
08:16of this Buscetta who moved us the photograph of the newspaper, which made an impression on me,
08:23Mr. President, he made me... I have these people with long hair, the young ones,
08:28I can admit the young people, but a person, a boss, is from two worlds.
08:31Was there something dirty put in there?
08:35Of the idiots, yes.
08:37Of the brothers, I put the one with the most flesh.
08:40Antonino, also a trafficker.
08:42I'm hearing it now, Mr. President, because I...
08:45Arrest warrant and you didn't receive it?
08:48All the drugs in Milan pass through their family.
08:50I don't know these gentlemen here, I've never been to Pianzo with this side dish,
08:55with this good, with no one.
08:58Buscetta spoke of Giuseppe, not Antonino.
09:02Mr. President, can you ask me some specific questions about Antonino?
09:05so that... because here it seems to me, everyone says, says, says, but what do they say?
09:14In that scorching summer, the news of the maxi-trial did not always end up on the front page,
09:19many Palermitans preferred walks along the seafront.
09:23But the great machine, the legal monster, as Falcone said, was always in motion.
09:30I, Buscetta, do not exclude that she also came to put a mirror in my house.
09:35Nothing, we didn't get along.
09:37In the bunker courtroom, the interrogations continued one after another, making it almost difficult to keep track of them.
09:43I've been called Franco Urso since I was born, since I was little, since I was like this.
09:47The number of defendants and witnesses who continued to trample on the green floor
09:52that brought them to the praetorium was impressive.
09:55I'm just an honest worker.
09:5973 hearings since the trial began, 258 defendants have gone up to the praetorium to be questioned,
10:05among them big bosses like Liggio, Greco and Calò, and repentants like Buscetta, Contorno and Senato.
10:11So it is a res that, moreover, a photographer remains on the ground hit.
10:24In our archive the cassettes were piling up.
10:32A wall of tapes recording everything that happened in the classroom.
10:38That classroom that had become more familiar than our homes.
10:46In short, even though we were in a time when more ice creams were sold than newspapers,
10:51We were aware of how important it was to keep attention alive on what was happening in the bunker courtroom.
10:59Because unprecedented discussions were taking place there.
11:03Then the Court compares the defendants Mutolo, Gaspar...
11:08Like the one between the trafficker Gaspare Mutolo, one of the mafiosi of the Partanna area,
11:13and the Singaporean Kobachin, for years the drug courier between the Far East and Sicily,
11:19arrested with a shipment of 200 kg of heroin, destined for the Palermo square.
11:26When you came to Italy, did you come because you called him Mutolo, or for other reasons?
11:37As for me, in Italy there's a double standard, let's say.
11:42Was he supposed to come minding his own business?
11:45If he leaves for Mutolo, he leaves to deliver Urbano's takeover bid.
11:51Oh, he said he came to... he killed two birds with one stone.
12:02Once the parade of bosses was over, the civil parties were scheduled to testify.
12:07Relatives of the victims and ordinary citizens, affected in their affections by the mafia,
12:12which would have brought back memories of the years of the most serious crimes,
12:17those that each of us remembered well, as journalists and as Palermitans.
12:24The murder of Captain Basile, for example, killed in Monreale on May 4, 1980,
12:31or that of Professor Paolo Giacone, a forensic doctor who had refused to falsify
12:37a ballistics assessment, as he had been asked to do, on behalf of the boss Filippo Marchese
12:42and who was killed on the university avenues on August 11, 1982.
12:48His wife, Rosetta Prestinicola, also went up to the praetorium.
12:53Listen, madam, your husband had confided in you that he had received a recommendation.
12:59regarding the report he was supposed to file?
13:03If I may, I would like to tell you two more episodes that I didn't remember at the moment.
13:11and my husband had an answering machine and when I went I would turn it off
13:18to see if there were any appointments or anything.
13:22And one evening instead I heard a rather strange voice telling my husband,
13:28in the sense of saying, Professor Giacone, don't do it, excuse me, I put this sentence in quotation marks
13:34because I can't translate it into Italian, he's going to sword it, otherwise it won't last long.
13:40I got worried, I called my husband, I said, Paolo, what is this?
13:45He says, don't worry, it's just a bad joke, deleting the recording.
13:52In addition to the organizational chart of the mafia, I felt the need for another paper,
13:56a map showing the locations of high profile crimes that occurred in the city,
14:01like scars on an old lady's body.
14:04He wanted to tell me about the last day, the last half day spent with my husband
14:10also to account for the family union that existed between us.
14:16He accompanied us to Via Roma.
14:19We joked along the way and decided what to do in the afternoon.
14:24buying a violin bow for the little girl, a wedding present for her niece.
14:29We get out of the car, cross the street and I tell my daughters
14:33It's still early to go to the teacher, let's have a coffee.
14:37A patrol car passes by to get coffee, I hear the fires blazing
14:41and I say to my daughter, to Milù, first death of the day.
14:45I thought about everything but that, I thought about a bus accident,
14:51to a car accident.
14:53It was only when I went there and saw it that I understood what had happened.
14:59I won't continue, it's useless to say what I felt, it's impossible for me.
15:05It was awful, that's it, and it is awful.
15:11To celebrate Canadian Beverly Smith, Felizatti last night...
15:16But are you here?
15:17Mmh.
15:19Franco has already left.
15:21Yes, a little while ago.
15:24So the maxi-trial doesn't interest you anymore?
15:27Yes, in fact I think it's time for me to go back.
15:30Nothing ever changes here, what am I doing here?
15:35Are you happy?
15:37Listen, rather...
15:41Who sends these postcards to Franco?
15:43That he has a secret admirer watching him on TV?
15:46But you really don't understand?
15:48What?
15:49Gianni received them after the report you filmed in Corleone.
15:53So what?
15:54That is, they cannot be admirers.
15:57Some people may not have liked the service.
16:00And why does he keep them here?
16:03Well, but I asked myself that.
16:04By the way, I placed it next to Mario Francese's articles.
16:10And why didn't he tell me anything, excuse me?
16:14Well, maybe just to protect you.
16:17So you don't worry.
16:20But you're leaving anyway.
16:32There were places in Palermo that, for us journalists, could never go back to what they were before.
16:38The Lux bar where Boris Giuliano was killed was one of them.
16:52It was also scorchingly hot that day.
16:55But when the news arrived and Commissioner Giuliano had been shot, many of us found ourselves on the streets.
17:01Journalists, police officers, ordinary people.
17:04The unbelievers and the lonely.
17:09Boris Giuliano was the head of the Palermo flying squad.
17:12A determined, but kind man.
17:15A policeman with profound intuition and great humanity.
17:19When he died we were all left orphans.
17:22It was the summer of 1979.
17:32That pain, that sense of emptiness, of anger, of impotence, now filled the courtroom of the maxi-trial.
17:39And the victims' families were ready to look their executioners in the eye and tell their stories.
17:47That's what Maria Leotta, Boris Giuliano's wife, did.
17:53You are the widow of Dr. Boris Giuliano.
17:57I don't know anything about the investigation my husband was doing.
18:00I think he was very worried.
18:02Because the reports he submitted were not immediately acknowledged by the judicial authorities.
18:08I therefore also expressed these concerns to the Superior Council of the Judiciary.
18:13We're very much on her.
18:15I have to say that I don't already have any possible ones.
18:19Mrs. Giuliano had noted some words in the preliminary ruling to testify to her husband's isolation.
18:27For example, on the judicial level, the disconcerting delays and questionable drying up of the fruits of the investigation initiated by the official are being revealed.
18:36Thus, but the incessant and multifaceted activity conducted on a very broad front,
18:41both for the stubborn will to prosecute criminals, despite the almost general indifference,
18:46and the objective devaluation in judicial proceedings at the time of the results achieved during the police investigation.
18:53What connection would there be between this fact that you complained about and the killing of your husband?
19:01And that my husband appeared practically in the eyes of these gangs as the only persecutor,
19:06because it was not supported enough.
19:09Can you please come in, ma'am?
19:10Thank you.
19:10We follow the time that comes out.
19:15Cut to the son?
19:16No.
19:18Let's stick to the judges.
19:21And off it goes.
19:23Right away.
19:26After her it was Boris's son, Alexander.
19:30I remembered him as a child, I found him as a young man, elegant and determined.
19:35He is the son of Alessandro, son of Dr. Boris Giuliano.
19:40Exact.
19:41He has never been heard, he insists in the Constitution of the civil party?
19:45Yes.
19:46I think there are no questions.
19:47Did you know Giuliano?
19:49All right?
19:50Yes, you turn a little.
19:51He was a bit ahead of everyone.
19:53Here it is.
19:54As?
19:54Yes.
19:55In the very last period of his life I asked him why I saw so many American policemen frequenting our house.
20:04He told me, with these American colleagues we are carrying out very important investigations against international drug trafficking,
20:13he said.
20:14But I would like you not to tell anyone about this.
20:16He repeated it to me because he didn't want to, he thought I wouldn't want me to talk about it because it could be very risky.
20:21also because if you said it.
20:23For me.
20:23He said so.
20:25I also remember that in the same last period of his life, precisely in those very last months, he, what
20:32which he hadn't done before, he often had to talk to us about the possibility of his death.
20:38So if I may make a very small deduction, I see a link between the investigations he was doing in the last
20:45times against drugs and a possible killing for this reason.
20:53In my own small way, I have reconstructed in the editorial office a plan with all the details of the maxi-trial.
21:04I had seen something similar in his office, he was the first one to do something like this, Boris
21:10Giuliani.
21:12He invented the control of the territory, every night he went around with his men
21:17Palermo to talk to the informants.
21:19In fact, he was the one who knew the most about the mafia.
21:22Even Judge Falcone himself said that he learned how to conduct asset investigations from Boris Giuliani.
21:35I don't have much experience, but relatives of victims who speak in court don't seem to me to be...
21:43had happened before.
21:44Sure, but why is the mayor joining the civil action, right there in the front row, when has that ever happened?
21:50But maybe things are changing.
21:53And are things changing for you, doctor?
21:56Are they changing?
21:58I've only been feeling fete immunization for a few days.
22:01And what does Mr. Mayor do? He comes to see a show.
22:04But why doesn't he deal with all the problems the people of Palermo have?
22:08When we have Travaglio, Casamuchini-Munnizza, when the bus passes.
22:13This should do.
22:15That this year not even Santuzza will be able to pass, as far as we know.
22:20By now I had understood that the bartender Rosario was one of those Palermitans for whom the mafia both existed and did not exist.
22:28That part of the city for which the procession of the Santuzza was more important than anything else.
22:39Santa Rosaria, the little saint who protected Palermo from Mount Pellegrino
22:44and that every 14th July paraded on the float through the streets of the historic centre.
22:49Everyone went to see it, good and bad.
22:52And everyone turned to her, the girl who freed Palermo from the plague.
22:58Rosalia had chosen a hermitage, isolation.
23:02The women who entered the courtroom in those days, however, all seemed to me to be victims of loneliness.
23:10They were countless. They mourned the dead, sometimes silent.
23:15Someone named the enemies.
23:18Are you from Fresco Ferigia?
23:20Yes.
23:22She is the widow of Mazzola Emanuele.
23:26He said he couldn't explain the reasons for the murder.
23:29Do you have anything to say?
23:32Ninth.
23:32No.
23:33The manda is the engraver.
23:34When is it?
23:38I knew the answer.
23:39The truth is that with the oath the initiative of man is assumed and the sworn of truth.
23:43Nothing but the truth.
23:44Say, I swear.
23:46I swore it, yes.
23:49Confirm the statement you made below.
23:51I'm all in mourning.
23:52But look here!
23:53I mounted it in a row.
23:55Confirm the statement you made below.
23:57But what keeps looking that way?
24:00Confirm the statement you made below.
24:03I've been wondering something for two days.
24:09Is there anything we can do to change Gianni's mind, in your opinion?
24:15Cerello Giuseppe, she is the widow of Calabria, Agostino.
24:18Yes.
24:19He confirms what he told the flying squad and the judicial police.
24:25Do you confirm this?
24:27Do you have anything to add, anything to say to the justice system?
24:30Nothing else.
24:32She told how the murder took place.
24:35Was she present?
24:37Yes.
24:38But he told me that I only saw a young man whom he wouldn't be able to recognize.
24:44It's absurd, they all seem completely out of place.
24:48They don't understand what the President is asking.
24:51They could all be elsewhere.
24:53Were there any disagreements between your husband and her husband?
24:57I wouldn't say so, but still.
25:01I mean, she wouldn't say that, but what does it mean anyway?
25:04I don't know the inside, I couldn't know if you were a woman.
25:10So, please, I would like to tell the head if he knows De Simone Antonino, if he knows my wife, if he knows if I have
25:19I have a child or I don't have a child.
25:22Do you know these people?
25:25I don't know them.
25:26Mr. President, one more question, sorry.
25:28If the lady ever attended any party I held at my villa.
25:38You remember the head that is under oath, Mr. President.
25:41I'm done, thanks.
25:42She knows she's under oath.
25:45Corrella Stefano is my son.
25:48She has never been interviewed by the police since June.
25:53Do you remember Stefano Pecorella?
25:57He is the 16 year old boy who was killed together with Giuseppe Inserillo, the one who Totorrina did
26:04cut off the arm.
26:05My son is dead, he is alive for me.
26:09Because it got an answer.
26:13Poor woman.
26:16Tragic, horrible, heartbreaking stories.
26:19Not only of frightened women, who took refuge in omertà, in silence, who denied.
26:25There were also those who found the courage to challenge the assassins, like Michela Buscemi.
26:30His two brothers had been killed in the death chambers.
26:34And she had been isolated from the rest of her family when she decided to file a civil action.
26:41She is related to Buscemi Salvatone.
26:43And Rodolfo.
26:44And Rodolfo?
26:46Sister.
26:47Yes.
26:48She had cost dearly.
26:50He had received warnings and threats and no one had entered his bar again.
26:55My brother once told me that he was on the trail of whoever killed my brother Salvatore.
27:05A certain marquis.
27:07This marquis' name, his Christian name, doesn't he have one at all?
27:11By Filippo Marchese.
27:12Ah.
27:13And then he had received a warning to leave Sant'Enalmo.
27:20How, how, how did this warning come about?
27:23Orally, in writing?
27:25By voice.
27:27Come on, come on, come on.
27:30Shot today.
27:31As?
27:32Crazy.
27:34But do you know her, Vitarugnetta?
27:36Of course I know her.
27:40Ah, it's her, Vitarugnetta.
27:42I've seen her often in court, she's always dressed in black.
27:45Eh, he lost his son.
27:46Sorry guys, let's get her talking.
27:48talk, they decide, make it clear that my son was not a nemmafioso, a nemmfio, a nemmfio, an espion, and not even that
27:57what the press says.
28:02That lady was called Vitarugnetta.
28:06His son Antonino was a friend of Salvatore Contorno and was killed because some mafiosi were convinced that he
28:13he knew where the pentino was hiding.
28:15Teresa, stop for a moment.
28:22I remembered very well when Vincenzo Sinagra, the collaborator of justice, had revealed the atrocious details of his end.
28:39So, we need to insert it here. Sinagra tells exactly how the lady's son was killed.
29:12Vita Rugnetta with great courage
29:15She publicly asked the person who had killed her son to explain the reasons.
29:19And if you'll allow me, I brought my son's questions so he can remember everything.
29:25If he was a mafia person, if he was a criminal, if he was a Ribusciato as the press says.
29:32Here it is.
29:33This is my son, 40 years old.
29:36They destroyed my life and they destroyed me.
29:40They send them to my son and I'm left speechless.
29:42And I'm alone, he had no one.
29:44Only this son.
29:45He was for me and I was for him.
29:47So the gentlemen, if they are honest, are men of pain, they must say why they killed my son. It is not true.
29:57what Sinagre says he heard, because everything else I heard from the stirrup, which was
30:03killed because he knew the surroundings.
30:04It's not true that he didn't know the side dish. I also admit that my son knew the side dish. I admit that too.
30:12That was the way to kill my son like this. Strangle him and put him in the thing.
30:18And if they want to come and kill me, now these ladies are making me come and kill them. I'm going away with my
30:23son.
30:23Look, madam, the Court respects your grief, but calm down because...
30:27Yes, Mr. President, you who are a father, see if I can calm down with this single son.
30:51Who sent you these?
30:54Oh, look, if I knew I would have thanked him already.
30:59Frank, there's little to joke about here. And why did you put it next to the article about French?
31:05These postcards are a threat.
31:07So what?
31:08So what? So what? You didn't go to the police?
31:12To do what?
31:22Why don't you leave?
31:25Forget everything, get sent to Rome.
31:31Aren't you afraid, are you?
31:33Gianni, we're all afraid, but that's no reason to run away.
31:41Come on, maybe, maybe, let's go. We have to go to class in Bung.
31:44Let's go to class, let's go to class.
32:01There was another story about to enter the bunker courtroom with a huge load of mysteries and questions.
32:09that of General Carlo Alberto Dallachiesa, killed in Palermo in Biacarini on 3 September 1982.
32:17His family sat in the front rows.
32:21Rita was the first of the children to respond to President Giordano.
32:31General Dallachiesa had been in service in Corleone in the 50s
32:36and there he had experienced mafia violence.
32:41Then he had achieved great successes in the fight against terrorism
32:45and it was natural to bring him back to Palermo to counter the mafia emergency of the early 80s.
32:54It was 1982, just a few months earlier, in April, the Honorable Piola Torre had been assassinated.
33:02From the church he arrived in Pompamagna as prefect with special powers
33:07but as he himself said, his phone never rang.
33:10You see him for the last time August 24th to 25th.
33:18We spoke to Dad almost every evening.
33:21It's clear that he was very, very tense in that last period.
33:26I mean, I understood that he wasn't the person I was used to hearing from.
33:31and that I had been used to hearing, I don't say that long, but up until 20 days before.
33:36But look, of course he told me something else too, he told me if you think that it's only in Palermo that
33:44mafia, you're wrong.
33:46Attorney Muldio, can you clarify how you learned of your father's murder?
33:54I learned it from a friend who is the editor-in-chief at Tg2.
34:00I experienced a moment of great loneliness that night, because I was in Rome.
34:06In Rome there is the headquarters of the general command, there are many people with whom my father had been
34:11in contact at that time
34:14and no one showed up.
34:16That is, that night I remained...
34:17The Dalla Chiesa murder had dark sides, like many murders that occurred in Italy during that period.
34:23The safe in the prefect's residence was mysteriously found empty.
34:29For this and many other reasons, his son Nando asked for explanations with composure and dignity.
34:54There was a convergence of interests, I believe exceptional, in deciding this crime.
35:03And I think it is significant that the opposition to the figure and functions of the prefect of the church
35:14were already there immediately after the news of his appointment.
35:18Was it intended to prevent a specific activity that had already been planned?
35:23Or was it just a desire to demonstrate?
35:31That is, an emblematic character?
35:33The symbolic nature of this crime is there and it is very strong.
35:39I don't think the mafia only hits symbolic targets if those targets don't bother it too much.
35:46And it was certainly a devastating message sent to those who seriously intended to fight the mafia and the system of mafia interests.
35:56If I remember correctly...
35:57According to the church, the escort agent Domenico Russo and the general's young wife Emanuela Asetti Carraro also died.
36:10At the trial, the mother, Maria Antonietta Carraro, also testified. She was a very austere woman who had been a Red Cross nurse during the
36:18Second World War,
36:20experiencing first-hand the worst atrocities of the conflict.
36:24She is heard as an offended person.
36:26We thank you for your words, but we would like you to give us some facts.
36:30Emanuela was perfectly aware of the danger she was running.
36:36I had understood the situation and Emanuela spoke until the end about this solitude in which they were left
36:47and how much Carlo Alberto did to find support, consensus and aid.
36:53The lady repeated several times that the general had been left alone.
36:59Who left the general of the church alone and who was afraid of the general of the church and
37:05of Mrs. Carraro?
37:06I can't say anything about Palermo, I can say about the orders from Rome.
37:10They left them alone because they were afraid even after they died.
37:13That night we left on the General Staff plane and arrived here in Palermo at two in the morning.
37:21We immediately went to Via Carini.
37:24It was a disaster.
37:25And when we went to the prefecture I said I want the funeral to be held in Palermo.
37:31No, he told me.
37:32We are afraid of the square.
37:34And I said it was time for the Palermo square to rebel.
37:37It's time, I said, for honest Palermitans to rebel against these things.
37:41And it's time for the women of Palermo to stand in solidarity with Medico at this time.
37:47The only moment I felt that Emanuela wasn't calm was the last sentence.
37:54I was already hanging up the phone and Emanuela said to me, Mom, I love you so much.
38:00And at that moment I barely had time to answer, me too, darling, a lot.
38:06And the fact that I said it at that moment, I love you so much, meant, Mom, I'm scared.
38:13Well, this was the only moment when Emanuela's confidence wavered.
38:19Excuse me for a moment.
38:20And I have never seen, not even in the German concentration camps, such an abomination as killing a woman.
38:2931 years old like Emanuela,
38:30guilty only of following her husband's feelings and loving them.
38:36And when mafia men call themselves men of honor, I wonder what kind of honor they have.
38:41I would like to know from this trial and I would like to know from the mafia, which has a thousand ways to let us know how and why
38:49they killed Emanuela.
38:50So, the other civil parties, if they want...
38:53Mr President, as you pointed out, my speech led to questions.
38:58I must say, however, that the arguments are identical.
39:01It is clear that this is a request, the instructor is completely indebted, aimed at creating a smokescreen once again on the
39:08process.
39:08We want the truth, we don't want...
39:12Excuse me, but who are you greeting?
39:16The lay judge.
39:19But how do you know her?
39:26She's my mother.
39:46But did Teresa tell you that her mother is one of the lay judges?
39:50What are you saying?
39:51He was always watching her on the monitor, didn't you notice?
39:54No, no, no, me too, I hadn't known anything.
39:57She is under guard who brings her here every single day to listen to all the depositions.
40:03He doesn't work anymore.
40:04There was a moment when he didn't even want to see his daughter Teresa, because he was afraid for her, for
40:11his safety.
40:23When you ask yourself all these questions about this trial, about Palermo, think about them, the ordinary people.
40:45That summer the sirocco gave us no respite.
40:48August was approaching, the time when everything in the city stopped.
40:52But Palermo could not afford to let the trial remain suspended for too long.
40:59Mr. President, I swear on my honor if I have ever seen this gentleman.
41:03All hands asked for a certificate like dogs of dogs.
41:06We hope for some investigations.
41:08Maybe, it's still Bucetta who has me, it's not like he's had me for a few years.
41:12Based on the President's psychiatric control, the inmate can participate in the urgency because he is vested and back.
41:23This is fundamental for me and I think also for the Court, to know if in the end Bucetta has reached what point
41:29lied or not.
41:30The description he made with Torno does not correspond to reality.
41:34No, no, I'll just hand it over, there's nothing to support it. I can prove it one thing at a time.
41:40The Court, the precezzo is sent to the habit of September 4, 1976, now it is 9.30, the habit is removed.
42:34Four hundred and seventy-four defendants, including free prisoners and fugitives.
42:38Currently there are four hundred and sixty-six assisted by one hundred and forty-three lawyers.
42:44After the start of the maxi-trial, two hundred and sixty defendants were questioned and two hundred witnesses were heard.
42:53Line under study.
43:02But what's hot?
43:04But what has expired?
43:05My God, it's hot.
43:07Thank goodness this Camorra is ending for a while.
43:09Real?
43:09It is true.
43:10But are you leaving?
43:11No, I'm staying here with my mother, we go to Falù for a few days, to the seaside a bit.
43:16And you, Gianni, aren't you in Rome?
43:18I'm going to Favignana.
43:19And you don't go to Rome anymore?
43:21No.
43:23In short, the only one left in Palermo is me.
43:27Me too.
43:37The trial resumed in September with other defendants.
43:40So can we proceed?
43:43And Gianni was still there with us, with his camera.
43:46Can I say something good?
43:48I almost missed this guy.
43:51I missed the cook.
43:53Eh, I had no doubts.
43:56Look, that's okay.
43:57See you all.
43:58Yes.
43:58Maybe because Palermo rejects you with one hand but embraces you tightly with the other.
44:03Alfano Pietro, Vitale Paolo, Visconti Ludovico.
44:07The word returned to the collaborators of justice.
44:11They were street people who had repented but who in the long run would not have been able to handle the pressure.
44:17In the courtroom we witnessed Salvatore Di Marco's emotional breakdown.
44:23One of the collaborators of justice on whom the accusation was based.
44:27So, I'll postpone.
44:28And excuse me if I can't be correct and I can't express myself as I would like, but it's been three years that I
44:34I live in hell.
44:36I've been wanting to tell the truth for a long time, but I haven't had the courage out of fear.
44:40But I don't argue, I tell you the facts.
44:42No, I don't want to fight, it's the things that are in my heart, that I've been holding on to for a long time.
44:46I want to say these things.
44:47Tell the facts.
44:48And if you want to condemn me and also want to condemn me for mafia association, which I am not a mafioso,
44:53Convict me also for mafia association and for everything else that is believed, given how the investigations are going.
44:57I'm saying, you tell the facts.
44:59Excuse me, Mr. President, if I'm so upset, but it's...
45:02Calm down, I'm trying to calm down.
45:04Too much tension has accumulated.
45:07I'm too emotional, Mr. President.
45:15A month later, another collaborator of justice, Stefano Calzetta, stepped down.
45:25I think we could even stop this show.
45:28Okay, then, let's say that Deputy Calzetta goes berserk and starts to undress.
45:35After the serious accusations, followed by sudden amnesia, he was no longer credible.
45:41If you are disappointed.
45:42He had only one last card left.
45:44Acting crazy.
45:46The Carabinieri who are there are stunned, but you don't know the screams we heard in the stands.
45:52Evening.
45:55Franco, look at this agency that just arrived.
45:57Ma'am, is everything okay?
45:59There was a murder in San Lorenzo.
46:04A little boy dies.
46:06Who's talking about a child?
46:07Claudio, an eldest son.
46:09Listen, I want to go to San Lorenzo, then we'll talk.
46:12I'll bring Gianni, bye.
46:15Good evening, an 11-year-old boy was killed by the mafia, likely a cross-party vendetta in the ruthless mafia logic.
46:23Straight to the line in Palermo.
46:30This is not the first time that organized crime has targeted children.
46:34A motorcyclist with a helmet on his head approached little Claudio Domino,
46:38who was returning home with a bundle of bread under his arm in the company of some peers.
46:42It happened at 9am on Via Giovanni Fattori.
46:45Claudio, come, I need to talk to you, the hitman is said to have said.
46:49Then he fired a 7.65 round into the child's face,
46:52who had been attending the first year of middle school at the Ignazio Florio school for a few days.
46:56The little boy's parents run two shops and a business which since July 18th
47:01has contracted to clean the bunker courtroom where the Cosa Nostra maxi-trial is being held.
47:11The emotion of the crime reached the courtroom, people talked about it in the corridors, people asked questions.
47:17But no one could have expected that the next day someone from the cages would ask to speak
47:24and not just any defendant.
47:26Ah, the good guy wanted to speak, he's been wanting to speak since this morning, so let's give him the floor, excuse me.
47:31Mr. President, thank you.
47:33Please.
47:33And I wanted to ask the courtesy if it was possible to read a statement
47:37that the prisoner in this cell is so dear to us.
47:40A statement you want to make?
47:42Yes.
47:43Only of this cell?
47:44But it's good.
47:45Yes, Giovanni is good.
47:47Yes, that's good. You've already read a long statement.
47:50The speaker was Giovanni Bontate, brother of Stefano, the mafia boss killed in 1981.
47:57Mr. President and ladies of the court, we witness on a daily basis meters of information
48:02to indiscriminate attacks on the defendants in this trial.
48:06But yesterday all limits were exceeded.
48:09We are as sorry and saddened as the entire citizenry,
48:13for the massacre of the innocent Claudio Domino.
48:16We are men, we have children and we know how great the pain of the Domino family is,
48:21but we cannot allow such a barbaric act to touch us.
48:25I am sure I interpret the thoughts of all the co-defendants.
48:29If you would allow us to do so, we ask you for a few minutes of silence for poor and innocent Claudio.
48:34Thank you.
48:36We, he said.
48:37We are men, we are sorry.
48:40On behalf of everyone.
48:41Who knows, the first time.
48:44But what does the first time mean?
48:45Capallone in the plural.
48:47Which leaves us all in dismay, I ask the court for a few minutes of suspension.
48:52Yes, the court is accustomed to silence, even when this silence comes at a great cost on the human side.
48:59Doctor, five minutes and we'll be out.
49:01Yes please.
49:02Did you hear that, Bontate?
49:03Bontate spoke on behalf of a group.
49:05What did he say?
49:06He basically said, we have nothing to do with it.
49:09And is that enough to make them all guilty?
49:13You think it's over, right?
49:17But I want to tell you one more thing.
49:20It takes a day to read the trial documents of a single defendant.
49:26How long do you think it takes to read the one of 474 defendants?
49:29It's the whole thing that's wrong.
49:33Enough, maxi-trials.
49:35They'll understand.
49:36And you journalists will understand it too, I'm telling you.
49:40It wasn't over, that much was clear.
49:42The lawyers still had one last shot to fire.
49:46The full reading of the trial documents, which usually takes place at the end of the questioning.
49:53A procedure that would have irreversibly lengthened the trial and released numerous defendants.
50:04What am I bringing back here?
50:06The Four Songs is beautiful.
50:07Like the four fountains a bit, right?
50:10What are the four fountains?
50:11It's a street in Rome.
50:13You know that loose hair well anyway.
50:16Thank you.
50:17Thank you.
50:18Let's go.
50:34Meanwhile, the city was reacting.
50:37He took to the streets in the face of the murder of an innocent child.
50:45We could no longer remain indifferent.
50:50Neither do we.
50:52They all try at the demonstration.
50:58That day San Lorenzo was filled with children, parents, and teachers.
51:03For a day that seemed to last a long time, Palermo was tinged with bright colors, with a new air to breathe.
51:10at the top of my lungs.
51:13Was something really changing?
51:23The verdict is tomorrow.
51:26The test must give you the facts!
51:34If your parents are convicted tomorrow, what happens?
51:39A seal!
51:40Let's go with the baby!
51:41Law triumphs over crime, democracy and civilization over insolence.
51:50I wish you peace, Mr. President.
51:54Name of the Italian people.
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