Sicilian town angry after ‘disgusting’ social media post by mafia boss’s son | Italy

A son of a notorious Cosa Nostra mafia boss has sparked anger in the Sicilian town of Corleone after posting a message on social media that was condemned as a “despicable attack” on the Italian state.

On Ferragosto, a beloved national holiday in Italy celebrated on August 15, “Salvuccio” Giuseppe Salvatore Riina, one of the sons of Salvatore “Totò” Riina, wished his followers on social media a “happy holiday” from “via Scorsone 24, Corleone, Italy”.

The address was for many years the home of the Riina family, but in 2018 the street was renamed Via Terranova, in tribute to anti-mafia judge Cesare Terranova, who was shot dead in 1979 in an ambush orchestrated by Corleone mafia boss Luciano Liggio. The name change was ordered by the commissioners of the Ministry of the Interior who governed Corleone at the time – as seen in the book The Godfather and the film trilogy – after the town hall was dissolved due to mafia infiltration.

Walter Rà, elected mayor of Corleone in June, described the incident as “cowardly” and affirmed that the town had put its dark history behind it and would not bow to intimidation. “We will not allow it,” he told Italian media. “We have turned the page here, no one will push us back.”

Salvuccio Riina later shortened the post to remove the reference to “via Scorsone.”

“Corleone is not a mafia,” the government said, but some in the city have played on the stereotypes to attract tourists. Photo: Francesco Faraci/The Guardian

Totò Riina died in prison in 2017. Nicknamed “the Beast”, he is said to have ordered more than 150 murders, including the killing of a 13-year-old boy who was dissolved in acid. He also ordered the murder of anti-mafia judges Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino in 1992.

His third son, Salvuccio, returned to Corleone in 2023 after serving nearly nine years in prison for mafia association, money laundering and extortion, and then spending time between Veneto and Abruzzo, where he had been entrusted to a social service scheme. Corleone’s former administration had tried to oust him in an attempt to protect the city from “reputational damage”.

The city’s current leaders said in a statement on Salvuccio Riina’s social media post: “While we do not wish to further expose those who periodically seek them, we firmly distance ourselves from such statements and resolutely condemn such bravado, which sounds like a despicable attack on the State and institutions. Riina Jr.’s statements … accentuate nothing but a negative and distorted vision of Corleone, and tarnish the efforts that the community makes every day to free itself from a reputation linked to mafia and crime.

“Corleone is not the Mafia. Corleone is history, culture, freedom, but above all, Corleone is legality, all qualities that highly questionable figures will never be able to undermine.”

skip the newsletter promotion

The Laboratory of Legality, a gallery and a kind of anti-mafia museum in Corleone, features works by the painter Gaetano Porcasi that trace the history of the Cosa Nostra. Photo: Francesco Faraci/The Guardian

Salvuccio Riina is said to have married his Spanish partner in Spain in June, after which he hosted a post-wedding party at a restaurant in Corleone with 200 guests. In 2016, he wrote the controversial book Riina Family Life, which many bookstores refused to sell.

Totò Riina had three other children: Maria Concetta, Giovanni Francesco and the youngest, Lucia. Giovanni Riina, also a Cosa Nostra mafioso, was sentenced to life in prison in 1996. In 2019, Lucia Riina opened a restaurant – called Corleone – near the Arc de Triomphe in Paris, but closed it a year later.

You May Also Like

More From Author