Augusto La Torre

Augusto La Torre (Mondragone, Province of Caserta, September 24, 1962)[1] is an Italian criminal and former Camorra boss. Up until his arrest and subsequent collaboration with Italian justice in January 2003, La Torre was the head of the now defunct La Torre clan, a powerful Camorra organization whose vast lucrative criminal empire stretched from its base Mondragone in the hinterland of Campania out into Aberdeen, Scotland, as well as the Netherlands.[2]

Augusto La Torre
Born (1962-09-24) September 24, 1962
NationalityItalian
OccupationFormer head of the La Torre clan
Criminal statusIn prison
ChildrenFrancesco Tiberio La Torre
RelativesAntonio La Torre (brother)
AllegianceLa Torre clan / Camorra
Criminal chargeMurder
PenaltyLife in prison

Criminal career

Augusto La Torre is the son of Tiberio La Torre, also a Camorrista, and Paolina Gravano, his brother is Antonio La Torre. At a young age, Augusto took over from his father the command of the clan, at the time dominant in the region of Alto Casertano, in lower Lazio and along the whole domitian coast. Over the years La Torre accumulated capital with extortion, drug trafficking, control of various economic activities and contracts. For a time the La Torre clan was hostile to the Casalesi clan. One of the great strengths of the La Torre's organization was the alliances with politics, in fact, Mondragone, the clan's stronghold, was the first municipality to be dissolved due to Camorra infiltration in the 1990s.[3][4][5]

La Torre was suspected of having hid hundreds of millions of euros in Dutch banks, as the La Torre clan was very active in the Netherlands in the 1990s, transporting large cocaine shipments from South America to Campania via the Netherlands.[6]

His organization was also known to launder money in the Ivory Coast with the help of the former chancellor of Salerno, Cesare Salomone.[7]

In October 2019, La Torre was sentenced to life imprisonment. He was found guilty of being the instigator and executor of the Pescopagano massacre happened on April 24, 1990. According to the investigations reconstruction, the massacre happened because La Torre wanted to "clean up" the Pescopagano area from African drug dealers.[8]

Personal life

Augusto La Torre has a son, Francesco Tiberio La Torre. In a 2017 interview, Francesco declared that found out about his father's "job" in the newspapers when he was 7 years old and just burst into tears, he also explained how it was growing up in Mondragone when the La Torre clan was at its peak, saying that “you could feel the Camorra in the air. You could smell it.“[9]

gollark: Site Null is a "private island", that's just a continent.
gollark: "private island"
gollark: You could reduce costs somewhat by just assembling them from raw materials on demand, so you don't have to keep tons of things stocked when they aren't immediately needed.
gollark: Cheaper OC components via JIT manufacturing.
gollark: I just had an *excellent* business idea.

See also


References

  1. (in Italian) Atti Parlamentari, Giustizia, 4655 Archived July 22, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, Camera dei Deputati, July 1, 2002
  2. Gangsters Incorporated:Augusto La Torre Archived April 15, 2009, at the Wayback Machine - David Amoruso, May 1, 2007
  3. Blackstock, Gordon. "'I'm sick of appearing in the papers': Police recordings reveal Aberdeen mob boss Antonio La Torre came under fire from his mother". Sunday Post. Retrieved 2019-11-28.
  4. "Guns, extortion and death threats… the new claims facing Aberdeen mafia boss arrested in Italy". sundaypost.com. 26 August 2018.
  5. "Biografia di Augusto La Torre". www.cinquantamila.it (in Italian). Retrieved 2019-11-28.
  6. "Augusto La Torre kon zijn maffia-dna niet langer verbergen". AD.nl (in Dutch). Retrieved 2019-11-28.
  7. "Camorra, riciclaggio in Costa d'Avorio: "la talpa" era un ex cancelliere salernitano". SalernoToday (in Italian). Retrieved 2019-11-28.
  8. "Ergastolo per Augusto La Torre, il boss psicologo condannato per strage". Napoli Fanpage (in Italian). Retrieved 2019-10-29.
  9. "L'ultima intervista di La Torre jr nel libro 'Figli dei boss'". CasertaNews (in Italian). Retrieved 2019-10-29.


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