List of Camorra clans

This is a comprehensive list of Camorra clans and their place of origin. A clan is a basic unit in the Camorra, a criminal organization originating in Campania. Currently it is estimated there are about 111 Camorra clans,[1] and about 7,000 full members.[2][3][4]

Province of Avellino

Quindici

  • Cava clan
  • Graziano clan

Province of Caserta

Casal di Principe

Maddaloni

  • Farina clan (defunct)

Marcianise

  • Belforte clan

Mondragone

Pignataro Maggiore

  • Lubrano-Ligato clan (defunct)

Metropolitan City of Naples

Afragola

Bacoli

  • Pariante clan

Castellammare di Stabia

Ercolano

  • Ascione clan
  • Birra clan (defunct)

Giugliano in Campania

Marano di Napoli

Naples

Nola

San Giuseppe Vesuviano

Poggiomarino

Pozzuoli

  • Beneduce-Longobardi clan

Portici

San Giorgio a Cremano

  • Abate clan (defunct)
  • Troia clan

Sant'Antimo

  • Puca clan
  • Verde clan
  • Ranucci clan (defunct)

Saviano

Torre Annunziata

  • Gionta clan
  • Gallo-Cavalieri clan
  • Tamarisco clan

Boscotrecase/Boscoreale

  • Vangone-Limelli clan

Torre del Greco

  • Falanga clan
  • Gargiulo clan (defunct)

Province of Salerno

Battipaglia

  • Pecoraro-Renna clan

Eboli

  • Maiale clan

Salerno

  • D'Agostino-Panella clan
  • Tafuri Clan

Scafati

gollark: Put too much money in one place, and *boom*.
gollark: Let's make money from radioisotopes.
gollark: To replace damaged notes.
gollark: Well, you need to print a bit.
gollark: There's a limited amount of actual value/wealth available, so if the government arbitrarily prints money and people use that money it's effectively taxation anyway but it breaks everything horribly too.

References

  1. "Mafia management". The Economist. 2016-08-27. ISSN 0013-0613. Retrieved 2019-11-26.
  2. "FBI Italian/Mafia". FBI. Archived from the original on May 24, 2014. Retrieved December 26, 2014.
  3. Gayrau, Jean-François (2005). Le Monde des mafias: Géopolitique du crime organisé [The World of Mafias: Geopolitics of Organized Crime] (in French). Paris: Odile Jacob. p. 86. ISBN 9782738187338.
  4. Abadinsky, Howard (2012). Organized Crime. Belmont: Wadsworth, Cengage Learning. p. 122-123. ISBN 9781285401577. Archived from the original on January 4, 2018. Retrieved April 4, 2020.
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