close
close

The mafia’s ice cream parlors in Sicily: a story of gelato gangsters, fraud and corruption

The mafia’s ice cream parlors in Sicily: a story of gelato gangsters, fraud and corruption

PALERMO (Italy), October 26 – Two scoops of pistachio, one scoop of corruption. For years, holidaymakers have sipped Sicilian ice cream in famous salons in Palermo, unaware that the booming businesses were controlled by organized crime.

The fraud was a textbook example for detectives trained to track down dirty money, but even with three gangster classics – a suspected bankrupt, a frontman and a scheming ‘Godfather’ – it took years for investigators to shut down the operation.

The Brioscia brand, made up of two ice cream parlors, flourished in the late 2010s, attracting both local and foreign visitors with its glittering gold stars on travel websites.

The stores were run by Mario Mancuso. Behind the scenes was Michele Micalizzi who had been in prison several times for ties to the mafia.

Mancuso provided the ice, Micalizzi did the rest.

That included a cut of profits for protecting Mancuso from extortion attempts by other gangsters, a judicial source told AFP.

But the company was in Mancuso’s wife’s name and when divorce loomed, the men feared they would lose control.

They declared Brioscia bankrupt in 2021, blaming the €4mil (RM18.6mil) hole in its books on the Covid lockdown, the source said.

“It was a thriving company, very well known in Palermo. The bankruptcy was therefore unjustified,” he told AFP.

Suspicious investigators used telephone taps to discover that the two men – far from bankrupt – had grand plans to open salons abroad.

The pair launched a new company called Sharbat, with the stores rebranded, the source said.

“I’m not even sure if the employees knew who they were working for,” said a nearby store employee on condition of anonymity.

Investigators say the men split the windfall, with Micalizzi passing some of it on to his imprisoned relatives to pay legal fees or miscellaneous items.

But on August 12, the police intervened, arrested both men and four accomplices and seized 1.5 million euros.

Mancuso and Micalizzi are being prosecuted for criminal associations with a mafia character, extortion and fraudulent bankruptcy.

The mafia’s billions

Between drug trafficking, extortion, government procurement, legitimate businesses and money laundering shells, Italy’s Central Bank estimates the annual turnover of the country’s organized crime groups at 40 billion euros, or two percent of national wealth.

The mafia still makes good money from traditional crimes such as drug trafficking. For example, the ‘Ndrangheta in the southern region of Calabria are responsible for much of Europe’s cocaine trade.

“It also makes direct investments in the legal economy,” said Rocco Sciarrone, who teaches criminal psychology at the University of Turin.

According to a 2022 report by economist Antonio Parbonetti, more than two-thirds of mafia infiltrations occur in the construction, commercial, real estate and manufacturing sectors.

The crowd also has tentacles in agriculture, hotels and restaurants, logistics, transportation and waste management.

How much the crime groups ‘invest’ in each sector varies considerably from region to region.

“The socio-economic fabric (in Sicily) consists of small family businesses that lend themselves very well to money laundering,” says Eliseo Davi of the University of Palermo.

According to the Parbonetti report, one in two mafia-controlled companies is a so-called ‘star company’, which generates a comfortable income and employs people, and therefore enjoys broad social, economic and political support.

In the Palermo gelato affair, the company did not have the necessary permits for either of the two stores, prompting an investigation into whether there was collusion with government officials.

Near the salons is the former home of Giovanni Falcone, an anti-mafia judge whose 1992 murder by the mafia led to a state crackdown that permanently weakened Cosa Nostra.

Like American law enforcement agent Eliot Ness, who took down gangster Al Capone, Falcone had a simple rule: follow the money. —AFP