<https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/jan/05/italian-mafia-fugitive-arrested-in-spain-after-google-maps-sighting>

An Italian mafia boss on the run for 20 years was tracked down to a Spanish 
town after being spotted on Google Street View.

Gioacchino Gammino, a convicted murderer listed among Italy’s most wanted 
gangsters, was arrested in Galapagar, a town near Madrid, where over the years 
he had married, changed his name to Manuel, worked as a chef and owned a fruit 
and vegetable shop.

Sicilian police carried out several investigations in their search for Gammino, 
61, and a European arrest warrant was issued in 2014. The fugitive was traced 
to Spain, but it was Google Street View that helped to pinpoint his precise 
location.

The navigation tool, accessible through Google Maps, had captured an image of 
two men chatting outside a fruit and vegetable shop called El Huerto de Manu, 
or Manu’s Garden, in Galapagar. Police believed one of the men closely 
resembled Gammino, but his identity was only confirmed when they came across a 
listing for a nearby restaurant called La Cocina de Manu or Manu’s Kitchen.

The shop and the restaurant are now closed, but the police found a photo of 
Gammino, dressed in his chef’s garb, on a still-existing Facebook page for La 
Cocina de Manu. He was recognisable by the scar on the left side of his chin. 
The restaurant’s menu included a dish called Cena Siciliana or Sicilian dinner.

Gammino was arrested on 17 December but the details surrounding his capture did 
not come to light until they were reported by La Repubblica on Wednesday.

The details were confirmed by the Palermo prosecutor Francesco Lo Voi, who led 
the latest investigation. “It’s not as if we spend our days wading through 
Google Maps to find fugitives,” he told the Guardian. “There were many previous 
and long investigations, which led us to Spain. We were on a good path, with 
Google Maps helping to confirm our investigations.”

After 20 years in hiding, Gammino thought he had managed to sever all his ties 
with Sicily. Upon his arrest, he reportedly told police: “How did you find me? 
I haven’t even called my family for 10 years!”

Gammino belonged to a mafia clan in Agrigento, Sicily, which was caught up in a 
bloody feud with Cosa Nostra, Sicily’s main mafia network, in the 1990s. He was 
first arrested in 1984, when he was investigated by the anti-mafia judge 
Giovanni Falcone, who was assassinated by the mafia in a car bomb in 1992.

Gammino was wanted for murder and various other mafia-related crimes. He was 
arrested for a second time in Barcelona in 1998. He had been serving a life 
sentence at Rebibbia prison in Rome when, in 2002, he managed to escape during 
the commotion of the making of a film at the prison.

It is not the first time a mafia fugitive has been caught with the help of the 
web. In March last year, Mark Feren Claude Biart was captured in the Caribbean 
after appearing in YouTube cooking videos. Biart had been on the run since 
2014, when Italian prosecutors ordered his arrest for trafficking cocaine in 
the Netherlands on behalf of the Cacciola clan of the ’Ndrangheta mafia.

Until his arrest, Biart had been leading a quiet life among the Italian expat 
community in Boca Chica in the Dominican Republic. Although the YouTube videos 
of him flaunting his cooking skills never showed his face, police said he was 
betrayed by the distinctive tattoos on his body.

In 2019, police arrested a mobster with the Camorra mafia organisation while he 
was eating pasta with his two cats sitting beside him in an apartment in the 
outskirts of Naples.
_______________________________________________
nexa mailing list
nexa@server-nexa.polito.it
https://server-nexa.polito.it/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nexa

Reply via email to