Suspect in German Mafia-link massacre arrested

ROME – A suspected Italian mobster accused of the killing of six men outside a pizzeria in Germany in 2007 has been caught by…

ROME – A suspected Italian mobster accused of the killing of six men outside a pizzeria in Germany in 2007 has been caught by Dutch police, ending more than a year on the run as one of Italy’s most wanted fugitives, police said.

Giovanni Strangio (30), is considered a main suspect in the so-called “Duisburg massacre”, in which six Italians were gunned down in a hail of bullets in Duisburg, Germany.

The killings were believed to be part of a lengthy feud between rival clans of the ’Ndrangheta crime group, and were revenge for the 2006 Christmas Day killing of a distant cousin of Strangio’s.

Late on Thursday, Dutch police stormed an Amsterdam apartment where Strangio had been secretly living with his wife and son. They found at least €1 million in cash. “There were a lot of apparently forged papers and passports . . . and lots of money, probably over a million euro, and a firearm,” Holger Haufmann, the head of Duisburg’s criminal investigation unit, told reporters.

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The Mafia in the Italian region of Calabria, known as the ’Ndrangheta, has grown into the most powerful Italian crime organisation – bigger than Sicily’s Cosa Nostra – with most of its cash coming from drug trafficking.

Renato Cortese, a police chief in Calabria, said authorities found Strangio partly thanks to wiretaps and telephone tracking.

Authorities in Italy and Germany have both expressed interest in extraditing Strangio. – (Reuters)