• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

Video: Lee Kuan Yew just had another Grand Funeral shocking the world - power sia

minionstar

Alfrescian
Loyal
http://www.theguardian.com/world/20...glamour-funeral-complete-with-godfather-music

Disgust in Rome at mafia don's glamour funeral complete with Godfather music

Vittorio Casamonica farewelled with gilded horse-drawn carriage, flower petals tossed from helicopter and banner on church saying he would ‘conquer paradise’
Vittorio Casamonica’s coffin arrives at San Giovanni Bosco church to the strains of the theme from The Godfather

Staff and agencies in Rome

Friday 21 August 2015 02.12 BST
Last modified on Friday 21 August 2015 15.21 BST

Share on Facebook
Share on Twitter
Share via Email
Share on Pinterest
Share on LinkedIn
Share on Google+

Romans aghast at revelations of official corruption tied to the mafia found new reason for outrage after the Hollywood-style funeral of a purported local crime boss – replete with a gilded horse-drawn carriage, flower petals tossed from a helicopter and the theme music from The Godfather playing outside the church.

Hundreds of tearful mourners paid their final respects to Vittorio Casamonica, 65, at the San Giovanni Bosco church on Rome’s outskirts.

Licence of pilot who flew low to drop petals for mafiosi funeral suspended

The Casamonica clan has been accused of racketeering, extortion and usury. Rome city hall said on Thursday that Vittorio Casamonica himself was the subject of “many investigations into Roman criminality”.

“Never again. Rome cannot be defaced by those who want it to became the set of the Godfather,” said Matteo Orfini, president of the ruling Democratic party.

“You conquered Rome, now you’ll conquer paradise,” read a banner affixed to the entrance of the church. “King of Rome” read another, featuring Casamonica’s image, the Colosseum and St Peter’s Basilica.
A banner showing Vittorio Casamonica and reading King of Rome hangs from the facade of the Don Bosco church in Rome.
Facebook
Twitter
Pinterest
A banner showing Vittorio Casamonica and reading King of Rome hangs from the facade of the Don Bosco church in Rome. Photograph: Massimo Percossi/AP

Surge in mafia attacks on journalists in Italy

Mayor Ignazio Marino called Rome’s prefect demanding to know how such a scene could have taken place and said it was “intolerable that funerals are used by the living to send mafia messages”.

The parish priest, the Reverend Giancarlo Manieri, said he had no control over what happened outside the church and that inside the funeral was celebrated normally, the Ansa news agency reported.

Lawmakers expressed outrage at the scene, which played out on TV newscasts all afternoon and evening: six black horses pulling an antique black-and-gold carriage to a stop in front of the church as a band played music from The Godfather and mourners tossed bouquets of flowers as the casket was carried into the church.
A man plays a trumpet in front of a banner showing Vittorio Casamonica and reading 'You conquered Rome, now you'll conquer paradise'.
Facebook
Twitter
Pinterest
A man plays a trumpet in front of a banner showing Vittorio Casamonica and reading: ‘You conquered Rome, now you’ll conquer paradise.’ Photograph: Massimo Percossi/AP

At one point a low-flying helicopter dropped red rose petals on the crowd below. More were thrown from the back of a lorry.

The funeral came a day after a judge set 5 November as the start date for the trial of 59 people charged in a spiralling mafia investigation in the capital, in which local criminal bosses allegedly managed to cement ties with city politicians over lucrative public contracts.

Rosy Bindi, president of the parliamentary anti-mafia commission, said it was “alarming” that a funeral for someone purportedly caught up in the mob could be “transformed into an ostentatious show of mafia power”.

She said it was proof that the mafia had firmly infiltrated Rome and called for a redoubling of efforts to rout it from public administration.

The hard-left SEL party called on interior minister Angelino Alfano to explain how such a funeral could take place. “These funerals might seem like a folkloric custom, but in reality they send a clear message of impunity on the part of the clans: we still exist and we are powerful,” SEL politicians Arturo Scotto and Celeste Costantino wrote in a statement. “That is unacceptable in a democratic state.”

Police said the mourned patriach had led the Casamonica clan active in the south-west part of the capital but they played down his importance, saying he had been “on the margins” of organised crime overall and had not emerged as a suspect in recent mafia investigations.

Rome’s corruption has long thrived on the connivance of city politicians, administrators and local gangsters, who have no formal ties to the traditional southern crime syndicates. A prosecutor famed for fighting Sicily’s Cosa Nostra has been enlisted to help root out city hall corruption. The mafia fighter was enlisted following dozens of arrests since late 2014 of city politicians and businessmen with links to the political right and left.
Flowers are tossed in front of the Don Bosco church for Vittorio Casamonica's funeral.
Facebook
Twitter
Pinterest
Flowers are tossed in front of the Don Bosco church for Vittorio Casamonica’s funeral. Photograph: Massimo Percossi/AP

On Thursday several commentators noted the irony that a reported mob boss was allowed an elaborate funeral at the church while the Archdiocese of Rome refused to allow a funeral at the same church in 2006 for Piergiorgio Welby, then the symbol of Italy’s right-to-die movement.

Welby, who had muscular dystrophy and was unable to eat, speak or breathe on his own, got his wish to die in December 2006 when a doctor disconnected his respirator. His case split the overwhelmingly Catholic nation but the local church defended its decision to deny him a Catholic funeral, arguing that allowing it would have legitimised attitudes contrary to God’s law.

Reuters and the Associated Press contributed to this report
More news
Topics

Mafia Organised crime Italy Europe

Share on Facebook
Share on Twitter
Share via Email
Share on Pinterest
Share on LinkedIn
Share on Google+



[video=youtube;7RH3by5U198]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7RH3by5U198[/video]
 

minionstar

Alfrescian
Loyal
http://www.npr.org/2015/08/21/433402343/in-rome-reported-mafia-don-has-lavish-funeral



In Rome, Reported Mafia Don Has Lavish Funeral
August 21, 2015 7:28 AM ET
Listen to the Story

Morning Edition
0:30

Playlist
Download
Embed
Transcript

It included an antique horse-drawn carriage and rose petals dropped from a helicopter. Government officials were angry that this was the message sent as 60 alleged mafia members had trial dates set.

DAVID GREENE, HOST:

Good morning. I'm David Greene with news from the old country. A lavish funeral was thrown in Rome yesterday for a purported mob boss. It included an antique horse-drawn carriage, rose petals dropped from a helicopter, a banner at the church that read, you conquered Rome, now you'll conquer paradise. And, yes, music blared from "The Godfather." Imagine, government officials were angry that this was the message sent just as 60 alleged Mafia members had their trial dates set. You're listening to MORNING EDITION.

Copyright © 2015 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.
 

minionstar

Alfrescian
Loyal
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/08/21/a-mafia-funeral-rome-couldn-t-refuse.html

A Mafia Funeral Rome Couldn’t Refuse
Police blocked streets for the crime boss’s cortège as helicopters dropped rose petals on crowds tearing up at the procession—and a government crackdown looked as futile as ever.

ROME — There are certain times the Eternal City, with its glorious ancient ruins and stunning beauty, seems fictitious, almost like a movie set where the most bizarre scenes play out. And so it was Thursday, when hundreds of mourners gathered to pay their final respects to 65-year-old Vittorio Casamonica in an extravagant funeral befitting royalty.

Six black stallions pulled a gilded and glassed-in carriage as a low-flying helicopter dropped red rose petals onto tearful crowds who lined the streets. Trucks laden with wreaths followed the procession. After the funeral, a shiny black Rolls-Royce carried the coffin to the parish cemetery, where it was interred in the Casamonica family’s marble mausoleum.

But this was no movie shoot or noble funeral. It was the final farewell to one of the most well-known—and obviously beloved—mob bosses in Rome, whose criminal clan has helped bring the capital to its knees in recent months. Giant posters with photos of Casamonica hung from the Church of Don Bosco, where the funeral took place and is, appropriately perhaps, a few blocks from the legendary Cinecitta Movie Studios. In some pictures, he wears a dark suit and is superimposed inside the ancient Roman Colosseum under the words “King of Rome.” In others, he is dressed in papal white with a shimmering cross slung on a gold chain around his neck, over the words “You conquered Rome,” one sign read. “Now you will conquer heaven.”

More embarrassing still was the complicity of the Roman police, whose cars blocked traffic so the procession could carry on unhindered.

And lest there be any doubt what this was really about, at the church a lone trumpeter played a mournful rendition of “Speak Softly Love”—which happens to be the theme song from The Godfather. Other songs included numbers from 2001: A Space Odyssey.

The show funeral was, in many ways, a blatant slap in the face to Rome’s ruling establishment, which had claimed to have pulled the plug on the so-called Mafia Capitale crime syndicate. Until recently the group had run the city unchecked, pilfering funds from the city’s coffers through extensive corruption, making massive profits off the most vulnerable, including refugees and the homeless. The Casamonica clan stands formally accused of extortion and racketeering, and several members are in jail pending trial.

Casamonica’s death after a long battle with cancer and his subsequent funeral came during one of the quietest weeks in Rome, when government entities were on break and while the mayor, Ignazio Marino, was on holiday in America. As news broke of the ironic event, the mayor quickly tweeted that he had called the local prefect to clarify just how this could happen, saying it was “intolerable that funerals are used by the living to send mafia messages.” The civil-protection chief countered that there had been a breakdown in communication and no one knew exactly who the funeral was really for until it was too late.

But someone had indeed given permission for the funeral cortège, which was covered by Italian press with the same energy as a celebrity event, with star reporters lining the procession route to comment on the extravagant affair. More embarrassing still was the complicity of the Roman police, whose cars blocked traffic so the procession could carry on unhindered. A spokesman for Rome’s police department said that Casamonica was only in the “margins of criminal activity” recently due to his terminal illness, and that the elaborate funeral broke no laws. Apparently no license is necessary for low-flying rose-petal-carrying choppers outside the historical city center.

The presiding priest, Father Giancarlo Manieri, seemed shocked that there was any ruckus attached to the event, telling local media that, actually, the funeral was conducted “normally” inside the church in accordance with the Catholic ritual, and that he had no control over what grieving families chose to do to send off their loved ones.

This week, judges in Rome set November 5 as the start date for a criminal trial against almost 60 suspects, including some from the Casamonica clan, allegedly tied to the capital mob, though it would seem that the news only served to bolster the crime syndicate. Italy’s parliamentary anti-mafia head Rosy Bindi said she was appalled that, given the circumstances of the judicial clampdown, “a funeral could be transformed into an ostentatious show of mafia power.”

Other parliamentarians expressed similar outrage. “Funerals like this may appear to be a phenomenon of folklore,” said parliamentarian Celeste Costantino. “But in reality they are a clear message of impunity by a clan that says ‘We still exist and we are powerful.’ That’s unacceptable in a democratic state.” But apparently not so in Italy’s capital. Ah, Rome…
 

minionstar

Alfrescian
Loyal
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...Casamonica-given-Hollywood-style-funeral.html

Heads begin to roll: Helicopter pilot is suspended after flying low over Rome dropping flower petals at a 'mafia' boss’s lavish funeral – complete with The Godfather music – while the city’s mayor is under pressure to resign

Hundreds of tearful mourners in Rome paid their final respects to Casamonica clan 'leader' Vittorio Casamonica, 65
Six black horses were seen pulling an antique, black-and-gold carriage to a stop in front of church as a band played
Helicopter pilot who flew low over the city to drop flower petals during the funeral has had his licence suspended
Beleaguered city mayor, already under pressure over the Mafia Capital scandals, has come under pressure to resign

By Mark Duell and Jenny Stanton For Mailonline

Published: 03:22 GMT, 21 August 2015 | Updated: 18:03 GMT, 21 August 2015

1.6k
shares

29

View comments

The helicopter pilot who flew low over Rome to drop petals during the Hollywood-style funeral of a 'mafia boss' has had his licence suspended.

Hundreds of tearful mourners paid their final respects to Vittorio Casamonica, 65, whom police said was a leader of the Casamonica clan - but the ostentatious scenes, complete with horse-drawn carriage and theme music from The Godfather, infuriated many observers.

Today, Italy's civil aviation authority suspended the licence of the helicopter pilot and the beleaguered city mayor has come under renewed pressure to resign.

Scroll down for video

Carriage: Mourners at the funeral procession of 'mafia boss' Vittorio Casamonica outside San Giovanni Bosco church in Rome yesterday

Carriage: Mourners at the funeral procession of 'mafia boss' Vittorio Casamonica outside San Giovanni Bosco church in Rome yesterday
Coffin: He was given a send-off to remember as rose petals were thrown from a helicopter and a band played the The Godfather theme

Coffin: He was given a send-off to remember as rose petals were thrown from a helicopter and a band played the The Godfather theme
Music: A musician plays a trumpet in a front of a banner showing Casamonica, reading 'You conquered Rome, now you'll conquer paradise'

Music: A musician plays a trumpet in a front of a banner showing Casamonica, reading 'You conquered Rome, now you'll conquer paradise'
Emotion: Hundreds of tearful mourners paid their final respects to Casamonica, whom police said was a leader of the Casamonica clan

Emotion: Hundreds of tearful mourners paid their final respects to Casamonica, whom police said was a leader of the Casamonica clan
Tears: People grieve next to the casket during the funeral procession of the alleged mafia member outside the church in the Italian capital

Tears: People grieve next to the casket during the funeral procession of the alleged mafia member outside the church in the Italian capital

Politicians expressed outrage at the scene, which played out on television news reports all afternoon and evening.

‘You conquered Rome, now you'll conquer paradise,’ read a banner on the entrance of the San Giovanni Bosco church on the outskirts of Italy's capital.

Another read ‘King of Rome’ - featuring Casamonica's image along with the famous landmarks of the Colosseum and St Peter's Basilica.

It was widely interpreted as a direct challenge to the rule of law in a city already rocked by months of corruption scandals.
RELATED ARTICLES

Previous
1
Next

The day it rained roses for Liverpool's princess: Mourners...
Italian real-life 'Christian Grey' millionaire property...
Stockbroker, 41, stabbed himself to death in the shower...

Share this article
Share

The so-called Mafia Capital probe launched in December has seen dozens of politicians and politicians arrested amid allegations that organised crime has moved outside its southern bastions and infested Italy's capital.

Prime Minister Matteo Renzi's government has launched an investigation and Rosy Bindi, a member of Renzi's Democratic Party (PD) and president of parliament's anti-mafia committee, said the funeral was 'yet another wound for Rome and humiliated all Italians'.

She said that it was ‘alarming’ that a funeral for someone purportedly caught up in the mob could be ‘transformed into an ostentatious show of mafia power’.

more videos

1
2
3

Watch video

Girl pops giant six-year-old pimple with disgusting results
Watch video

Dramatic footage shows aftermath of French train attack
Watch video

F-35A test fires 25mm 181 rounds gun at full capacity
Watch video

Cliff Richard pays tribute to Cilla and sings Oh Faithful One
Watch video

'They took my floatie!' Bear family trash swimming pool
Watch video

Paul O'Grady gives brilliant eulogy at Cilla Black's funeral
Watch video

Ghostly apparition moves around an Australian pub (related)
Watch video

Shocking moment naked pillion passenger rides through the streets
Watch video

'It's not the armpit but it's close' James Corden on Sidcup
Watch video

Suspect attacked in COURT by man he is accused of stabbing
Watch video

Baby meets Bambi in adorable video with a young deer
Watch video

Bear hunts down men who plotted sex attack on trapped animal

Hollywood-style event: Pallbearers carry the coffin of Casamonica next to a horse-drawn carriage during the funeral ceremony in Rome

Hollywood-style event: Pallbearers carry the coffin of Casamonica next to a horse-drawn carriage during the funeral ceremony in Rome
Tribute: Flowers are thrown in front of the San Giovanni Bosco church on the outskirts of Rome during Casamonica's funeral yesterday

Tribute: Flowers are thrown in front of the San Giovanni Bosco church on the outskirts of Rome during Casamonica's funeral yesterday
City landmarks: One banner read ‘King of Rome’, featuring Casamonica's image, the Colosseum and St Peter's Basilica

City landmarks: One banner read ‘King of Rome’, featuring Casamonica's image, the Colosseum and St Peter's Basilica
Coachman: Six black horses were seen pulling an antique, black-and-gold carriage to a stop in front of the church in Rome yesterday

Coachman: Six black horses were seen pulling an antique, black-and-gold carriage to a stop in front of the church in Rome yesterday
Huge wheels: An elderly woman stands by a horse-drawn carriage, during the funeral ceremony of purported mafia boss Casamonica

Huge wheels: An elderly woman stands by a horse-drawn carriage, during the funeral ceremony of purported mafia boss Casamonica

It was proof that the mafia had firmly infiltrated Rome, she added, calling for a redoubling of efforts to rout it from public administration.

Interior Minister Angelino Alfano asked for a report from city officials to see whether the 'funeral show', as it was dubbed by Italian media, had broken any laws.

Rome's PD Mayor Ignazio Marino, already under pressure over the Mafia Capital scandals and local transport disruptions, said it was 'intolerable that funerals should be turned into a message of the living to launch mafiosi messages'.

Renato Brunetta, lower house speaker for Silvio Berlusconi's Forza Italia party, said Marino should resign and Alfano must explain to parliament how 'an obscene chain of silence and incompetence' had allowed the funeral to go ahead.

Police conceded that Casamonica was ‘on the margins’ of organised crime and had not emerged as a suspect in recent mafia investigations.

The priest who celebrated the Mass, meanwhile, defended himself. The Reverend Giancarlo Manieri said he had no idea what was going on outside the church, that he did his job by celebrating a sober funeral of a practicing Catholic, and that he received no prohibition from doing so from his superiors.

Asked by Sky TG24 if he would do it all over again, Manieri said: 'Probably, yes. I do my job. It's not up to me to block a funeral.'

Caused fury: Mayor Ignazio Marino called Rome's prefect demanding to know how such a scene could have taken place

Caused fury: Mayor Ignazio Marino called Rome's prefect demanding to know how such a scene could have taken place
Watching on: Mourners are seen through an horse-drawn carriage containing the coffin of Casamonica during the funeral ceremony

Watching on: Mourners are seen through an horse-drawn carriage containing the coffin of Casamonica during the funeral ceremony
Widely broadcast: Politicians expressed outrage at the scene, which played out on TV news reports all afternoon and evening

Widely broadcast: Politicians expressed outrage at the scene, which played out on TV news reports all afternoon and evening
Mourners: Rome's mayor said it was ‘intolerable that funerals are used by the living to send mafia messages'

Mourners: Rome's mayor said it was ‘intolerable that funerals are used by the living to send mafia messages'
Applause: The Hollywood-style funeral yesterday came with a horse-drawn carriage, flower petals and theme music from The Godfather

Applause: The Hollywood-style funeral yesterday came with a horse-drawn carriage, flower petals and theme music from The Godfather

Rev. Manieri added that as soon as church officials saw the posters praising Casamonica affixed to the church they took them down.

The civil aviation authority ENAC said it was suspending the licence of the pilot as a precaution, given that single-engine helicopters are prohibited from flying over the capital.
An ostentatious show of mafia power
Rosy Bindi, anti-mafia commission

ENAC said the helicopter also flew below the 1,000-foot (330-meter) limit and violated regulations by tossing out objects without authorisation.

Yesterday, several commentators noted the irony that a reported mob boss was allowed an elaborate funeral at the church.

It comes after the Archdiocese of Rome refused to allow a funeral at the same church in 2006 for Piergiorgio Welby, then the symbol of Italy's right-to-die movement.

Mr Welby, who had muscular dystrophy and was unable to eat, speak or breathe on his own, got his wish to die in December 2006 when a doctor disconnected his respirator.

His case split the overwhelmingly Catholic nation but the local church defended its decision to deny him a Catholic funeral, arguing that allowing it would have legitimised attitudes contrary to God's law.
Driving: The parish priest said he had no control over what happened outside the church in the outskirts of Rome

Driving: The parish priest said he had no control over what happened outside the church in the outskirts of Rome
Horses: Police said Casamonica was ‘on the margins’ of organised crime and had not emerged as a suspect in recent mafia probes

Horses: Police said Casamonica was ‘on the margins’ of organised crime and had not emerged as a suspect in recent mafia probes
Controversy: The funeral came just a day after a judge a start date for the trial of 59 people charged in a spiralling mafia probe

Controversy: The funeral came just a day after a judge a start date for the trial of 59 people charged in a spiralling mafia probe
In Rome: People attend the funeral procession of Casamonica, outside the entrance of the San Giovanni Bosco church

In Rome: People attend the funeral procession of Casamonica, outside the entrance of the San Giovanni Bosco church
 
Top