Camorra, Moccia clan: boss's directives even from prison to subordinates and entrepreneurs
The leaders of the Moccia Camorra clan led the criminal organization and gave orders to subordinates and entrepreneurs even from prison or from Rome, where two of the leaders had long since moved.
This is what emerged from the investigations coordinated by the District Anti-Mafia Directorate of Naples and culminated in the execution of an order against 57 suspects by the Carabinieri of the ROS and the financiers of the GICO of Naples.
The investigation has shed light on the structure of the Moccia clan, organized on different levels of command and territorial competence, of which the brothers Angelo, Luigi and Antonio Moccia and their brother-in-law Filippo Iazzetta are believed to be the leaders; these, even from prison and although Angelo and Luigi had long since moved to Rome, would have conveyed orders to the affiliates, also promoting when necessary the commission of crimes by the various territorial subgroups, constituting the military wing of the clan, both by entrepreneurs active in the sector of the recovery of used animal-vegetable oils of food type and slaughterhouse waste, as well as in large railway and high-speed contracts, to whom they would have given directives and provided large supplies deriving from the illicit accumulation, over time, of large amounts of capital.
Article published on 20 April 2022 - 10:45