Naples, inside the invisible clan: the new Amato-Pagano clan.
The testimonies of informants reveal the strained relationships between families, the growing role of women, and the silent transformation of the Melito cartel. The clan reorganizes amidst underground feuds and new alliances in international drug trafficking.
Naples - Recent investigations by the District Anti-Mafia Directorate have reconstructed the business network that, from Melito to Dubai, ensured the Amato-Pagano clan's leading role in the European cocaine market.
Imperiale's collaboration and the recent statements of the new repentants have given a name and a face to the hidden power of the Amato-Paganos.
But, as an investigator writes in one of the: "The Amato-Paganos never die, we just change address."
The arrest of Antonio Pompilio, known as 'o Cafone, marked the end of an era for the Amato-Pagano clan.
According to all his collaborators, he was the man who had held the structure in place during the most difficult years, when the bugs in the apartments of Melito and Mugnano had revealed too much, and the DIA was now inside the clan's secret rooms.
But power, in the Amato galaxy, does not disperse: it moves, sheds its skin, crosses borders and generations.
Deborah's Shadow
In the web of stories told by the informants, Amato Debora remains a central figure. Not just Mimmo's wife, but his effective regent: a woman capable of commanding attention and keeping men raised on violence in check.
"She was the one who made the decisions," they say, "together with her husband. Everyone feared her."
After the arrest of several key figures, Debora allegedly managed contacts with Spain, controlling the flow of money and verifying family accounts. The meeting in Barcelona, in the summer of 2023, remains one of the defining moments of this phase: a negotiation within the clan's diaspora, amid suspicion and mediation, while cocaine continued to flow from the Spanish ports to the streets of Naples.
The internal cracks
But Pompilius' fear – that of being killed by his own allies – was not unfounded.
His collaborator D'Ambrosio confirms it: Cafone had become inconvenient, too powerful, too close to money and international affairs.
The Mugnano group, led by Enrico Bocchetti, did not forgive him for the revelation about the drug "company" that had allowed a few to enrich themselves outside the clan's official circuits.
Investigators speak of an economic and generational divide: on one side, the older men linked to the Amato-Raffaele line; on the other, the young affiliates who grew up on the new drug trafficking routes, more interested in contacts with foreign brokers than in the clan's rules.
The Cafone's mother and the "phantom box"
What makes the collapse of the old order more evident is an apparently marginal, but emblematic episode.
Shortly before Rosaria Pagano's arrest, repentant Sabev Tsvetan recounts, Pompilio's mother showed up to him, asking for a favor: to intercede with Pagano so that she would contact Imperiale, who had to return a sum of money – between 200 and 300 thousand euros – belonging to her son.
Rosaria Pagano's response was icy: "I don't care about the vulgar woman." A refusal that sounded like a definitive sentence, the formal break between two once-inseparable families.
A clan in transformation
The statements of collaborators – from Imperiale to Carbone, from D'Ambrosio to Sabev – now offer investigators a complete mosaic of the clan: hierarchies, money flows, drug channels, and survival strategies.
After Pompilio's arrest, the leadership fragmented. Second-tier figures alternated at the top, acting as temporary regents who controlled portions of the territory and maintained contact with foreign suppliers.
The strength of the Amato-Pagano family, however, has never been based solely on violence. It lies in its ability to regenerate, to shift its economic base to places where the state still struggles to strike: in Spain, the Netherlands, and the Emirates.
Today, investigators speak of a "new invisible dome," a fluid system in which the old names—Amato, Pagano, Liguori, Pompilio—give way to sons, brothers-in-law, and young digital brokers. A less visible clan, but still deeply embedded in the circuits of major international drug trafficking.
Choose the social channel you want to subscribe to