Naples - A coordinated "High Impact" operation has rocked the San Pietro a Patierno neighborhood, exposing a widespread system of illegal activity ranging from the illegal occupation of public buildings to the receiving of stolen luxury goods.
The intervention, which arose from a series of complaints submitted by residents, involved members of the State Police, the Carabinieri, and specialized units of the Naples Local Police (Secondigliano, Building and Heritage Protection).
Illegal accommodation and theft of utilities
The investigation focused on the illegal management of public property. Two people were charged after law enforcement discovered the occupation of municipally owned properties.
Specifically, it emerged that some basements had been radically transformed into residential units through unauthorized construction. In addition to the crime of trespassing and unauthorized construction, the individuals will be charged with aggravated theft: technicians found four unauthorized connections to the electricity grid and one to the water grid, which illegally served the occupied premises.
The treasure of recipe: high fashion shoes
The operation led to the identification of a large haul of stolen goods. Inside a van stolen from its rightful owner, the police found approximately 500 boxes containing shoes from well-known high-fashion brands. The seizure was then extended to an illegal structure built on a public lot in the same area, where another 2.000 pairs of similar shoes were stored.
The entire shipment was seized and placed in custody, while the handling of stolen goods charges is being investigated in parallel.
Restoration of decorum and traffic flow
The intervention was not limited to the buildings, but also involved the common areas and roadway, which had been severely damaged by the presence of dilapidated vehicles. To restore full usability to the entrance hall and pedestrian walkways of the building complex, the authorities removed and ordered demolition of 20 abandoned motorcycles and 30 cars.
The operation marks a key step in the plan to restore legality in the city's outskirts, targeting both petty crime linked to housing and the storage channels for counterfeit or stolen goods.
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Comments (1)
Intervention is necessary, but it seems the situation isn't changing; too many squatters are looting in municipal buildings, and stolen goods are floating around freely as if nothing had happened. Law enforcement has taken action, but in practice, everything remains as it was: no ongoing checks and little prevention. Hopefully, checks will remain constant and fines will be issued for those who make mistakes.