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How Italian police captured fugitive mafia boss Matteo Messina Denaro

Matteo Messina Denaro being transported in a van after his arrest in Sicily yesterday (Pic: Italian police)
Matteo Messina Denaro being transported in a van after his arrest in Sicily yesterday (Pic: Italian police)

Betrayed by his cancer, Italy's most wanted fugitive, Sicilian mobster Matteo Messina Denaro, has been caught after 30 years on the run.

Here's how the mafia hunters tightened the net.

Wiretaps

Investigators looking for mass murderer Messina Denaro had been searching the Sicilian countryside for possible hideouts for years, arresting those believed to be protecting him and slowly reducing the circle of people he could trust.

Members of his family and his friends were then heard on wiretapped conversations discussing the medical problems of an unnamed person who suffered from cancer, as well as eye problems.

Police issued this image of Matteo Messina Denaro

Detectives were sure they were talking about Messina Denaro, 60, who was believed to have undergone an eye operation in the 1990s.

"We had unequivocal information that the fugitive had health problems ... that he was attending a health facility in order to treat his illness," special operations commander Pasquale Angelosanto told a press conference.

"So we worked to identify ... those who had access to treatment for the suspected pathologies," he said.

National database

Investigators knew Messina Denaro would be going under a false identity, but they used a national health system database to search for male patients of the right age and medical history.

"We were narrowing down the list, ticking people off, until we had only a few individuals left," Mr Angelosanto said.

"A few days ago we identified someone who had booked a 'specialist visit' for Monday" at the Maddalena health facility in Palermo.

The man had booked in as Andrea Bonafede, the nephew of a close friend of Messina Denaro's father, Italian media reported.

La Maddalena private clinic where Matteo Messina Denaro was arrested

Mr Bonafede's medical record showed he had been to an ophthalmologist for problems with his left eye, the Open online newspaper said.

He had also undergone two operations for colon cancer, one in 2020 and another in 2022, it said.

But when detectives dug further, they found Mr Bonafede appeared to have been in two places at once.

Council surveillance footage from his hometown of Campobello di Mazara on the date in question in 2022 showed the real Mr Bonafede out walking the dog at the moment he was allegedly under the knife.

Special ops

When the man going by the name of Mr Bonafede booked an appointment for Monday at the upscale Palermo clinic, police readied a task force of 150 special operatives to capture him.

Footage released by police later showed him arriving with his face barely visible underneath a hat, Covid-19 mask and tinted glasses.

Once he had checked in at the clinic they locked down the surrounding area and began checking the identity of everyone present.

Italian police address the media after the arrest

Unaware of the closing net, the so-called Mr Bonafede, dressed in his brown leather jacket with a fleece lining, lined up for the centre's obligatory Covid-19 nose swab, before heading back outside, perhaps to get a coffee, the Corriere della Sera said.

He likely realised then what was going on.

When asked "who are you?" by a law enforcement officer, the Cosa Nostra boss replied: "You know who I am. Matteo Messina Denaro".

The doctor

Palermo's chief prosecutor Paolo Guido said Messina Denaro may have been undergoing treatment for serious illnesses, but he "appeared to be in good health. He didn't look fragile or in difficulty to us".

He may thank his doctor Alfonso Tumbarello, who is now being investigated by police.

He had been treating Messina Denaro as Mr Bonafede, despite having been the real Mr Bonafede's doctor for years, according to the Messaggero daily.

Police are also questioning others at the clinic, from those who shared chemotherapy sessions with Messina Denaro to a nurse who snapped a selfie with him, media reported.

Mr Guido said the clinic was not itself under suspicion, adding that it was the mobster's health that was his undoing.

"It was what forced him to come out into the open," the prosecutor said.

What did police find in his hideout?

Perfumes, designer clothes and sex pills were found in an apartment that investigators believe was the last hideout of Messina Denaro, judicial sources said.

The apartment is in an a modest building near the centre of Campobello di Mazara, a town in the Western Sicilian province of Trapani, just a few kilometres from Messina Denaro's home town of Castelvetrano.

Investigators found clothes, shoes, a well-stocked fridge and restaurant receipts there, judicial sources said. They also found potency pills.

"He had a regular life, he went to the supermarket," said magistrate Paolo Guido, one of the officials investigating Messina Denaro.

The San Lorenzo Carabinieri Station where Matteo Messina Denaro was brought to after his arrest

Messina Denaro is being held in the central Italian city of L'Aquila, the Palermo prosecutor said. He was transferred from Sicily on the day of his arrest.

Friendly neighbour

Neighbours described him as a friendly person.

"I live on the first floor of the building, sometimes I have seen this person, greeted him and nothing else. He responded in a cordial manner," Rosario Cognata told Italian media.

Messina Denaro was known for his taste for luxury goods, including designer clothes and expensive sunglasses. Police said he was wearing a watch worth €35,000 when he was arrested.

He is believed to have lived in the apartment for the past year, judicial sources said, but police are still searching for other places where he might have spent time.

Investigators believe Messina Denaro was driven yesterday to Palermo's La Maddalena hospital from Campobello di Mazara to be treated for cancer.

The town was home to his alleged aide Giovanni Luppino, who was arrested with him.

Nicknamed "'U Siccu" (The Skinny One), Messina Denaro picked up 20 life prison terms in trials held in absentia for his role in an array of mob murders.

Those included the bomb attacks that killed anti-mafia prosecutors Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino in 1992.

Despite his illness, prosecutors said Messina Denaro was fit enough to serve time in prison where he will carry on with his cancer treatment.