Berlusconi says biased courts are making false charges to bring down the 19-month-old government — his third since 1994 — and attack his Mediaset business empire.
Stripped of immunity from prosecution, the prime minister faced legal difficulties on two fronts on Friday, with an ally appealing against conviction on Mafia charges and an unrelated corruption case where he is accused of bribing a British lawyer.
Mafia “pentito”, or mobster-turned-witness, Gaspare Spatuzza told a court in Turin that a Mafia clan leader later jailed for the attacks had named Berlusconi, who had not entered politics at the time, in connection with the bombings.
He recounted a meeting with clan boss Giuseppe Graviano — later given multiple life sentences along with his brother for the bombings in Rome, Milan and Florence — in a cafe on Rome’s Via Veneto in early 1994, after the deadly bombing campaign.
“Graviano told me we had obtained everything, thanks to the seriousness of the people who’d helped with our affair … he mentioned two names, he called Berlusconi ‘the man from Channel 5’,” said Spatuzza, referring to a Mediaset television channel.
He quoted Graviano as saying: “We have everything thanks to the seriousness of these people, specifically Berlusconi … they put the country in our hands.”
Berlusconi is not formally linked to the case, part of an appeal by a political and business associate. He has dismissed earlier evidence from Spatuzza to prosecutors as “unfounded”.
His allies questioned the credibility of Spatuzza, who told the court he was convicted of six bomb attacks and 40 homicides but became religious in prison and, facing “a choice between God and the Cosa Nostra”, chose to cooperate and tell the truth.
“It is completely logical the Mafia would use its members to make statements against the prime minister of a government that has acted in a determined and concrete way against organised crime,” said his spokesman Paolo Bonaiuti after Spatuzza spoke.
“Our government has arrested eight Mafiosi a day. It has arrested 15 of the 30 most wanted fugitives. It has confiscated an average of 8 million euros from the mafia a day for a total of 5.6 billion euros,” said Bonaiuti in a statement.
Spatuzza spoke in open court for the first time as part of an appeal by pro-Berlusconi senator Marcello Dell’Utri against his conviction for association with the Mafia. He spoke behind a screen in a maximum-security courtroom packed with reporters.
The court adjourned until Dec. 11 when it meets in Sicily to hear evidence from the Graviano brothers, once bosses of the Brancaccio quarter of Palermo, by video conference from jail.
“It’s all false. And of course Berlusconi is completely calm about it too. He’s more afraid of his wife than Spatuzza,” joked Dell’Utri referring to Berlusconi’s current divorce proceedings. The senator is fighting against a nine-year jail term.
Berlusconi has threatened to sue newspapers that reported he was being investigated and that the mob had a stake in his business. A Florence court that has reopened a probe into the bomb attacks has said that Berlusconi is not being investigated.
The prime minister said last weekend: “If there’s a person who by nature, sensitivity, mentality, background, culture and political effort is very far from the Mafia, it is me.”