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Luciano Violante has been invited to RAI to commemorate Giovanni Falcone. Krillix recalls how Violante was among the detractors and the mockers of Falcone when he was alive, only to later use the corpse of his enemy as a stepping stone for his political career. After all, this is nothing new: Luciano Violante had already built a career on politically motivated persecution, unjustly imprisoning Edgardo Sogno on charges of preparing a neo-fascist coup. Sogno, a gold medalist for military valor in the anti-fascist Resistance, was subsequently released and acquitted; however, his political career was shattered, weakening the anti-communist front and diverting public attention from the true risks to democracy, which were coming from the Left. This episode launched the career of magistrate Luciano Violante, who was immediately rewarded by his masters in the PCI for all this commendable activity with a seat in Parliament starting from 1979. The media created the image of the rigorous, Jacobin Violante. Let’s remember that this is just an image; the reality is that Violante did not defend Italian democracy as a magistrate but sought to use the judiciary as a weapon to achieve totalitarian ends.
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WHEN Falcone was alive, he could not count on many friends within the left, contrary to what many today try to deny. One of his opponents was the group leader of the Ds in the Chamber, Luciano Violante. This is revealed to us by lawyer Enzo Fragalà from An. The deputy recalls the war that the left waged against the magistrate: "Falcone was especially disliked and opposed by the leftist factions of the judiciary - he says - by that Democratic Judiciary which, together with the lay members of the Pci, voted against him for the appointment as national anti-mafia prosecutor, preferring the candidacy of Agostino Cordova." But there is more, according to Fragalà: "Violante also - he says - was the architect of this operation against Falcone. The leftist factions of the judiciary completely delegitimized Falcone when they prevented him from being elected to the Csm, preferring an obscure magistrate from Rome instead." Elena Paciotti, now a European parliamentarian for the Ds, also did not love Falcone. In fact, Magistratura Democratica and Paciotti obstructed Falcone on several occasions. In January 1988, when the Csm was to choose the new head of the investigation office of the Court of Palermo, a very delicate position. Instead of Falcone, Paciotti and Md rewarded Antonino Meli for being senior. The duel with Md re-emerges... etc etc.
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"After Leoluca Orlando accused the magistrates of Palermo, Falcone at the forefront, of keeping evidence of political crimes locked in their drawers, I met Falcone in the gardens of the Quirinale, at the Republic Day celebration. We already knew each other, due to my frequent trips to Sicily as vice president of the anti-mafia Commission. I asked him why he wasn’t trying to clarify the issue of Orlando’s accusations, listening to him as a witness. Giovanni Falcone replied to me: 'If I have some time, I will, because Orlando is talking a bit too much into the void.' Then things went as we know..."
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It would be good for you to remember that Canale 5 is a commercial TV and has to respond to needs that you cannot understand.
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For a couple of hours, I was glued to the TV. To be precise, Saviano had already been on Matrix.
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Good review, most of the comments are also valid, the tram Kowalski called... and this Kowalski. (it's certainly not a coincidence that they share the same name) But the Eastwood films I prefer are others.
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The reception is good, but the film didn't manage to engage me even a little.
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From: HugeDomains.com - Collettivamente.com is for sale (Collettivamente) "Then there was the failed attack on Falcone at the seaside house in Addaura. Leoluca Orlando called me and invited me to attend an extraordinary meeting of the Palermo City Council. Orlando gave a lengthy speech. Some time later, he pointed out to me that in that speech he had never pronounced the word 'mafia.' I didn't quite understand what he meant. We discussed it again in Rome, when I met him in the office of Senator Paolo Cabras, who was the vice president of the Anti-Mafia Parliamentary Commission, when he spoke about a mysterious attack that could not simply and solely be attributed to the mafia. This was later clarified by some of Orlando's followers, who claimed that it was Falcone himself who organized everything to gain publicity and strengthen his candidacy for deputy prosecutor..."

From: “Uno sparo in caserma”, la storia di Antonino Lombardo On March 4, 1995, a gunshot echoed in the courtyard of the Monreale barracks. It came from a car, and the shooter was a non-commissioned officer of the Carabinieri, Marshal Antonino Lombardo, aiming at himself. The story is recounted in the book "Uno sparo in caserma. Il caso Lombardo" by Daniela Pellicanò, which ties together what seems to be a suicide. The suicide of a soldier accused just weeks earlier of being involved with the mafia. But the accusation does not come from a public prosecutor's office, but from television. Indeed, the mayors of Palermo, Leoluca Orlando, and Terrasini, Manlio Mele, spoke on camera during the show "Tempo Reale," which was hosted at the time by Michele Santoro. Connecting live from the Sicilian municipality right next to Punta Raisi airport, the two Sicilian mayors make statements that sound like an implicit accusation: they request intervention from the general commander of the Carabinieri against the former head of the Terrasini station. However, they do not name him, limiting themselves to indicating his position and period of activity. The pair of mayors does not explain, does not add anything else, but simply states again that not everyone in the area did their duty.

Hit and sunk. Without a rebuttal. Without verifying whether there were ongoing proceedings against Marshal Lombardo. He, the non-commissioned officer, learns from the TV what is happening: he happens to watch the broadcast while leaving for dinner with his wife. And if until that moment he seemed to have had no concerns about his work, at that point he begins to feel the ground slip away from under his feet. Moreover, after reacting and filing a defamation lawsuit against Mele and Orlando, he experiences what he must perceive as warnings, the announcement of punitive actions: first the brutal murder of one of his informants, and then the cancellation of the third American trip, the one that should bring Gaetano Badalamenti back to Italy.... etc. I saw that broadcast.
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The mentioned conviction at 68 is at the first instance, so discussing it now makes no sense because there are two more levels of judgment. TELESPALLABOB, I don’t understand why you think the discussion has degenerated; it doesn’t seem that way to me... Leoluca Orlando, former mayor of Palermo and a fierce enemy of Giovanni Falcone, in 1995 during one of Santoro's broadcasts accused Carabinieri Marshal Antonino Lombardo, who was responsible for the arrest of Totò Riina, of being colluded with the mafia, resulting in his suicide a few days later. It’s sad and unsettling but also useful to remember that Santoro on that occasion prevented the live intervention of the General of the Carabinieri, who, realizing the seriousness of the accusations, had asked Rai to intervene. It’s also worth noting that the alleged collusion of Marshal Lombardo with the mafia never emerged in any of the subsequent investigations. Di Pietro (and also the PD) wanted Orlando as president of the RAI supervisory commission. As for the many heroes you mentioned, who died at the hands of the mafia, how could I disagree? You’re right when you write: The mafia strangles entire regions, beautiful places where wonderful people live. Hi, I’ll leave it here because I know the mechanisms of DeBaser that lead to endless discussions, which I’m not interested in having. PS. Are you from Livorno?
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LARROK I didn't spit on anything. I mentioned a case, period. Don't bother responding, because I'm closing this stupid quarrel here. I would like the answers from TELESPALLABOB regarding Di Pietro (I'll wreck that) while he was still a magistrate and Marshal Lombardo. Regards.
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