New interceptions could reopen the investigation into the massacres of '92-'93 in which the judges Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino lost their lives, and re-involve the former premier Silvio Berlusconi. "Berlusca asked me for this courtesy... that's why it was the urgency...", whispers Giuseppe Graviano, the boss of the massacres, to his time-of-air companion in a conversation filmed by hidden cameras and recovered by the Palermo prosecutor's office.
“In 92 he already wanted to get off – continues the interception – he wanted everything, and he was disturbed, because it was… acchianavu (I went up, ed)… in… with that…”. The conversation with the boss Graviano is dated 10 April 2016. "He wanted to get off, but at that time there were the old people, he told me: it would take a good thing"": according to the Palermo prosecutor's office, Graviano seems to want to attribute to Berlusconi the role of instigator of the massacres of 1992-1993. Here because the minutes have already been sent, through the national anti-mafia directorate, to the prosecutors of Caltanissetta and Florence, who deal with the investigation of the mafia bomb season.
In fact, this morning the prosecutors Nino Di Matteo, Roberto Tartaglia, Francesco Del Bene and Vittorio Teresi deposited 5000 pages of wiretaps made by the Dia operations center in Palermo at the hearing. There is one mystery after another in the new chapter of the Negotiation process, which among the defendants sees Marcello Dell'Utri, Berlusconi's right-hand man, currently detained to serve a seven-year sentence for external competition in mafia association. Graviano explains why the bombs suddenly ended in 1993: "They didn't want the massacres anymore... the mountain told me, no... it's too much". Who is the mountain? Then he reveals what they would have offered him, it is not clear who: "They offered us a passport and 50 million". And, again, he boasts of having conceived his son in prison, in 1996: "My wife and I slept in a cell together".