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Ex-Folgore Piselli: I transported explosives. Theoretically it could be that of the massacres
Antimafia Duemila

Ex-Folgore Piselli: I transported explosives. Theoretically it could be that of the massacres

Antimafia DuemilaItaly2026declassified
#stragi#servizi segreti#esplosivo#mafia#terrorismo#reportage#investigation#declassified

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Ex-Folgore Piselli: I transported explosives. Theoretically it could be that of the massacres

Ex-Folgore Piselli: I transported explosives. Theoretically it could be that of the massacres

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Ex-Folgore Piselli: I transported explosives. Theoretically it could be that of the massacres

Fanpage's interview with the former soldier considered close to the American military structures and intelligence services

Have you ever participated in an operational way in the massacres? “Negative, absolutely.” You transported explosives three times: once in Palermo, the second in Reggio Calabria and the third in Rome, in '89, '92, '93 respectively. Was it the same explosive used in the massacres? “Theoretically it could also be.” This is Fabio Piselli: a former Folgore paratrooper, he was born in Livorno in the 1960s; at 16 he enlisted in the Armed Forces. On March 11, 1988, Piselli was arrested on an arrest warrant for robbery and illegal possession of weapons. Despite his innocence, he spent 77 days in prison. According to Piselli it was not a mistake. There is a specific desire to hit him, linked to a meeting in November 1986 between military colleagues in the Livorno-Bologna-Verona axis. From November 1986, he began reporting to the competent authorities - anti-mafia and anti-terrorism - what he knew. In November 1989, Piselli enlisted in the Foreign Legion. In Sicily, he made contact with Vincenzo Li Causi, a Folgore paratrooper, services man in charge of managing stay-behind operational needs, and head of the Scorpio Center in Trapani. Piselli took part in an exercise to recover explosive material 7-8 miles from the coast. Shortly thereafter, Li Causi's death prompted him to cut off all contact. Today he lives in France with his family. This and many other things were discussed in depth during Fanpage's Confidential broadcast: at the table with Fabio were the host Francesco Piccinini, the forensic criminologist Federico Carbone and the former magistrate Giovanni Spinosa.

Fabio Piselli has been speaking since 1986; no conviction for slander, defamation, misdirection, false information, false declarations. Some statements, say the hosts of Fanpage, have already been confirmed; for others, however, we will have to wait for the judiciary. The prosecutor's office will always decide to investigate further. According to the stories, it was he who spoke, again in the 1980s, about the Farfalla protocol and the presence of subjects presumably attributable to intelligence within the prison. The former Folgore soldier did not say anything to Fanpage that had not already "been made known to the competent authorities at the time, both in the field of anti-mafia and anti-terrorism". However, there was something left to say, so much so that the Caltanissetta prosecutor's office summoned him on Monday to report what he was unable to declare publicly. The former paratrooper said he had transported explosives and that there were other subjects, three to be precise, whose identity is not known. The criminologist Carbone asked if there had been anyone from the seventh division of Sismi. “An important thing - replied Piselli - when we talk about a cellular structure” the secrecy constraint is the fragmentation of the information: that is, an operator knows what to do up to a certain point; beyond that point another subject intervenes without knowing who operated before him. Suspicion could arise from this thesis: in a clip of a previous interview Piselli spoke of his "fear in having participated in a series of movements and activities" which could "have in some way supported those who supported the mafia massacres". In '92, after the Capaci massacre, "they gave the 'Grepole', the operators, if I remember correctly, Col Moschini the task of reconstructing what happened to Falcone. That put me in a position to say: 'this is our stuff'". “That is the source of support for the massacres and I was in that area too”.

We would like to remind you that there is no confirmation from the judiciary yet and before assigning any responsibility it is necessary to follow the entire procedural process. The former soldier then expanded the concept: "When we talk about the explosives of the massacres, we are talking about subjects who do not have explosives skills", at most there are "subjects who are trained in the handling, mixing and composition of explosive devices by taking explosives, as a repentant will later say who will be made reliable, from the sea", such as "TNT which is then associated with other explosive material, but then there is a reinforcer which is the T4, if I remember correctly, the RDX, which is not purely military, but is also used commercially, is used a lot by the military and therefore requires completely different skills from simply mixing or composing a bomb". However, Piselli suspects that "explosive material" was placed "in the hands of individuals who gravitate in the Trapani area, the so-called Scorpio center (led by Li Causi, ed.)". Li Causi himself, according to Piselli's story, "was always very angry" because he didn't understand who they were working for. “Because he was the first to say that the situation in Trapani was anomalous”. In other words: how did these activities taking place at the Scorpio center serve to counter a hypothetical Soviet invasion? Perhaps Li Causi, after he had begun to intuit something, might have cultivated the idea of ​​speaking to the judiciary? Possible. Piselli also hypothesizes that the head of the Scorpio Center would have wanted to speak directly with Giovanni Falcone. Maybe that's also why he was killed?

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