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January 31, 1933 - Bernardo Provenzano

He spent more than four decades as a fugitive while quietly consolidating control over the Sicilian Mafia, eventually becoming its de facto supreme authority after his predecessors fell to arrest. Where Salvatore Riina favored open warfare and spectacular violence, Provenzano preferred a lower profile — communicating through handwritten notes called pizzini and managing alliances through patience rather than spectacle. His tenure nonetheless encompassed some of the most consequential crimes in postwar Italian history, including the assassinations of the anti-Mafia prosecutors Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino. He was finally captured in 2006, having evaded authorities since 1963.

From Wikipedia

Bernardo Provenzano

Bernardo Provenzano (Italian pronunciation: [berˈnardo provenˈtsaːno]; 31 January 1933 – 13 July 2016) was an Italian mobster, capo of the Corleone Mafia family, and of the Corleonesi, an alliance of Mafia families that originated in the town of Corleone, and de facto the boss of bosses ("il capo dei capi"). His nickname was Binnu u tratturi (Sicilian for "Bernie the tractor") because, in the words of one informant, "he mows people down". Another nickname was il ragioniere ("the accountant"), due to his apparently subtle and low-key approach to running his crime empire, at least in contrast to some of his more violent predecessors.

Provenzano was part of the Corleonesi Mafia clan who backed mob boss Luciano Leggio in the ambush and murder of Michele Navarra in the late 1950s. In 1963, Provenzano became a fugitive after a failed hit. Provenzano also participated in the Viale Lazio massacre in the late 1960s. Salvatore Riina succeeded Leggio in the mid-1970s, and Provenzano became the second-in-command of the Corleonesi. Provenzano took the reins after Riina and Bagarella's arrests, but the three had already been sentenced to life in absentia in the late 1980s as part of the Maxi Trial and in the 1990s for the two high-profile bombings (the Capaci massacre and Via D'Amelio massacre) that killed prosecutors Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino.

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