Italian mafia boss Rocco Morabito has fled prison in the Uruguayan capital Montevideo, where he was awaiting extradition to Italy, the interior ministry announced yesterday.
Morabito and three other inmates “escaped through a hole in the roof of the building” late Sunday and robbed the occupants of a nearby farmhouse, the ministry said in a statement.
The statement said the 52-year-old Morabito — a top ‘Ndrangheta figure arrested in Uruguay in 2017 after decades on the run — was awaiting extradition for “international drug trafficking”.
Italy’s Interior Minister Matteo Salvini reacted angrily to the “disconcerting and serious” news.
“I make two commitments, first to shed full light on how he escaped, asking for an immediate explanation from the Montevideo government. Then we will continue the hunt for Morabito, wherever he is.”
Long-time fugitive Morabito — dubbed “the king of cocaine — was one of Italy’s most-wanted men when he was arrested in a downtown Montevideo hotel.
His lawyer told reporters at the time he was staying there while looking for a new apartment after splitting from his wife.
Registering for new accommodation would have helped expose Morabito, who had been on the run for 23 years.
He had been living since 2004 in Punta del Este, a playground for South America’s rich about 90 minutes drive northeast of Montevideo.
He eventually settled in a country estate with a Tuscan-style farmhouse some 40kms from Punta del Este.
Officials said at the time that he had acquired Uruguayan residence after entering the country with a false Brazilian passport in the name of Francisco Capeletto.
Morabito, a capo with the Calabrian ‘Ndrangheta, Italy’s most feared organised crime gang, was originally arrested on charges of falsifying identity papers, but has been awaiting extradition on the more serious charges since September 2017.
The three other men who escaped with Morabito were awaiting extradition to Brazil and Argentina, including one on charges of homicide.
Morabito arrived in trendy Milan from his hometown of Africo in Italy’s poor southern region of Calabria at the age of 23, and quickly carved out a reputation as the city’s “king of cocaine.”
Nicknamed ‘U Tamunga’ in reference to a German military vehicle, the Dkw Munga, the young Morabito became a charismatic figure in Milan who frequented bars and parties, according to Italian press reports.
He quickly came to the attention of Italian anti-Mafia investigators and they regularly tracked him delivering suitcases filled with millions of lira to Colombian drug traffickers in a Milan piazza.
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