International Journal on Criminology Volume 2, Number 1, Spring 2014 | Page 31

Criminal State and Illicit Economy ince would range from 128,000 to 160,000 votes 32 , enough to mediate the political debate, or even hold its key. For the anti-mafia deputy prosecutor of Calabria, "the 'Ndrangheta [...] controls 20% of votes, it is sufficient to switch the majorities in our small towns" 33 . Criminal powers are thus both fought and courted by law abiding personnel and corruptible individuals. Unsurprisingly, from July 1991 to February 2008, 172 municipal councils were dissolved for operating under mafia influence 34 . The trial for "participation in a criminal association" of a key figure, from the years 1955 to 1992, seven times President of the Council (Prime Minister), Andreotti, leave limited room for speculation on the national security concern reached by organized crime penetration in Italy. The supreme court in its October 2004 ruling declared that "during the 1970s and through to the spring of 1980, Andreotti enjoyed friendly and direct relations with leading members of Cosa Nostra and had knowingly and deliberately cultivated a stable relationship with Mafiosi. […] The judgment found that Andreotti had been involved in criminal association until spring of 1980, but the crime was time-barred and insufficient proof brought him acquittal for the time after that" 35 . In other words, Andreotti was found guilty of criminal association but the expiry of the statute of limitation prevented any sentence. The ruling was translated by the Italian press in a simple acquittal. For the U.S. Department of State, "The proceeds of domestic organized crime groups (especially the Camorra, the ‘Ndrangheta, and the Mafia) operating across numerous economic sectors in Italy and abroad compose the main source of laundered funds. Numerous reports by Italian non-governmental organizations identify domestic organized crime as Italy’s largest enterprise" 36 . Japan The Japanese situation can be difficult to apprehend for western eyes. To the opposite of criminal wisdom, yakuza (or boryokudan) possess clearly identified offices, give away business cards, may grant interviews, and are the subject of fan magazines. They can compete with traditional companies in the hiring of graduates straight out of business schools. The relation between state, power, and yakuza is thus well documented 37 . Comprising roughly 79,000 persons divided among 22 groups (in 2012), they are considered to have played a key role in the decade long recession that hit Japan at the beginning of the 1990s, to the point that the period is often referred to as the "yakuza recession" 38 . 32 According to the pentito Antonino Calderone (1987) and Xavier Raufer (http://www.xavier-raufer.com). 33 Le Monde, November 7, 2005. 34 Italian Parliament, Relazione annuale della Commissione parlamentare di inchiesta sul fenomeno della criminalità organizzata mafiosa o similare 'ndrangheta', 2008, 116. 35 David Lane, Into the heart of the Mafia, 2010 (Profile books LTD), 4. 36 Department of State, International Narcotics Control Strategy Report, Vol. II, March 2013, 141. 37 David Kapan and Alec Dubro, Yakuza (du Picquier editions, 2002), Thierry Cretin, Mafia(s), Op. cit., 130– 141, Foreign Policy, "The Yakuza lobby", December 13, 2012. 38 Far Eastern Economic Review, The Yakuza Recession, January 17, 2002: "Neither Miyawaki nor any other credible commentator suggests that deflation, policy blunders, political inertia and a whole range of other factors haven't contributed to Japan's decade-long stagnation. All the same, Miyawaki, a Tokyo University Law School graduate, former spokesman for Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone and former head of the National Police 29