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Brit Mafia boss dubbed the ‘Don on the Don’ arrested in Italy over plot


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A BRITISH restaurateur revealed as a member of the mafia is back behind bars over allegations involving guns and threats to kill prosecutors.

Aberdeen businessman Antonio La Torre - dubbed the ‘Don on the Don’ - is being held on remand in Italy after a series of high-profile police raids.

The 62-year-old moved to Scotland in 1984, allegedly to set up a money laundering operation for the notorious crime syndicate.

La Torre was arrested in 2005 and jailed in Italy for extortion and racketeering before being freed in 2014.

He is the elder brother of Augusto La Torre, 55, who has admitted more than 40 murders and is believed to be a kingpin in the Naples-based Camorra mob.

Officers now say they have evidence that La Torre and Augusto threatened to murder two anti-mafia prosecutors.

The plot is said to have been drawn up in prison, where Augusto, 55, is serving 22 years for murder and extortion.

The alleged targets - reportedly discussed in intercepted calls from a high-security jail in Piedmont - are said to be a magistrate and his deputy.

Antonio was arrested in the seaside town of Mondragone, north of Naples and the regional police chief told the Sunday Post he was now on remand “and will be processed in the next few months”.

La Torre lived in Aberdeen for two decades and owned two popular restaurants called Pavarotti’s and Sorrento.

However, he was found to have been running a money-laundering operation, and prosecutors were able to show “he was able to force businessmen thousands of miles away to pay protection money”.

His organisation began to crumble in 2004 when an Italian court jailed him in his absence for crimes including racketeering, extortion, robbery and the production of counterfeit money.

He was arrested again along with three other men in a series of police raids and is being investigated for the illegal possession of firearms, attempted extortion, attempted robbery, and involvement in the mafia. La Torre denies the charges.

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