Paolo Borsellino (1940-1992)
Born in a middle-class Palermo neighbourhood, la Kalsa, Borsellino obtained a
degree in law at University of Palermo, with honors, in 1962. Then, after his
father's death, he passed the judging exam in 1963. During those years, he
worked in many cities inside Sicily (Enna in 1965, Mazara del Vallo in 1967,
Monreale in 1969). After he married in 1968, he transferred to his native
Palermo in 1975 together with Rocco Chinnici, where he then started his
unfinished work to fight and defeat the growing Sicilian Mafia.
His accomplishments included the arrest of six organization members in 1980;
during the same year, one of his workmates, the Carabinieri captain Emanuele
Basile, was murdered by the Mafia. Because of that event, he was assigned police
protection.
During those years, working together with Magistrates Giovanni Falcone and Rocco
Chinnici, Borsellino continued his research about the Mafia and its links to
political and economical powers in Sicily and Italy. In 1983, Rocco Chinnici was
killed by a bomb inside his car. His place in the Antimafia Pool was taken by
Antonino Caponnetto. In 1986, Borsellino became head of the Procure of Marsala,
continuing there his personal campaign against the Mafia bosses, in the most
populated city of the province of Trapani. His links with Giovanni Falcone,
remained in Palermo, allowed him to cover the entire Western Sicily for
investigations. In 1987, after Caponnetto resigned due to illness, Borsellino
was protagonist of a great protest about the unsuccessful nomination of his
friend Giovanni Falcone as head of the Antimafia Pool.
In 1992, after five years of battling the Mafia, Borsellino was killed by a car
bomb in Via D'Amelio, Palermo, less than two months after the death of his good
friend Falcone. The bomb attack also claimed the lives of five policemen:
Agostino Catalano, Walter Cosina, Emanuela Loi, Vincenzo Li Muli, Claudio
Traina.
Paolo Borsellino today is considered as one of the most important magistrates
killed by the Sicilian Mafia during the 1980s and 1990s, and he is remembered as
one of the main symbols of the battle of the State against the Mafia. |