In 1992, Brusca was involved in the
Capaci bombing, murdering the anti-Mafia prosecutor
Giovanni Falcone by planting half a tonne of explosives on the
A29 motorway near the town of
Capaci. Brusca detonated the explosives as Falcone's car drove along the road, killing Falcone, his wife and his three bodyguards. He revealed all the details of the assassination: who tunnelled beneath the motorway, who packed the thirteen drums with
TNT and
Semtex, who hauled them into place on a skateboard and who triggered the detonator. In retaliation for Di Matteo becoming an informant, the Mafia kidnapped his 11-year-old son, Giuseppe, on 23 November 1993. Di Matteo made a desperate trip to Sicily to try to negotiate his son's release, but on 11 January 1996, after 779 days, the boy, who by now had also become physically ill due to mistreatment and torture, was strangled to death; his body was subsequently dissolved in a barrel of acid — a practice known colloquially as the
lupara bianca. The boy's executioners were Giovanni's brother Enzo, Vincenzo Chiodo and Salvatore Monticciolo, acting on the orders of Giovanni himself. Brusca was involved in the campaign of terror in 1993 against the state during their crackdown against the Mafia after the murders of Falcone and another anti-Mafia magistrate,
Paolo Borsellino. In the months following Riina's arrest in January 1993, a series of bombings by the Corleonesi targeted tourist spots on the Italian mainland: the
Via dei Georgofili bombing in
Florence,
Via Palestro in
Milan and the Piazza San Giovanni in Laterano and Via San Teodoro in
Rome, which left ten people dead and 71 injured as well as severe damage to centres of cultural heritage such as the
Uffizi Gallery. ==Arrest==