According to the
pentito Antonino Giuffrè the Graviano brothers were the intermediaries between Cosa Nostra and prime minister
Silvio Berlusconi. Cosa Nostra decided to back Berlusconi's
Forza Italia party from its foundation in 1993, in exchange for help in resolving the mafia's judicial problems. The mafia turned to Forza Italia when its traditional contacts in the discredited
Christian Democrat party proved unable to protect its members from the rigours of the law. According to Giuffrè, the Gravianos dealt directly with Berlusconi through the businessman
Gianni Letta, in September or October 1993. The alleged pact fell apart in 2002. Cosa Nostra had achieved nothing. There were no revisions of Mafia trials, no changes in the law of asset seizures and no changes in the harsh
article 41-bis prison regime.
Assertions of Gaspare Spatuzza One of Graviano's subordinates
Gaspare Spatuzza, who turned pentito in 2008, has confirmed Giuffrè's statements. Spatuzza testified that Graviano had told him in 1994 that future prime minister
Silvio Berlusconi was bargaining with the Mafia, concerning a political-electoral agreement between Cosa Nostra and Berlusconi’s party
Forza Italia. Spatuzza said Graviano disclosed the information to him during a conversation in a bar Graviano owned in the upscale Via Veneto district of the Italian capital Rome. Berlusconi’s right-hand man
Marcello Dell'Utri was the intermediary, according to Spatuzza. Dell'Utri has dismissed Spatuzza's allegations as "nonsense". On 4 December 2009, Spatuzza repeated his accusations in court at the appeal hearing against Dell’Utri, sentenced to 9 years in 2004, for collusion with the Mafia. He testified: "Graviano told me the name of Berlusconi and said that thanks to him and the man from our home town [an apparent reference to Dell' Utri] we have the country in our hands." Dell'Utri told the court that neither he nor Berlusconi had Mafia connections. On 11 December 2009, Filippo Graviano denied the assertions of Spatuzza before the court of Palermo. He said that he never had met Dell'Utri directly or indirectly. In 2012, Giuseppe Graviano was one of five that were sentenced to life imprisonment for his role in the murder of
Giuseppe Di Matteo. ==References==