Imperiale was born in
Castellammare di Stabia, a seaside resort just south of
Naples, Italy. His father, Ludovico Imperiale, who died at the age of 82 on 16 July 2022, was a wealthy and well-known construction contractor of Castellammare di Stabia who built parks and buildings in the area and who served as the president and part owner of the city's football team,
S.S. Juve Stabia. In his childhood, Imperiale was the victim of an attempted kidnapping, but managed to escape and return home safely. It has always been a mystery how he managed to escape. He had an older brother who died in 1996 and bequeathed him the Rockland coffeeshop in
Amsterdam from where Imperiale began his notorious criminal career. In his coffeeshop Imperiale sold soft drugs and was involved in largescale cocaine trafficking with the Dutch drug trader Rick van de Bunt. In the 1990s he was introduced by Antonio Orefice, member of the
Moccia clan, to Elio Amato, brother of
Raffaele Amato, at the time one of the top drug traffickers of the
Di Lauro clan. During those years Imperiale began to earn millions of euros, becoming the referent of the Di Lauro's organization who dealt directly with the drug trafficking cartels in Peru, Ecuador and Colombia. During the split of the
Scissionisti di Secondigliano from the Di Lauro clan, Imperiale decided to ally with the Scissionisti, a position that he maintains to this day. In fact, during the
Scampia feud, Imperiale supplied the
Amato-Pagano clan with weapons. Yet, according to the
pentito Antonio Leonardi, Imperiale was not a broker who acted independently, but, a full member of the Amato-Pagano. According to the authorities, while living in
Dubai, Imperiale spent €400,000 a month to maintain his lavish lifestyle. In fact, after his arrest, it was revealed by the authorities that he had spent 7 million euros in just three months while on run, with the majority of expenses declared as "personal expenses". In 2016, two stolen
Van Gogh paintings from the
Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam in 2002,
Congregation Leaving the Reformed Church in Nuenen and
View of the Sea at Scheveningen, were recovered in a villa in Castellammare di Stabia, owned by him. Documents sent by the United States
Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) to the Dutch police exposed what would be a super drug cartel headed by Raffaele Imperiale,
Ridouan Taghi (Dutch former most-wanted criminal, now in jail),
Daniel Kinahan (Irish reputed gang boss) and Edin Gačanin (Bosnian drug trafficker). The group was observed by the DEA having meetings in the
Burj Al Arab hotel in Dubai, Imperiale's alleged operating base. The meetings took place in 2017, however, it only reached the Dutch media in October 2019. The DEA regards this as one of the world's fifty largest drug cartels, with a virtual monopoly on the Peruvian cocaine trade and would control around a third of the cocaine trade in Europe. Yet, according to the DEA documents, the destination for all the drugs shipments would be the Dutch ports. == References ==