
Evil Life
The True Story of the Calabrian Mafia in Australia
Clive Small(Author)
Allen & Unwin (Publisher)
Published on 27. January 2016
Book
Paperback/Softback
368 pages
978-1-74237-492-5 (ISBN)
Description
The Calabrian mafia is Australia's oldest, largest and most ruthless crime syndicate, trafficking drugs worth billions of dollars and laundering the proceeds through sophisticated international networks.
Enforcing discipline with age-old tools of violence and intimidation, the Calabrians have been responsible for nearly forty murders in Australia since the mid-1970s and many more before that. Mafia families in Australia report directly to bosses in Calabria and profits are funnelled back to the mother organisation. Yet despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary, Federal and State law enforcement agencies have long assured the public that there is no Calabrian mafia in Australia.
With powerful and uncompromising clarity, Evil Life shatters this myth. Drawing on court documents and unreleased intelligence reports, as well as interviews with well-informed sources, the authors reveal how the Calabrian mafia evolved from its beginnings on the north Queensland cane fields in the 1920s to establish cells in every major capital city, making Australia a key outpost in the world of global organised crime.
Enforcing discipline with age-old tools of violence and intimidation, the Calabrians have been responsible for nearly forty murders in Australia since the mid-1970s and many more before that. Mafia families in Australia report directly to bosses in Calabria and profits are funnelled back to the mother organisation. Yet despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary, Federal and State law enforcement agencies have long assured the public that there is no Calabrian mafia in Australia.
With powerful and uncompromising clarity, Evil Life shatters this myth. Drawing on court documents and unreleased intelligence reports, as well as interviews with well-informed sources, the authors reveal how the Calabrian mafia evolved from its beginnings on the north Queensland cane fields in the 1920s to establish cells in every major capital city, making Australia a key outpost in the world of global organised crime.
Reviews / Votes
A significant historical account of the Australian 'Ndrangheta... a particularly timely account * Adelaide Advertiser * A must-read for cops, pollies and anyone with an interest in true crime... Compulsory reading... An invaluable work of social history. * Crikey * This groundbreaking and authoritative history of Australia's oldest and most durable criminal organisation will also be avidly read in Italy, where there has been enormous recent interest in the Australian branch of a global criminal franchise about which little has hitherto been known. * Weekend Australian * This is a meticulously detailed account of what the Italian organised crime gang has been up to Down Under... It is a gripping true-crime read * Townsville Eye *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
St Leonards
Australia
Target group
College/higher education
Illustrations
8pp colour photos, 8pp b&w photos
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 155 mm
Thickness: 30 mm
Weight
520 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-74237-492-5 (9781742374925)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
01/2016
Allen & Unwin
€21.49
Available for download
Person
Clive Small and Tom Gilling are the authors of the bestselling Smack Express, Blood Money, Milat and Betrayed. Clive is a former Assistant Commissioner of Police, NSW. Tom is a highly regarded investigative journalist and fiction writer.
Content
AcknowledgementsAbout the authorsAuthors' noteIntroduction1 The Black Hand2 New country, new rackets3 A market for murder4 The family business5 The Toronto connection6 Heroin Central7 No ordinary crop8 The Sunshine State9 Omerta10 Infiltration11 It's only revenge12 Setbacks13 The South Americans14 The enemy they dare not name15 Political connections16 Ecstasy by the tonne17 Big debts, little debts18 A year of living dangerously19 Behind bars20 The grass is (always) greener21 The enemy withinAPPENDICES1 Translation of letter written by Antonio Brando, Melbourne, to Domenico Belle and companions, 24 August 19282 Translation of letter written by Antonio Brando, Melbourne, to Domenico Belle, 17 September 19283 Translation of letter written by Rocco Trimarchi, Griffith, to Domenico Belle, 26 March 19294 Translation of Ritual of the Camorra Society, 15 December 19305 Translation of documents relating to the formation of a society found at the residence of Francesco Angilletta, Preston, 14 April 19636 Australian 'ndrangheta killings, 1973-2008BibliographyIndex