Education
Scaglione graduated in law at the University of Palermo in 1927.
Scaglione graduated in law at the University of Palermo in 1927.
He was killed by the Mafia in 1971. After a career in the judiciary, he became Chief Prosecutor of Palermo in April 1962. As such, together with the head of the investigative branch of the prosecution office Cesare Terranova, he was responsible for the repression of the Mafia after the First Mafia war and the Ciaculli massacre on June 30, 1963.
Their efforts were largely undone by lenient sentences of the court in Catanzaro at the so-called Trial of the 114.
lieutenant was the first time since the end of World World War II that the Mafia had carried out a hit on an Italian magistrate. The police rounded up 114 Mafiosi who would be tried in the second Trial of the 114.
Number one has ever been convicted for the killing of Scaglione and his driver. During his long career in the judiciary Scaglione was involved in some of the unsolved political mysteries that tainted post-war Italy.
He was the last one to have interrogated Gaspare Pisciotta, the right-hand man of the Sicilian bandit Salvatore Giuliano, held responsible for the Portella della Ginestra massacre on May Day 1947 to impede the advance of communist and peasant movement.
He was also the last one to have seen the journalist Mauro De Mauro, who disappeared in September 1970 following his investigations on the mysterious death of Enrico Mattei and on the Golpe Borghese, a right wing coup attempt. De Mauro was allegedly murdered by the Mafia to cover up these events and possible political connections. Some observers claim Scaglione had been involved to keep these mysteries under wraps.
Recent historical research, however, describes Scaglione as an honest judge.
According to Mafia turncoat (pentito) Tommaso Buscetta the murder of Scaglione had three objectives: to remove a troublesome prosecutor, to bring heat on two rival Mafiosi who were being tried by Scaglione and who might be thought culpable, and to create the suspicion that Scaglione had collaborated with the Mafia. Another pentito, Antonio Calderone, suggested that Scaglione’s assassination was the Mafia’s way of asserting its return to potency after the Catanzaro trial, during which it had been quiet.
According to Buscetta it was Leggio himself who killed Scaglione with the help of Salvatore Riina. Leggio would later be tried twice for killing Scaglione but was acquitted for insufficient evidence.