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List of Italian convicted MPs

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This is an alphabetical list of the present MPs, senators and European MPs from Italy that have received final conviction, not obstructed by statutory terms.

Politicians who have been found guilty, but were amnestied or acquitted on grounds of statutory terms (such as Giulio Andreotti, Silvio Berlusconi and Massimo D'Alema) are not supposed to be in this list.

Politicians found guilty, but no longer present in either parliament (as Bettino Craxi), are neither supposed to be included.

These MPs were elected in the National elections of 2001 and in the European election of 2004.

Massimo Maria Berruti (MP for Forza Italia)

Alfredo Biondi (MP for Forza Italia)

Vito Bonsignore (European MP for UDC)

  • 2 years for attempted corruption in the construction of a hospital in Asti.[1]

Mario Borghezio (European MP for Lega Nord)

Umberto Bossi (European MP, secretary of Lega Nord, Minister of Federal Reforms)

Giampiero Cantoni (senator for Forza Italia)

Enzo Carra (MP for Daisy-Democracy is Freedom)

  • 1 year and 4 months for false statements to prosecutors about the Enimont bribe.[1]

Paolo Cirino Pomicino (European MP for Popular-UDEUR)

  • 1 year and 8 months for illegal financing, in the Enimont bribe.
  • 2 months negotiated for corruption and Eni black funds.

Marcello Dell'Utri (senator for Forza Italia and member of the European Council)

  • 2 years for tax fraud and false invoices in Turin, regarding his time in Publitalia.[1]
  • 6 months negotiated in Milan for other issues about false invoices accounting in Publitalia.[1]

Antonio Del Pennino (senator for Forza Italia)

  • 2 months and 20 days negotiated for illegal financing (Enimont bribe).[1]
  • 1 year, 8 months and 20 days negotiated for illegal financing in the Milan underground.

Gianni De Michelis (MP and secretary of the Socialist Party New PSI)

  • 1 year and 6 months negotiated in Milan for corruption and bribes for highways in Veneto.
  • 6 months negotiated for illegal financing (Enimont bribe).

Walter De Rigo (senator for Forza Italia)

  • 1 year and 4 months negotiated for fraud on the ministry of Work and the European Economic Community for 474 millions lire, in exchange for fake professional qualification courses for his firm.

Gianstefano Frigerio (MP for Forza Italia)

  • 3 years and 9 months for corruption in Milan, dumping ground bribes;
  • 2 years and 11 months for other two issues in Tangentopoli, among which corruption (both corruzione and concussione variants of the Italian legal system), receiving stolen goods and illegal financing.

Giorgio Galvagno (MP for Forza Italia), former socialist mayor of Asti

  • 6 months and 26 days negotiated in 1996 for pollution of acquifer, abuse and omission of due acts in office, false statement, nonintentional crimes against public health (pollution of aquifer) and omitted reporting for the responsibles of the Asti corruption situation in the Vallemanina and Valleandona dumping ground scandal (unlawful waste disposal of toxic waste, in exchange for bribes).

Lino Jannuzzi (senator for Forza Italia)

Giorgio La Malfa (MP for Italian Republican Party, minister for Community Policies)

  • 6 months and 20 days for illegal financing (Enimont bribe).[3]

Roberto Maroni (MP for Lega Nord and Home Office Minister)

  • 4 months and 20 days for resistance against public official during the police raid in the party's building in via Bellerio in Milan.[1]

Augusto Rollandin (senator for Valdotanian Union-Democrats of the Left), former president of the regional council of the Aosta Valley

  • 16 months and fined 2 millions lire in 1994, plus damages to be paid to the Region for abuse in office: he favoured a friend's firm in the assignment of a construction contract for a waste packer in Brissogne. After being removed from his position by the court of Turin, because he was "ineligible", in 2001 he became a candidate for the Valdotanian Union and the DS.

Vittorio Sgarbi (MP for Forza Italia)

  • 6 months for grand and continued fraud against the state, i.e. the minister of Culture.

Calogero Sodano (senator for UDC), formerly mayor of Agrigento

  • 1 year and 6 months for abuse in office aiming to favour illegal construction firms in exchange for voting favours.

Egidio Sterpa (MP for Forza Italia)

  • 6 months for the Enimont bribe.[1]

Antonio Tomassini (senator for Forza Italia), surgeon

  • 3 years for false statements: during a birth, a baby was born with brain damage. Forza Italia designated him responsible for health in the party and president of the Work Health commission in the Senate.

Vincenzo Visco (MP for Democrats of the Left)

  • 10 days and 20 million lire in fine for construction abuse in 2001, because of some illegal works in his house in Pantelleria. He was also ordered to "restore the locations", i.e. demolishing the abusive constructions.[4]

Alfredo Vito (MP for Forza Italia)

  • 2 years negotiated and 5 billion lire reboursed for 22 episodes of corruption in Naples.[1]

Statistics

This section tries to present some statistics from the data presented above. Since it is more likely that a party will have a convicted member when it is very large, convictions are weighed on the millions of votes the party received. Since some crimes are more serious than others, the days sentenced are used as a reasonable measure of the gravity of the fact.

Party Sentence days vs. millions of votes in the Italian Chamber of Deputies
Italian Republican Party
Socialist Party New PSI 2052.26
Forza Italia 368.11
Northern League 95.61
Daisy-Democracy is Freedom 89.95
Democrats of the Left 1.63

The Italian Republican Party was not present in the 2001 national elections, and Giorgio La Malfa was elected with the Forza Italia ticket.

Parties with parliamentary representation and no convicted members are, in order of magnitude: National Alliance, the Communist Refoundation Party, the Sunflower (an electoral coalition of the Federation of the Greens and the Italian Democratic Socialists), the Party of Italian Communists, the South Tyrolese People's Party, the Valdotanian Union.

Coalition Sentence days vs. millions of votes in the Italian Senate
House of Freedoms 293.27
Olive Tree 41.58

No separate list vote is possible in the Senate election.

Parties with senatorial representation and no convicted members are, in order of magnitude: the Communist Refoundation Party, Italy of Values, European Democracy, Lombardian Alliance-Autonomy, the South Tyrolese People's Party.

Party Sentence days vs. millions of votes in the European Parliament
Popular-UDEUR 1583.00
Union of Christian Democrats 380.65
Northern League 148.53

Parties with European-parliamentary representation and no convicted members are, in order of magnitude: Olive Tree (presented itself as a coalition), Forza Italia, National Alliance, the Communist Refoundation Party, the Federation of the Greens, the Party of Italian Communists, the Emma Bonino List, Civil Society of Di Pietro - Occhetto, Socialists United for Europe, Fiamma Tricolore, Alternativa Sociale, Pensioners' Party.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Trenta onorevoli nella black list del Parlamento" (in Italian). la Repubblica. 22 February 2008. Retrieved 10 March 2010. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  2. ^ "Violenza privata contro bambino marocchino Condannato a un mese l' on. Borghezio (Lega)" (in Italian). La Stampa. 23 May 1993. Retrieved 10 March 2010. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  3. ^ a b "Tutti condannati, da Craxi a Bossi" (in Italian). Corriere della Sera. 28 October 1995. Retrieved 10 March 2010. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  4. ^ "Uno su dieci: i «diversamente onesti» del Parlamento" (in Italian). Corriere della Sera. 9 July 2006. Retrieved 10 March 2010. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)