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Bulgarian series of organized crime elements From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Bulgarian mafia (Bulgarian: мафия) is a series of organized crime elements originating from Bulgaria.
Мутри ("Mutri") - From Bulgarian: "Mean Mugs" or "Thugs" | |
Ethnicity | Bulgarians |
---|---|
Criminal activities | Arms trafficking, drug trafficking, human trafficking, money laundering, contract killing, murder, racketeering, extortion, bribery, assault, car theft, prostitution,fraud |
Notable members | Vasil Iliev, Georgi Iliev, Ivo Karamanski, Pantyu Pantev, Milcho Bonev, Stefan Miroslavov, Ivan Todorov, Mladen Mihalev, Vasil Bojkov, Konstantin Dimitrov, Dimitar Zhelyazkov, Nikolai Tzvetin, Krasimir Marinov, Nikolai Marinov,Boyko Borissov,Delyan Peevski,Borislav Mihaylov,Yordan Letchkov,Georgi Ivanov,Grisha Ganchev,Manasi Mladenov |
Bulgarian organised crime traces its roots to the 1960s, with import-export companies such as Kintex (owned by Bulgaria's secret police- the State Security agency) profiting from illegal export of weapons and other contraband goods such as amphetamines and cigarettes to terrorists and political groups in the Middle East and North Africa. Kintex's smuggling activities were covered in the Turkish press and first mentioned in CIA documents following the assassination attempt on pope John Paul II. During the late communist period, figures such as Illia Pavlov and Ismet Turkmen Shaban "The Big Fatik" were known to have conducted contraband activities and set up smuggling channels across Europe & the Middle East with the aid and protection of Bulgaria's state security. After the fall of the communist regime in Bulgaria in 1989, it is presumed that the mobsters who dominated Bulgaria's business elites in the 1990s and beyond inherited the smuggling channels created by the former State Security and were in fact puppets of generals and high ranking former members of the secret services such as Lyuben Gotsev. The men "recruited" as direct overseers of Bulgaria's drug trafficking and contraband routes after 1989 were former wrestlers, security personel, special forces personel, policemen, low-ranking secret service members and others who were capable of and comfortable with keeping their status through violence. As such, the transition to a market economy in Bulgaria was marked by quick and vast wealth for some, but violence for most, with constant contract killings, clashes, and turf wars between rival crime elements competing for domination over not only Bulgaria's drug trade, but also most sectors and industries within Bulgaria's economy.[1]
In 2020, the Italian police, together with the Bulgarian police, dismantled a Bulgarian gang that operated mainly in the Italian region of Tuscany, but also in Bulgaria. The gang was specialized in theft, and was found responsible for more than 40 thefts in the time period between September 2018 and April 2020. According to the investigations the gang was a well-structured and organized criminal group.[2][3] Still, according to the Italian police, the Bulgarian mafia is among the most dangerous foreign criminal groups operating in Italy, and it was reported that they would be cooperating with the 'Ndrangheta.[4]
Drug trafficking organizations run by Bulgarian nationals have been investigated in across US, especially in Los Angeles and Tampa. These groups deal with the import of cocaine and multi-thousand doses of ecstasy into the United States. Most members of these were imprisoned in the U.S. There, Bulgarian nationals are identified for falsification of IDs, organized bank fraud, drug trafficking, mortgage fraud, pimping, money laundering, extortion, arms dealing, loan sharking, pornography credit card fraud and alien smuggling.[5]
Since the fall of communism in 1989, there have been more than 250 high rank heads mafia-style contract killings in Bulgaria, frequently perpetrated in the centre of the capital, Sofia, in broad daylight. There has been at most 1 conviction[6] in these cases to date, though sources differ.[7][8] This is frequently blamed on the alleged widespread corruption at all levels of the Bulgarian judicial system including the Prosecutor's Office.
The cost of contract killings carried out by highly professional snipers has been estimated at £5,000-£500,000. The more important one's worth's considered, the more expensive the contract.[6]
Some of the most prominent assassination targets of recent years (in chronological order):
Krasimir kamenov- Bulgarian mobster May 2023
In 2006, the EU dispatched the head of Germany's criminal investigation office Klaus Jansen to assess Bulgaria's progress in fighting organized crime. He concluded that Bulgaria had failed to implement modern principles and methods in the fight against crime, criticising among other things the low commitment of the country's police force to combat organized crime.[19][20][21] The report further observed that "indictments, prosecutions, trials, convictions and deterrent sentences remain rare in the fight against high-level corruption" and described efforts to fight crime as "a total mess". Jensen also suggested that European police information passed to Sofia could end up with criminals. In a reaction to the report, Interior Minister Rumen Petkov described the findings as exaggerated and protested against Jansen's way of presenting the situation in Bulgaria which, in his words, demonstrated his incompetence.[22]
In the Bulgarian judicial system, the Prosecutor General is elected by a qualified majority of two-thirds from all the members of the Supreme Judicial Council and is appointed by the President of the Republic. The Supreme Judicial Council is in charge of the self-administration and organisation of the Judiciary.[23]
List of Prosecutor Generals in Bulgaria post-1989:
Much of the post-Communist Bulgarian mafia originates from the professional sportsmen and especially the wrestlers of the Communist period (1944–1989). The Iliev brothers, Krasimir "Big Margin" Marinov and Iliya Pavlov were all students of the school for future champions "Olympic Hopes" (Bulgarian: "Олимпийски надежди").[24]
In post-1990 Bulgaria, the word борец ("wrestler") came to denote a mafia man (a common synonym is мутра (mutra),[25] literally "mug, or mean mug"). The image of the Bulgarian "mug", including a sturdy muscular build, a black suit, sunglasses, a shaved head, and golden jewellery, became synonymous with the so-called Bulgarian "transition" (to market economy). These wrestlers were also known to own expensive cars with license plates with double numbers so that strangers would recognize their status as elite criminals. [26]
The wrestlers came to control much of Bulgarian business, so the word "businessman" acquired similar undertones. The wrestlers also infiltrated Bulgarian politics (it was often alleged that SIC and VIS were connected to the two main parties of the 1990s, the Bulgarian Socialist Party and the Union of Democratic Forces, respectively).[24] As the UDF government (1997–2001) made the registration of the criminal insurance businesses more difficult, much of their networks and personnel were integrated into existing legal insurance firms, while at the same time the principal bosses moved the focus of their attention to smuggling, trade and privatization.[26]
During the government of National Movement Simeon II (2001–2005), assassinations became especially common. Throughout the Post-Communist period, evidence has often surfaced to show the close ties between the criminal networks and politicians and officials. UDF chief prosecutor Ivan Tatarchev allegedly recreated together with Ivo Karamanski, NMS-II finance minister Milen Velchev was photographed playing cards with Ivan "The Doctor" Todorov, and BSP interior minister Rumen Petkov negotiated with the shadowy "Galev brothers".
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