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ANKARA: Mafia leader testifies in Ergenekon probe

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  • ANKARA: Mafia leader testifies in Ergenekon probe

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    April 12 2008


    Mafia leader testifies in Ergenekon probe


    A mafia leader serving four years in prison for heading a crime gang
    was brought to the Beþiktaþ courthouse on Friday to testify to a
    prosecutor investigating a political crime gang believed to have been
    carrying out preparations for an overthrow of the government.

    On Friday, Alaattin Çakýcý, arguably the most famous mafia boss in
    Turkey, who was convicted of `leading an organized crime gang' by an
    Ýstanbul court last year, was brought to the chambers of prosecutor
    Zekeriya Öz at the Beþiktaþ courthouse yesterday to testify as part
    of an investigation into Ergenekon, a shadowy and powerful
    neo-nationalist gang suspected of being behind a number of
    politically motivated murders, including the assassination of
    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in 2007. Possible links Çakýcý
    might have to Ergenekon were not immediately clear.
    So far 47 suspects have been arrested as part of the Ergenekon
    investigation, launched after the police found a house full of guns
    and explosives in Ýstanbul last June. Those who have been arrested
    include retired generals and army officials; public figures such as
    journalists; mafia leaders including drug lords; and the previous
    suspects of a 1996 car crash in Susurluk which revealed that a police
    chief at the time had dealings with a mafia leader and a deputy, who
    wss the chief of a Kurdish clan in the Southeast funded by the state
    to fight the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK).

    Four years for Çakýcý

    Çakýcý was convicted by the Istanbul 14th Higher Criminal Court last
    year in February. The court ruled Çakýcý should be tried under
    Article 220, Section 1 of the new Turkish Penal Code (TCK), which
    foresees punishment for `forming a criminal organization.' When
    handing down Çakýcý's four-year sentence, the judge said, `The way
    crime was committed, the significance of the law [Article 220] and
    the severity of the danger stemming from the crime should be taken
    into consideration, and a fair and logical punishment should be
    decided based on the minimum sentence.'
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