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How Italian mafia ‘took over’ quiet UK town & turned it into ‘Surrey Sopranos’– before daring bank raid took them down

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THE ITALIAN mafia “took over” a quiet UK town and turned it into the “Surrey Sopranos” before a daring bank raid foiled its plans.

Woking, in northwest Surrey, was a hotbed of crime and mafioso behaviour in the 1970s through the 80s and into the 90s.

a street with a sign that says bourne on it
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Commercial Way in the pedestrianised town centre of Woking, Surrey, which was a hotbed of mafioso behaviour in the 1970s[/caption]
Rex
Francesco Di Carlo aka Frankie the Strangler lived in Woking[/caption]
an aerial view of a city with lots of buildings and trees
Getty
The Sicilian population in Woking is owed in part to a massive prisoner of war camp[/caption]

But those living in modern day Woking say the town has moved on since the days of NatWest bust ups.

One drinker at the Herbert Wells Wetherspoon told The Sun: “We were neighbours in Cedar Road with some Italians.

“There was a bust there in the 80s. It was above the NatWest bank and was apparently where they (the gangsters) kept their money.

Margaret Thatcher was in power at the time and she had apparently wanted to get them all cleared out.

“I don’t know about the modern day mafia. Woking has changed loads and is a commuter belt town. It’s not what it was.

“But yes, there are loads of Italians here and, yes, I saw the criminal side first hand.”

The man, who wished to remain anonymous, added: “There was without a doubt a mafia contingent in Woking in the 80s and 90s.”

He refused to elaborate more on stories he had with the mafia.

Another man said communities of Sicilian monsters were focused around the Horsall Road and Cedar Road areas of the Surrey town.

Lee Burnham, 71, has lived in Woking his whole life and was enjoying a Guinness when he revealed he had connections to the underworld.

He told The Sun how he was friends with a gangster who he played with in an Italian football team.

He said: “He upset someone in Woking, someone quite big. I don’t know what it was about.

“Anyway, he got nicked, we’re going back to the 80s here, and he took the wrap.

“He was jailed and I never saw him again and have no clue to this day what happened to him.”

The Sicilian population in Woking is owed in part to a massive prisoner of war camp that was located in nearby Send.

Margaret Thatcher was in power at the time and she had apparently wanted to get them all cleared out.

After the war, many settled in Woking and started families.

A local business owner is from Sicily himself.

He said: “I’ve heard of stories. They’re even my customers!

“I’m from Sicily. Cosa Nostra is from Sicily. There are a lot of Sicilians in Woking.”

'God's banker'

THE discovery of Roberto Calvi, 62, hanging under Blackfriars Bridge in London in 1982 sent out a message that the Mafia were here.

Calvi — known as “God’s banker” because he dealt with the Pope‘s money — is believed to have lost huge sums belonging to a Sicilian mobster.

Ex-Scotland Yard detective Peter Bleksley said: “The Mafia were saying, wherever you go we will find you.”

Many historians suspect hitman Francesco Di Carlo was responsible for Calvi’s murder but no one has ever been found guilty of the crime.

The assassin, also known as Frankie the Strangler, helped to ship heroin and cannabis under the cover of his antiques firm.

Living in a mansion in the stockbroker belt town of Woking, Surrey, Di Carlo drove a Ferrari and had a string of businesses including a hotel and travel agency.

In 1985 his operation was smashed by British customs officers, and he was sentenced to 25 years in jail.

He died in 2020, still denying carrying out the hit on Calvi.

It comes as Ross Kemp found that organised criminals from Italy have links to this country stretching back a century.

And he believes they are still operating here today, possibly stronger than ever before.

In the Sky History series Ross Kemp: Mafia And Britain, which begins on Tuesday, the former EastEnders actor said: “Undoubtedly they’re still here.

“They’re everywhere. They operate in a very different way to the 1920s or 1980s.

“The most successful ones are the ones you never hear of.”

The web of crime leading back to these shores takes Ross to Colombia, the USSpain and southern Italy.

Experts think Britain is attractive to the mob because it is the biggest market for cocaine in Europe and has a lax attitude to money laundering.

a group of men are posing for a picture in front of a store that has the number 6 on it
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The Sopranos cast pictured in a promotional shoot for the show’s first season. Locals say Woking was like an episode of the show in the 1970s[/caption]
a woman walks past a boz 's fruit and veg store
Alamy
Woking is a commuter town about a 45 minute drive outside London[/caption]
a poster for ross kemp 's mafia & britain
© A&E Television Networks 1996-2024. All rights reserved.
Ross Kemp: Mafia And Britain is on Sky History on Tuesday[/caption]
a group of police officers are walking down a street
Kemp found organised criminals from Italy have links to this country stretching back a century
© A&E Television Networks 1996-2024. All rights reserved.
a man in a green jacket is cleaning a coffin with a broom
EPA
Renowned gangster Leone Calvi stands near the coffin of his mobster brother Roberto in the little cemetery of Drezzo, Italy, after his death[/caption]
two men walking under a bridge with a building in the background that says ' tower bridge '
Roberto Calvi was found dead under London’s Blackfriars Bridge
© A&E Television Networks 1996-2024. All rights reserved.
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AP:Associated Press
Calvi is pictured in a courtroom in Milan in this undated photo from files[/caption]
a man with a beard is wearing an orange shirt
Gennaro Panzuto, a known member of the Camorra crime organisation in Naples, fled to Britain in 2006

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