Romanian mafia

Romanian Mafia
Founding location Romania
Territory Romania, Northern Italy, Spain, Netherlands, Germany, United Kingdom, United States (Detroit), Canada, France, Serbia, Bulgaria, Republic of Macedonia
Ethnicity Majority Romanians including Romani Romanian Serbs
Criminal activities Human trafficking, illegal drug trade (Northern Italy and Spain), prostitution, murder, cigarette smuggling, forgery, car trafficking, extortion, cyber crime, property crime, racketeering, automated banking machine frauds, usury
Allies Italian Mafia Serbian mafia Russian mafia, Satudarah, Bandidos, Nazi Lowriders, Ukrainian mafia

The Romanian mafia is a term used for organized crime groups based in Romania.

They have expanded their criminal activities in the European Union, reads an Europol report on EU organized crime, being active mostly in Northern Italy and Spain. They participate in a wide range of criminal activities ranging from prostitution and extortion to drug trade, also document forgery and property crime. A Romanian mafia gang by the name of Brigada Oaraza overtook northern Italy.[1]

Recently, it was reported that some Romanians specialize in ATM skimming in Australia and New Zealand.[2] According to the Queensland Police, the country's history partly explains this criminal specialization: "Romania was prior to the fall of the Ceaușescu dictatorship, a centre of mathematics and computer coding and those skills were exploited by Eastern Bloc organized crime groups.".[3]

Notable clans

In Romania there are some clans consisting of ethnic Romani[4][5] that are active in a wide range of criminal activities. Some of them have expanded their operations.

Powerful clans include:

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/26/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.