[Clips] Rotini-13: Mafia Boss's Encrypted Messages Unraveled

R.A. Hettinga rah at shipwright.com
Tue Apr 18 12:25:54 PDT 2006


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  Delivered-To: clips at philodox.com
  Date: Tue, 18 Apr 2006 15:25:04 -0400
  To: Philodox Clips List <clips at philodox.com>
  From: "R.A. Hettinga" <rah at shipwright.com>
  Subject: [Clips] Rotini-13: Mafia Boss's Encrypted Messages Unraveled
  Reply-To: rah at philodox.com
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  <http://dsc.discovery.com/news/briefs/20060417/mafiaboss_tec_print.html>


  Discovery Channel :: News ::

  Mafia Boss's Encrypted Messages Deciphered

  By Rossella Lorenzi, Discovery News


  April 17, 2006 - The recently arrested "boss of bosses" of the Sicilian
  Mafia, Bernardo Provenzano, wrote notes using an encryption scheme similar
  to the one used by Julius Caesar more than 2,000 years ago, according to a
  biography of Italy's most wanted man.

  The biography, written by journalists Salvo Palazzolo and Ernesto Oliva, is
  published in Italian on www.bernardoprovenzano.net, which is the most
  exhaustive Web site on Provenzano.

  Accused of numerous murders, including the 1992 killings of two judges for
  which he was sentenced to life in jail, the 73-year-old boss was arrested
  last week in a farmhouse about just a few miles from his Sicilian hometown
  Corleone, a place forever associated with the Godfather saga.

  Also known as "Binnu u tratturi" (Binnu the tractor) because of his
  reputation for mowing down people in his youth, Provenzano had been on the
  run for more than 40 years, many of them spent writing cryptograms on
  little pieces of paper, known in Sicilian dialect as pizzini.

  The Italian police found about 350 pizzini in Provenzano's hideaway.

  A few dozen of these notes contained requests to his family, such as having
  lasagne on Easter. All the others, featuring orders to his lieutenants,
  displayed numeric sequences that concealed the names of people.

  Caesar Cipher
  At least one coded note, published in the Web site's biography, has a
  strong resemblance to what's known as Caesar cipher, an encryption scheme
  used by Julius Caesar to protect important military messages.

  The letter, written in January 2001 by Angelo Provenzano to his father, was
  found with other documents when one of Provenzano's men, Nicola La Barbera,
  was arrested

  "...I met 512151522 191212154 and we agreed that we will see each other
  after the holidays...," said the letter, which included several other
  cryptograms.

  "The Binnu code is nothing new: each number corresponds to a letter of the
  alphabet. "A" is 4, "B" is 5, "C" is 6 and so on until the letter Z , which
  corresponds to number 24," wrote Palazzolo and Oliva.

  While the classic Caesar cipher moves everything three letters later (A
  becomes D, B becomes E, etc.), the "Provenzano code" assigns a number to
  each letter by simply increasing by 3 the value given to the 21 letters of
  the Italian alphabet listed in order.

  So, A becomes 4 (1+3), B becomes 5 (2+3), C becomes 6 (3+3), etc

  "In the Provenzano code the key is the +3 shift," mathematics expert
  Alessandro Martignago told Discovery News.

  As the code is cracked, the "512151522 191212154" person becomes "Binnu
  Riina." Most likely, it refers to Bernardo Riina, arrested on Wednesday on
  suspicion of aiding Provenzano while he was on the run.

  According to Martignago, the Provenzano code might have been made more
  secure by changing the + 3 key with other shift characters ( +5, +7, +8,
  etc.) from time to time.

  "Looks like kindergarten cryptography to me. It will keep your kid sister
  out, but it won't keep the police out. But what do you expect from someone
  who is computer illiterate?" security guru Bruce Schneier, author of
  several books on cryptography, told Discovery News.

  Indeed, no high-tech ran the Mafia network under Provenzano's rule. Top
  Mafia businesses were conducted on an obsolete Olivetti Lettera 32
  typewriter. Pizzini were delivered by a chain of messengers.

  The fact that the boss code was rather straightforward may be explained by
  Provenzano's lack of education. It stopped when he dropped out of school at
  about eight.

  Anna Petrozzi is an editor at Antimafia 2000, a magazine that Provenzano
  read, as copies found in his hideaway attest.

  "The police are not new to these coded messages. When they arrested in 2002
  Antonio Giuffri, one of his right-hand men then turned informer, and about
  30 pizzini came to light," she told Discovery News.

  Those pizzini helped investigators enormously. Once the cryptograms were
  decoded, several members of Provenzano's close circle were identified, a
  step which ultimately led to his arrest.

  "Now we will have to work on the newly discovered pizzini, which contain
  several coded names. We have known the system used to code them since
  2002," assistant state prosecutor Giuseppe Pignatone told state television
  RAI 2 on Thursday.


  --
  -----------------
  R. A. Hettinga <mailto: rah at ibuc.com>
  The Internet Bearer Underwriting Corporation <http://www.ibuc.com/>
  44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131 USA
  "... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity,
  [predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to
  experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'
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-- 
-----------------
R. A. Hettinga <mailto: rah at ibuc.com>
The Internet Bearer Underwriting Corporation <http://www.ibuc.com/>
44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131 USA
"... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity,
[predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to
experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'





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