Enzo Tortora

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Enzo Tortora
File:Enzo Tortora.jpg
Member of Parliament
for North-West Italy
In office
18 June 1984 – 18 June 1989
Personal details
Born (1928-11-30)30 November 1928
Genoa, Kingdom of Italy
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Milan, Italy
Nationality Italian
Political party Radical Party (1984–1989)
Spouse(s) Pasqualina Reillo (m. 1953–59); divorced
Alma mater University of Genoa
Profession TV host, politician
Religion Roman Catholic

Enzo Tortora (November 30, 1928 – May 18, 1988) was an Italian TV host on national RAI television, who was unjustly convicted of being a member of the Camorra and drug trafficking in 1985, and sentenced to 10 years in jail. He was acquitted of all charges on appeal in 1986.

Early career

Enzo Tortora was born in Genoa.

After taking a degree in journalism in his native city, he worked in theatre with Paolo Villaggio before joining the RAI – Italy's state radio and television corporation – as a radio announcer. In 1956, he first appeared on television and presented programmes such as Domenica Sportiva and Giochi senza frontiere. In 1969, he was fired by RAI when he described the company's managers as a group of boy scouts trying to pilot a supersonic jet plane unsuccessfully. Subsequently, he worked for several private TV stations and various newspapers, before returning to RAI in 1977.[1]

During the seventies Enzo Tortora was the co-founder of Telebiella the first Italian free TV station that broke the state monopoly of TV broadcasting, and later of telealtomilanese and Antenna 3 Lombardia.[citation needed]

In 1977, Tortora started to present a programme called Portobello, which attracted an audience of up to 26 million people every Friday night, far outperforming any other programme. Named after the Portobello Road market in London, the show allowed the audience, via telephone from home, to buy or sell things, present ideas or inventions, or look for a partner or someone they had not seen for years. The challenge for those participating in the studio was to get Portobello, the green parrot and mascot of the show, to say his name. He rarely did.[1]

Arrest and conviction

Tortora being led by the police during his 1985 trial.

In June 1983, he was arrested and held in jail for months after allegations by several pentiti of the Nuova Camorra Organizzata, such as Pasquale Barra, Giovanni Pandico and Giovanni Melluso. It was claimed that this was most likely a wrong identification with a man bearing the same surname, but the pentiti continued to accuse Tortora of offences related to cocaine dealing.[2]

He was sentenced to ten years in jail in his first trial held in 1985, being spared further incarceration only thanks to the providential intervention of the Radical Party who offered him a candidacy to the European Parliament, which Tortora won in a landslide as the country divided between those who held him guilty and those who held him innocent.[clarification needed]

Rehabilitation

In September 1986, the Court of Appeal of Naples fully acquitted Tortora. In 1987 the Supreme Court definitively affirmed Tortora's total innocence, and he started an action against those magistrates who had unjustly tried and sentenced him.[3]

After four years, he returned to television, hosting his Portobello show in February 1987. Tortora began the show saying "Well then, where did we leave off?" He developed cancer and died in May 1988.[1]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Enzo Tortora: When justice miscarries, The Florentine, October 30, 2008
  2. Enzo Tortora: Justice betrayed, Panorama, August 27, 1986
  3. Human rights - Italy : Enzo Tortora, Booklet for the XXXV Congress of The Radical Party, April 26, 1989