Serum Franqueado La Mafia vai alm de ter seu prprio negcio, investir em uma marca forte e consolidada que, desde 2014, est dentro do mercado de beleza masculino. Venha fazer parte desse time de sucesso!
Criado para grandes homens que buscam comodidade e facilidade nos servios de barbearia, a assinatura oferece benefcios exclusivos nos servios de corte e barba, alm de brindes e vantagens em redes parceiras.
A La Mafia Barber School tem o intuito de formar profissionais preparados para o mercado de trabalho, com foco na qualidade tcnica e de atendimento. Oferecemos cursos profissionalizantes e de especializao, utilizando todo o know-how de quem possui uma rede de barbearias e 9 anos de experincia.
A La Mafia Social Club chegou a sua 38 unidade em funcionamento com a inaugurao em Viamo na ltima sexta-feira (24). A nova unidade fica localizada em um tradicional conjunto comercial da cidade, o Fachini Center. O evento de inaugurao contou com mais de 50...
Na noite do ltimo dia 17, foi inaugurada mais uma unidade da La Mafia Barbearia, no Shopping Viva Open Mall, localizado na rua Avenida Doutor Nilo Peanha, 3228, Loja 44, em Porto Alegre. O evento contou com a presena convidados, clientes, franqueados de outras...
Na noite da ltima tera-feira, 12, foi inaugurada mais uma unidade da La Mafia Barbearia, localizada na rua Flix da Cunha, n 824, Floresta, na cidade de Porto Alegre. O evento contou com a presena de clientes, franqueados, barbeiros da rede e dos scios...
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2021 Serious and Organized Crime Threat Assessment of Montenegro (SOCTA) identifies 10 high-risk organized crime groups in Montenegro, with Kavač and Škaljari clans being by far most prominent, and playing the central role in so called Balkan cartel. Most of the other high risk organized crime groups in Montenegro are either subservient to, or allied with one of two aforementioned Kotor clans. Major crime groups in Montenegro specialize in narcotics smuggling, although highly profitable cigarette smuggling is a focus of several criminal associations. [1]
Kotor is a coastal town in Montenegro, which has a long maritime trade history, and is home to Montenegro's sole naval faculty. Thus, owing to the fact that most of Montenegro's educated merchant seamen come from Kotor, the city has emerged as a recruitment ground for sailors tasked with smuggling cocaine on cargo ships, on a South America - Europe route.
Kotor clan came to prominence during 2000s, the under the leadership of Darko Šarić and Dragan Dudić "Fric". This criminal organization was suspected of operating one of the largest cocaine smuggling schemes, on a South America - Europe route. They reinvested the proceeds from their criminal enterprise into numerous business ventures in Montenegro and the region, including high profile nightclubs and hotels.
In 2010, Dragan Dudić was murdered in Kotor, while Šarić clan was largely neutralized in regional police action "Balkan Warrior". The remainder of Kotor clan has split into two factions - Kavač and Škaljari clans. These two organized crime groups are engaged in a bitter gang war since 2015, with as many as 50 dead on both sides, murdered in Montenegro and throughout Europe, usually in carefully planned targeted murders.
The 2021 takedown of Sky ECC encrypted communication network has shed light on many previously unsolved crimes committed by the two clans, as well as on their connections with various Montenegro police and government officials. However, although Sky ECC takedown has weakened the clans, they remain the two most powerful criminal groups in Montenegro, and possibly in the Balkans.
Both clans have offshoots and associates in countries of the Balkans region, as well as in rest of Europe - Spain (major transit and unloading point for cocaine shipments, particularly Valencia, Balearic and Canary Islands), Italy (using Port of Gioia Tauro as a transit point of cocaine shipments, in cooperation with 'Ndrangheta), Austria, Netherlands, Germany, Belgium, Greece, Hungary, Ukraine and Turkey. Also, clans maintain a direct presence in South America, with ports in Brazil, Ecuador and Uruguay being identified as loading points for Montenegro cocaine smugglers.
Named after the Kotor village of Kavač, this clan is currently led by Radoje Zvicer. This clan is suspected to be close with remainder of Šarić clan, and Veljko Belivuk criminal group from Serbia. The clan also has a strong presence in Herceg Novi, Podgorica, Nikšić and Cetinje.
Bečići clan is an organized criminal group based in Bečići, a suburb of Budva. This clan is closely allied with Kavač clan, and is led by Vasilije Rafailović. It is unclear whether Bečići clan can be considered a separate criminal group, or an independent faction of Kavač clan.
Named after the Kotor village of Škaljari, this clan was led by Jovan Vukotić, until his murder in 2022. This clan is suspected to be close with Bar clan, as well as Zemun clan from Serbia. The clan has a strong presence in Bar, Budva, Cetinje and Podgorica. Škaljari clan is more horizontally organized, with looser ties between highly independent regional factions.
Budva clan is an organized criminal group based in coastal Montenegrin city of Budva. This clan is closely allied with Škaljari clan, and is led by Marko Ljubiša "Kan" and Saša Boreta. It is unclear weather Budva clan can be considered a separate criminal group, or a highly independent faction of Škaljari clan.
Bar clan is an organized criminal group based in coastal Montenegrin city of Bar. This clan is allied with Škaljari clan, and is organized in the horizontal manner - higher-ranked members are not necessarily coordinated by any leader, although lately the Bar mafia started regulating its vertical hierarchy making the organization much stronger.[2] The organization has a local reputation to have connections with corrupt high-ranking men in Herceg Novi, Tivat, Kotor, Budva and Ulcinj Regional Police Units.[3]
Berane clan is an organized criminal group, operating out of northern Montenegro city of Berane, specialized in narcotics trade, and led by Vuk Vulević. 2021 Serious and Organised Crime Threat Assessment of Montenegro (SOCTA) classifies Berane clan as the third most powerful organized criminal group in Montenegro, although far from influence and power of Kavač and Škaljari clans.[4]
Pink Panthers are an international criminal group, specialized in jewelry heists. It is unknown whether Pink Panthers are sufficiently integrated and coordinated to be classified as a criminal group, however, many heists perpetrated by Montenegrin citizens worldwide have been attributed to Pink Panthers.
In December, Law and Social Inquiry, the journal of the American Bar Foundation, will publish an article on Nevada's Black Book by two criminal justice professors at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. "Denunciation and the Illusion of Social Control: The Case of The Nevada Black Book" is authored by Carole Case and Ronald A. Farrell.
In Nevada, individuals are excluded from casinos when their names have been listed in what is popularly called the Black Book. As a state regulatory procedure, the Black Book is aimed at excluding organized crime figures from the gaming industry. Among those who have been listed in the Book are reputed Chicago mob associates Sam Giancana, Anthony Spilotro, and Frank Larry Rosenthal, the latter two of whose Las Vegas activities are the subject of the new movie "Casino."
Farrell and Case are also authors of "The Black Book and The Mob: The Untold Story of the Control of Nevada's Casinos," a book just published by the University of Wisconsin Press in which they detail the backgrounds and alleged illicit activities of the Black Book figures and the political, economic, and moral factors that impelled their exclusion from Nevada gaming.
This work comes at a time when the nation's politicians have called for a panel to study gambling, including the effectiveness of law enforcement in controlling crime in the industry, which is exactly what Nevada's Black Book is intended to accomplish.
But Farrell and Case argue that the Black Book is largely symbolic, as well as discriminatory in its application. They contend that the drama and denunciation surrounding the procedure are meant to imply to the public that gaming is legitimate and the regulators can control organized crime in the gaming industry. This enables the preservation of powerful financial interests in gaming, Farrell and Case say, although the state contends that it is intended to protect the public welfare.
Mafia stereotypes and conflicts among competing organized crime groups have also been driving forces behind the Black Book, according to the authors. The result is that those who are excluded from gaming are remarkably similar -- the majority are Italian and associated with organized crime in Chicago and Kansas City. Interestingly, Farrell and Case say, these were the losers in the battle to obtain control of gambling in Nevada. The winners (who gained legitimacy and became casino owners over the years) were members of competing non-Italian groups from New York and Cleveland. These groups' victories were aided as regulators licensed them preferentially and acted to keep the former competing organized crime groups out.
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