Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Police arrest Leonardo Rizzuto in major operation targeting Montreal Mafia

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Jun, 2025 10:44 AM
  • Police arrest Leonardo Rizzuto in major operation targeting Montreal Mafia

Nearly a dozen people alleged to be important members of Montreal's Mafia and other gangs were arrested on Thursday in what police called a major blow to organized crime. 

Those arrested include Leonardo Rizzuto, 56, son of the late crime boss Vito Rizzuto and the presumed head of one of Canada's most notorious crime families. He and the others have all been charged with first-degree murder. 

About 150 officers were deployed early Thursday morning in several cities across Quebec as part of a joint investigation between Montreal and provincial police called Project Alliance. They arrested 11 men between 27 and 57 years old, who they say are associated with the Mafia, the Hells Angels and street gangs. The suspects allegedly participated in several murders and attempted murders between 2011 and 2021. 

"This is one of the most significant police operations in recent decades," said Marc Charbonneau, head of the Montreal police specialized services department, during a news conference following the arrests. 

"The indictment of these individuals will undoubtedly have a major impact, destabilizing the spheres of organized crime."

Police are still searching for five other suspects, who have also been charged with first-degree murder. Three of the men arrested were already in detention. 

André Gélinas, retired detective-sergeant with the intelligence division of the Montreal police, said Rizzuto's arrest has symbolic weight, as he is widely perceived to have taken over as the "godfather" of the Rizzuto family following his father's death in 2013. 

He said there is no obvious successor to Rizzuto from within the clan. 

"It is a devastating blow that effectively decapitates the leadership of the Rizzuto crime family, an organization that for some years now has lost the power it once held in Montreal," said organized crime expert Antonio Nicaso in an email.

Rizzuto and six other men have been charged in the 2011 killing of Lorenzo Lopresti, reported to have been a Mafia member. The seven men, including 57-year-old Stefano Sollecito — another reputed leader of the Montreal Mafia — have also been charged with conspiring to murder Lopresti and seven other people. 

Richard Larivière, 57, reportedly an influential member of the Hells Angels, has been charged with three counts of first-degree murder in killings that occurred between 2017 and 2019, as well as one count of attempted murder and conspiracy to commit murder. 

The charges have not been proven in court. 

At the press conference, police cautioned that new figures will be quick to fill the void left by those arrested on Thursday. "We often say that humans abhor a vacuum, so that vacuum will be filled," said Francis Renaud, head of the organized crime unit of the Montreal police. "Do we put on our rose-coloured glasses and expect there to be no reaction? That would be false, that would be a lie to say that."

But Benoît Dubé, deputy director general of the Quebec provincial police, said it's significant that all of the suspects were charged with murder. "They're not going to be charged for two years in prison. They're being charged for 25 years in prison. So that's the impact," he said. 

Gélinas said the arrests will cause turmoil in the world of organized crime. "Will it be other organizations that end up trying to strategically take advantage of the destabilization, or will positions be filled internally with people who get promoted?" he said. "Time will tell."

Rizzuto and Sollecito were arrested in 2015 as part of a drug-trafficking investigation, but were acquitted after a judge ruled that police had illegally wiretapped them. Rizzuto later survived an attempted murder in 2023. 

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Graham Hughes

MORE National ARTICLES

Here's the latest as the U.S. imposes tariffs on goods from Canada and Mexico

Here's the latest as the U.S. imposes tariffs on goods from Canada and Mexico
Canada has responded with 25 per cent retaliatory tariffs on $30 billion worth of American products, and will expand them to cover another $125 billion in U.S. goods in 21 days.

Here's the latest as the U.S. imposes tariffs on goods from Canada and Mexico

Canadians cancel U.S. travel plans amid anger over tariffs

Canadians cancel U.S. travel plans amid anger over tariffs
Travel agency Flight Centre Travel Group Canada says leisure bookings to American cities dropped 40 per cent in February from the same month in 2024, while one in five customers cancelled their trips to the U.S. over the past three months.

Canadians cancel U.S. travel plans amid anger over tariffs

Former B.C. MLA Mike de Jong ousted from federal Conservative nomination race

Former B.C. MLA Mike de Jong ousted from federal Conservative nomination race
Former B.C. finance minister Mike de Jong says he's been told by the Conservative Party of Canada that he is no longer in the running to be a candidate for the party in the next federal election. He says he found it "mystifying" that the party won't allow him to contest the nomination in the riding of Abbotsford-South Langley after campaigning for the spot for almost a year. 

Former B.C. MLA Mike de Jong ousted from federal Conservative nomination race

'Elbows up': Canadians angry, defiant as U.S. tariffs take effect

'Elbows up': Canadians angry, defiant as U.S. tariffs take effect
In downtown Vancouver, Sandra Mori walked out of a provincial liquor store on Tuesday with B.C. wine, and raised her elbow to the sky. From coast to coast, Canadians are remaining defiant in the face of punishing U.S. tariffs on Canadian goods, promising to use their wallets to fight the trade war launched on Tuesday by President Donald Trump.

'Elbows up': Canadians angry, defiant as U.S. tariffs take effect

B.C. budget brings record deficit, billions in trade-war contingencies

B.C. budget brings record deficit, billions in trade-war contingencies
British Columbia’s finance minister is forecasting another record deficit in a budget she says defends the province from an unfolding North American trade war that risks tens of thousands of jobs and tens of billions in economic losses for B.C. Brenda Bailey says “the impact will be severe” but it’s not the time to retreat by cutting spending on public services.

B.C. budget brings record deficit, billions in trade-war contingencies

Gang-related homicide investigators deployed to Surrey after shooting

Gang-related homicide investigators deployed to Surrey after shooting
British Columbia's Homicide Investigation Team has been deployed to Surrey after a fatal "targeted, brazen shooting" earlier this week. Police say officers with the Surrey Police Service responded to reports of a shooting near the 7900 block of 120 Street around 5:25 p.m. Monday and found the driver of a vehicle suffering from life-threatening injuries.

Gang-related homicide investigators deployed to Surrey after shooting