Italian Mail Blunder and Mistrust Hinder Crackdown on Chinese Gangs
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on April 21, 2026
5 min readLast updated: April 21, 2026
Add as preferred source on GooglePublished by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on April 21, 2026
5 min readLast updated: April 21, 2026
Add as preferred source on GoogleAn Italian mailroom accident delayed China’s mutual legal aid response, frustrating prosecutors battling Chinese-organised crime in Italy, amid deep mistrust and stalled cooperation between legal authorities.

By Silvia Ognibene , Emilio Parodi and Crispian Balmer
PRATO, Italy, April 21 (Reuters) - China's formal reply to an Italian request for mutual legal assistance never made it past a Rome mailroom.
The documents, relating to the attempted murder of a Chinese businessman in Italy in 2024, arrived at the Justice Ministry in Rome in early February via the ordinary postal service as is often the case, requiring a payment-on-delivery charge.
No one in the ministry's postal office knew the package was coming, so staff refused to pay, sending the envelope back to China unopened, said two people with knowledge of the blunder.
After the error was revealed, the Justice Ministry asked Chinese authorities to resend the material, but the documents have still not been received, one of the sources said.
The embarrassing episode reflects a wider sense of mistrust and paralysis within Italy surrounding Beijing's efforts to provide cooperation with Rome. The impasse is frustrating some prosecutors who say it is hindering their fight against Chinese gangs running multi-billion-euro crime rackets in Italy.
Over the past decade Italian prosecutors have opened dozens of investigations into illicit banking, drug rings, extortion, labour abuses, illegal immigration, tax evasion, murder and mob warfare within the Chinese diaspora in Italy.
Only a few cases have made it through the courts.
Investigators say they need help from Beijing to penetrate gangs that work in tandem with counterparts in China, but securing such collaboration is meeting resistance at home.
That wariness is a product of tensions between different branches of Italian law enforcement, and also reflects wider concerns over cybersecurity incidents involving China, with political ties having cooled during Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni's four years in power.
An initial move towards cooperation came from Beijing.
On September 24, 2025, Chinese authorities wrote to Luca Tescaroli, the chief prosecutor in the Tuscan city of Prato — home to one of Italy's largest Chinese communities and the epicentre of an alleged Chinese crime network accused of trying to control lucrative fast-fashion logistics across Europe.
They proposed a meeting and dispatched a high-level delegation — including a senior police officer and officials from the Chinese Ministry of Public Security — to Prato on November 25, 2025.
"This readiness to cooperate was an epoch-making development," Tescaroli told Reuters.
But there has been no follow-up meeting, as resistance within different Italian law-enforcement agencies has put a brake on efforts to cultivate the channel, three senior sources within judicial and public security bodies told Reuters.
One judicial source said there was concern in Rome that the cooperation offered by China focused on violent crime and did not extend to the numerous probes being conducted by prosecutors in Milan, Brescia, Florence and Rome into vast money-laundering operations run through so-called Chinese "underground banks".
The Chinese Foreign Ministry said China was willing to strengthen law-enforcement cooperation with Italy to tackle transnational crime. The Chinese consulate in Florence said China "naturally cooperates with all countries" to combat criminal activity and protect the Chinese community's rights.
Italy's national anti-mafia prosecutor, Barbara Sargenti, who coordinates investigations at home and abroad, said there was still no agreement on how best to proceed.
"There have been, and there continue to be, discussions through the Ministry of Justice. The question is whether there is both the possibility and the benefit, for both sides, of continuing along this path," she told Reuters.
At last November's meeting in Prato, a judicial source said the Chinese delegation provided the names of masterminds behind the 2024 attempted murder in the city.
Tescaroli's office prepared a statement to mark the encounter, but it was never released.
A Rome-based judicial source said the National Anti-Mafia and Anti-Terrorism Prosecutor's Office had been unhappy about the initiative, arguing that a local prosecutor's office should not have a direct channel with the Chinese police.
Tescaroli acknowledged disagreements between Italy's independent prosecutors and state-controlled security, such as the police, over how to manage contacts with Beijing.
"There are differing views between the political world and the judiciary," he said. "We are trying to move the cooperation forward and have frequent contacts. This is an opportunity."
One senior police official said Italian police were proceeding cautiously. "We're sniffing each other out," the official said, adding that China was not a partner comparable to Italy's European allies and required special care.
Cybersecurity concerns have complicated ties.
Italian police said in February that cyberattacks originating from China had targeted the Interior Ministry, seeking to locate Chinese dissidents and identify officers investigating Chinese crime groups.
Police said the attempts were thwarted and no sensitive data was taken. China's Foreign Ministry said Beijing actively opposed hacking and rejected "disinformation" on the issue.
European officials meanwhile have encouraged cooperation and China has pressed for a more stable channel via European institutions, the judicial sources said.
Eurojust, the European Union body that facilitates cross-border collaboration, said it was cooperating with Italy and China on one undisclosed case.
In another case late last year, Chinese authorities sought, via European channels, to send investigators to Florence a
The documents arrived at the ministry's mailroom with a payment-on-delivery charge and were sent back to China after staff refused to pay, unaware of the package's importance.
Mistrust and bureaucratic resistance have slowed collaboration, frustrating Italian prosecutors trying to combat Chinese crime networks.
Prato, home to a large Chinese community, has become the epicenter of alleged Chinese crime networks in Italy.
They are accused of illicit banking, drug trafficking, extortion, labor abuses, illegal immigration, tax evasion, murder, and mob warfare.
Chinese authorities express willingness to cooperate on combating transnational crime, according to official statements.
Explore more articles in the Headlines category
