The former mayor of a small Italian town dubbed “the town of welcome” has been convicted of aiding illegal immigration and sentenced to 13 years and two months in prison.
Domenico “Mimmo” Lucano was also convicted of fraud, embezzlement, criminal association and abuse of office by a court in Calabria, a region in the south of the Italian peninsula.
Lucano has denied wrongdoing.
“I will be stained for life for wrongs I didn’t commit,” the Italian news agency ANSA quoted him as saying.
He put a hand to his forehead in seeming disbelief as he listened to the verdict and sentence announced in court after three days of deliberations.
Prosecutors alleged that Lucano facilitated marriages of convenience between Italian men in the town of Riace and foreign women to get the women Italian residency permits.
They also alleged he misused government funds earmarked for migrant assistance, including five million euros (£4.3 million) that prosecutors contended had ended up in private pockets and was not used to help migrants.
His lawyers said they would appeal both the conviction and the sentence, which was some five years longer than the term prosecutors had requested.
One of his lawyers, Giuliano Pisapia, a former left-wing mayor of Milan, rejected the idea the trial was politically motivated.
But he said: “Without a doubt, there was certainly hostility against Lucano.”
Lucano remains out of prison pending the outcome of final appeals.
Humanitarian groups who rescue migrants from traffickers’ unseaworthy boats in the Mediterranean expressed outrage at the court’s verdict and sentence.
“The former mayor of Riace gave life and future to his city through welcome and solidarity,” Sea Watch Italy tweeted.
“We are at the side of Mimmo Lucano and whoever practices solidarity every day.”
Many migrants in Riace, a town of some 1,700 people, obtained municipal jobs, such as as street cleaners, while Lucano was mayor.
Another humanitarian group, Mediterranea Saving Humans, condemned the verdict as “shameful”.
In a statement it described the trial’s outcome as “the gravest repressive attack on the culture and the practice of solidarity in our country”.
The charity added: “Who is poor or a migrant is forced to suffer every violence, and whoever helps them is considered a criminal.”
Riace is famous for the discovery in 1972 of two ancient Greek statues at the bottom of the sea off the nearby coast. The statues are known as the Riace Bronzes.