This is who is the most dangerous Albanian in the world ( Photo)

If you are looking for the criminal model, you must not go further than the Albanian from Macedonia, “the men's host”, Daut Kadriovski. In the 50s and wanted in 12 European states for every crime, by weapons, cars, drugs, organ and human trafficking, Kadriovski, according to Europol, is at the top of a unique criminal organisation for [...]
If you are looking for the criminal model, you must not go further than the Albanian from Macedonia, “the men's host”, Daut Kadriovski.
In the 50s and wanted in 12 European states for every crime, by weapons, cars, drugs, organ trafficking and human beings, Kadriovski, according to Europol, is at the top of one.
Unique criminal organization for secrecy and brutality.
“We had one of the members of this criminal organization and were trying to turn us into collaborators,” recalls former crime officer in New York, Fred Santoro, who explains his efforts to turn an Albanian prisoner into informant.
But the gangster stood up and demanded that he return to his cell to serve his 30-year sentence of blackmail.
Santoro -- shocked and very familiar with the way Italian mobsters agreed to co-operate in reducing the sentence -- asked the Albanian why he declined.
He turned and was very clear: They'll kill my mother, my father, my brothers, my sisters, my children, my wife, whoever I know. That's why I refuse, thank you. Albanian on ger”.
So, with one leg in New York and Philadelphia, Kadriovski expanded what he could do best, except murder; and now his criminal organization is thought to be the main source of heroin in North America, which comes from Afghanistan, according to the FBI.
Because, you see yourself, Daut Kadriovski, also known as Mehmet Hajdini, is part of a Muslim-Albanian relationship with the shadow organisation, Al Qaeda.
He's even more connected than a plant, something he needs, writes Mapo.
In other words: a heroin-for-co-Coca connection with Colombians, plus hundreds of collaborators who trafficking drugs in Australia, Canada, Mexico, Ireland, Peru, Venezuela and elsewhere in the EU. What brings us to Kadriovski's second arrest: September 2, 2001, when it was locked up in a police station in Tiranne, Albania, following local and Interpol's arrest for drug trafficking. Something that in word terms is also known as warning: Kadriovski disappeared again and there are rumors from last year that he died. Or “is dead”.
And we just haven't caught him yet, say retired cop Eddie Williams.
But Kadriovski and Albanians are generally continuing their criminal and bloody activity as usual.
Santoro brings an interesting detail.
“Albanians open a club in a very traditional mafia country,” he says.
The Italian Mafia sent two gangsters to secure the new owners' payments.
The news went up and Albanian bosses decided to sit at the meeting.
Santoro says what happened next, learned through listening, surprised her too.
Almost all the low-level band went to the Bronx to meet with the Albanians.
“The Albanians get shit... in wood, breaking their wings,” says Santoro.
Eventually the Italian mafia decided to leave the Albanians for complicated reasons, but apparently business reasons.
And Kadriovski, alive or dead, still has traces on many of his old businesses, no matter whether it's the kidnapping of young girls for sexual slavery, waitress murders because they get mixed up in things or the order of a $19 million robbery through the internet, like the lover of drink and murder, Zef Mustafa, for whose head are put in five million dollars, but has avoided arrest and is now on freedom.
Kadriovski created an organization based on the absolute weight of intensity and egress, something that Italian prosecutor Kataldo Motta once called “a threat to Western society”.
And when you learn that Albanians lost a 125 million dollar charge under the mayor of New York, Rudy Giuliani, and the FBI says their first answer was to put attorney Alan Cohen and Detective Jack Delemore under protection, you understand why.
Others can wholeheartedly accept Motta's assessment: New York Attorney's Office, Antidroga, New York Police, Internal Security Office, Migration Office, Tax Investigation Office, American Marshalls, even the entire Narcotics Control Board, which was part of this action.
Without Kadriovski's body, he remains a very present memory of the fact that, sometimes more than we want, the system doesn't work well.
And, no less than American President Barack Obama, who imposed sanctions on traffickers Naser Kelmendi two years ago, don't expect the weather to change quickly.
“Kadriovski, alive or dead, says the same thing, indeed,” says Hannah Elliott, a self-declared revolutionary of criminal justice from the University of Florida.
Sometimes justice never works.















