Daughter-in-law of Montreal Mafia figure shot dead in parking lot - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 06:24 PM | Calgary | -5.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

Daughter-in-law of Montreal Mafia figure shot dead in parking lot

Claudia Iacono, owner of Salon Deauville, was the woman shot dead Tuesday afternoon in her vehicle at the intersection of Jean-Talon and de la Savane streets in Montreal, Radio-Canada is reporting.

Wives rarely targeted in Mafia attacks, says policing expert

police around crime scene
Montreal police say the woman's car collided with a building after she was fatally shot. The victim was declared dead on the scene. (Kolya H. Guilbault/Radio-Canada)

The daughter-in-law ofMontreal Mafia member Moreno Gallowaskilled ina targeted shooting in the parking lot of her beauty salon on Tuesday, Radio-Canada is reporting.

Multiple sources tell Radio-Canada that agunman shotClaudiaIacono five times at 4:30 p.m. after waiting for her to enter the parking lot of her beauty salon, Salon Deauville, in theCte-des-NeigesNotre-Dame-de-Grce borough.

Montreal policesay when they arrived on the scene,they found a woman with gunshot wounds inside her car.

"When the victim was hit by bullets, her vehicle was in motion and collided with a building," saidMontreal police spokesperson Const. Sabrina Gauthier.

Witnesses told police the shooter ran away after opening fire, police say.

Police would not confirm the victim's age or identity. Gauthier said the victimwas declared dead at the scene.

Hit may have crossed a line

Iacono was the wife of Anthony Gallo. Anthony's father, Moreno Gallo,was killed in Mexico in 2013.

Iacono was not involved in criminal activities, according to Radio-Canada sources.

Montreal police Chief Fady Dagher told reportersWednesday morning thatthe city is still "very safe" despite the shooting taking place in broad daylight.

Although Dagher called the timing of the shooting "concerning," he said "it'snot dangerous to be out at all because it was targeted."

"We cannot prevent all the revenge from organized crime," he said.

He added that it is too early to say more about the investigation, buthe expects to see some kind of retaliation within the underworld.

"If it's connected to organized crime, it's one of the first times that we see a woman being targeted," he said. "We are looking into it to find out why it happened to that person, to that woman."

Andr Glinas, a retired sergeant from the Service de police de la Ville de Montral (SPVM)'s criminal intelligence unit, said wives are rarely targeted in Mafia attacks.

"One thing is certain, we have just crossed a line by killing the spouse. Now, this limit will be crossed by criminal organizations," he said. "It just sent the message that no one is untouchable anymore. Not even Mafia wives."

Valrie Plante, the mayor of Montreal, told reporters on Wednesday that the shootingis "extremely troubling."

"When we speak to the SPVM, what they tell us isthat organized crime is changing," she said. "But clearly it's more and more true because certain codes, for them too, the code for criminals, changes. Obviously it worries us."

Her beauty salon was targeted

SPVM police officers had previously met Iaconoin early 2015 after her salon had been the target of a Molotov cocktail attack, Radio-Canada sources said.

The salonparking lot is located near the intersection of Jean-Talon and de la Savane streets, an areaknown as the "Triangle."

A woman stands in a beauty salon.
Claudia Iacono owned Salon Deauville, a beauty shop in Ctes-des-Neiges. (Claudia Iacono/Facebook)

Radio-Canada reports the attack was perceived at the time as a message to her husband, Anthony Gallo, and brother-in-law Moreno Gallo Jr., who were involved in organized crime.

Police have made no arrests so far and are speaking with more witnesses.

Major crime investigators and forensic identification technicians were also called to the scene.

with files from Mlissa Franois, Radio-Canada's Pascal Robidas and La Presse Canadienne