Giorgio Pisanò

Giorgio Pisanò was born on 30 January 1924 in Ferrara, the first of five children to his father Luigi,[1] an Apulian law graduate from San Vito dei Normanni who worked as a civil servant.

Along with a group of young fascists, Giorgio organized the reopening of the Casa del Fascio[1] and the occupation of the abandoned "Gavinana" barracks awaiting support from nearby German forces.

[1] He served as a 28th "Ruy Blas Blagi" Black Brigade lieutenant in Valtellina during the ending phase of the war, assigned to the special service of the General Headquarters.

On 20 April 1945 he joined the Ridotto Alpino Repubblicano and, on the 27th, a National Republican Guard Special Border Militia column led by Major Renato Vanna.

[2] In 1958 Pisanò defended Raoul Ghiani in the unsolved Fenaroli murder case,[citation needed] along with the Italcasse scandal, which involved "black funds" to political parties and the granting of questionable loans uncovered in an investigation by the Bank of Italy.

[14] Rusconi—who in the meantime had founded Gente magazine[13]—commissioned Pisanò in 1960 to collect all the photographic and documentary material on the Resistance[1] for a report in a weekly to be published in instalments.

[N 7] His protest against socialist leader Mancini culminated in being accused by Dino De Laurentiis of extortion in 1971 and his incarceration in Regina Coeli, where he spent 114 days before being acquitted of all charges by the Court of Rome on July 14 and released.

[N 8] Candido's 1980 ran a particularly virulent campaign aimed at demonstrating that behind Aldo Moro's murder in 1978, there was an interweaving of the interests of shady persons connected to the Lockheed bribery scandals.

In 1995, after the "svolta di Fiuggi" — when the Italian Social Movement made a turning point away from fascist symbolism to become a bona fide and legal force in politics — and the definitive transformation of the party into the National Alliance, Pisanò decided to associate with Pino Rauti in the conservation project of a historic Italian right-wing party, which subsequently gave rise to the Tricolour Flame (Flamma Tricolore).