Terrorized farmers and livestock breeders from the mountain villages of Vorizia and Amari have provided graphic testimony detailing how a violent family-run crime ring destroyed their livelihoods to hijack more than €586,000 in European Union agricultural subsidies.
Victims told investigators from the Greek Police’s organized crime unit that syndicate members used physical assaults and death threats to force them into signing over land deeds.
According to case files, the suspects target local families, forcing them into fictitious lease agreements so the gang could falsely register as agricultural beneficiaries.
When residents refused to cooperate, the retaliation was swift and destructive.
Landowners recounted harrowing accounts of night-time raids on their properties. In one documented attack, victims watched helplessly as suspects set fire to a critical farm vehicle. Other farmers testified that the gang cut down or poisoned entire harvests, including the systematic destruction of 400 vineyards and 130 mature olive trees.
"They didn't just take our land on paper; they destroyed what took generations to build," one local breeder stated in his deposition, describing how the suspects also drove stolen livestock onto his property to claim fraudulent grazing rights.
Total property damage from these retaliatory attacks has surpassed €200,000.
The two primary brothers spearheading the ring secured a postponement until Friday to answer to these specific victim accusations.
Their defense attorney claims his clients are victims of local rivalries, but prosecutors state the victims' testimonies align perfectly with a broader pattern of regional subsidy fraud.