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Autopsy suggests mobster was killed with cyanide

Giuseppe De Vito, is shown in this Montreal Police photo in 2010. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO.
Giuseppe De Vito, is shown in this Montreal Police photo in 2010. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO.

MONTREAL – Quebec’s coroner’s office says an inmate who died under suspicious circumstances in a federal penitentiary likely was poisoned with cyanide.

A toxicology report released Monday showed levels of cyanide in Giuseppe De Vito’s blood and in his stomach.

De Vito died at the Donnacona Institution, a maximum-security federal facility near Quebec City. He was found unconscious in his cell last July 8.

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The convicted mobster was serving a 15-year sentence for drug trafficking.

READ MORE:  Two more arrested in slaying of Mob boss Salvatore Montagna

He was the husband of Adele Sorella, a Quebec woman who was found guilty this past June in the slayings of the couple’s two children.

Those March 2009 deaths occurred while De Vito was on the lam from police.

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When De Vito was arrested in 2010, he’d drastically changed his appearance.

He was suspected of being one of those involved in a play for leadership of the Mafia a few years ago in Montreal.

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