Want Veronica: Why Does Abruzzi
By killing Veronica, Abruzzi isn't sabotaging Michael’s plan; he is protecting it. He is removing the variable of a legal miracle. If Veronica is dead, the appeal dies. If the appeal dies, Lincoln is executed. If Lincoln is executed, Michael stops digging tunnels and focuses solely on the escape. Abruzzi gets his plane. It is a brutal calculus: One dead lawyer equals one living mob boss. To understand Abruzzi’s rage, you have to remember the physical evidence. When Fibonacci turned state’s evidence, he didn’t just put Abruzzi in prison; he shot him. We see the scar on Abruzzi’s neck. That scar is a daily reminder of betrayal.
On the surface, it seems counterintuitive. Why kill the one person trying to prove Lincoln’s innocence? If Lincoln is exonerated, Michael doesn’t need to escape, and Abruzzi loses his ticket out. But for Abruzzi, the logic is terrifyingly perfect. Here are the five layers of his reasoning. Abruzzi is not a chaotic criminal; he is a traditionalist. In his world, there is a sacred hierarchy: God, Family, then Business. Otto Fibonacci—the man Abruzzi is desperate to kill—broke that code. Fibonacci testified against the Abruzzi crew, violating the oath of Omertà (silence). why does abruzzi want veronica
Abruzzi is a pragmatist. He has spent decades in a system where hope gets you killed. He does not believe Veronica will succeed. But he fears the attempt . Why? Because if Veronica gets too close to the truth, the shadowy organization that actually framed Lincoln (The Company) will panic. Abruzzi, while powerful, is a subcontractor for The Company in this matter. If Veronica creates a legal earthquake, The Company might cut ties, or worse, eliminate Abruzzi to clean house. If the appeal dies, Lincoln is executed
When Abruzzi learns that Veronica is talking to Fibonacci (via Nick Savrinn), it triggers a visceral, PTSD-like response. This isn't business anymore. This is personal. Fibonacci is the ghost that haunts Abruzzi’s cell. Every time Abruzzi looks in the mirror, he sees the man who almost killed him. The idea that Fibonacci might be "courted" by a lawyer—a pretty, respectable, civilian lawyer—is an insult so deep that Abruzzi cannot process it rationally. He doesn't just want Fibonacci dead; he wants to erase any possibility of Fibonacci having a voice. Veronica is that voice. Cutting off the voice is the only logical mob solution. This is the subtlest motive. Abruzzi is a predator testing his prey. Early in Season 1, Michael manipulates Abruzzi by promising the plane location, then pulling it away. Abruzzi responds by cutting off Michael’s toes (a horrifying scene). It is a brutal calculus: One dead lawyer