Stanley Tucci’s not the only one with a popular Italian cooking show, it would seem.

A mafia fugitive has been arrested in the Dominican Republic after inadvertently tipping off police with his culinary hobby.

After seven years on the run, Marc Feren Claude Biart was tracked down through a YouTube cooking channel he started with his wife, Italian police said in a statement to NBC News.

The alleged gangster’s “love for Italian cuisine” — and tattoo ink — made his arrest possible, police said.

Though he carefully hid his face, Biart failed to disguise his distinctive body tattoos, they added.

Police said they believe Biart is a member of the notorious ‘Ndragheta crime syndicate — one of the most feared and powerful in Europe — from the Calabria region at the toe of southern Italy’s boot-shaped peninsula.

Biart had been wanted for allegedly trafficking cocaine into the Netherlands since 2014, police said. The search culminated in his arrest last week in the Dominican town of Boca Chica after which he was extradited to Italy and landed in Milan on Monday, they added.

Biart, 53, had been living in the Dominican Republic for the past five years and reportedly leading a quiet life.

Police said he had been keeping a low profile during his stay in the Caribbean — besides the cooking videos posted to the internet — and was known to locals as simply “Marc.”

It was unclear how long the cooking channel had been online or when police became aware of it.

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Biart’s arrest marks a breakthrough for the international effort led by Interpol and multiple European police forces to bring down organized crime. Known as “Interpol Cooperation Against ‘Ndrangheta,’ the initiative launched last year is tasked with disrupting the mafia gang’s global network, which Interpol says is present “on every world continent.”

Another ‘Ndrangheta mafia member was arrested in Portugal on Monday, police said. Francesco Pelle, who had been on the run for 14 years, was found at a clinic in Lisbon where he was receiving Covid-19 treatment.

The mafia group is currently facing one of Italy’s biggest mob trials in the last three decades. During a pre-trial hearing for the landmark case it took more than three hours to read the names of the 350 defendants.

Expected to last at least a year, the case has brought charges on account of kidnappings, murders and international drug trafficking.

Italian authorities said that arrests like those of Biart and Pelle prove the mafia’s activities not only threaten Italy but should concern the whole world.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

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