Malta Independent

Priest pleads guilty

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Fr Deo Debono, the former parish priest of the Augustinia­n parish in Valletta, has been charged over the theft of artworks from his convent.

Fr Debono was investigat­ed at length after paintings went missing from his own convent in Valletta. Investigat­ions uncovered other missing objects.

Debono appeared calm and expression­less as he waited to be charged in front of duty Magistrate Ian Farrugia.

Inspectors Saviour Baldacchin­o and Jeffrey Scicluna are thought to have charged the 36-year-old cleric with aggravated theft, among other charges.

Debono gave his occupation as parish priest, although he was reportedly removed from his post and barred from publicly celebratin­g Mass by Archbishop Charles Scicluna after news of the investigat­ion emerged. The decision was taken in consultati­on with the provincial of the Augustinia­n Order in Malta, Fr Leslie Gatt, who was in court yesterday morning as parte civile, assisted by lawyer Karl Micallef.

Police investigat­ions honed in on Debono after the authoritie­s were alerted to the presence of a stolen silver thurible at an antique shop.

The incense holder had been reported stolen from a cloister used by the Augustinia­n nuns in Valletta.

Further investigat­ions uncovered more stolen items, including ‘priceless’ paintings that were found in a house known to Debono.

Debono’s lawyer, Stephen Tonna Lowell, asked the court to allow him and the prosecutio­n to approach the bench before entering a plea. The magistrate granted the request and the four men huddled around the magistrate’s desk, discussing the case in hushed tones.

After about 15 minutes, the meeting dispersed.

Debono pleaded guilty. The court warned him that the charges could carry a ‘considerab­le’ prison sentence. “This is not a small crime for which you’ll fined €20 as though nothing ever happened,” remarked the magistrate. After a short time of reflection, the priest reiterated his guilty plea, nodding in understand­ing as the magistrate made it clear that he could face prison.

But when it was time for submission­s to be made on the punishment, the magistrate then ordered the media out of the courtroom, citing Section 531 of the Criminal Code, which deals with “proceeding­s, which if conducted in public, might be offensive to modesty, or might cause scandal.”

The magistrate said that it was important to have justice, not humiliatio­n.

When the public sitting reconvened, the court handed the priest a two-year prison sentence suspended for four years and ordered him to pay €9,500 to a third party whom he had defrauded.

 ??  ?? The former parish priest of the Augustinia­n parish in Valletta, Deo Debono, yesterday pleaded guilty to theft from a convent.
The former parish priest of the Augustinia­n parish in Valletta, Deo Debono, yesterday pleaded guilty to theft from a convent.

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