Gulf Times

Vatican indicts 10, including cardinal, for financial crimes

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Aprominent Italian cardinal was among 10 people sent to trial in the Vatican yesterday charged with financial crimes including embezzleme­nt, money laundering, fraud, extortion and abuse of office.

Cardinal Angelo Becciu, formerly a senior official in the Vatican administra­tion, as well as two top officials at the Vatican’s Financial Intelligen­ce Unit will go on trial on July 27 over a multi-million euro scandal involving the Vatican’s purchase of a building in one of London’s smartest districts.

The trial will inevitably bring a swirl of media interest to the tiny city-state surrounded by Rome, and appears to underscore Pope Francis’ determinat­ion to cure the rot in Vatican finances, even if it involves messy public hearings.

Becciu, 73, whom the Pope fired from his senior clerical post last year for alleged nepotism, and who has always maintained his innocence during a twoyear investigat­ion, becomes the most senior Vatican official to be charged with financial crimes.

The Pope personally gave the required approval last week for Becciu to be indicted, according to a 487-page indictment request seen by Reuters. The Vatican announced the indictment­s in a two-page statement.

The charges against Becciu include embezzleme­nt and abuse of office. An Italian woman who worked for him was charged with embezzleme­nt and the cardinal’s former secretary, a priest, was accused of extortion.

Becciu said in a statement that he was a victim of a “machinatio­n” and reaffirmed his “absolute innocence”.

Two Italian brokers, Gianluigi Torzi and Raffaele Mincione, were charged with embezzleme­nt, fraud and money laundering. Torzi, for whom Italian magistrate­s issued an arrest warrant in April, was also charged with extortion. There was no immediate response to attempts to reach their lawyers, but both men have consistent­ly denied wrongdoing.

Four companies associated with individual defendants, two in Switzerlan­d, one in the United States and one in Slovenia, were also indicted, according to the document.

The investigat­ion into the purchase of the building became public on October 1, 2019, when Vatican police raided the offices of the Secretaria­t of State, the administra­tive heart of the Catholic Church, and those of the Vatican’s Financial Informatio­n Authority (AIF).

The then-president of the AIF, Rene Bruelhart, a 48-yearold Swiss, and AIF’s former Italian director, Tommaso Di Ruzza, 46, were charged with abuse of office for allegedly failing to adequately protect the Vatican’s interests and giving

Torzi what the indictment request called an “undue advantage”.

Di Ruzza was also accused of embezzleme­nt related to alleged inappropri­ate use of his official credit card, and of divulging confidenti­al informatio­n.

Bruelhart said in a text message that he had “always carried out my functions and duties with correctnes­s” and that “the truth about my innocence will emerge.”

Di Ruzza did not immediatel­y respond to a voicemail requesting comment.

In 2014, the Secretaria­t of State invested more than 200 million euros, much of it from contributi­ons from the faithful, in a fund run by Mincione, securing about 45% of a commercial and residentia­l building at 60 Sloane Avenue in London’s South Kensington district.

The indictment request said Mincione had tried to deceive the Vatican, which in 2018 tried to end the relationsh­ip.

It turned to Torzi for help in buying up the rest of the building, but later accused him of extortion.

At the time, Becciu was in the last year of his post as deputy secretary of state for general affairs, a powerful administra­tive position that handles hundreds of millions of euros.

All told, the Secretaria­t of State sank more than 350 million euros into the investment, according to Vatican media, and suffered what Cardinal George Pell, the former Vatican treasurer, told Reuters last year were

“enormous losses”.

Torzi was arrested in the Vatican in June 2020, and spent a week in custody.

According to the indictment request, Becciu is charged with five counts of embezzleme­nt, two of abuse of office, and one count of inducing a witness to perjury. About 75 pages of the document are dedicated to Becciu.

It says Becciu tried to “heavily deflect” the inquiry into Vatican investment­s, including the London building, and tried to discredit the investigat­ing magistrate­s via the Italian media.

Becciu continued to have influence over money transfers at the Secretaria­t even after he left the post, the document said.

The main charges against Becciu involve the alleged funnelling of money and contracts to companies or charitable organisati­ons controlled by his brothers on their native island of Sardinia.

Another Sardinian, Cecilia Maronga, 40, who worked for Becciu, was charged with embezzleme­nt. Her cellphone was not connected.

The indictment request said she had received about 575,000 euros from the Secretaria­t of State in 2018-2019.

She has said on Italian television that the money, sent to her company in Slovenia, was to ransom kidnapped missionari­es in Africa. But the indictment request said much of it was used for “personal benefit”, including the purchase of luxury goods.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? IN THE DOCK: Cardinal Giovanni Angelo Becciu, who has been caught up in a real estate scandal, speaks to the media a day after he resigned suddenly and gave up his right to take part in an eventual conclave to elect a Pope, near Vatican last year.
(Reuters) IN THE DOCK: Cardinal Giovanni Angelo Becciu, who has been caught up in a real estate scandal, speaks to the media a day after he resigned suddenly and gave up his right to take part in an eventual conclave to elect a Pope, near Vatican last year.

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