Los Angeles Times

Former papal envoy dies at Vatican

- By Tom Kington Kington is a special correspond­ent.

ROME — A former papal envoy accused of paying young boys for sex has died before his trial at the Vatican could get underway, officials said Friday.

In the first trial of its kind at the Vatican’s own court, Jozef Wesolowski, 67, faced seven years in jail on charges that he paid shoeshine boys for sex while serving as papal nuncio, or ambassador, in the Dominican Republic.

A Vatican statement said Wesolowski was found dead at his residence in the enclave early Friday. Although an autopsy has yet to be performed, the Vatican said natural causes were likely.

Pope Francis was informed of Wesolowski’s death, the statement said.

In July, Wesolowski was taken to a hospital the day before he was due in court for the first day of his trial, forcing an adjournmen­t. The Vatican did not specify the nature of his illness.

The former archbishop’s trial was the first time a senior church official was sent before a Vatican criminal court accused of sex abuse and marked a crucial test of Francis’ vow to crack down on abusive priests and the bishops accused of covering up for them. Wesolowski was accused of paying minors for sexual acts, purchasing pedophile material and offending Christian morality.

He was posted to the Dominican Republic as nuncio by Pope Benedict XVI, Francis’ predecesso­r, in 2008.

After accusation­s of abuse surfaced, Wesolowski was recalled by Francis in 2013 from the Dominican Republic to Rome, where he was defrocked by a church court in June 2014. He was placed under house arrest in September and ordered to face a criminal trial at the tiny city-state’s court.

His house-arrest order subsequent­ly expired, and at the time of his death he was free to move around the Vatican but not to leave it.

Wesolowski was staying with a group of Franciscan­s who hear confession from Roman Catholics visiting St. Peter’s Basilica.

The Vatican has been accused of recalling Wesolowski from the Dominican Republic before he could be put on trial there, thus going against its own advice to bishops to cooperate with local police.

The Vatican has said Wesolowski could not be tried until he was stripped of his diplomatic immunity by the Vatican, which occurred last year. After his criminal trial at the Vatican, he would have been available for extraditio­n to face legal proceeding­s in the Dominican Republic, the Vatican said.

While living at the Vatican last year, Wesolowski was found to be in possession of child pornograph­y on a computer.

Pope John Paul II ordained Wesolowski, a fellow Pole, when he was the archbishop of Krakow and then named him as a bishop in 2000.

 ?? Erika Santelices AFP/Getty ?? JOZEF WESOLOWSKI was awaiting trial on charges of sex abuse.
Erika Santelices AFP/Getty JOZEF WESOLOWSKI was awaiting trial on charges of sex abuse.

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