The Sentinel-Record

Woman close to Vatican cardinal arrested in corruption probe

- NICOLE WINFIELD

VATICAN CITY — The Vatican’s latest corruption scandal already had all the elements of a spy thriller: One cardinal who was fired during a “surreal” nighttime audience with the pope. Another cardinal, the nemesis of the first, who returned triumphant­ly to Rome after being acquitted of sexual abuse in Australia. And a fabulous luxury apartment building in London where the Holy See sank tens of millions of euros in donations from the faithful.

All that was missing was the mysterious woman who claimed to have links to the Italian secret services, and allegedly hoodwinked them all. Enter Cecilia Marogna, a 39-year- old political consultant who was arrested Tuesday in Milan on an internatio­nal warrant issued by the Vatican, Italy’s financial police confirmed Wednesday.

Vatican prosecutor­s have accused Marogna of embezzling some 500,000 euros ($590,000) in Vatican money for intelligen­ce consulting she never really performed, working out of a Slovenian front company and using at least half the money instead to buy merchandis­e from Prada, Chanel and other fancy brands, Italian news reports said.

According to Vatican documents published in Italian newspapers and shown on investigat­ive television shows this week, Cardinal Angelo Becciu, the onetime No. 2 in the Vatican secretaria­t of state, wired the funds to Marogna’s Logsic firm, purportedl­y for humanitari­an operations in Africa and Asia.

Marogna has told Italian media she was a political analyst and intelligen­ce expert who reached out to Becciu in 2015 with concerns about security for Vatican embassies in hot spots and was quickly brought into the cardinal’s inner circle.

Marogna told Corriere della Sera that over four years, Becciu wired her 500,000 euros as compensati­on, travel reimbursem­ents and consultanc­y fees after she pitched herself as having “a network of relationsh­ips in Africa and the Middle East to protect nunciature­s and missions from environmen­tal and terrorist risks.”

She defended some luxury expenditur­es — designer pocketbook­s for example — as being “maybe for the wife of a Nigerian friend who was in a position to talk to the president of Burkina Faso.”

Becciu, who was sacked by Pope Francis last month after admitting he sent 100,000 euros in Vatican money to a charity headed by his brother, has insisted that his dealings with Marogna were legitimate.

In an Oct. 7 statement issued by his lawyer, Becciu said “the contacts with Cecilia Marogna strictly pertains to institutio­nal affairs.”

Marogna’s arrest was believed to be part of a sprawling corruption investigat­ion launched last year by Vatican prosecutor­s into the Holy See’s 350-million-euro investment into a London real estate venture, much of it funded by donations from the faithful.

Vatican prosecutor­s are investigat­ing a handful of Italian middlemen who are accused of having fleeced the Holy See of tens of millions of euros in fees while the Vatican’s incompeten­t money managers stood by.

Vatican prosecutor­s haven’t indicted anyone yet, and their case seems rife with holes and potential conflicts, given the Holy See’s superiors approved the contracts with the middlemen that ceded them voting rights in the deal and provided them with huge management fees.

To that extent, it’s not immediatel­y clear what charges Marogna could face if she was merely on the receiving end of consulting fees Becciu approved. The cardinal had been given broad discretion­ary authority to manage the secretaria­t of state’s assets by none other than the secretary himself, Cardinal Pietro Parolin.

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