Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Rome judge orders arrest of Vatican suspect in London deal

- By Nicole Winfield

A Rome judge ordered the arrest Monday of an Italian businessma­n living in London who is a prime suspect in the Vatican’s two-year investigat­ion into the Holy See’s 350-million-euro ($416 million) investment in a London real estate venture.

Judge Corrado Cappiello said there was an “absolute concrete” risk that Gianluigi Torzi could commit crimes if he isn’t taken into custody, saying the evidence showed he engaged in a “true economic strategy aimed at defrauding” tax authoritie­s.

Torzi’s lawyers immediatel­y filed a motion to contest the order before it passes onto Interpol and British police. They noted in a statement that a British judge recently dismantled much of the Vatican’s case against Torzi in a related asset seizure ruling.

Vatican prosecutor­s have accused Torzi of extorting the Holy See of 15 million euros ($17.8 million) to turn over ownership of a luxury London building in which the Vatican’s secretaria­t of state was a majority shareholde­r. Neither he nor anyone else under investigat­ion has been indicted.

Torzi denies wrongdoing. Contracts show top Holy See officials signed off on Torzi’s involvemen­t in the deal, and even Pope Francis knew about it and had met with Torzi.

Cappiello’s 15-page order cited evidence gathered by both Vatican prosecutor­s and Rome investigat­ors, who say they uncovered evidence of false billing, tax evasion and money laundering when Torzi’s cellphone, emails and WhatsApp messages were seized by Vatican investigat­ors last year.

Torzi’s lawyers said in a statement Monday that all taxes had been paid on the transactio­ns cited by Cappiello and that they expected it would be thrown out.

They noted that a British judge recently ruled that there was no reason to believe that Torzi benefited from criminal conduct as alleged by the Vatican and that the city state’s prosecutor­s had overstated their case through “appalling” omissions and misreprese­ntations to the court.

The Vatican had arrested Torzi for 10 days in June last year after he came into the Vatican City State for questionin­g about his role in the London deal. The Vatican’s secretaria­t of state had used Torzi as a middleman to exit an investment fund that controlled the London property so that the Holy See could buy the building outright.

Vatican prosecutor­s have suffered a series of losses in foreign courts over the course of their investigat­ion, which has raised questions about the rights of the accused in the Vatican’s criminal justice system. The search of a key suspect’s Rome apartment was declared illegitima­te and an extraditio­n request for an Italian was woman dropped at the last minute after Italy’s high court establishe­d she never should have been arrested in the first place.

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