The Freeman

Anomalies abound in Vatican trial

- PHOTO FROM ITALYLOGUE.COM

VATICAN CITY — The Vatican trial over $500,000 in donations to the pope's pediatric hospital that were diverted to renovate a cardinal's penthouse is reaching its conclusion, with neither the cardinal who benefited nor the contractor who was apparently paid twice for the work facing trial.

Instead, the former president of the Bambino Gesu children's hospital and his ex-treasurer are accused of misappropr­iating 422,000 euros from the hospital's fundraisin­g foundation to overhaul the retirement home of Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, the Vatican secretary of state under Pope Benedict XVI.

Prosecutor­s have asked for a guilty verdict, a threeyear prison term and a fine of 5,000 euros ($5,910) for the ex-president, Giuseppe Profiti. They asked to shelve the case against the extreasure­r, Massimo Spina, for lack of evidence: The trial determined he had no signing power or decisionma­king authority.

The trial, which began in July and resumed yesterday with the defense's closing arguments, exposed how Bertone bent Vatican rules to get his retirement apartment in shape for him to move in after Pope Francis was elected in 2013 and named a new secretary of state.

And it laid bare the "opacity, silence and poor management" in handling Vatican assets, prosecutor Roberto Zanotti said in his closing statements. Such lack of financial transparen­cy and accountabi­lity has bedeviled the Holy See for centuries and has been a top concern for Francis' reform-minded papacy.

The trial also shined a light on "the pope's hospital," which was the subject of an Associated Press investigat­ion earlier this year. The AP uncovered a secret 2014 Vaticanaut­horized probe that found that the hospital's mission under the Profiti administra­tion had become "more aimed at profit" than patient care.

After retiring in 2013, Bertone was assigned a 400 square meter (4,305 sq. feet), top-floor bachelor pad in the Vatican-owned Palazzo San Carlo, which sits on the edge of the Vatican gardens and offers fabulous views of St. Peter's Basilica and overlooks the Vatican hotel where Francis lives.

During the trial, Bertone was shown to have personally engineered the unpreceden­ted maneuver to get an old friend, Gianantoni­o Bandera, to do the renovation. Bertone's project jumped the queue for Vatican real estate repairs, and avoided the normal external bidding process required for such an expensive overhaul— presumably because he promised to foot the bill himself.

And Bertone did indeed pay some 300,000 euros ($355,000) out of his own pocket. The problem is the hospital foundation also paid Bandera's firm 422,000 euros for a job that totaled 533,000 euros, including communal repairs to the palazzo's leaky roof.

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Part of the Vatican City.
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