The Reporter (Vacaville)

Papal official rejects new claims in `Vatican Girl' mystery

- By Nicole Winfield

The Vatican pushed back hard Friday at “slanderous” insinuatio­ns against St. John Paul II that were aired following the reopening of an investigat­ion into the 1983 disappeara­nce of the teenage daughter of a Vatican employee.

The kerfuffle erupted after Emanuela Orlandi's brother, Pietro, spent eight hours meeting Tuesday with Vatican prosecutor­s, who earlier this year reopened the dormant investigat­ion into Emanuela's disappeara­nce. The Vatican probe has coincided with the recent decision by Italy's parliament to open a parliament­ary commission of inquest into the case, giving the Orlandi family hope that the truth might finally emerge.

Emanuela Orlandi, 15, vanished June 22, 1983, after leaving her family's Vatican City apartment to go to a music lesson in Rome. Her father was a lay employee of the Holy See.

Her disappeara­nce has been one of the Vatican's enduring mysteries, and over the years has been linked to everything from the plot to kill John Paul, a financial scandal involving the Vatican bank and Rome's criminal underworld.

The recent four-part Netflix documentar­y “Vatican Girl” explored those scenarios and also provided new testimony from a friend who said Emanuela had told her a week before she disappeare­d that a high-ranking Vatican cleric had made sexual advances toward her.

Pietro Orlandi has long insisted the Vatican knows more than it has said and has welcomed the reopening of the probe and promises by Vatican prosecutor­s that they have been given carte blanche to investigat­e “without reservatio­ns” to find the truth.

During his Tuesday interrogat­ion, Pietro Orlandi provided Vatican prosecutor­s with an audiotape from a purported Roman mobster insinuatin­g that John Paul would go out looking for underage girls to molest. He played part of the recording during an appearance after his testimony on Italy's La7 network.

The Vatican's editorial director, Andrea Tornielli, blasted the recording and Orlandi's airing of it on national television as slanderous and noted that the insinuatio­n was accompanie­d by “no evidence,

clues, testimonie­s or corroborat­ion.”

“It is sacrosanct that there be a 360-degree investigat­ion to seek the truth about Emanuela's disappeara­nce,” Tornielli wrote in the Vatican newspaper L'Osservator­e Romano.

“But no one deserves to be vilified in this way, without even a shred of a clue, on the basis of the `rumors' of some unknown figure in the criminal underworld or some sleazy anonymous comment produced on live TV.”

John Paul's longtime secretary, Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz, also criticized the insinuatio­ns against John Paul as “unreal, false and laughable if they weren't tragic and even criminal.” He said he understood the pain of the Orlandi family and hoped for the truth to finally come out, but defended John Paul and denied he ever tried to cover up the Orlandi case.

Pietro Orlandi's lawyer, Laura Sgro, insisted her client wasn't accusing anyone and blamed a manipulati­on of his comments for fueling the dispute.

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