Cardinal 'claimed pope to die'

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Re: Cardinal 'claimed pope to die'

Postby cptmarginal » Mon May 28, 2012 3:44 pm

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2 ... do-it.html

Did the Pope’s Butler, Paolo Gabriele, Really Do It?

As the Vatican tries to squelch the scandal that has exposed cronyism and corruption inside the Roman Curia, many close to the Holy See wonder if papal butler Paolo Gabriele is really the fall guy.

by Barbie Latza Nadeau | May 28, 2012 12:00 AM EDT

Pope Benedict XVI looked noticeably glum Sunday morning as he celebrated the otherwise joyous Pentecost Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica. “We are living in a new Babel,” he said during his homily. “Everybody experiences inner conflict, division, driven by human and spiritual impulses. We cannot obey them all. We cannot be egoists and generous people simultaneously.”

The 85-year-old pontiff seemed to be referring to the fact that one of his most trusted aides, Paolo Gabriele, was not nearby, as he had been for almost every Mass the pope has celebrated since 2006. Instead Gabriele, the papal butler, was in a secretive cell inside the high stone walls of Vatican City, charged with aggravated theft for allegedly stealing the pope’s personal papers and leaking them to an Italian journalist. But with no motive to betray the pope and little proof beyond the Vatican’s brief announcement of the arrest, some wonder if the butler did it at all.

Gabriele, as the primary papal servant, would have had unhindered access to the pope’s personal desk and papers, but sources close to the Vatican say most of the documents that have been leaked to the press over the last year probably never crossed the papal desk at all. The Roman Curia is a fine-tuned machine, and the pope is known to be much more interested in doctrinal issues than the day-to-day business of the Holy See. Instead the documents that have surfaced would have been handled by Tarcisio Bertone, the Vatican’s secretary of state, or processed by the pope’s secretaries, who would have briefed him but not necessarily given him the paperwork.

But the butler could have been acting on someone else’s orders or acting as a conduit for documents out of the Vatican. Investigators will now look closely at Gabriele’s computer, bank, and phone records, says Giacomo Galeazzi, the Vatican expert behind the Vatican Insider blog. “Vatican investigators seek evidence, proof, and possible higher-level accomplices,” he says, predicting that more arrests will be made this week.

All of the known documents that have been leaked to the press have come to Gianluigi Nuzzi, who published most of them in his book His Holiness: The Secret Papers of Benedict XVI. The book contains images and transcripts of hundreds of documents that paint a picture of chaos and corruption inside the Roma Curia. Nuzzi, in an interview with The Daily Beast last week, said he never paid his sources for the book. He says they were Vatican staff who were tired of “the lies” and “inconsistencies between what was going on inside the Holy See and the public’s perception of events.” Nuzzi would not confirm or deny if Gabriele was his primary source, but after his arrest, he told The Daily Beast, “You do understand how the Vatican works, don’t you?”

Nuzzi’s book is not particularly hard on the pope. If anything, the documents portray the pontiff as a sympathetic character who spent a great deal of time troubleshooting and mediating a fierce power struggle among the Roman Curia’s top brass. The most unsympathetic character to come out of the leaked documents is Bertone, who appeared to have many enemies within the Holy See. Many of Nuzzi’s documents were directly or indirectly related to Bertone’s decisions and handling of financial affairs and international relationships. Gabriele, as the papal butler, would not have had access to any of those documents. Sources close to the Vatican say the investigation is now focused on those with access to Bertone’s desk. “This is a strategy of tension, an orgy of vendettas and pre-emptive vendettas that has now spun out of the control of those who thought they could orchestrate it,” noted Catholic historian Alberto Melloni in an op-ed in Italy’s Corriere della Sera.

Friends of Gabriele told the Italian media that he would have never betrayed the man whom he worked for. No one has heard from him since his arrest, but his wife gave a brief interview with La Repubblica newspaper in which she said she was baffled. It definitely came as a strong blow,” she said. “I cannot confirm that Paolo has not responded to the magistrates, I cannot make any comment at all.”

As a sovereign entity, the Vatican does not need to share the intricate details of its investigation into Gabriele’s alleged crime. He is being interrogated, according to Lombardi, and he has chosen two legal representatives who are qualified to practice law within the Vatican’s secret tribunal.

In his role as the papal butler, Gabriele was one of a tiny group of nonclerical staff that serves the pope on a daily basis. The “pontifical family,” as the Vatican calls the pope’s inner circle, consists of the pope, four nuns who cook his meals and clean his apartment, two clerical secretaries—German Georg Gaenswein and Maltese Alfred Xureb—and Gabriele, who helped the pope get dressed every morning and often served him his meals. He was often the first and last person to see the pope each day. He also accompanied him to meetings and masses and handed out rosaries to visiting dignitaries. He rode in the popemobile and held the papal umbrella when the pontiff had to be out in the rain.

Gabriele, a dual citizen of Italy and Vatican City, earned a tax-free salary for his daily services and reportedly was respected highly among the Vatican’s 220 residents. He and his wife and three children lived in a rent-controlled apartment inside Vatican City walls—one of the only families who can call the Holy See home. High-ranking prelates never got as much face time with the pope as Gabriele did, nor would they have built up such a close relationship with the highest-ranking member of the Catholic Church. Which is precisely why few believe the butler actually did it.
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Re: Cardinal 'claimed pope to die'

Postby seemslikeadream » Mon May 28, 2012 9:10 pm

May 28, 2012 7:29 PM

Vatican scandal could further grow
By Charlie D'Agata
PLAY CBS NEWS VIDEO
(CBS News) LONDON - A scandal that has rocked Vatican City threatened to expand Monday. So far, the only person under arrest is Pope Benedict XVI's butler. But few believe that he is the sole source of the leaks that have exposed corruption and double-dealing inside the leadership of the Catholic Church.

At the center of the holy whodunit is Paolo Gabriele, the pope's personal butler. Since he was arrested last week on suspicion of stealing confidential documents, rumors have swirled that he must have had some high-ranking help -- perhaps as high as the so-called 'princes of the Church,' the cardinals.

Marco Tosatti covers the Vatican for one of Italy's biggest newspapers. "If Paolo Gabriele acted as he did," he said, "well, probably there was somebody very important who convinced him to do it."

On Monday, the Vatican denied that any cardinal was under investigation.

Video: Pope's personal butler in Vatican custody

But the scandal shows no sign of slowing. The butler pledged that he'd cooperate fully with investigators, raising the specter that he would name others.

Gabriele -- a father of three -- has worked for the Pope since 2006, and is one of the few layman to have access to the Pope's private apartment.

He's accused of leaking letters and memos to Italian journalists that allegedly show corruption in the Church's financial dealings with Italian businesses, including money laundering and kickbacks.

The revelations are part of a number of embarrassing leaks that show the Church and its inner workings in disarray.

For the moment Paolo Gabriele is the lone arrest. If found guilty, he could face up to 30 years in prison.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Cardinal 'claimed pope to die'

Postby justdrew » Tue May 29, 2012 12:11 am

maybe the Pope himself is one doing the leaking. good luck arresting him
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Re: Cardinal 'claimed pope to die'

Postby seemslikeadream » Mon Jun 04, 2012 9:24 am

Image

VatiLeaks Strikes Again: Was the Butler Framed?
Jun 4, 2012 4:45 AM EDT
Fresh leaks from inside the Vatican suggest that the pope’s attendant was merely the ‘scapegoat’ of a much more powerful culprit. Barbie Latza Nadeau on what the latest twist has exposed.

The VatiLeaks source has struck again! But this time, the butler didn’t do it.

On Sunday, editors at the Italian newspaper La Repubblica published several documents they say were mailed to them after the arrest of Pope Benedict XVI’s butler, Paolo Gabriele, on May 24.

Gabriele is being held in a “secure room” somewhere within the tiny walled borders of Vatican City. He faces 30 years in prison for aggravated theft for allegedly leaking documents to Gianluigi Nuzzi, an Italian journalist who printed many of the confidential papers in the bestselling book His Holiness. Nuzzi will not reveal his sources’ names, ages, or gender, but he told The Daily Beast that they were Vatican employees trying to expose “the truth behind the Vatican’s lies.”

Among the fresh leaks obtained by La Repubblica are supposedly letters from the desk of the pope’s private secretary, featuring the Holy See’s crested letterhead and the signature “don Georg Gaenswein.” The contents are blanked out; the secret sender told the paper that the bodies of the letters were hidden so as not to “offend the Holy Father,” but that he or she was prepared to share them if the Vatican didn’t come clean about the real source of the leaks.

The sender is accusing Gaenswein, a personal secretary to the pope, and Holy See Secretary of State Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone of spearheading an unnamed plot against the pope and Vatican hierarchy. The newspaper did not specify whether that plot was the leaking of the documents or an unrelated intrigue. In a not-so-veiled threat against the “real culprits,” the secret source promised that there were “hundreds more” letters ready to be sent if the Vatican didn’t own up to who was really behind the leaks.

In one of three letters the paper published, American Cardinal Leo Raymond Burke wrote a nasty note to Bertone, complaining to him that he had been sidelined on an important procedural step with regard to the approval of liturgical reform, causing him great embarrassment among his peers in the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. In the letter, Burke also poured scorn on the group Neocatechumenal Way, expressing his concern to the Holy See’s second-in-command that the pope might soon approve their revised liturgy recommendations at great detriment to the institution as a whole. “This does not seem consistent with the pope’s liturgical intentions,” the cardinal wrote.

The newspaper said that the documents came with an unsigned computer-generated letter that calls into question the arrest of Gabriele, describing him as “a scapegoat” who is taking the fall for the crimes of higher-ups. The new leaker wrote to the newspaper, “It is time to drive out the real culprits inside the Vatican. Once again, the usual scapegoats are paying the price. What better victim than the Holy Father’s butler? The real truth lies in the Vatican’s central power.”

Friends of the butler describe him as a 'simple man' without a motive.
Since Gabriele’s arrest, there has been much speculation in Rome about just who was the mastermind behind the document dump. (The local press has nicknamed the VatiLeaks source "corvo," or "raven.") Friends of the butler vow that he would have never betrayed the pope, describing him as a “simple man” without a motive. Nuzzi, who likened Gabriele’s arrest to the plot of the Walt Disney film Aristocats, in which a villainous butler is cast as the obvious culprit because of his low rank, told The Daily Beast he never paid for the documents, and said that his sources never asked him for money. “Those who provided these documents have done it because they believe it was the right thing to do,” he said. “Sometimes truth and justice are a powerful motivation.”

The pope, who spent the weekend in Milan celebrating the role of the traditional family, has made only passing reference to the growing scandal. At his customary open-air audience in St. Peter’s Square last Wednesday, he chastised the press for sensationalizing the story. "The events of recent days involving the Curia and my collaborators have brought sadness to my heart," he said. “There is increasing conjecture, amplified by the media, which is entirely gratuitous and goes beyond the facts and instead presents a completely unrealistic image of the Holy See."

But if new documents continue to surface, spilling internal secrets, outlining power struggles, and exposing rampant corruption, the Vatican’s public image will be more like a self-portrait.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Cardinal 'claimed pope to die'

Postby Bruce Dazzling » Tue Jun 05, 2012 11:36 am

It's Coast to Coast, so take it for what it's worth...

Prophecy of the Popes
Sunday June 3, 2012
Coast to Coast AM

Author and publisher with a specialty in End Times and prophecy, Tom Horn, discussed his new research on the prophecy of the Popes, and how 2012 will be the fulfillment of St. Malachy's prediction that the Catholic Church will see one final Pope...






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Re: Cardinal 'claimed pope to die'

Postby seemslikeadream » Wed Jun 06, 2012 9:27 am

Vatileaks: Pope Benedict XVI's butler 'implicates two cardinals' over Vatican leaks
The Pope's butler has implicated at least two cardinals in a network of a moles who stole and leaked confidential documents from the Vatican, according to reports.
Vatican investigators began interrogating the Pope's butler on suspicion of stealing confidential documents on Tuesday as it was claimed he had been acting as a 'double agent' to help officials uncover others involved in the scandal.
Mr Gabriele has been held since May 23 in a 12ft by 12ft room inside the headquarters of the Gendarmerie, the city state's 130-strong police force Photo: AP
Nick Squires

By Nick Squires, Rome

12:30PM BST 06 Jun 2012

Paolo Gabriele, 46, who was arrested two weeks ago after investigators allegedly found a cache of stolen papers in his Vatican apartment, would meet the cardinals and other contacts, including journalists, in bars and cafés just outside the walls of the city state.

If found guilty of stealing the papers and letters, including some apparently taken directly from the desk of Pope Benedict XVI, the valet would lose his Vatican apartment and could be "exiled" from the Holy See, the Italian press reported.

Mario Monti, the Italian prime minister, spoke out about the scandal for the first time, saying he was sorry for the pain that the "Vatileaks" affair had caused the 85-year-old German pontiff.

"Certainly I am surprised and profoundly saddened by what I've read of the Vatican affair," Mr Monti, an economist who replaced Silvio Berlusconi in November, told Famiglia Cristiana (Christian Family), a Catholic magazine.

"But I also think about the very deep pain that many people are suffering, and of the pain that it has caused to the heart of the Holy Father."

Mr Gabriele, who is married with three children, was interrogated all day on Tuesday by Vatican investigators, in the presence of his two lawyers.

His alleged role in the murky affair is also being probed by a specially-appointed commission of cardinals, all of whom are in their eighties.

The butler had a reputation for being sociable and "loquacious" and had regular meetings with cardinals, monsignors and journalists, the Italian press reported on Wednesday.

But no clear motive has emerged for why he would betray the trust of the Pope and risk his job, his family home and his future as a member of the Pope's inner circle.

Mr Gabriele, who has been allowed to attend Mass in a Vatican chapel, will be interrogated again by Vatican prosecutors, as they try to determine whether there is enough evidence under the city state's penal code to send him to trial.

Federico Lombardi, the Vatican spokesman, has insisted that for the moment the butler is the only person being investigated in the scandal, which has provided a rare glimpse into high-level feuds and jockeying for power within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church in Rome.

The butler, whose job was to attend the Pope first thing in the morning and last thing at night, and to accompany him in his white "Popemobile", risks six years in prison if he is found guilty of "aggravated theft".

He is being held in one of four "secure rooms" inside the headquarters of the Vatican Gendarmerie, the city state's tiny police force.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Cardinal 'claimed pope to die'

Postby Bruce Dazzling » Wed Jun 06, 2012 9:48 am

If found guilty of stealing the papers and letters, including some apparently taken directly from the desk of Pope Benedict XVI, the valet would lose his Vatican apartment and could be "exiled" from the Holy See, the Italian press reported.


Is it worse to be "exiled" or to be exiled?
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Re: Cardinal 'claimed pope to die'

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Jun 07, 2012 7:54 pm

Home of ex-Vatican bank chief searched in widening Finmeccanica corruption probe

By Associated Press, Published: June 5

ROME — The home of the recently ousted president of the Vatican bank was searched Tuesday as part of a corruption investigation into Italy’s state-controlled aerospace and engineering giant Finmeccanica, prosecutors said.

Prosecutor Francesco Greco told The Associated Press that the search had nothing to do with Ettore Gotti Tedeschi’s role as head of the Vatican bank and that he is not under investigation in the Finmeccanica probe. He declined to provide details of why Gotti Tedeschi’s home was searched.

Prosecutors for months have been investigating allegations that Finmeccanica officials created a slush fund to funnel money to political parties. Finmeccanica’s ex-chairman Pier Francesco Guarguaglini is under investigation for making false invoices and tax fraud, while his wife Marina Grossi, the CEO of Finmeccanica subsidiary Selex, is under investigation for creating false invoices and corruption. Both have denied wrongdoing.

The probe centers on accusations that Selex set up a system of false invoices created to evade taxes and used the proceeds to set up a €2-million ($2.7-million) slush fund to pay off political go-betweens. The alleged corruption revolved around contracts for Italy’s air traffic controller body, ENAV.

Gotti Tedeschi is a well-connected Italian financier and head of the Italian branch of Spain’s Banco Santander.

In an unprecedented move May 24, the board of the Vatican bank, known as the Institute for Religious Works, ousted him in a no-confidence vote, saying he failed to do his job. On Saturday, the Vatican spokesman confirmed that the five cardinals who control the bank had ratified the board’s decision and worked out a payment to Gotti Tedeschi.

Gotti Tedeschi hasn’t responded in detail to the accusations contained in a scathing denunciation by the board of its reasons for ousting him, saying he doesn’t want to upset the pope. Among the board’s allegations is that he failed to keep the board informed of the bank’s activities, failed to show up at board meetings and failed to explain how documents in his possession were disseminated.

Emails seeking comment from him haven’t been returned.



Ex-head of Vatican bank has archive on senior Italian and Church figures
Ettore Gotti Tedeschi, the former head of the Holy See’s bank compiled a secret dossier of compromising information about the Vatican because he feared for his life, it was claimed.
Ettore Gotti Tedeschi, the former head of the Vatican bank, has put together an archive of potentially damaging information on senior Italian and Vatican figures, according to reports.

By Nick Squires, Rome

3:00PM BST 07 Jun 2012

In the latest twist in a scandal which has convulsed the papacy of Benedict XVI, Mr Tedeschi reportedly gave copies of the documents to his closest confidantes and told them: “If I am killed, the reason for my death is in here. I’ve seen things in the Vatican that would frighten anyone.”

One of the documents was reportedly titled “internal enemies” and contained the names of senior clergy and powerful Italian politicians.

Other emails and letters related to “money of dubious provenance” being allegedly funnelled through the Vatican bank, according to Corriere della Sera.

Appointed in 2009, the 67-year-old banker was sacked as head of the Vatican’s bank on May 24 – the day after the Pope’s butler was arrested on suspicion of stealing confidential letters from Benedict’s desk and leaking them to journalists.

Mr Gotti Tedeschi was allegedly ousted by Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, who as the Vatican secretary of state is the Pope’s deputy, in a dispute over efforts to improve the transparency of the scandal-ridden bank, known formally as the Institute for Religious Works.

Mr Gotti Tedeschi appeared to have compiled the dossier as a means of him defending himself against charges of incompetency, mismanagement and possible money laundering.

The reforms were intended to clean up the Vatican’s finances so that it could be included on the OECD's “white list” of countries least at risk from money laundering and other financial irregularities.

Earlier this year the city state was listed as a “jurisdiction of concern” for money laundering in the US State Department’s annual International Narcotics Control Strategy report.

Mr Gotti Tedeschi was so fearful for his safety that he hired bodyguards and sought advice from a private investigation agency, the Italian media reported.

The sensational claims evoked memories of one of the Vatican’s darkest chapters – the mysterious death in 1982 of Roberto Calvi, nicknamed “God’s Banker”, who was president of Italy’s largest private bank, the Banco Ambrosiano.

After the bank, which had close links with the Vatican, went bankrupt, Calvi was found hanged from scaffolding beneath Blackfriars Bridge in London, amid suspicions that he had been murdered by mafia godfathers as punishment for losing money they had invested in the bank.

“Gotti Tedeschi was nicknamed ‘the Pope’s banker’ and he feared meeting the same end as ‘God’s banker,’” said Il Fatto Quotidiano, a daily newspaper with a reputation for investigative reporting.

The secret dossier allegedly compiled by Mr Gotti Tedeschi was discovered by Carabinieri police after they raided his home and office in Milan and Piacenza, both in northern Italy, on Tuesday.

He was questioned by prosecutors for up to nine hours on Tuesday and Wednesday, during which he reportedly told them: “I’m afraid for my life”.

The raid was part of a separate investigation involving allegations of bribery at Finmeccanica, an Italian defence company that has extensive interests and thousands of employees in the UK.


Ouster of Vatican bank chief takes strange twist as Italy seizes memo meant for pope

By Associated Press, Updated: Thursday, June 7, 3:20 PM

VATICAN CITY — Italian authorities seized a private document meant for Pope Benedict XVI when they raided the home of the Vatican’s recently ousted bank chief, a lawyer said Thursday, adding a potentially problematic legal twist in an already controversial case.

Italian paramilitary police raided Ettore Gotti Tedeschi’s Piacenza home on Tuesday as part of a corruption investigation into Italy’s state-controlled aerospace and engineering giant Finmeccanica. Gotti Tedeschi is a longtime friend of Finmeccanica’s current chief who is under investigation in the probe.

During the raid, prosecutors seized a detailed memorandum Gotti Tedeschi prepared for Benedict concerning his May 24 ouster as president of the Vatican bank. Attorney Fabio Palazzo stressed Thursday that the documents were seized and that Gotti Tedeschi didn’t hand them over voluntarily.

The seizure poses potentially thorny legal issues, since Gotti Tedeschi was until recently an official of a sovereign state — the Vatican — and as such enjoys some immunity in Italy. The Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, said the Holy See was aware of the seizure but was waiting to clarify what Holy See-related documents were taken. Only after such an analysis would the Vatican consider any possible action, he said.

The raid was the latest upheaval in one of the most convulsive few weeks in the Holy See’s recent history.

The Vatican is currently hunting down the sources of leaked documents alleging corruption, internal intrigue and political infighting within the highest echelons of the Catholic Church’s governance that have been published in a new book. Already the pope’s butler has been arrested in the case, accused of keeping papal documents in his Vatican City apartment.

Gotti Tedeschi’s ouster was another jolt to the normally staid affairs of the Vatican. The board of the bank, known as the Institute for Religious Works, took a unanimous vote of no-confidence May 24, accusing him of failing to do his job and impeding the Vatican’s efforts to be more transparent in its financial dealings.

The ouster was unprecedentedly harsh — in none of the public communiques was Gotti Tedeschi thanked for his service, as would be protocol. Instead, the board secretary issued a scathing memo listing all Gotti Tedeschi’s failures, leaving the bank’s ultimate leadership — five cardinals including the Vatican secretary of state — little choice but to take note and appoint an interim president.

Gotti Tedeschi, close to Benedict and, at least until recently the secretary of state Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, has been silent about his ouster. But his lawyer confirmed Thursday that the memo that was seized contained “elements useful to strike back against the accusations that were made against him” by the board.

Gotti Tedeschi was named president of the Vatican bank, known by its Italian acronym IOR, in 2009, tapped by Bertone to help rid the bank of its reputation as a scandal-plagued tax haven and help get the Vatican on the so-called “white list” of countries that share financial information to crack down on tax evasion.

A critical step in that process is just weeks away with a Council of Europe committee deciding in early July on whether the Vatican has complied with dozens of anti-money-laundering measures. The upheavals of recent weeks have certainly clouded the Vatican’s chances.

Gotti Tedeschi and the IOR’s general manager were placed under investigation in 2010 by Rome prosecutors for alleged violations of Italy’s anti-money laundering norms in conducting a routine transaction from an IOR account at an Italian bank. Prosecutors seized some €23 million ($28.97 million) from the account but eventually returned it after the Vatican passed an anti-money laundering law that went into effect last year.

Gotti Tedeschi has long called the investigation the result of a misunderstanding. He angered many in the Vatican for failing to assert his immunity as a Vatican official when he voluntarily answered Rome prosecutors’ questions about the transfer.

He enjoys no such immunity concerning the Finmeccanica probe, and Naples investigators raided his home in that context. But they called in Rome prosecutors in charge of the IOR money laundering probe after coming across the Vatican documentation during the search.


Vatican 'blackmailed' in leaks scandal
Published: Thursday, Jun 7, 2012, 14:57 IST
By Nick Squires | Place: Vatican City | Agency: Daily Telegraph
Pope Benedict XVI

The Vatican said on Wednesday it was being blackmailed by the leaking of confidential documents taken from the Pope's private apartment as an anonymous mole threatened to release more embarrassing material unless two senior officials were sacked.

In the latest round of leaks, an Italian newspaper was sent three letters apparently stolen from the Vatican, two of which were signed by the Pope's private secretary and had their contents blanked out. An anonymous note claimed that they dealt with "shameful events inside the Vatican" and threatened to reveal the contents of the letters "if there is an attempt to hide the truth of the facts".

The accompanying letter called for the resignation of Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, who as secretary of state is the Vatican's de facto prime minister, and Mgr Georg Ganswein, the Pope's secretary. It claimed that Paolo Gabriele, the butler arrested over the affair, was simply a scapegoat.

Fr Federico Lombardi, the Vatican spokesperson, said the note represented "a grave threat" to Benedict XVI's seven-year papacy. "Blackmail is a plausible way of defining it," he said. "We have arrived at a situation of blackmail threats."

Vatican prosecutors were questioning Gabriele for the second day yesterday. He has been accused of stealing the papers.

Fr Lombardi said reports in several newspapers that two cardinals were part of a network of moles who stole and leaked compromising documents were "without foundation".

He insisted that, for the moment, the butler was the only person being investigated in the scandal, which has provided a rare glimpse into high-level feuds and jockeying for power within the hierarchy of the Roman Catholic Church.

Many of the leaked documents appeared to be aimed at discrediting Cardinal Bertone, the Pope's deputy, and toppling him from power.

Gabriele, 46, was arrested two weeks ago after investigators allegedly found a cache of stolen papers in his Vatican apartment. If found guilty of theft, he would lose the apartment and could be "exiled" from the Holy See, the Italian press reported.

Mario Monti, Italy's prime minister, spoke about the scandal for the first time, saying he was sorry for the pain it had caused the 85-year-old German Pontiff. "I am surprised and profoundly saddened by what I've read of the Vatican affair," Monti told Famiglia Cristiana, a Catholic magazine. "But I also think about the very deep pain that many people are suffering, and of the pain that it has caused to the heart of the Holy Father."

Many of the leaked documents were published last month in a book entitled His Holiness - The Secret Papers of Benedict XVI, which has become a best seller.


ticks in time....and other summer hazards.

Summer (northern hemisphere) time-to-event forecasts from the data used in the last report.

June 7/8/9 - Economic and political scandal surfaces in USA. Temporal echoes show this scandal will track over June/July with 'unexpected events' within the [cult of rome] aka 'vatican'. Expect secrets to be revealed in both the USA and vatican scandals that will not only [shock], but will [horrify]. The data indicates that [communications] between [cabal members] will be [intercepted], and the [real leaks] will be [viral] in [hours]. This is indicated to lead to a [global constipation (blockage)] of the [financial flows].




Italian anarchists kneecap nuclear executive and threaten more shootings

Group named after Greek anarchist warns it will strike seven more times at nuclear firm's parent company, Finmeccanica

Tom Kington in Rome
guardian.co.uk, Friday 11 May 2012 12.55 EDT

Italian police carry out investigations at the site where Roberto Adinolfi was shot
Italian police carry out investigations at the site where Roberto Adinolfi, a 53-year-old nuclear engineer, was shot in Genoa. Photograph: Paolo Rattini/AFP/Getty Images

An anarchist group claimed responsibility on Friday for kneecapping an Italian nuclear engineering executive and warned it would strike another seven times at the firm's parent company, Finmeccanica.

In a four-page letter sent to an Italian newspaper, the group, calling itself the Olga Nucleus of the Informal Anarchist Federation-International Revolutionary Front, said two of its members had shot Roberto Adinolfi, the CEO of Ansaldo Nucleare, in Genoa on Monday.

The firm is owned by Italian state-controlled defence and aerospace group Finmeccanica, which operates 16 sites and employs 10,000 people in the UK.

The letter, which was deemed credible by investigators, said the cell named itself after Olga Ikonomidou, one of eight Greek anarchists it listed as currently jailed in Greece. Seven further attacks would be carried out, one for each of them, the letter stated.

After the shooting Finmeccanica's CFO, Alessandro Pansa, said the firm would not be intimidated. On Friday a spokesman declined to comment on the letter.

The letter takes aim at Adinolfi, calling him a "sorcerer of the atomic industry" and criticising him for claiming in an interview that none of the deaths during the Japanese earthquake and tsunami in 2011 were due to nuclear incidents.

"Adinolfi knows well that it is only a matter of time before a European Fukushima kills on our continent," the letter stated.

"Science in centuries past promised us a golden age, but it is pushing us towards self destruction and slavery," the group wrote, adding: "With our action we give back to you a small part of the suffering that you scientists are bringing to the world."

Adinolfi, who was discharged from hospital under police guard on Friday after he was wounded in the shooting, said "Thank God I am OK".

Before the letter arrived at the offices of Corriere della Sera in Milan, investigators had suspected the attack could be the work of the Red Brigades, the terrorist organisation that kidnapped former Italian prime minister Aldo Moro in 1978.

The so-called Olga Nucleus stated that another cell within the Informal Anarchist Federation had sent a letter bomb to Italy's tax collection agency, Equitalia, in December, nearly blinding an official. Other letter bomb attacks in Italy have also been claimed by anarchist cells within the Federation.

As Italy's economy dips, Equitalia offices have become a target for violence. After an armed man briefly took hostages in an office in Bergamo last week, police on Friday clashed with protesters outside a Naples office, while a suspect package containing powder was sent to a Rome office.

On Thursday, the industry minister, Corrado Passera, warned Italy's economic crisis was threatening social cohesion.

In its letter, the Olga Nucleus said it could have chosen to attack Equitalia but was not looking to win public support. "We have nothing to do with citizens who are indignant about something which doesn't work in a system in which they want to be a part," it wrote.

"We are wild lovers of freedom, and will never renounce the revolution or the complete destruction of the state and its violence."


Finmeccanica in Talks for U.S. Deal, La Stampa
By Tommaso Ebhardt - May 19, 2012 7:56 AM CT


Finmeccanica SpA (FNC) is in talks with the U.S. Department of Transportation over contracts central to a $150 billion five-year upgrade of the country’s railroads, La Stampa reported, without saying where it got the information.

Italy’s No. 1 defense company aims to be prime-contractor on the projects, part of President Barack Obama’s Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery or TIGER program, via its Ansaldo STS SpA (STS), AnsaldoBreda SpA and Selex Sistemi Integrati SpA divisions, the newspaper said, adding that work will be worth $58 billion in the first year alone.

Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti spoke with Obama by telephone about possible cooperation, according to La Stampa, which also cited letters between Monti’s office and Florida Representative Corrine Brown, the ranking member on the House Subcommittee on Railroads, Pipelines and Hazardous Materials.

Rome-based Finmeccanica declined to comment when contacted by Bloomberg News today.


Finmeccanica reorganizes U.S. properties in two-step plan
Washington Business Journal
Date: Monday, May 21, 2012, 1:20pm EDT

Finmeccanica Defense may be the new unified brand of the company's U.S. identity once it consolidates and reorganizes its U.S. properties, Defense News reports.

“What defense companies need to do is to get ahead of the wave,” William Lynn, chief executive officer at Finmeccanica subsidiary DRS Technologies, said in an interview with Defense News. “You need to lower your cost structure in advance of any revenue declines, because if you don’t, your [profit] margins crash.”

As part of a two-step plan, DRS will consolidate two unites and then create an overarching identity for the collection of Finmeccanica’s U.S.-based subsidiaries to be led by DRS.

DRS Wins $134M For Thermal Sight Tech, Security Services

Posted by Katelyn Noland on May 29, 2012 · Leave a Comment

DRS Technologies has won two indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contracts worth up to $134 million, according to an announcement from Finmeccanica, DRS’ Italy-based parent company.

DRS received a potential $40 million contract from the U.S. Defense Department to manufacture spot on target long-range day and night thermal sight equipment for the military.

The company also received a potential $94 million contract to provide the Navy‘s Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command command with electronic security services.

DRS is restructuring into three operating groups and plans to enter a proxy agreement with the Defense Security Service, allowing DRS and its subsidiaries to compete for classified contracts.

The agreement would also allow the company to access classified information as a unified entity.



Reuters Pictures 2 months ago
Image

Saif al-Islam (R), son of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, talks with Eni's Chief Executive Paolo Scaroni as they attend George Bizet's "Carmen" show at the La Scala opera house in Milan in this December 7, 2009 file photograph. Italian tax police said on March 28, 2012 it had seized Italian assets worth more than 1.1 billion euros ($1.46 billion) belonging to members of the Gaddafi family. In a statement, the tax police said the assets include stakes in Italy's largest bank UniCredit, Italian oil and gas giant Eni, Italy's defence group Finmeccanica, carmaker Fiat, truck-maker Fiat Industrial and Turin-based soccer club Juventus. The police said the seizure has been ordered by the International Criminal Court in The Hague. Picture taken December 7, 2009.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Cardinal 'claimed pope to die'

Postby seemslikeadream » Sun Jun 10, 2012 9:21 am

Vatican Banker Running Scared: Gotti Tedeschi Could Turn Whistle-Blower
Jun 10, 2012 4:45 AM EDT
The recently ousted head of the Vatican bank may have evidence that the organization is involved in money laundering—and now he's afraid for his life. By Barbie Latza Nadeau

Ettore Gotti Tedeschi feared for his life when he was ousted as head of the Vatican bank after a vote of no confidence May 24.

The 67-year-old Italian was brought in by the pope’s secretary of state, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, in 2009 with a mandate to turn the troubled bank around and help “facilitate transparency” with an eye toward quashing rumors that the bank was a den of iniquity. The Vatican had hoped that through Gotti Tedeschi’s guidance, the tiny city-state could finally earn a coveted spot on the global Financial Action Task Force “white list” of states whose financial practices can be trusted.

In reality, Gotti Tedeschi says he found the bank’s record much worse than he could have imagined, and that he spent the last two years struggling endlessly against the Vatican’s powerful Vatican forces, whom he says blocked his every attempt at transparency. He stormed out of his final meeting of the board of the Vatican bank, known as the Institute for Religious Works (IOR), even before they cast their no-confidence vote against him. The bank says it dismissed him due to lack of management skills and “progressively erratic personal behavior.” But Gotti Tedeschi says he was ousted because he got too close to the truth about the bank’s alleged shady dealings. He told a Reuters journalist moments after he was sacked, “I have paid the price for transparency.”

A week after his ouster, Gotti Tedeschi was in trouble again. His home in Piacenza and his offices in Milan were searched by Italian police, who say they were combing for evidence that he was an “informed witness” with regard to questionable business dealings of Italy’s state-run defense and aerospace firm Finmeccanica, whose president is his close pal. He has not been arrested, nor is he officially under investigation, and the police say the Finmeccanica inquiry is a separate affair not at all related to his problems with the Vatican bank. But in searching his property, investigators reportedly found a treasure trove that could link the Vatican to all sorts of shady dealings and underworld characters. And the Vatican top brass desperately want to get their hands on it, sternly warning Italian police that because the Vatican is a “sovereign nation” their documents are protected under immunity, even if they are found during a criminal probe outside its borders. “The Holy See is surprised and concerned at the recent events that Professor Gotti Tedeschi is involved with,” said a Vatican statement issued Friday. “We have faith that the prosecutors and Italian judicial system will respect our sovereignty—recognized internationally—with regard to these documents.”

What they are reportedly worried about is a secret dossier that Gotti Tedeschi told friends he compiled “just in case something happens to me.” Local press reports say the dossier includes 47 different binders with emails from the pope, letters from cardinals, and notes and reports from various meetings tied to Vatican bank business. He had reportedly planned to deliver the dossier directly to Pope Benedict XVI, presumably as a counterargument to his May 24 firing. The cache reportedly contains irrefutable evidence that could substantiate claims that the IOR is involved in money laundering and tax-evasive practices. There were documents that allegedly show financial transactions between the Vatican and a number of surprising characters, including politicians and known middlemen for mafia bosses. If true, it would give Italian authorities a rare opening to investigate the Vatican’s banking practices with names, account numbers, and transaction dates of dealings with financial entities outside the Vatican’s historically secretive jurisdiction.

Three decades ago, another of “God’s bankers" was found hanging from a noose under Blackfriars Bridge in London.

Head of the Vatican Bank Ettore Gotti Tedeschi

Tony Gentile, Reuters / Landov

In 2010, Gotti Tedeschi and IOR general manager Paolo Cipriani were placed under criminal investigation by authorities in Rome on suspicion of alleged money laundering for shady transactions between the Vatican’s bank accounts. More than €23 million was frozen and later released after the Vatican allegedly cleansed itself by passing anti-fraud legislation. Gotti Tedeschi’s dossier reportedly also included a list of enemies who might want to harm him, including Cipriani, who is still under criminal investigation in the Italian judicial system from the 2010 affair. The Italian police are taking the banker’s enemy list seriously and are considering providing him with police protection.

There is little doubt that Tedeschi has reason to be worried for his safety. Three decades ago, another of “God’s bankers,” Roberto Calvi, was found hanging from a noose under Blackfriars Bridge in London. His pockets were weighted down with bricks and cash. Calvi was not the head of the IOR like Gotti Tedeschi, but he was closely tied to the Vatican’s secret banking structure as head of Banco Ambrosiano, which went bankrupt at the time amid allegations of money laundering, mafia collusion, and generally questionable banking practices. The Vatican owned a small stake in the bank, but wielded great influence over Calvi, who knew the Vatican’s deepest financial secrets. The mystery into Calvi’s death has never been solved. First thought to be a suicide, evidence later pointed to murder. “There are some similarities between the situation of Gotti Tedeschi and what my family lived through during the trial of currency violations of 1981,” Roberto Calvi’s son Carlo told The Daily Beast. He says his father could not have defended himself without exposing the whole structure, and that’s what led to his demise. “While it is difficult for the public to appreciate this, there has always been an attitude of intolerance, isolation, and stubborness with those who set up this type of fiduciary relationship to evade regulations, and this makes them take risks that would be unimaginable to most.”

But neither the Vatican nor Gotti Tedeschi seemed to have learned anything from the scandal surrounding Calvi’s death. “I do not know Gotti Tedeschi," he says. "But I do know that the very same account structure that existed at the time of my father has continued to be used by IOR in a similar fashion and has even increased disproportionally in size."

For now, Gotti Tedeschi is cooperating with Italian authorities. According to prosecutor Giuseppe Pignatone, Tedeschi told prosecutors he was “held hostage because he wanted transparency, especially with regard to certain Vatican accounts. It all started when I asked to have information about accounts that were not in the church’s name.” Where it goes from here is anyone’s guess.


VATICAN REMINDS ITALY IT’S A SOVEREIGN STATE
At issue: Documents intended for pope taken during corruption probe of ousted banker

By NICOLE WINFIELD Associated Press
12:01 a.m., June 10, 2012
Updated 10:06 p.m. , June 8, 2012

VATICAN CITY — The Vatican has chastised Italian authorities for seizing documents intended for the pope during a raid on the home of the recently ousted Vatican bank chief, reminding them that the Holy See is a sovereign state whose officials and documents enjoy immunity protections.

In a statement released Friday, the Vatican said it expected Italian judicial authorities would recognize and respect its internationally recognized sovereign status in any proceedings concerning Ettore Gotti Tedeschi.

Italian paramilitary police raided Gotti Tedeschi’s Piacenza home on Tuesday as part of a corruption investigation into Italy’s state-controlled aerospace giant Finmeccanica. He is not under investigation, and at the time of the raid prosecutors said the search had nothing to do with Gotti Tedeschi’s recently terminated role as president of the Vatican bank.

But during the raid, police seized documentation Gotti Tedeschi had prepared for the pope concerning his controversial May 24 ouster as president of the Vatican bank, known as the Institute for Religious Works.

In an unprecedented harsh move, the bank’s board fired Gotti Tedeschi in a no-confidence vote, accusing him of leaking documents, failing to do his job and impeding the Vatican’s efforts to be more transparent in its financial dealings.

Gotti Tedeschi’s lawyer said Thursday the documentation seized contained his client’s responses to the board’s accusations.

The seizure and subsequent questioning by prosecutors about Gotti Tedeschi’s role at the bank posed potentially thorny legal issues, since Gotti Tedeschi enjoys some immunity as a former official of a foreign sovereign, the Vatican.

It’s not clear what was contained in the seized documentation — some news reports say there were 47 folders seized. But official Holy See documentation could be considered protected under the Vatican’s sovereign status were prosecutors to try to get it admitted in a court case.

Gotti Tedeschi and the IOR’s manager were placed under investigation in 2010 by Rome prosecutors for alleged violations of Italy’s anti-money laundering norms in conducting a routine transaction from an IOR account at a bank. Prosecutors seized some $28.97 million from the account but returned it after the Vatican passed an anti-money-laundering law that went into effect last year. Gotti Tedeschi has long called the investigation the result of a misunderstanding. He hasn’t been charged.

Gotti Tedeschi’s ouster and subsequent raid on his home has convulsed a Vatican reeling from the leaks of documents from the pope’s desk that ended up in a recently published book, documentation that paints a picture of a Catholic Church hierarchy as little more than a group of petty, provincial Italian bureaucrats engaged in Machiavellian power struggles.

Already the pope’s butler has been arrested in the leaks case, accused of keeping papal documents in his Vatican City apartment.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Cardinal 'claimed pope to die'

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Jun 15, 2012 12:02 pm

Exhausted in the Vatican The Final Battles of Pope Benedict XVI

By Fiona Ehlers, Alexander Smoltczyk and Peter Wensierski

The mood at the Vatican is apocalyptic. Pope Benedict XVI seems tired, and both unable and unwilling to seize the reins amid fierce infighting and scandal. While Vatican insiders jockey for power and speculate on his successor, Joseph Ratzinger has withdrawn to focus on his still-ambiguous legacy.
Info

Finally, there is clarity. The Holy See has cleared things up and made the document accessible to all: a handout on checking whether apparitions of the Virgin Mary are authentic.

Everything will be much easier from now on. The Roman Catholic Church has taken a step forward.

This "breaking news" from the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) reveals the kinds of issues the Vatican is concerned with -- and the kind of world in which some there live. It's a world in which the official Church investigation of Virgin Mary sightings is carefully regulated while cardinals in the Roman Curia, the Vatican's administrative and judicial apparatus, wield power with absolutely no checks and the pope's private correspondence turns up in the desk drawers of a butler.

It's a completely different apparition of the Virgin Mary that has pulled the Vatican and the Catholic Church into a new crisis, whose end and impact can only be surmised: the appearance of a source in the heart of the Church, a conspiracy against the pope and a leak code-named "Maria."

Since the end of May, the pope's former butler, Paolo Gabriele, has been detained in a 35-square-meter (377-square-foot) cell at the Vatican, with a window but no TV. Using the code name "Maria," he allegedly smuggled faxes and letters out of the pope's private quarters. But it remains unclear who was directing him to do so.

Even with Gabriele's arrest, the leak still hasn't been plugged. More documents were released to the public last week, documents intended primarily to damage two close associates of Pope Benedict XVI: his private secretary, Georg Gänswein, and Cardinal Secretary of State Tarcisio Bertone, the Vatican's top administrator. According to one document, "hundreds" of other secret documents would be published if Gänswein and Bertone weren't "kicked out of the Vatican." "This is blackmail," says Vatican expert Marco Politi. "It's like threatening total war."

A House in Disarray

Fear is running rampant in the Curia, where the mood has rarely been this miserable. It's as if someone had poked a stick into a beehive. Men wearing purple robes are rushing around, hectically monitoring correspondence. No one trusts anyone anymore, and some even hesitate to communicate by phone.

It all began in the accursed seventh year of the papacy of Benedict XVI, with striking parallels to the latter part of Pope John Paul II's papacy. The same complaints about poor leadership and internal divisions are being aired outside the Vatican's walls, while the pope himself seems exhausted and no longer able to exert his power.

Joseph Ratzinger turned 85 in April. This makes him the oldest pope in 109 years, and one of the few popes who have exercised what Benedict has called this "enormous" office at such an advanced age.

Of course, he is still enviably fit, both mentally and physically, especially compared to his predecessor in his later years. But speaking has become unmistakably more difficult for Benedict than at the beginning of his papacy, and it's hard to miss that his movements have become stiff and cautious.

He recently told a visitor that his old piano hardly gets any use anymore. Playing it requires practice, he added, but he doesn't have any time for that. He prefers to continue working on the last part of his series on Jesus, which he wants to finish before dying.

A Ship with No Captain

These days, it isn't difficult to find clerics at the Vatican who are willing to talk, provided their identities remain anonymous.

The monsignor who finds his way to a restaurant near Piazza Santa Maria in Rome's Trastevere neighborhood one evening worked closely with Ratzinger in the CDF for years. But even before the waiter arrives with water and wine, the monsignor delivers his verdict on Ratzinger's papacy: "The pope doesn't fully exercise his office!" In his view, instead of having things under control, they control him.

The pope isn't interested in daily affairs at the Vatican, says the anonymous monsignor. Still, this is not exactly unprecedented, as his predecessor also neglected the Curia. While the Polish pope spent a lot of time traveling, his German successor is apparently happiest while poring over books and writing speeches. "He simply isn't taking matters into his own hands," the monsignor says. In essence, he adds, the pope faces a different power in Rome -- and one he hasn't take command of.

Although the Vatican is Catholic, it's also two-thirds Italian. In the end, says the monsignor, the Vatican's employees and administration don't care who among their ranks leads the Church. Even for someone who has been living there for decades, the monsignor says, "the Vatican is a ball of wool that's almost impossible to untangle -- not even by a pope."

When John Paul II died in April 2005, the Curia was in terrible shape. Events and personnel decisions had been postponed during his last few years, in which he was often ill. The new pope was expected to finally clear off the desks and give the Curia a fresh start.

But, for the most part, such reforms haven't materialized. Priests still hold all key positions, including those on the Council for the Laity and the Council for the Family. The only woman in a senior position, Briton Lesley-Anne Knight, was driven out of office as secretary-general of the Catholic development agency Caritas Internationalis in 2011 for having openly opposed the Church's male-dominated hierarchy.

Fractured and Ferocious

A "reform of the Curia" is probably a contradiction in terms. Its hierarchical, essentially medieval organizational model is incompatible with modern management. The Vatican is an anachronistic, albeit surprisingly tenacious system, in which pecking orders and an absurd penchant for secrecy and intrigue prevail. "The only important thing is proximity to the monarch," says a member of a cardinal's staff. Rome works like an absolutist court, one in which decisions are made by people whispering things into the others' ears rather than by committees. "There are many vain people here, people in sharp competition with one another," the staff member adds.

Who spoke with whom, and for how long? What did they talk about? Who attends early Mass with whom, and who invites whom to dinner? Who's in and who's out? Who belongs and who doesn't, and who's coming into favor and who's falling out of it? "This mood fosters feelings of exclusion, discrimination, envy, revenge and resentment," the monsignor says. And all things have now appeared in the so-called Vatileaks documents.

Papal secretary Gänswein, in particular, has made many enemies. As the pope's gatekeeper, he has influence over who is granted or denied the pontiff's favor as well as over which events and issues might command his attention. This power can trigger fear, jealousy and derision in the corridors of the Apostolic Palace, the pope's official residence. For Gänswein, it seemed almost miraculous that he was able to spend an entire evening relaxing and conversing with German clerics at the Vatican's embassy in Berlin last September. It was an experience he couldn't have had in Rome.

The Vatican is disintegrating into dozens of competing interest groups. In the past, it was the Jesuits, the Benedictines, the Franciscans and other orders that competed for respect and sway within the Vatican court. But their influence has waned, and they have now been replaced primarily by the so-called "new clerical communities" that bring the large, cheering crowds to Masses celebrated by the pope: the Neocatechumenate, the Legionaries of Christ and the traditionalists of the Society of St. Pius X (SSPX) and the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter -- not to mention the worldwide "santa mafia" of Opus Dei.

They all have their open and clandestine agents in and around the Vatican, and they all own real estate and run universities, institutes and other educational facilities in Rome. Various cardinals and bishops champion their interests at the Vatican, often without an official or recognizable mandate. At the Vatican, everyone is against everyone, and everyone feels they have God on their side.

Perhaps Benedict XVI simply knows the Vatican too well to seriously attempt to reform it. "As pope, this veteran curial insider has turned out to have virtually zero interest in actually running the Roman Curia," writes John L. Allen, a biographer of the pope.

Part 2: Losers in the Battle for Reform

The current scandal unfolded against this backdrop. The revelations about the secret Vatican documents -- dubbed "Vatileaks" by none other than papal spokesman Padre Federico Lombardi -- first emerged more than four months ago. They suggest a Vatican mired in corruption and character-assassination campaigns, a plot that seems hardly limited to a butler's alleged act of theft.

The central figure is Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, whom the pope instructed in July 2009 to clean up at the Vatican administration. The overzealous lawyer imposed cutbacks in various areas, including construction contracts, real estate and management of the Vatican Gardens. In a letter to Bertone, he wrote that he had turned a Vatican budget deficit of €7.8 million ($9.8 million) into a surplus of €34.5 million within a year by putting an end to old boys' networks that "always awarded contracts to the same companies" -- at double the prices customarily paid outside the Vatican. Viganò made himself unpopular with his fight against waste and abuse of office.

He was maneuvered out of his position after only 27 months and, since October, he has been the Vatican's ambassador to the United States in Washington, far away from the Vatican. He has perceived his transfer as a punishment. In a letter of protest to the pope, he painted a blunt picture of the Curia: "The realm is fragmented into many small feudal states, with everyone fighting against everyone else." The conditions, he wrote, are "disastrous" and, even worse, are "well-known" to the entire Curia.

The Vatileaks scandal has also brought to light the reasons behind the sacking of another senior official. Ettore Gotti Tedeschi, head of the Vatican bank until shortly before Pentecost, was apparently shown the door because he was trying to bring more transparency to the scandal-ridden institution. His goal was to make the bank -- where Mafia godfathers once deposited their money for safekeeping -- eligible for the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development's (OECD) "white list" of supposedly clean organizations. Tedeschi wanted the Vatican to finally disclose transactions that satisfied international standards on combating money laundering. He failed.

Observers believe that the banker's case is the real core of the scandal, a power struggle over control of the Vatican's finances. This most likely explains why Tedeschi was so vigorously ousted. The bank's board of directors issued absurd justifications for his expulsion, saying that Tedeschi, a professor of business ethics, was unpredictable and had drawn attention to himself through his absences.

In any case, it's clear that Tedeschi has lost out in a struggle against Bertone. It apparently displeased the pope's second-in-command that new guidelines could make a cut in the Vatican's assets.

An Old Guard Ignored

It would be overly simplistic to interpret all of this as merely a conflict between reformers and traditionalists. In reality, it's about the Church's sclerosis, and a problem that has a name: Benedict XVI.

The Vatican's old guard, made up of Italian cardinals and their backers, believed that they had found a transitional pope in Ratzinger. But now the transition is in its eighth year, and the Curia is roughly where it was near the end of the previous pope's life: There's no one in sight to firmly assume the helm.

Benedict XVI surrounds himself with individuals he's known for a long time, and he's given them considerable power. When he appointed Bertone to his senior office, the pope bypassed the usual pecking order of the cliques. He and Gänswein, known in Rome as the "Black Forest Adonis" on account of his southwestern-German origins, have become too powerful and independent for many cardinals in the Curia. Bertone and Gänswein were the primary targets of the attack code-named "Maria."

Cardinals from Italy's provinces have noticed that their access to the Holy See is slipping away. Although Bertone is Italian, he prefers his fellow members of the Salesian order, elevating them to key positions and nominating them as cardinals. In addition, the 77-year-old Bertone is seen as a poor manager and awkward diplomat. In the summer of 2009, a delegation of cardinals reportedly asked the pope to replace him.

But the head of the Vatican administration can hardly be the only target of the "Maria" attacks. The reason for this is that it's highly likely that he would only have remained in office for another six months in any case so as to clear the position for a successor. No, "Maria" is aiming higher than Bertone.

Uncomfortable in Office

The Catholic Church has a leadership problem at the center of its baroque court. The leaked documents ultimately harm Benedict himself, and the scandal is also fundamentally detrimental to the papacy itself. With each additional day of speculation over the true masterminds behind the plot, there is a growing impression of a difficult papacy and a weakened pope who is no longer calling the shots.

For a long time, Ratzinger himself could hardly believe he was suddenly the leader of all Catholics. More than a month after his election, on May 24, 2005, he paid another visit to the place in the Vatican where so many things had begun for him: the seminary in the Campo Santo Teutonico, a green island in the cramped papal state, directly adjacent to the sacristy of St. Peter's Basilica.

He had lived here during the Church's sweeping modernization effort known as Vatican II and, in 1982, he returned to Rome from Munich, staying "in a room with only the bare necessities around me so that I could make a fresh start."

Ratzinger remained loyal to the seminary community until he was elected pope. For decades, he celebrated Mass at 7 a.m. there every Thursday, and he often ate with students in the dining room, had discussions with them and attended the Christmas party in the fireplace room. It was a place to which he could seek refuge from his duties as head of the CDF, a kind of adopted family.

He hasn't been to the seminary since his last visit, in late May 2005, which lasted over an hour. In parting, Ratzinger signed the guestbook. He wrote "Benedict XVI" and then, leaving a small space, scribbled "pope." At first he wrote it with a lower-case p, but then he changed it to an upper-case one.

None of his predecessors had ever signed anything like that -- and Benedict himself would never do it again. It was almost as if he had to tell himself: My God, I'm the pope!

Ratzinger felt uncomfortable with the power he had assumed, which is one reason he has declined to comprehensively reform the system. He has preferred to place his trust in his underlings.

A Need for Family

Benedict doesn't need the Vatican; he needs a small family. Family is sacred to him, and it's something he has always sought throughout his life. The only surviving member of his family is his older brother, Georg. His father, Joseph, died in 1959 and his mother, Maria, in 1963. His sister, Maria, ran his household for about 30 years, even in Rome, until her death in 1991. When she died, he wrote in his memoirs: "The world became a little emptier for me."

For Ratzinger, all of these issues remain unresolved. At the World Meeting of Families held in Milan in early June, he responded to questions about family in an ad hoc and unscripted manner. "Hi, pope," a 7-year-old girl said to him. "I am Cat Tien. I come from Vietnam. I would really like to know something about your family and when you were little like me." The 85-year-old Benedict replied: "To tell the truth, if I try to imagine a little how paradise will be, I think always of the time of my youth, of my childhood. In this context of confidence, of joy and love, we were happy, and I think that paradise must be something like how it was in my youth."

Ratzinger has repeatedly tried to foster this "environment of trust," but it has repeatedly been damaged. When Ratzinger moved into the papal apartments in 2005, he suddenly had to go without a longtime confidante. Ingrid Stampa, the housekeeper who had succeeded his sister, was not permitted to join Ratzinger in his new quarters. She had been disgraced in the Vatican for having once pointed at St. Peter's Square from the window of the pope's apartment and waved to the crowd -- an unforgivable faux pas.

Instead, four lay sisters with the Memores Domini association -- Loredana, Cristina, Manuela and Carmela -- became his new housekeepers. They looked after him for five years, attended his prayers every morning, celebrated Christmas and saints' days with him, and ate their meals with him.

Then one of them, Manuela Camagni, was killed in a traffic accident in 2010. The pope was shaken. He knelt before her coffin, delivered a eulogy and spoke of the "unforgettable family-like moments" he had enjoyed with her.

With the betrayal of his butler, who had been at his side around the clock, the small world of Joseph Ratzinger has once again been thrown out of joint.

The Elusive 'Benedict Effect'

When compared with expectations, the results of Benedict XVI's seven years as pope have been rather modest. The German pope will not be remembered much for his avowed fight to preserve the unity of the Church. Instead, he will be remembered as a victim of circumstances and of fragmented, competing factions, as a pontiff plagued by scandals, mistakes and gaffes. He even built walls back up that seemed to have been worn down long ago. His papacy has consisted of years of ongoing apologies and alleged or actual misunderstandings.

He has annoyed the Protestants by declaring that denominations other than his own are not true churches. He has alienated Muslims with an inept speech in the Bavarian city of Regensburg. And he has insulted Jews by reinserting a prayer for the conversion of the Jews into the Good Friday liturgy.

He has also snubbed the Church by currying favor with the traditionalists of the Society of St. Pius X, which rejects the Vatican II reforms. The current backlog of Church reforms, which had already started piling up under his conservative predecessor, John Paul II, has only gotten bigger under Benedict. The Catholics' Day held in May in the southwestern German city of Mannheim, with its 80,000 attendees, was a last cry for change in the Church.

The fact that the pope is German has not had a lasting effect on Germans. When he was newly elected, the German media spoke of a "Benedict effect," of how having a German pope would positively influence conversion and retention rates in Germany. But, if it ever really existed, this effect quickly dissipated. Since Benedict's election in 2005, the number of people leaving the Catholic Church in Germany has more than doubled, and it's been the highest most recently in Ratzinger's former Archdiocese of Munich and Freising. Only 30 percent of Germans are still Catholic today.

The claim, often made by enthusiastic Catholics on German talk shows -- that all of this is a German or European problem and nothing but sour grapes, and that the Church is more successful elsewhere -- isn't even true in deeply Catholic Latin America, where the number of Catholics has been sharply declining. Evangelical Christians, on the other hand, are multiplying there like the loaves and fishes in Canaan.
Part 3: Stymied by Vatican Insiders

Ratzinger has only been able to make it through those seven years by making sure he has small escapes. In addition to his everyday duties, he has written books and encyclicals on Christian love ("Deus Caritas Est") and on hope ("Spe Salvi").

Some of his writings have become best-sellers, even in hopelessly secularized Germany. Indeed, this pope has managed to put the Vatican back on the secular world's radar. His encyclicals, his thoughts on reason and faith, and his criticism of the relativism of all values have been closely followed in the press. He has been seen as a pope who understands the zeitgeist.

In fact, the pope's failure to live up to many expectations has actually often benefited the Church. "Christianity, Catholicism, is not a collection of prohibitions; it's a positive option," Benedict said before his trip to Bavaria in 2006. Although he stands behind dogma and pure doctrine, he tries not to alienate anyone, even if he admittedly hasn't always been successful at it. By now, the pope seems about as mild as the Queen of England during his appearances. He knows how to captivate a crowd without spectacular gestures. He has met with Holocaust survivors in Auschwitz, abuse victims in the United States and people with AIDS in Cameroon.

Benedict has understood better than others what the Church's real condition is -- and how far removed it is from his ideal. His stumbling block has always been the Curia. Perhaps the real thing learned over the last seven years is just how powerlessness a pope can be.

Already Searching for a Successor

The pope only wanted to be a "simple, humble worker in the vineyard of the Lord," a "servant of the truth." Now he stands before the reality of his own mortality. For some time, he has been overcome by periods of "deep sadness," says a source close to Benedict, though he notes that it is unclear whether this is merely sadness or genuine depression.

Ratzinger survived two mild strokes in the early 1990s. Both his father and sister died of strokes. The pope takes aspirin as a preventive medicine. He is plagued by osteoarthritis in his knees, especially the right one. Walking is getting more difficult for him, and he now uses a rolling platform, which he mounts upon entering St. Peter's Basilica, such as when he is wearing heavy garments.

He hasn't gone on vacation in the mountains since 2010. Sometimes he takes short walks with his secretary in the Vatican Gardens, where he says the rosary.

In the Curia and the backrooms of the Vatican's palaces, efforts are already underway to search for a successor. The possible outcomes of a conclave are analyzed and candidates are discussed, as was done seven years ago. Some say the next pope should be someone like Pius XII, the pope between 1939 and 1958 who was a calculating and predictable power player and Vatican insider. Or someone like Paul VI, the pope from 1963 to 1978, who paid attention to the Curia's interests. The name of Cardinal Angelo Scola, the archbishop of Milan, has been mentioned, as has that of Leonardo Sandri, an Argentine cardinal with Italian roots. Another possible candidate is Curia Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi, president of the Pontifical Council for Culture and one of the few Vatican insiders who is adept at handling the media, politics and the public.

The Italians, with 30 votes, still form the largest bloc in a conclave. Some believe that, after more than 33 years of foreign dominance -- first by a Pole and then by a German -- it's high time to elect an Italian pope. After all, proponents of the idea argue, an Italian cardinal knows the Roman Curia best. But the Italians' prospects have become slim since Vatileaks, says Vatican expert Marco Politi. "If the scandal has exposed one thing, it is the typical Italian mess. Italians are no longer seen as papabile (capable of becoming pope). They have discredited themselves with their power struggle."

Last Days and Legacies

Benedict himself knows that he doesn't have much time left. "The last segment of my life is now beginning," he told birthday guests in April.

In fact, his planning hardly goes past next July, when he will attend the Catholic "World Youth Day" in Rio de Janeiro. Healing the rift with the SSPX will be at the top of his agenda in the coming weeks, in addition to admonishing feuding groups to exercise mutual respect.

With the dispute that has erupted over the assessment of the reforms of Vatican II, which began 50 years, the pope is now experiencing a return to his own past. Will the once liberal-minded and now conservative pastor find the strength to foster reconciliation at the end of his life? To blaze some middle path between tradition and modernity for the world's 1.2 billion Catholics?

"Stalin was right in saying that the pope has no divisions and cannot issue commands," Benedict said in the 2010 book-length interview "Light of the World." "Nor does he have a big business in which all the faithful of the Church are his employees or his subordinates. In that respect, the pope is, on the one hand, a completely powerless man. On the other hand, he bears a great responsibility."

Benedict has always seen himself as a teaching rather than a governing pontiff. The professor-pope from the small Bavarian village of Marktl am Inn will undoubtedly not go down in the annals of Church history as Benedict the Great.

But he will be remembered as a church leader with a human face, as someone who has remained true to himself as a theologian, and as someone who turned his back on the power within his own four walls. In other words, as a pope with a lower-case p.



DRS Technologies Wins $92 Million Follow-On Contract to Support SPAWAR Internet Cafe Program
Brian T. Gallagher


PARSIPPANY, NJ--(Marketwire - June 14, 2012) - DRS Technologies, Inc., a Finmeccanica Company, announced that its Global Enterprise Solutions International division of DRS Technical Services has received a $92 million contract for continued IT support to the military's Internet Café program, which is operated by the U.S. Navy Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command (SPAWAR) Atlantic-European Office.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Cardinal 'claimed pope to die'

Postby Simulist » Fri Jun 15, 2012 2:55 pm

Exhausted in the Vatican: The Final Battles of Pope Benedict XVI

By Fiona Ehlers, Alexander Smoltczyk and Peter Wensierski

The mood at the Vatican is apocalyptic. Pope Benedict XVI seems tired, and both unable and unwilling to seize the reins amid fierce infighting and scandal. While Vatican insiders jockey for power and speculate on his successor, Joseph Ratzinger has withdrawn to focus on his still-ambiguous legacy.

[...]

But he will be remembered as a church leader with a human face, as someone who has remained true to himself as a theologian, and as someone who turned his back on the power within his own four walls. In other words, as a pope with a lower-case p.

In an article of more than 4,300 words concerning the legacy of Pope Benedict XVI, it is worth noting — and is even conspicuous — that the sweeping scandal of pedophile priests is mentioned only in passing.

And unless Benny decides to say something "infallible" (and, admittedly, ex cathedra pronouncements have been rare, but crowd-pleasers) presiding over the widespread child sex abuse scandal will be what Joseph Razinger is most remembered for — whether Spiegel Online International cares to mention that inconvenient truth, or not.
"The most strongly enforced of all known taboos is the taboo against knowing who or what you really are behind the mask of your apparently separate, independent, and isolated ego."
    — Alan Watts
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Re: Cardinal 'claimed pope to die'

Postby cptmarginal » Fri Jun 15, 2012 3:01 pm

Thank you for all of these major updates on the recent turmoil in the Vatican, I haven't been keeping up.
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Re: Cardinal 'claimed pope to die'

Postby crikkett » Sun Jun 17, 2012 7:41 pm

seemslikeadream wrote:
Vatican Banker Running Scared: Gotti Tedeschi Could Turn Whistle-Blower
Jun 10, 2012 4:45 AM EDT

...Three decades ago, another of “God’s bankers" was found hanging from a noose under Blackfriars Bridge in London.

Head of the Vatican Bank Ettore Gotti Tedeschi

Tony Gentile, Reuters / Landov

In 2010, Gotti Tedeschi and IOR general manager Paolo Cipriani were placed under criminal investigation by authorities in Rome on suspicion of alleged money laundering for shady transactions between the Vatican’s bank accounts. More than €23 million was frozen and later released after the Vatican allegedly cleansed itself by passing anti-fraud legislation. Gotti Tedeschi’s dossier reportedly also included a list of enemies who might want to harm him, including Cipriani, who is still under criminal investigation in the Italian judicial system from the 2010 affair. The Italian police are taking the banker’s enemy list seriously and are considering providing him with police protection.

There is little doubt that Tedeschi has reason to be worried for his safety. Three decades ago, another of “God’s bankers,” Roberto Calvi, was found hanging from a noose under Blackfriars Bridge in London. His pockets were weighted down with bricks and cash. Calvi was not the head of the IOR like Gotti Tedeschi, but he was closely tied to the Vatican’s secret banking structure as head of Banco Ambrosiano, which went bankrupt at the time amid allegations of money laundering, mafia collusion, and generally questionable banking practices. The Vatican owned a small stake in the bank, but wielded great influence over Calvi, who knew the Vatican’s deepest financial secrets. The mystery into Calvi’s death has never been solved. First thought to be a suicide, evidence later pointed to murder. “There are some similarities between the situation of Gotti Tedeschi and what my family lived through during the trial of currency violations of 1981,” Roberto Calvi’s son Carlo told The Daily Beast. He says his father could not have defended himself without exposing the whole structure, and that’s what led to his demise. “While it is difficult for the public to appreciate this, there has always been an attitude of intolerance, isolation, and stubborness with those who set up this type of fiduciary relationship to evade regulations, and this makes them take risks that would be unimaginable to most.”

But neither the Vatican nor Gotti Tedeschi seemed to have learned anything from the scandal surrounding Calvi’s death. “I do not know Gotti Tedeschi," he says. "But I do know that the very same account structure that existed at the time of my father has continued to be used by IOR in a similar fashion and has even increased disproportionally in size."

For now, Gotti Tedeschi is cooperating with Italian authorities. According to prosecutor Giuseppe Pignatone, Tedeschi told prosecutors he was “held hostage because he wanted transparency, especially with regard to certain Vatican accounts. It all started when I asked to have information about accounts that were not in the church’s name.” Where it goes from here is anyone’s guess.



I need to check something. In parts of this article, the language seems to be lifted from an 80s-era book that has a title similar to "God's Bankers" and I think I still have it around here somewhere.
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Re: Cardinal 'claimed pope to die'

Postby seemslikeadream » Mon Jun 25, 2012 11:16 am

Fox reporter to Vatican
Rome
June 26, 2012

This picture taken on Sept. 20, 2007, and released on Saturday, June 22, 2012 by Gregory Joseph Burke shows Gregory Joseph Burke as a Fox News journalist in the U.S. base of Camp Spann in Afghanistan. Greg Burke, 52, will leave Fox to become a senior communications adviser in the Vatican's secretariat of state, the Vatican and Burke told the AP. The Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi said Burke will help integrate communications issues within the Vatican's top administrative office, the secretariat of state, and will help handle its relations with the Holy See press office and other Vatican communications offices. (AP Photo)

A FOX News reporter has been chosen by Pope Benedict XVI to sort out the Vatican's media strategy amid signs that the 85-year-old pontiff is plotting a radical shake-up at the top of the Roman Catholic church.

Greg Burke, a 52-year-old member of the conservative Opus Dei fellowship, is to take a job in the Vatican's secretariat of state. He said: ''I feel exactly the way I felt in Lebanon at the start of the 2006 war - nervous and excited at the same time.''

Burke, who is Rome correspondent for Fox television, said he had twice refused a similar offer from the Vatican ''because I had a really great job''.
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The appointment followed a meeting between the Pope and his cardinals on Saturday. The Vatican has been in turmoil, with the sacking of the head of the Vatican bank and the arrest of the Pope's butler, who is accused of leaking correspondence. After a meeting on Saturday, the Pope consulted a group of five cardinals that did not include the Secretary of State, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone.

Exclusion of the Vatican's ''prime minister'' prompted speculation that Pope Benedict had yielded to pressure for Cardinal Bertone's removal.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Cardinal 'claimed pope to die'

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Jul 06, 2012 8:13 pm

BREAKING NEWS: Italian Financial Police Searches the Vatican It 's the first time in history, almost touched the diplomatic incident

By GLR ANdReA - Posted on 05 July 2012


Italian Financial Police Searches the Vatican
It 's the first time in history, almost touched the diplomatic incident

17:45 - For the first time the Italian police came to the Vatican for a search. Touched the diplomatic incident when finance has sifted through the records of the Institute of the Immaculate Hospital and dermatology San Carlo, which refer to the congregation of the "Sons of the Immaculate Conception", in an investigation a hole of more than 800 million euros.
The men of Yellow Flames, coordinated by the prosecutor Michele Nardi, waited hours before the authorities of the Papal States gave their green light, after repeatedly asking strict compliance with the procedures laid down by the Treaty of '29 church and state. The investigations include investigations on the financial scandal that hit the two hospitals.

The story so far has involved 4 people, including Father Franco Decaminada, father, master of the institution for years, then was forced to resign just because of the happy financial management. He is accused of conspiracy, aimed unwarranted approval and a series of tax offenses. Also searched the headquarters of the provincial head of the congregation, Father Paritanti.


Vatican receives money-laundering report

ROME, July 4 | Thu Jul 5, 2012 1:03am IST

(Reuters) - A European body that monitors money-laundering handed over a report to the Vatican on Wednesday which the Holy See hopes will help it shore up the reputation of its bank in the wake of an investigation by Italian magistrates.

Moneyval, the Council of Europe department that evaluates how effectively member states are fighting money-laundering, will give the Vatican one month to respond to the report before it is made public.

The Vatican has been trying to join a so-called "white list" of states that comply with Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development standards on financial transparency. The Moneyval report, based on consultations and meetings with inspectors, is expected to be a key step along the way.

The Vatican bank, formally known as the Institute for Works of Religion, has been in turmoil since May 24 when its president Ettore Gotti Tedeschi was dismissed by the board, which said he was an ineffective and divisive manager.

Both Gotti Tedeschi and Paolo Cipriani, director-general of the bank, are under investigation by Rome magistrates who in 2010 froze 23 million euros ($33 million) the Vatican bank held in two Italian banks.

The Vatican bank says it did nothing wrong and had merely been carrying out "normal operations" by transferring its own funds between its own accounts in Italy and Germany. The money was released in June 2011, but the investigation is continuing.

A search for Gotti Tedeschi's replacement is currently under way but no appointment is expected until after the summer
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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