| The Vatican's Fake Occupy Implodes: Documents Evoke a History of Money Laundering, Sexual Terrorism, and Even ... Murder
By Dan Vojir
Oped News
May 27, 2012
http://www.opednews.com/articles/The-Vatican-s-Fake-Occupy-by-Rev-Dan-Vojir-120527-850.html
THE BUTLER DID NOT DO IT
A tell-all book, leaked documents, billions in favorable contracts, money laundering, sexual terrorism ... and possibly murder. With St. Peter's in the background, it all sounds like a Dan Brown thriller. But in this mystery, the butler did not do it. At least not to the extent that a papal investigation would have it.
Paolo Gabriele, 46, who has worked as Benedict's butler since 2006, was reportedly taken into custody after investigators found a mass of documents in the Vatican apartment he shares with his wife and three children.
The arrest comes a month after the Vatican gave an investigative team led by Cardinal Julian Herranz, a member of Opus dei, a full "pontifical mandate" to join Vatican police in rooting out the perpetrators of what has been dubbed Vatileaks.
Gabriele is now languishing in a Vatican prison cell (yes, the Vatican does have a prison) and for now it seems that his only crime was the same as that of Pvt. Bradley Manning (wikileaks) - leaking the juiciest anti-Vatican documents in history.
Sources close to Gabriele, however, say that he would not have masterminded a leak and that his possession of the documents proves very little: no motive has been proffered and apparently no money was offered for the documents.
MONEY FIRST
The documents show how contracts were awarded to favoured companies and individuals and also highlight allegations of internal power struggles with the Vatican's bank known as the Institute for Religious Works.
In a chaotic mire of firings, leaked documents and sordid stories, one thing stands out: an attempt at looking transparent has failed. From Yahoo News :
The Vatican in July will learn if it has complied with the financial transparency criteria of a Council of Europe committee, Moneyval -- a key step in its efforts to get on the so-called "white list" of countries that share financial information to fight tax evasion.
As was reported in OpEdNews last
October, the Vatican issued a statement entitled: TOWARDS REFORMING THE INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL AND MONETARY SYSTEMS IN THE CONTEXT OF GLOBAL PUBLIC AUTHORITY . The gist of the memo endeared the Vatican to the hearts of the OWS movement, but was seen by many to be just another attempt to gloss over the latest money-laundering scandal (fined $30 million by the Italian government).
HIS HOLINESS - One Helluva Read
The book, which was described as criminal by the Vatican, alleged that the editor of the Vatican's newspaper started a gay smear campaign against a rival editor, with the help of a newspaper owned by the Berlusconi family.
Letters depict collusion between the Berlusconi government and the Vatican over how to avoid EU pressure to make the Catholic church pay tax on its properties.
With previously leaked documents, journalist Gianluihi Nuzzi wrote a book in 2009 entitled Vatican SpA, and his latest work, His Holiness, uses even more, including some of the documents found in the home of Gabriele. In it, "hypocrisy within the Vatican goes unchallenged and scandals multiply", in-fighting, smear campaigns and the pope's personal correspondence with the head of the Vatican bank, Ettore Gotti Tedeschi all highlight the almost innate corruption holding sway in the Vatican for years.
MURDERS IN THE RUE VATICANE
The leaked documents have brought to light old scandals and conspiracy theories as well: The Vatican bank, The Institute for Religious Works, has been embroiled in intrigue and nefarious doings as far back as 1978, when Banco Ambrosiano became steeped in scandal, resulting in the loss of over $350 million.
Three suspicious deaths are connected with the demise of the Banco Ambrosiano: Roberto Calvi , Chairman of the bank, Graziella Corrocher, his private secretary, and ... Pope John Paul I. Roberto Calvi was found hung under a London Bridge a victim of foul play (not suicide). Graziella Corrocher's death was an apparent suicide, but suspiciously close to Calvi's death. John Paul's death is now worthy of a Dan Brown thriller: his cause of death has never been satisfactorily explained, and, against custom, his body did not undergo an autopsy.
All this would be old news except for Ratzinger's (Benedict's) involvement in spin and cover-up: one of the most vocal clerics against the papacy (especially in regards to its infallibility) has been Hans Kung, who's proximity to John XXIII, Paul VI and John Paul I concerned the papacy enough to have him barred from teaching theology at the University of Tubingen. As then-head of the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith (ancestor to the old Inquisition), Ratzinger continued the disbarment.*
WHAT HAPPENS IN ROME, STAYS IN ROME
And what the pope knows is at the crux of the matter: the portrait of a clueless, doddering old man certainly does not fit Benedict. His obvious cover-up of pedophile priests , first in Munich as archbishop, then as head of the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith, showed a man used to secrecy and intrigue. His experience with clandestine affairs did not stop when elected pope: in order to maintain secrecy, a man of his stature must know everything there is to be secret about.
So it seems that Benedict XVI has had a history of cover-ups and his papacy has hidden financial abuse, sexual abuse and maybe even murder, but will the latest scandal hurt the papacy? Will the"criminal" book, His Holiness, make an 1800 year-old institution come crashing down around his Prada-clad feet?
Hardly. But stay tuned, just in case.
*Even though Kung and Ratzinger had been friends. Kung was instrumental in getting Ratzinger the position.
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