Following
the money
By Phyllis Zagano National Catholic Reporter
February 26, 2014 http://ncronline.org/blogs/just-catholic/following-money-0
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Cardinal George Pell of
Sydney leaves a meeting of cardinals with Pope Francis in the
synod hall at the Vatican Feb. 20. The Vatican announced Feb.
24 that Pell has been appointed by Pope Francis to head a new
Vatican office overseeing Vatican finances. |
Will Pope
Francis’ new money lord make any difference? Australian
Cardinal George Pell, 72, who moves to Rome next month to head
a new Vatican office, is not known as a financial expert.
Australian sex-abuse critics call his appointment a golden
parachute, one that may touch down in a palatial suite in the AUS$30 million “Domus Australia” guesthouse Pell
dedicated in 2011.
Of course Francis is
trying to do the right thing. Religion and money are never a
good mix, and a long history of scandals only complicates the
task of getting the Vatican bureaucracy in order. As Cardinal
Prefect of the new dicastery,
the Secretariat for the Economy, Pell reports directly to the
pope. He also reports to the new Council for the Economy, eight
cardinals and seven lay experts projected to analyze internal
controls, transparency, and governance. In addition, there will
be an Auditor-General empowered to check the books of any Holy
See component.
Pell’s mandate
appears to be oversight of any money the Vatican touches,
particularly that in the Administration of the Patrimony for
the Holy See (APSA),
which manages Vatican-owned money and property, and the
Institute for Religious Works (IOR), also known as the Vatican
Bank, which manages between $6 billion to $7 billion dollars in
cash and securities owned by various clergy, religious orders,
dioceses and church-affiliated persons and institutions.
Both are ripe fields
for fraud, waste and abuse. The lack of transparency at the
Vatican Bank, which has 19,000 clients worldwide and does a
quarter of its business in cash, has long been cause for
scandal. No one knows where it invests its funds. In 1982, the
head of the collapsed Banco
Amrosiano, Roberto Calvi, was found hanged in
London. The Vatican Bank owned controlling shares of Banco Ambrosiano. More recently, Italian police arrested Msgr.
Nunzio Scarano, former
head of accounting at APSA,
on suspicion of using the Vatican Bank to move money for
“others.” He was also accused of trying to smuggle
$20 million Euro by private plane from Switzerland.
Moving money secretly
is a time-honored sport, usually played on the fields of
Switzerland, Lichtenstein,
the Cayman Islands and the Isle of Mann. The combined forces of
the world banking community have rumpled those fields —
no more numbered Swiss bank accounts, for example — and
computerization of accounts creates easier tracking methods
than paper deposit slips.
But money is still as
slippery as ever. A good accountant can hide — or steal
— about 10 percent or anything. And, if truth be told,
there are lots of folks who touch church money and just
can’t let go of it. I am reminded of a telephone call
from the president of a parish council: “Is the pastor
allowed to take $250 a week out of the collection before it is
counted?” Then there was the pastor who exposed an
employee scheme to purchase fine art with church funds. He
fired the employee, and kept the art. Or, the storehouse of
rice and beans meant for the poor found to be a Potemkin village. Church employees
had sold most of the donated goods and pocketed the money.
These genuinely heartbreaking stories multiply over the years
and around the world. Temptation comes in many forms, but one
size fits all.
On the larger scale
— it has 33,000 accounts — the Vatican Bank says it
is certain it is not money laundering for terrorists. It is
probably not, but there could be lots of secrets in its
sovereign accounts. And intrigue remains in long memories at
the Vatican. In one year, as head of Vatican City State,
Archbishop Carlo Viganò
turned a $10 million deficit into a $44 million surplus —
and got fired. He complained to the pope: "Blessed Father,
my transfer in this moment would provoke confusion and
discouragement for those who thought it was possible to clean
up so many situations of corruption and abuse of office.”
Viganò is a
civil and canon lawyer. Whether Pell, a historian of early
Christianity ordained as bishop in 1987 is up to the job
remains to be seen. He is a former football player and son of a
heavyweight boxing champion, so his imposing stature may help.
He has been photographed in a cappa magna, but his new fashion
statement seems to be a pewter pectoral cross. Even so, unlike
new Nicaraguan Cardinal Leopoldo José Brenes when he traveled to the consistory, he is not likely to board his flight to Rome
wearing blue jeans.
[Phyllis Zagano is senior research
associate-in-residence at Hofstra University and winner of
the 2014 Isaac Hecker
Award for Social Justice. Her newest books are Mysticism and the Spiritual
Quest: A Crosscultural Anthology and Ordination of Women to the
Diaconate in the Eastern Churches. She will speak March 13 at
Rockhurst University in
Kansas City, Mo.; April 5 at St. Ursula Academy in Cincinnati,
Ohio; and May 6 at St. Francis Xavier Church in New York City.]
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