Vatican Accountant Busted in Corruption Plot - East Idaho News
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Vatican Accountant Busted in Corruption Plot

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GETTY W 070512 Vatican?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1372430097706Brand X Pictures/Thinkstock(LONDON) — Is the world’s holiest bank riddled with corruption?

Many are asking that question on Friday after a senior Vatican accountant was accused of plotting to sneak $26 million in bags of cash into Italy by stashing them away on a private jet — with the help of a former Italian spy.

The accountant, the former spy and an Italian financial broker have all been arrested in a case that highlights the Vatican’s continuing challenge to eliminate fraud within the famously secretive Vatican Bank.

Monsignor Nunzio Scarano, who was the head of analytic accounts at the Holy See’s property-management agency, has been accused of fraud, corruption and slander.  He was the middle-man in a complex plot that involved secretly flying his friends’ money from Italy to Switzerland, evading customs, and driving to his house in an armoured convoy in order to avoid taxes, according to prosecutors.

The arrests come just two days after Pope Francis created an unprecedented commission that will investigate the Vatican Bank and problems that have plagued it for decades — and damaged the Vatican’s reputation.

The Vatican on Friday said it would “fully” cooperate with the probe and that Scarano had been suspended from his job more than a month ago because of a separate allegation of laundering.  In that inquiry, Scarano is accused of taking more than $700,000 donated for terminally ill patients and using it to pay off a personal mortgage.  He did so, according to investigators, by withdrawing $16,000 at a time, giving it to 56 different friends, who then paid him back with checks, so he could avoid detection.

In the arrest Friday, Scarano’s friends approached him and asked him to bring the money back into Italy from Switzerland, according to prosecutors in Rome.  Giovanni Maria Zito, a former intelligence agent and current member of the Italian military and secret service, then arranged for a private, government plane and plotted how to avoid customs agents and have the money driven back to Scarano’s home with an armed export.  Zito agreed to the plot in exchange for $520,000.

Zito hired the private plane while on sick leave and flew with Giovanni Carenzio, a broker, to Locarno, Switzerland, according to prosecutors.  Carenzio was supposed to collect the money from a Swiss bank on behalf of his friends, but never did because the broker called off the plot after deciding it was too complicated.

Pope Francis has made fighting corruption in the bank a priority.  The bank has 114 employees, manages $9.3 billion in assets and handles funds for Vatican departments, Catholic charities, and priests and nuns around the world.  

But the Italian media have long been filled with reports about bank accounts used by the mafia and fraudsters.  The most famous example is that of Banco Ambrosiano, in which the Holy See was the main shareholder before the bank collapsed with losses of more than $3 billion.  

The bank was accused of laundering money for mobsters, and its former chairman, dubbed “God’s Banker”, who was found hanging from a London bridge in 1982.  The death was dressed up as a suicide, but police believed he was murdered.

To try and fight that reputation, Francis gave the new commission carte blanche, reporting directly to him and bypassing normal secrecy rules.

The Vatican Bank, which is called the Institute for Works of Religion, “must become an accepted member of the international financial system,” the bank’s new chief executive, Ernst von Freyberg, recently told Vatican reporters.  “My role is to improve our reputation, so that the Church is no longer darkened by bad news from us… We have to be clean on all legal fronts.”

But the allegations of impropriety continue.  The Vatican says it has caught seven attempts of money laundering already this year.  Last year, it caught six attempts.

Copyright 2013 ABC News Radio

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