Vatican criminal trial to shed light on failed Carige bank takeover
Send a link to a friend
[July 19, 2021] By
Giselda Vagnoni
ROME (Reuters) - The thwarted takeover of a
troubled Italian bank in 2018 will come into focus in a forthcoming
Vatican trial that is tied to Pope Francis's efforts to clean up Holy
See finances after decades of scandals.
Weakened by mismanagement and bad loans, Carige bank was placed under
special administration by the European Central Bank in early 2019 after
a failed attempt led by one of its main shareholders, Raffaele Mincione,
to take control.
Vatican prosecutors allege that Mincione bought a stake in Carige with
embezzled money including funds raised from faithful Catholics and
intended for the needy.
They have indicted him and another nine people including a prominent
Cardinal Angelo Becciu over a multi-million-euro scandal that also
involves the Vatican's purchase of a building in one of London's
smartest districts.
The trial is due to begin on July 27. The defendants are all free
pending the opening of the case.
Mincione, who lives in London, has consistently denied wrongdoing. His
Italian lawyer Luigi Giuliano declined to comment, saying "he wants to
prepare the defence arguments in the utmost confidentiality" ahead of
the trial.
The former Carige shareholder resigned from the lender's board in
September 2018. Two months later, Mincione sold the London property to
the Vatican in a deal negotiated by another Italian middleman, Gianluigi
Torzi, who also faces trial.
Torzi has denied any wrongdoing, as has Becciu.
Prosecutors believe the Vatican paid over 350 million euros ($410
million) for the building, including debt, which had been acquired by
Mincione for 129 million pounds ($177.66 million) just a few years
before.
[to top of second column] |
Cardinal Angelo Becciu speaks to the media a day near the Vatican,
in Rome, Italy, September 25, 2020. REUTERS/Guglielmo Mangiapane/File
Photo
As evidence of alleged criminal intent, prosecutors say Mincione used
part of 40 million pounds of Vatican money to repay a loan from Torzi
for the failed bid to take control of Carige’s board.
"Until now, the sources available for public consultation have never
hinted that Mincione had financed the takeover of Carige with funds from
the (Catholic Church)," prosecutors said in their 487-page charge sheet
released earlier this month.
The two brokers are accused of embezzlement, fraud and money laundering.
Torzi is also charged with extortion.
Both men have said the sale of the London building was unconnected to
the loan for Carige.
Torzi's lawyer Ambra Giovene told Reuters prosecutors had yet to prove
that part of the 40-million-pound loan was transferred by Mincione to
her client, and stressed there was no link between the two deals.
Carige declined to comment.
($1 = 0.7261 pounds)
(Reporting by Giselda Vagnoni; Editing by Crispian Balmer and Mark
Heinrich)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|