Pope Francis on Tuesday freed a Vatican monsignor convicted of leaking confidential documents to journalists, granting him a Christmas-time clemency.
Francis granted “conditional freedom” to Spanish Monsignor Lucio Vallejo Balda after he served half of his 18-month sentence, the Vatican said late on Tuesday. Fired from his job as a high-ranking Vatican financial official, Mgr Vallejo now falls under the authority of his local bishop in Astorga, Spain.
In July, a Vatican court convicted Mgr Vallejo of conspiring to pass documents onto two journalists, although it cleared him and a co-defendant of forming a criminal organisation to do so.
The case had been criticised by media rights groups because the two journalists were also put on trial, though the court ultimately declared it had no jurisdiction to prosecute them.
The two journalists, Emiliano Fittipaldi and Gianluigi Nuzzi, wrote blockbuster books last year based on Vatican documents exposing the alleged greed of bishops and cardinals angling for big apartments, the extraordinarily high costs of saint making and the loss to the Holy See of millions of euros in rental income because of undervalued property.
The documentation had been compiled by a pontifical commission that Francis had asked to gather information about the Vatican’s finances to make them more transparent and efficient.
Mgr Vallejo, the second highest ranked official on the commission, admitted in court that he gave Nuzzi 85 passwords to password-protected documents. He denied that the journalists threatened him, and put the blame of feeling pressured on Francesca Chaouqui, the communications expert who was also a member of the commission and was convicted alongside him of conspiracy. She was given a 10-month suspended sentence.
Publishing confidential information is a crime in the Vatican, punishable by up to eight years in prison.
The trial had several surreal moments, including when Mgr Vallejo was put back under house arrest after a friend sneaked a mobile phone to him inside a cake.
Pope Francis’s Christmas-time clemency harks back to the 2012 gesture granted by Benedict XVI to his then-butler, who had been convicted of giving Nuzzi confidential documents for an earlier book about Vatican misdeeds.
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