The Vatican’s criminal court has frozen the Vatican bank accounts of a monsignor arrested in Italy and has opened its own criminal investigation into how he used the accounts.
Mgr Nunzio Scarano was suspended in late May from his job as an accountant in the Vatican office overseeing property and investments. The Vatican suspended him when it learned that he was under criminal investigation in Italy.
The monsignor has been in a Rome jail since his arrest on June 28; he has been charged with fraud, corruption and slander in a case involving an alleged plot to bring €20 million in cash from Switzerland to Italy. He also has been named in a separate investigation in southern Italy on suspicion of money laundering after several claims that he gave people cash in exchange for cheques marked as donations.
Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi, Vatican spokesman, said the Vatican court order to freeze Mgr Scarano’s accounts was part of a separate Vatican investigation “triggered by several suspicious transaction reports” that the Vatican bank filed with the Vatican’s Financial Intelligence Authority.
The investigation, he said, “could be extended to additional individuals.”
When Mgr Scarano was arrested, the Vatican expressed its willingness to cooperate with Italian authorities in their investigation. Father Lombardi told reporters that is still the case and that the information might flow in both directions now that the Vatican has begun its own investigation.
The Vatican bank, formally known as the Institute for the Works of Religion, has commissioned the Promontory Financial Group to review “the accounts in question,” Father Lombardi said. Promontory is a private international financial strategy, risk management and regulatory compliance consulting firm.
The Vatican bank has already hired Promontory to begin a full review of “all client relationships and the anti-money laundering procedures it has in place,” Father Lombardi added.
In addition, when the Vatican bank’s director and deputy director resigned in the wake of Mgr Scarano’s arrest, Ernst von Freyberg, president of the Vatican bank, created the position of chief risk officer and hired an expert with US banking experience to fill the role.
Father Lombardi said that under Von Freyberg, who was appointed in February, the bank is “systematically identifying and will have zero tolerance for any activity, whether conducted by laity or clergy, that is illegal or outside the statutes of the institute.”
Areas of Catholic Herald business are still recovering post-pandemic.
However, we are reaching out to the Catholic community and readership, that has been so loyal to the Catholic Herald. Please join us on our 135 year mission by supporting us.
We are raising £250,000 to safeguard the Herald as a world-leading voice in Catholic journalism and teaching.
We have been a bold and influential voice in the church since 1888, standing up for traditional Catholic culture and values. Please consider donating.