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Dead Men Hold No Bank Accounts

By Phil Lawler
Catholic Culture
July 30, 2012

http://www.catholicculture.org/commentary/the-city-gates.cfm?id=372

The “Moneyval” audit of the Vatican bank, the IOR, turned up this interesting tidbit: there were 236 cardinals who held accounts there. Which wouldn’t be remarkable, except that at the time of the audit, there were only 213 cardinals alive.

This is not necessarily evidence of financial shenanigans. The estate of a deceased prelate might control a bank account that is still listed in the late cardinal’s name. Dormant accounts might linger on the books for some time before someone decides how the funds should be disbursed. Still one can understand why the European inspectors thought some tighter controls would be useful.

William Bulger, the longtime president of the Massachusetts state Senate, quipped that he wants to be buried in St. Augustine’s cemetery, because he wants to remain politically active. (Bulger was referring to the reports that inhabitants of that cemetery have showed up mysteriously on Election Day at the polling places of South Boston.) The line always draws a laugh, but for election commissioners the laughter is uncomfortable. So too with banking inspectors who discover that 20% of the cardinals holding accounts at the IOR are deceased.

 

 

 

 

 




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