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Ex-vatican Envoy under House Arrest

Irish Examiner
September 23, 2014

http://www.irishexaminer.com/breakingnews/world/ex-vatican-envoy-under-house-arrest-642954.html

The Vatican has put its former ambassador to the Dominican Republic under house arrest after opening a criminal child sex trial against him.

It marks the first time a high-ranking Vatican official has faced criminal charges of sexually abusing youngsters.

Josef Wesolowski had already been defrocked in June after the Vatican’s canon law court found him guilty of abuse and imposed its toughest penalty under church law, laicisation – returning to life as a layman.

But today, the Vatican City State’s separate criminal court opened a preliminary hearing into his case and ordered him placed under house arrest.

A Vatican statement said Wesolwski presented medical documentation detailing health concerns that presumably prevented a more restrictive type of detention. The Vatican has a few small detention rooms inside its police barracks, but no long-term facilities.

The Holy See recalled Polish-born Wesolowski in August, 2013 after the archbishop of Santo Domingo told Pope Francis about rumours that Wesolowski had sexually abused teenage boys in the Caribbean country. Prosecutors there say he allegedly paid them to masturbate.

Dominican authorities opened an investigation but declined initially to press charges since the Vatican had said Wesolowski enjoyed diplomatic immunity. Polish prosecutors also opened an investigation.

A Santo Domingo court, though, took the first steps towards possibly charging him last month after the Vatican said he had lost his immunity when he was defrocked and could be prosecuted elsewhere.

Wesolowski could face jail time if found guilty by the Vatican criminal court, which has jurisdiction over crimes committed within the tiny Vatican city state or by any of the Holy See’s diplomatic staff.

It is unclear where he would serve any possible term: inside the Vatican or in an Italian prison.

The case against Wesolowski has been closely watched, given the grave nature of the charges and the fact that the Vatican had faced criticism that it had shielded Wesolowski from Dominican jurisdiction by recalling him last year. In fact, many countries would have done the same with diplomatic staff facing possible criminal charges abroad.

The case has also been a test of Francis’ willingness to sanction even a high-ranking Vatican official for a crime the Holy See has long sought to blame on wayward priests, not direct representatives of the Pope.

Francis has said no prelate, whether a priest or a cardinal, has any privileges when it comes to sex abuse.

 

 

 

 

 




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