VATICAN CITY
Bloomberg Businessweek
By Andrew Frye and Alessandra Migliaccio January 21, 2014
Italy’s finance police advanced their investigation into alleged money laundering at the Vatican, saying “fake donations” were used to move funds from offshore companies through the Holy Seeâs bank.
The cash was allegedly deposited into accounts used by Monsignor Nunzio Scarano, a priest and former accountant at the Vatican, who was arrested in June for plotting to cross the Swiss-Italian border with 20 million euros ($27 million), Italian finance police said today. Assets were seized as part of the probe, according to a finance police statement issued in the southern city of Salerno.
The Italian investigation caused a shakeup at the Vatican Bank, known as the Institute for Religious Works, and Paolo Cipriani resigned as director in July. Pope Francis, in his first year as pontiff, has sought to tighten oversight of the bank.
“The Vatican has been collaborating with Italian authorities from the very beginning of this investigation and continues to do so,” Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi said by phone. “The Vatican has responded to all the requests for information received from Italy and is waiting for a response to its own information requests.”
The police didn’t enter the bank, Lombardi said.
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