"Pope
Benedict XVI yesterday, just three days before Christmas, pardoned his former
butler, Paolo Gabriele, who was serving an 18-month jail sentence for stealing
confidential Vatican documents and handing them over to a journalist for
publication, resulting in the "Vatileaks" scandal.
The Pope yesterday morning visited Gabriele personally in his Vatican cell to inform him of the decision, the Vatican said in a statement. (Photo: This photo from the Osservatore Romano, is the only photo of the meeting the Vatican will be releasing.) The Vatican's spokesman, Father Federico Lombardi, said the two had a "very intense" conversation for about 15 minutes, privately and alone.
On October 6, a Vatican tribunal, after a brief trial, found Gabriele guilty of removing and/or photocopying dozens of the Pope's private documents and leaking them to Italian journalist Gianluigi Nuzzi, who published them in May.
Gabriele said in his testimony that he acted out of love for the Church. He said he had taken the documents in order to "jar" the Vatican in some way, in order to force top officials -- and eventually the Pope himself -- to face more directly a number of cases where special agendas seemed to be placing private or partial interests ahead of the interests of the Universal Church. In this sense, Gabriele saw himself as a "whistleblower," not as the agent of any group, in or out of the Church, seeking to harm the Church. The Vatican tribunal judges said in their sentence that they believed Gabriele's description of his motivation, and for this reason reduced his sentence from 3 years to a year and a half.
The Pope yesterday morning visited Gabriele personally in his Vatican cell to inform him of the decision, the Vatican said in a statement. (Photo: This photo from the Osservatore Romano, is the only photo of the meeting the Vatican will be releasing.) The Vatican's spokesman, Father Federico Lombardi, said the two had a "very intense" conversation for about 15 minutes, privately and alone.
On October 6, a Vatican tribunal, after a brief trial, found Gabriele guilty of removing and/or photocopying dozens of the Pope's private documents and leaking them to Italian journalist Gianluigi Nuzzi, who published them in May.
Gabriele said in his testimony that he acted out of love for the Church. He said he had taken the documents in order to "jar" the Vatican in some way, in order to force top officials -- and eventually the Pope himself -- to face more directly a number of cases where special agendas seemed to be placing private or partial interests ahead of the interests of the Universal Church. In this sense, Gabriele saw himself as a "whistleblower," not as the agent of any group, in or out of the Church, seeking to harm the Church. The Vatican tribunal judges said in their sentence that they believed Gabriele's description of his motivation, and for this reason reduced his sentence from 3 years to a year and a half.
Now Gabriele is
free.
"This morning the Holy Father Benedict XVI visited Paolo Gabriele in prison in order to confirm his forgiveness and to inform him personally of his acceptance of Mr Gabriele's request for pardon," the Vatican statement said.
In November the court convicted a computer expert, Claudio Sciarpelletti, of helping Gabriele leak the papal documents. Sciarpelletti, who pleaded innocent, was found guilty and given a suspended sentence of two months. He is already back at work in his old job, and a full pardon is also expected soon for him, Father Lombardi said.
"This morning the Holy Father Benedict XVI visited Paolo Gabriele in prison in order to confirm his forgiveness and to inform him personally of his acceptance of Mr Gabriele's request for pardon," the Vatican statement said.
In November the court convicted a computer expert, Claudio Sciarpelletti, of helping Gabriele leak the papal documents. Sciarpelletti, who pleaded innocent, was found guilty and given a suspended sentence of two months. He is already back at work in his old job, and a full pardon is also expected soon for him, Father Lombardi said.
What has not been made clear is
whether the "Vatileaks" case is now completely closed, or not.
A
few days ago, Pope Benedict, unexpectedly, received in audience three cardinals
-- the Spaniard Julian Herranz, the Slovak Josef Tomko and the Italian Salvatore
De Giorgi -- who comprise the special "cardinals' commission" the Pope himself
set up to investigate the "Vatileaks" case, alongside the investigation of the
Vatican court and the Vatican police department.
It is said in Rome that the
three cardinals continued to gather testimony and evidence about the case even
after Gabriele's trial and sentencing in October. This suggests that perhaps
there is still an ongoing investigation. But what this investigation (if it is
continuing) consists of, why it might be continuing, and what it might lead to
(if anything), is not clear."
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