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Vatican opens another ‘VatiLeaks’ trial

November 6th, 2012 Posted in Uncategorized, Vatican News

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Vatican opens another VatiLeaks’ trial

Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY —- A Vatican computer technician charged with aiding and abetting the papal butler in stealing confidential documents went on trial amid legal arguments over the definition of the charge and questions about the “anonymous source” who reported him to officials.

As the trial began Nov. 5, the lawyer for Claudio Sciarpelletti, 48, argued Nov. 5 that his client and the papal butler, Paolo Gabriele, were acquaintances, not friends, and that Sciarpelletti had no motive to set aside “20 years of service to the Holy See” to help someone he wasn’t particularly close to.

The court rejected the motion by Gianluca Benedetti, the defense attorney, to drop the charge against Sciarpelletti, who works in the Vatican Secretariat of State, but accepted his request for a copy of documents from the butler’s trial. After asking Benedetti how much time he needed to read the documents, the court ruled the trial will continue Nov. 10.

Gabriele, who was sentenced to 18 months in jail for stealing and leaking confidential Vatican correspondence, including letters to and from the pope, was present in the courtroom along with others called as witnesses. They will be questioned Nov. 10.

Sciarpelletti was arrested May 25, two days after Gabriele; Vatican police searched Sciarpelletti’s office after investigators were told that he and Gabriele had “continual contacts.”

Benedetti told the court, “Everything began with an anonymous tip — from someone in the Secretariat of State, I understand — who spoke of frequent contacts between Paolo Gabriele and Claudio Sciarpelletti, and from there the idea of a friendship developed.”

But, Benedetti said, the two were little more than acquaintances. And, he said, if the two were such good friends, the court should wonder why, over the course of six years, Gabriele refused to allow Sciarpelletti to replace his work computer even though it was “obsolete.”

The court rejected Benedetti’s request for “the acquisition of evidence relative to telephone traffic and electronic mail communications” between Sciarpelletti and Gabriele. The court said it would be difficult to ascertain precisely the men’s relationship from phone records and emails.

The Vatican’s indictment of Sciarpelletti said he had led police to their key piece of evidence against him: an envelope in his desk marked “Personal: P. Gabriele.”

Indicting Sciarpelletti in August, the court said that, among other contents, the envelope contained a copy of a section of an Italian journalist’s book, which was based on documents leaked by Gabriele. It also contained copies of email, but the court did not describe the email further.

According to the court documents, Sciarpelletti’s descriptions of his relationship with Gabriele and of the origin and destination of the envelope changed several times over the course of the investigation.

“The contrasting version of facts furnished by the accused, Claudio Sciarpelletti, may have hindered the investigation,” the indictment said, leading to the charge of “aiding and abetting,” which is the closest crime the Vatican has to an accusation of being an accessory after the fact by obstructing justice.

At the opening of the trial, Benedetti asked the court how it could accuse Sciarpelletti of obstructing the investigation when the Vatican police had already confiscated from Gabriele’s Vatican apartment 82 boxes of material, including about 1,000 pages of sensitive correspondence, much of which had been leaked to and published by an Italian journalist.

Benedetti said the differing version of facts initially given by Sciarpelletti was due to his client’s “emotional confusion.”

Sciarpelletti had spent one night in a Vatican jail cell and then was released on his own recognizance. If found guilty, he is not expected to be sentenced to jail time, although the charge could carry a penalty of up to one year in prison.

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November a month to remember the dead also to celebrate life, says priest

November 2nd, 2012 Posted in Uncategorized

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BROWNSVILLE, Texas — Death does not mean the end.

“Life is changed, not ended,” said Father Gregory Labus, coordinator of the Office of Liturgy and Worship for the Diocese of Brownsville.

November, he pointed out, is the month dedicated to remembering the dead.

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Sister Ann Michele Zwosta, longtime Padua principal, dies at 68

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ASTON, Pa. – Sister Ann Michele Zwosta, who was a teacher and principal for 34 years at Padua Academy in Wilmington, died Nov. 1. She had been a professed member of the Sisters of St. Francis of Philadelphia for 46 years.

Sister Ann Michele, born Marian Eileen Zwosta in Philadelphia, arrived at Padua in 1975 as an economics teacher. In 1985 she became director of studies, and three years later was named vice principal. She became principal in 1990 and remained in that position until 2009. Padua was designated a Blue Ribbon School of Excellence by the U.S. Department of Education during her tenure. Read more »

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Pope to synod: Persuade lapsed Catholics to rediscover Christ

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Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY — Winning converts to the church, ministering better to practicing Catholics and bringing lapsed members back into the fold are all parts of the multifaceted effort known as the new evangelization, Pope Benedict XVI told a group of bishops and other church leaders from around the world.

The pope made his remarks Oct. 28 during his homily at a Mass marking the end of the world Synod of Bishops on the new evangelization. The three-week gathering, which brought more than 260 bishops and religious superiors to the Vatican, along with dozens of official observers and experts, discussed how the church can revive and spread the faith in increasingly secular societies.

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Obituary: Father Flavian Walsh, OFM

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Franciscan Father Flavian Walsh, who ministered in Wilmington for nine years, died Oct. 12 in Chilton Hospital in Pompton Plains, N.J. He was 82.

Father Walsh, a friar for 61 years and a priest for 56, served at St. Paul’s Friary in Wilmington as the assistant director of novices for the Holy Name Province from 1999-2008. He also served as a seminary professor, foreign missionary, pastor, provincial vicar and director of personnel for the Holy Name Province.

Funeral services were Oct. 15 in New York City, with burial at Holy Sepulchre Cemetery in Totowa, N.J. Contributions in his memory may be made to Holy Name Province, Office of Development, 144 West 32nd St., New York, NY 10001-3202.

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Former papal butler begins prison sentence in a Vatican cell

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Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY — Paolo Gabriele, the pope’s former butler who was found guilty of aggravated theft, was to be transferred from house arrest to a Vatican prison cell to begin his 18-month sentence.

Because the Vatican’s prosecutor decided not to file an appeal, Gabriele would immediately begin serving his prison sentence by order of a Vatican court, said Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi, Vatican spokesman.

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St. Elizabeth welcomes new principal, but just for a day

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Pete Booker (right), the chief executive officer of Delmarva Broadcasting Co., spent Thursday at St. Elizabeth High School as the principal for the day. The program is sponsored annually by the Delaware Chamber of Commerce. Booker is joined by assistant principal John Forrester, student leadership representative Mike McClosky and the principal for all the other days of the year, Shirley Bounds. Photo courtesy of St. Elizabeth High School.

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Pope names six new cardinals, including an American

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Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY — Pope Benedict XVI surprised pilgrims in St. Peter’s Square Oct. 24 by announcing he would create six new cardinals, including 63-year-old U.S. Archbishop James M. Harvey, prefect of the papal household, in late November.

The pope said the consistory to create the new cardinals, who come from six countries, would take place Nov. 24, the eve of the feast of Christ the King.

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Trial set for second Vatican employee; report issued on butler’s trial

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VATICAN CITY — Claudio Sciarpelletti, the Vatican Secretariat of State computer technician accused of aiding and abetting the pope’s butler in stealing confidential Vatican correspondence, will go on trial at the Vatican Nov. 5.

The Vatican announced the trial date Oct. 23. Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi, Vatican spokesman, told reporters that Sciarpelletti’s trial on the “minor charges” of aiding and abetting was expected to be brief.

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Vatican postpones papal delegation’s trip to Syria

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Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY — The visit of a papal delegation to the capital of war-torn Syria, previously announced for late October, has been postponed indefinitely, and the delegation’s membership, which was to have included Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan of New York, will be changed.

Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, Vatican secretary of state, made the announcement Oct. 23 at the morning session of the world Synod of Bishops.

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