VATICAN (CNS): Vatican police seized documents and computers at the home and office of Monsignor Alberto Perlasca, the former head of the Vatican Secretariat of State’s administrative office, in their continuing investigation into financial mismanagement.
In a statement published on February 18, the Vatican said the operation, which was authorised by Gian Piero Milano, Vatican chief prosecutor, and his deputy, Alessandro Diddi, led to the confiscation “of documents and electronic devices at the office and room of Monsignor Alberto Perlasca.”
The Vatican said, “The measure, taken as part of the investigation into financial and real estate investments of the Secretariat of State, is linked—while respecting the principle of the presumption of innocence—to what emerged from the first interrogations of the officials under investigation and suspended from duty.”
Vatican police conducted a raid on offices in the Secretariat of State and its financial oversight office on 1 October 2019 after suspicions of financial mismanagement were raised “by the Institute for the Works of Religion (the Vatican Bank) and the Office of the Auditor General, concerning financial transactions carried out over time,” the Vatican press office said.
The following day, the Italian magazine, L’Espresso, published an internal notice from the Vatican police about the “cautionary suspension” of several individuals.
The report also alleged the raid was part of a Vatican investigation into how the Secretariat of State used US$200 million ($1.5 billion) to finance a property development project in London’s Chelsea district in 2014.
The announcement of the seizure of documents from Monsignor Perlasca came a day after Giovanni Angelo Cardinal Becciu, prefect of the Congregation for Saints’ Causes, defended the property investment and vehemently denied that the money used in the purchase came from the annual Peter’s Pence collection and was earmarked for helping the poor.
“I want to deny this because we did not use that money,” Cardinal Becciu said during a book presentation on February 17.
“Peter’s Pence was not affected; an investment was made on a building. It was a good and opportune occasion, which many people envy us for today,” he stressed.
Monsignor Perlasca served at the Vatican Secretariat of State from 2009 until Pope Francis named him as a prosecutor in the Vatican’s highest court, the Apostolic Signatura, in July 2019.
He also serves as a member of several managing boards that handle Vatican City State’s health care and pension funds, as well as Vatican-run Bambino Gésu Pediatric Hospital. Additionally, he is an auditor for the Vatican’s Joseph Ratzinger-Benedict XVI Foundation.