THE VATICAN City trial of Paolo Gabriele, Pope Benedict XVI’s former
butler accused of the theft of confidential documents from the papal
apartment, reaches its substantive point today (Tuesday) when he takes the
witness stand for what could be a key interrogation.
Against the
background of a huge media presence, this unprecedented trial opened
last Saturday with a largely procedural first session concerned with the
admission of minor elements of the prosecution’s evidence.
It saw the
court make two important decisions, however.
First, Gabriele’s
trial has been separated from that of his co- defendant, computer
technician Claudio Sciarpelletti, accused of aiding and abetting
Gabriele. It is believed Sciarpelletti’s role in the theft was little
more than that of a postman who passed documents to and from Gabriele.
Second,
and more significantly, the court ruled it would not seek as evidence
the result of a commission of cardinals instigated by the pope to look
into the “Vatileaks” phenomenon – the stream of confidential Holy See
documents leaked to the media earlier this year. The court ruled that
the commission was answerable only to the pope and was not relevant to
Vatican City law.
Observers have speculated that the commission’s
report, compiled by senior cardinals Julian Herranz, Joseph Tomko and
Salvatore de Giorgi, and delivered to the pope in late July, might
contain fresh information, especially with regard to the involvement of
other senior Holy See figures.
While the court intends to ignore
the commission, it will hear evidence from at least one senior Holy See
figure: Msgr Georg Ganswein, the pope’s private secretary. On Saturday,
he was named as one of eight witnesses due to be called by the court.
The
other seven include six Vatican gendarmerie officers and Cristina
Cernetti, one of the “memores”, or consecrated women, who work in the
papal apartment. Gabriele’s defence lawyer called for a plan of Msgr
Ganswein’s apartment in the apostolic palace to be submitted as evidence
but this was denied by the court on security grounds.
Other
details of the investigation to emerge were that Vatican police had
sequestered 82 boxes of documentation from Gabriele’s apartments in the
Vatican City and at Castel Gandolfo, the pope’s summer residence.
In
addition, police installed CCTV surveillance outside Gabriele’s Vatican
apartment in early June, some two weeks after his arrest.
Gabriele
has already admitted his guilt, acknowledging that he passed documents
to Gianluigi Nuzzi, author of the book His Holiness: the Secret Papers
of Benedict XVI.
Published last May, the book portrays a Holy See driven
by internecine rivalry, political manoeuvres and occasional corruption.
Gabriele
has always said he acted for the good of the Catholic Church, inspired
by the Holy Spirit and with a mission to expose “evil and corruption”.
Many observers wonder if he acted alone or on behalf of some senior Holy
See figure, however.
Presiding judge Giuseppe della Torre
suggested on Saturday that the trial might be concluded this week, after
four more hearings.
If found guilty, Gabriele faces up to four years in
prison.
Many believe, however, that he will eventually be pardoned by
the pope.