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Papal pardon expected after butler is jailed for 18 months over leaked documents

Paolo Gabriele: house arrest. Picture: AP

Paolo Gabriele: house arrest. Picture: AP

THE Pope’s butler was sentenced to 18 months in jail
yesterday after being convicted of stealing the pontiff’s private documents and leaking them to a journalist in the gravest Vatican security breach in
recent memory.

Paolo Gabriele will serve his sentence under house arrest in his Vatican apartment while awaiting a possible papal ­pardon, his lawyer said.

Cristiana Arru said the Vatican’s promoter of justice, or prosecutor, had agreed to the conditions after a court handed down its sentence. Otherwise, Gabriele would have had to go to an Italian jail since the Vatican has no such facility.

Judge Giuseppe Dalla Torre read the verdict aloud two hours after the three-judge Vatican panel began deliberating Gabriele’s fate.

Gabriele stood impassively as it was read out in the tiny wood-panelled tribunal tucked behind St Peter’s Basilica.

The sentence was reduced from three years because of a series of mitigating circumstances, including that Gabriele had no previous record, had acknowledged that he had betrayed the Pope and was convinced, “albeit erroneously” that he was doing the right thing, Dalla Torre said.

Gabriele was accused of stealing the Pope’s private correspondence and passing it on to journalist Gianluigi Nuzzi, whose book revealed the intrigue, petty infighting and 
allegations of corruption and homosexual liaisons that plague the leadership of the Roman Catholic Church.

He has said he leaked the documents because he felt the Pope wasn’t being informed of the “evil and corruption” in the Vatican, and that exposing the problems publicly would put the church back on the right track.

In his final appeal to the court yesterday morning, Gabriele insisted he was no thief. “The thing I feel strongly in me is the conviction that I acted out of exclusive love, I would say visceral love, for the church of Christ and its visible head,” he told the court in a steady voice. “I do not feel like a thief.”

Gabriele’s lawyer, Cristiana Arru, said the sentence was “good and balanced” and said she was awaiting the judges’ written reasoning before deciding whether to appeal.

Nuzzi’s book, His Holiness: Pope Benedict XVI’s Secret ­Papers, convulsed the Vatican for months and prompted an unprecedented response, with the Pope naming a commission of cardinals to investigate the origin of the leaks alongside Vatican magistrates.

Arru said Gabriele would ­return to his Vatican City apartment to begin serving his sentence. He has been held on house arrest there since July after spending his first two months in a Vatican detention room.

Gabriele was also ordered to pay court costs.

Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi said the possibility of a papal pardon was “concrete, likely” and that the Pope would now study the court file and decide. He said there was no way to know when a papal pardon might be announced.

In something of a novelty in jurisprudence, the Pope was both victim and supreme judge in this case.

As an absolute monarch of the tiny Vatican City state, Benedict wields full executive, legislative and judicial power. He delegates that power, though, and Lombardi said the trial showed the complete ­independence of the Vatican judiciary.


 
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