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Italian laywoman Francesca Chaouqui, second from right, and her lawyer Laura Sgro, second from left, arrive for the so-called "Vatileaks" trial at the Vatican March 14. Chaouqui is one of five people on trial for leaking confidential Vatican documents that were published in two books. CNS photo/Alessandro Bianchi, Reuters

At Vatican trial, official says he felt threatened to release documents

By  Junno Arocho Esteves, Catholic News Service
  • March 15, 2016

VATICAN CITY - The secretary of the Prefecture for the Economic Affairs of the Holy See testified in a Vatican court that he felt he was being threatened and had little choice but to give confidential documents to two Italian reporters.

Under questioning by his co-defendants' lawyers, Spanish Msgr. Lucio Vallejo Balda cited a Whatsapp conversation in which Francesca Chaouqui told him: "I will destroy you in all the newspapers and you know that I can do it."

"If that isn't a concrete threat, (I don't know what is)," Vallejo Balda told the court March 15, his second day of testimony. The day before, he had admitted leaking confidential Vatican documents.

Vallejo Balda is on trial with Chaouqui, a member of the former Pontifical Commission for Reference on the Organization of the Economic-Administrative Structure of the Holy See; Nicola Maio, the monsignor's former assistant; and the journalists Gianluigi Nuzzi, author of Merchants in the Temple, and Emiliano Fittipaldi, author of Avarice.

The monsignor, Chaouqui and Maio were accused of "committing several illegal acts of divulging news and documents concerning fundamental interests of the Holy See and (Vatican City) State." Nuzzi and Fittipaldi were accused of "soliciting and exercising pressure, especially on Vallejo Balda, in order to obtain confidential documents and news."

In his testimony, Vallejo Balda said he knew that Chaouqui and Nuzzi knew each other well and so he gave documents to Nuzzi in order to win his trust and stave off any threat Chaouqui posed to him. "For me, giving those documents was a way to pay for my freedom," he said.

The monsignor also told the court that Maio, his personal assistant, resigned in December 2014, six months before he passed along the documents; the assistant, he said, was unaware of the leak.

The day's court session ended with Fittipaldi being called to the stand. The Italian journalist testified that by the time Vallejo Balda gave him the documents, he had nearly completed writing his book and that he used only two of the leaked documents: a semi-official budget of the Institute for the Works of Religion, commonly known as the Vatican bank, and a letter signed by Cardinal George Pell, prefect of the Vatican Secretariat for the Economy. The other documents, he said, "were of little journalistic value."

On the trial's first day of testimony, Vallejo Balda testified he passed along several documents to both Nuzzi and Fittipaldi. He also admitted to giving Nuzzi five pages containing passwords to private e-mails and password-protected documents.

The monsignor had told the court he grew increasingly suspicious of Chaouqui, saying she told him she was "the number two in the Italian secret service" and testified that he suspected she had ties with the Mafia.

During a break in the trial March 15, Fittipaldi told journalists Vallejo Balda contradicted his own testimony the previous day that he was pressured to leak the documents.

Although the Vatican prosecution's case asserts the confidential documents were illegally obtained, both journalists defended their right to freedom of the press. Fittipaldi told journalists they were being tried "for simply asking questions."

"In America, the journalists of the Boston Globe asked questions and were awarded a Pulitzer Prize for uncovering important information on pedophilia (in the Church) in the Spotlight case and their story becomes an Oscar-winning movie," he said. "In Italy, journalists who ask questions, who investigate very important questions on an economic structure riddled with corruption end up being tried and risk four to eight years in prison. For the simple fact of asking questions."

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