Vatican chief of staff testifies in U.K finance trial, points finger at deputy who escaped unscathed

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Pope Francis' chief of staff became one of the highest-ranking Holy See officials to testify in a foreign court Thursday, telling a British tribunal about the negotiations at the heart of the Vatican’s so-called 'trial of the century' and pointing a finger at his onetime deputy who escaped the scandal unscathed.

Then-Deputy Vatican secretary of state Monsignor Edgar Peña Parra, second from right, receives a Venezuelan delegation representing opposition leader Juan Guaido, at the Vatican, Monday, Feb. 11, 2019.

In his written opening statement in London, Pena Parra provided a detailed play-by-play of the frenzied meetings, WhatsApp messages and negotiations in late 2018 when the property changed hands from a fund controlled by Mincione to a holding company controlled by Torzi. Vatican prosecutors say Torzi, however, hoodwinked the Vatican and assumed all the voting shares in the holding company for himself.

Perlasca’s fate has been one of the lingering anomalies of the London saga. He was never prosecuted for his role in the deal, whereas his underlings and bosses were, and he reportedly has resumed working as prosecutor himself in the Holy See’s highest ecclesial court, the Apostolic Signatura. “I had put trust in the officials of the administrative office, and I had never expected this kind of conduct. I felt betrayed,” he said in his prepared statement.

Pena Parra insisted that his main aim was to finalize all dealings with Torzi, whom he said had “put us in a trap,” according to a Vatican News report on the hearing.In the first few weeks of summer, the real estate sector is experiencing an upturn marked by more housing inventory, a Canadian realtor saysOntarians could see long lineups at LCBO stores across the province today as customers prepare for a possible strike that will close all LCBO locations for the next two weeks.

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