Monday, August 7, 2017



          
Drawing Aside the Purple Curtain
The Papal System Today: an Analysis of the News

The Leaked Story of a Sodomite Orgy
in the Vatican

                                                                 Shaun Willcock


Drugs and Sodomy in the Vatican

  According to an article which first appeared on 28 June in the Italian newspaper, Il Fatto Quotidiano, Vatican police, alerted to strange shenanigans going on in the flat of a monsignor, a man who was the secretary of a senior Roman Catholic cardinal, raided the flat and broke up a drug-fuelled homosexual party.[i]  The flat, which is in the Vatican itself, is not far from the Santa Marta residence of the pope of Rome, Francis I.  It is in the Palazzo del Sant’Uffizio, which belongs to the Vatican’s “Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith” – which used to be known as the Inquisition.  Be it noted, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith is the very institution in charge of supposedly dealing with priestly sex abuse cases!
  Neighbours living in the building had complained of the “constant coming and going” of young men, and of noisy parties being held in the flat.[ii] 
  The Italian article said that the secretary was also entrusted with a luxury car with Vatican number plates, which enabled him to transport the drugs into the Vatican without being troubled by Vatican or Italian police.
  The Vatican reacted – apparently by hustling the offender off into a “retreat”!  The monsignor was taken for detox at a medical facility, and was later said to be “in retreat” in a monastery somewhere in Italy.[iii]  This is usual Vatican practice when one of their own is bust in some scandal of a sexual nature – he is hustled off to some secret location.
  Then on 30 June, in a piece published on a French website, the monsignor-secretary was named: he was Luigi Capozzi.  And so it came out that Capozzi’s boss is the Romish cardinal, Francesco Coccopalmerio.  He is head of the Vatican’s Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts, which makes him “like the Church’s Chief Justice, the chief interpreter of the Church’s laws.”[iv]  A very influential man in the Vatican indeed.  And surely he was not unaware of his secretary’s behaviour.  As one high prelate commented: “Is it possible that he [Coccopalmerio) never noticed anything?  Yet he often said that they [Coccopalmerio and Capozzi] worked together until late.”[v]  Certainly, considering how the monsignor was enjoying such benefits “above his pay grade” so to speak, it indicates that he was being protected by some very powerful authority figures within the Vatican itself.   ARTICLE CONTINUES HERE:


[i]. The Moynihan Letters, July 28, 2017.  MoynihanReport@gmail.com.
[ii]. The Times of Israel, 6 July 2017.  www.timesofisrael.com. Also National Catholic Register, 8 July 2017. www.ncregister.com.
[iii]. The Times of Israel, 6 July 2017.  Also National Catholic Register, 8 July 2017.
[iv]. The Moynihan Letters, July 28, 2017. 
[v]. The Moynihan Letters, July 28, 2017. 

No comments:

Post a Comment