Roberto Calvi

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Roberto Calvi
Born(1920-04-13)13 April 1920
Milan, Italy
Died17 June 1982(1982-06-17) (aged 62)
London, England
Other namesBanchiere di Dio ("God's Banker")
OccupationBanker

Roberto Calvi (13 April 1920 – 17 June 1982) was an

Italian banker, dubbed "God's Banker" (Italian: Banchiere di Dio) by the press because of his close business dealings with the Holy See. He was a native of Milan and was chairman of Banco Ambrosiano
, which collapsed in one of Italy's biggest political scandals.

Calvi's death by hanging in London in June 1982 is a source of enduring controversy and was ruled a murder after two

.

Life and career

Roberto Calvi's father was the manager of the Banca Commerciale Italiana. Calvi joined the bank after World War II, but he moved to Banco Ambrosiano, then Italy's second largest bank, in 1947. He married in 1952 and had two children. Soon he became the personal assistant of Carlo Alessandro Canesi, a leading figure and later president of Banco Ambrosiano.[1] Calvi was the bank's general manager in 1971 and chairman in 1975.[citation needed]

Banco Ambrosiano scandal

In 1978, the Bank of Italy produced a report on Banco Ambrosiano which found that several billion lire had been exported illegally, leading to criminal investigations. Calvi was tried in 1981, given a four-year suspended sentence, and fined US$19.8 million for transferring US$27 million out of the country in violation of Italian currency laws. He was released on bail pending appeal and kept his position at the bank. During his short spell in jail, Calvi attempted suicide. His family maintains that he was manipulated by others and was innocent of the crimes attributed to him.[2][page needed]

The controversy surrounding Calvi's dealings at Banco Ambrosiano echoed a scandal in 1974, when the Holy See lost an estimated US$30 million upon the collapse of the Franklin National Bank owned by financier Michele Sindona. Bad loans and foreign currency transactions led to the collapse of the bank. Sindona died in prison after drinking coffee laced with cyanide.[3]

Calvi wrote a letter of warning to

Vatican Bank, which owned shares in Banco Ambrosiano. [6]

In 1984, the Vatican Bank agreed to pay US$224 million to 120 of Banco Ambrosiano's

Death

Calvi went missing from his Rome apartment on 10 June 1982, having fled the country on a false passport under the name Gian Roberto Calvini, fleeing initially to Venice. From there, he apparently hired a private plane to London via Zürich. A postal clerk was crossing London's Blackfriars Bridge at 7:30 am on Friday, 18 June and noticed Calvi's body hanging from the scaffolding beneath. Calvi had five bricks in his pockets and had in his possession about US$14,000 in three different currencies.[9]

Calvi was a member of Licio Gelli's illegal masonic lodge Propaganda Due (P2), who referred to themselves as frati neri or "black friars". This led to a suggestion in some quarters that Calvi was murdered as a masonic warning because of the symbolism associated with the word "Blackfriars".[10]

The day before his body was found, Calvi was stripped of his post at Banco Ambrosiano by the Bank of Italy, and his private secretary Graziella Corrocher jumped to her death from a fifth floor window at the bank's headquarters. Corrocher left behind an angry note condemning the damage that Calvi had done to the bank and its employees. Her death was ruled a suicide.[citation needed]

Calvi's death was the subject of two

QC. The second inquest was held in July 1983, and the jury recorded an open verdict, indicating that the court had been unable to determine the exact cause of death. Calvi's family maintained that his death had been a murder.[citation needed
]

In 1991, the Calvi family commissioned the

home secretary and the City of London Police, who dismissed it at the time.[citation needed
]

Calvi's body was exhumed in December 1998, and an Italian court commissioned a German forensic scientist to repeat the work produced by Katz and his forensic team. That report was published in October 2002, ten years after the original, and confirmed the first report. In addition, it said that the injuries to Calvi's neck were inconsistent with hanging and that he had not touched the bricks found in his pockets. When his body was found, the River Thames had receded with the tide, but the scaffolding could have been reached by a person standing in a boat at the time of the hanging. That had also been the conclusion of a separate report by Katz in 1992, which also detailed a reconstruction based on Calvi's last known movements in London and theorized that he had been taken by boat from a point of access to the Thames in West London.[11][12][13][14]

This aspect of Calvi's death was the focus of the theory that he was murdered, and is the version of events depicted in Giuseppe Ferrara's film reconstruction of the event. In September 2003, the City of London Police re-opened their investigation as a murder inquiry.[15][16][17] More evidence arose, revealing that Calvi stayed in a flat in Chelsea Cloisters just prior to his death. Sergio Vaccari was a small-time drug dealer who had stayed in the same flat, and he was found dead in possession of masonic papers displaying member names of P2. The murders of both Calvi and Vaccari involved bricks stuffed in clothing, correlating the two deaths and confirming Calvi's ties to the lodge.[18]

Calvi's life was insured for US$10 million with Unione Italiana. His family's attempts to obtain a payout resulted in litigation (Fisher v Unione Italiana [1998] CLC 682). The forensic report of 2002 established that Calvi had been murdered and the policy was finally settled, although around half of the sum was paid to creditors of the Calvi family who incurred considerable costs during their attempts to establish the cause of his death.[10][19][20]

Prosecution of Giuseppe Calò and Licio Gelli

In July 1991,

Worshipful Master Licio Gelli. Di Carlo also became an cooperating witness in June 1996 and denied that he was the killer, but he admitted that Calò had approached him to commit the murder.[23]

According to Di Carlo, the killers were Vaccari and Vincenzo Casillo, who belonged to the Camorra from Naples and both of whom were later murdered.[20] In 1997, Italian prosecutors in Rome implicated Calò in Calvi's murder, along with Flavio Carboni, an allegedly mobbed up Sardinian businessman with wide-ranging interests. Di Carlo and Ernesto Diotallevi, a member of the Banda della Magliana, were also alleged to be involved in the killing.[citation needed] In July 2003, Italian prosecutors concluded that the Sicilian Mafia acted in its own interests and to ensure that Calvi could not blackmail them.[24]

Gelli was the

master of the P2 lodge, and he received a notification on 19 July 2005 informing him that he was formally under investigation on charges of ordering Calvi's contract killing, along with Calò, Diotallevi, Flavio Carboni, and Carboni's Austrian girlfriend Manuela Kleinszig. The other four suspects had been indicted on murder charges in April. According to the indictment, the five ordered the murder to prevent Calvi "from using blackmail power against his political and institutional sponsors from the world of Masonry, belonging to the P2 lodge, or to the Institute for Religious Works (the Vatican Bank) with whom he had managed investments and financing with conspicuous sums of money, some of it coming from Cosa Nostra and public agencies".[25]

Gelli was accused of demanding Calvi's death as punishment for

People's Republic of Poland. This is thought to be a reference to Calvi's alleged involvement in financing the Solidarity trade union movement at the request of Pope John Paul II, allegedly on behalf of the Vatican.[25] However, Gelli's name was not in the final indictment at the trial which started in October 2005.[26]

Trials in Italy

In 2005, the Italian magistrates investigating Calvi's death took their inquiries to London in order to question witnesses. They had been cooperating with Chief Superintendent Trevor Smith who built his case partly on evidence provided by Katz. Smith had been able to make the first arrest of a UK witness who had allegedly committed perjury during the Calvi inquest.[19]

On 5 October 2005, the trial began in Rome of the five individuals charged with Calvi's murder. The defendants were Calò, Carboni, Kleinszig, Ernesto Diotallevi, and Calvi's former driver and bodyguard Silvano Vittor. The trial took place in a specially fortified courtroom in Rome's

life sentences for the four men.[35]

Katz claimed that it was likely that senior figures in the Italian establishment escaped prosecution. "The problem is that the people who probably actually ordered the death of Calvi are not in the dock - but to get to those people might be very difficult indeed".[35] Katz said that it was "probably true" that the Mafia carried out the killing, but that the gangsters suspected of the crime were either dead or missing.[36] The verdict in the trial was not the end of the matter, since the prosecutor's office in Rome had opened a second investigation by June 2007 implicating Gelli and others.[37]

In May 2009, the prosecution dropped the case against Gelli. According to the magistrate, there was insufficient evidence to argue that Gelli had played a role in planning and executing the crime.

Court of Cassation confirmed the acquittal.[40] Calò is still serving a life sentence on unrelated Mafia charges.[37]

Films about Calvi's death

BBC One's programme

I Banchieri di Dio - Il Caso Calvi (God's Bankers - The Calvi Case) in 2001.[42] A heavily fictionalized version of Calvi appears in The Godfather Part III in the character of Frederick Keinszig.[43]

In 1990, The Comic Strip Presents produced a spoof version of Calvi's story under the title Spaghetti Hoops, with Nigel Planer in the lead role, directed by Peter Richardson, and co-written by him and Pete Richens.[44][45] Variety magazine described the comedy film The Pope Must Die (1991) as "loosely based on the Roberto Calvi banking scandal".[46][47] In the 2009 film The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus, the character of Tony is found hanging alive under Blackfriars Bridge, which director Terry Gilliam described as "an homage to Roberto Calvi".[48][49]

Calvi is featured in the Italian film Il divo (2008), a biography of former Italian Prime Minister Giulio Andreotti.

See also

References

  1. ^ A. G. D. Maran: Mafia. Inside the Dark Heart, Random House 2011, p. 73
  2. ^ See: Robert Hutchison's Their Kingdom Come: Inside the Secret World of Opus Dei, 1997[page needed]
  3. New York Times
    . 23 March 1986. Retrieved 5 July 2021.
  4. ^ a b Plea to Pope from 'God's banker' revealed as murder trial begins, The Times, 6 October 2005
  5. ISSN 0261-3077
    . Retrieved 4 September 2016.
  6. New York Times
    . 2 February 2006. Retrieved 5 July 2021.
  7. ^ Obituary Archbishop Paul Marcinkus, The Times, 22 February 2006
  8. ^ "The Banco Ambrosiano affair: what happened to Roberto Calvi?". 20 March 2014. Archived from the original on 16 September 2016. Retrieved 4 September 2016.
  9. ^ 'God's banker' found hanged, BBC, 19 June 1982
  10. ^ a b A son's quest for truth, Evening Standard 7 October 2003
  11. ^ Evidence on hanged Calvi 'proves' it was murder, The Observer, 18 October 1992.
  12. ^ Calvi - The tests that may point to murder, The Observer, 31 January 1993.
  13. ^ Dead Man Talking, by Jeffrey Katz, The Sunday Telegraph Magazine, 26 October 2003
  14. ^ Mafia, masons and murder, BBC News, 6 January 2005.
  15. ^ "An end to the mystery of God's Banker?", BBC News, 31 March 2004
  16. New York Times
    , 20 June 1982
  17. ^ "1982: 'God's banker' found hanged", BBC News
  18. ^ Reuters Editorial. "Italy's murky masonic leader Gelli, linked to decades of plots, dies". Retrieved 4 September 2016. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  19. ^ a b Who killed Calvi?, The Observer, 7 December 2003
  20. ^ a b Mafia wanted me to kill Calvi, says jailed gangster, The Daily Telegraph, 10 December 2005
  21. ^ Mafia 'murdered banker over bungled deal' Archived 12 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine, The Scotsman, 15 February 2006
  22. ^ (in Italian) Anche Antonino Giuffré nell'inchiesta Calvi, La Repubblica, 13 October 2002
  23. ^ Mafia boss breaks silence over Roberto Calvi killing, The Observer, 12 May 2012
  24. ^ Calvi was murdered by the mafia, Italian experts rule, The Guardian, 25 July 2003
  25. ^ a b Mason indicted over murder of 'God's banker', The Independent, 20 July 2005
  26. ^ Laurence, Kristen. The Murder Stories. Nischal Hegde.[permanent dead link]
  27. ^ Four charged over Calvi killing, BBC News, 18 April 2005
  28. ^ Calvi murder trial opens in Rome, Associated Press, 6 October 2005
  29. ^ Calvi murder trial opens in Rome, BBC News, 6 October 2005
  30. ^ God's Banker' Murder - Five Cleared, Sky News, 6 June 2007
  31. ^ Five cleared over murder of 'God's Banker', The Times, 6 June 2007
  32. ^ Five acquitted over Calvi death, BBC News, 6 June 2007
  33. ^ 'God's Banker' death still a mystery, BBC News, 6 June 2007
  34. ^ ‘God’s banker’ murder suspects acquitted, Financial Times, 6 June 2007
  35. ^ a b Five cleared of Calvi murder, Guardian Unlimited, 6 June 2007
  36. ^ Family’s distress as five are cleared of conspiracy to kill ‘God’s banker’, The Times, 7 June 2007
  37. ^ a b (in Italian) Processo Calvi, la sentenza dopo 25 anni assolti Pippo Calò e gli altri imputati, La Repubblica, 6 June 2007
  38. ^ (in Italian) Omicidio Calvi: archiviato procedimento contro Licio Gelli, Corriere della Sera, 30 May 2009
  39. ^ (in Italian) Assolti Carboni, Calò e Diotallevi, La Repubblica, 7 May 2010
  40. ^ (in Italian) Calvi, è definitiva l' assoluzione di Carboni, Calò e Diotallevi, Corriere della Sera, 18 November 2011
  41. ^ Panorama, BBC One, Monday 20 December 1982. 8.10 pm "Called to Account - How Roberto Calvi Died"
  42. ^ Film spotlights 'murky Vatican finances', BBC News, 8 March 2002
  43. IMDb Edit this at Wikidata
  44. . Retrieved 1 September 2014. the Calvi affair (a subject already sent up in the Comic Strip's Spaghetti Hoops for BBC2).
  45. ^ "The Comic Strip Presents...: Season 5, Episode 5 Spaghetti Hoops (1 Mar. 1990)". IMDb. Retrieved 1 September 2014.
  46. ^ "Review: 'The Pope Must Die'". Variety. 31 December 1990. Retrieved 1 September 2014. Loosely based (like The Godfather Part III) on the Roberto Calvi banking scandal, ...
  47. ^ "The Pope Must Diet (1991) - "The Pope Must Die" (original title)". IMDb. Retrieved 1 September 2014.
  48. ^ The Dr Parnassus Press Conference at Cannes - Part 2, edited by Phil Stubbs
  49. ^ The Last of Heath, Peter Biskind, Vanity Fair, August 2009

Further reading

External links