The Vatican is facing a deepening controversy over the burial 22
years ago of a notorious crime boss, with reports emerging that the
church accepted a one billion lire (£407,000) payment from the mobster's
widow to allow his interment in a basilica.
A source at the Holy See told the Ansa news agency that "despite
initial reluctance" the then vicar-general of Rome, Cardinal Ugo
Poletti, "in the face of such a conspicuous sum, gave his blessing" to
the controversial interment of Enrico De Pedis, the former boss of
Rome's notorious Magliana gang. The money was reportedly used on
missions and to restore the Basilica of St Apollinare, where the mobster
was laid to rest next to popes and cardinals after his death in 1990.