VATICAN CITY – Dressed in a black polo shirt with a sweater draped around his shoulders, Father Gabriele Martinelli, 28, heard a Vatican criminal court accuse him of repeatedly sexually abusing a younger student at a minor seminary inside the Vatican.
Msgr. Enrico Radice, 71, former rector of the seminary, heard the court accuse him of obstructing the investigation by helping Father Martinelli “in different times and places, in Italy and abroad.”
The trial in the Vatican City State criminal court opened Oct. 14 with the reading of charges related to abuse that allegedly occurred at the St. Pius X Pre-Seminary, a minor seminary operated by the Diocese of Como inside the Vatican. Both priests on trial are incardinated in the Como diocese.
Boys in middle school and high school live at the pre-seminary, serve Mass at St. Peter’s Basilica and attend a Catholic school in Rome while considering applying to a seminary when they are older.
On the first day of the trial, the court asked the defense attorneys to provide information by Oct. 16 about how much time they believe they will need to present their clients’ defense.
“This tribunal wants to give as much space as possible to the defense,” said Giuseppe Pignatone, president of the court.
The entire session lasted just eight minutes before Pignatone announced that the trial would resume the afternoon of Oct. 27.
Both Father Martinelli and his alleged victim, L.G., were under the age of 18 when the abuse allegedly began in 2007; the court, however, accused Father Martinelli of continuing to abuse the younger student as late as 2012, when Father Martinelli was already 20 years old.
Father Martinelli was a senior student, tutor and coordinator of the seminarian activities; the court accused him of abusing his position of trust and using threats and violence to force L.G., who is a year younger, to engage in sexual relations, including sodomy and mutual masturbation “at different times and places in Vatican City State.”
The court accused Msgr. Radice of hindering the investigation, including by lying to Vatican investigators in 2018 when he affirmed with absolute certainty that he had no knowledge of sexual acts ever taking place at the seminary while he was rector.
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