Pope John Paul I died only 33 days into his Pontificate (August 26,
1978 - September 28, 1978). It was one of the shortest reigns in the
annals of the papacy. The official cause of death was myocardial
infarction (a heart attack). But there was a great deal of confusion in
the details of his sudden death, and many were crying - murder!
The "Smiling Pope," as he was affectionately called was born Albino
Luciani on October 17, 1912 near Belluno, Italy. He was ordained in
1935, made Bishop in 1958 and became patriarch of Venice in 1969. He
received his cardinal's hat in 1973. He was a staunch believer in
ecumenism and the reduction of Church wealth. He was warm, humble and
had no aspirations for the papacy. After Pope Paul VI died, Luciani was
elected on the second day of the Conclave in 1978. He refused to wear
the papal tiara or to be carried in the gestatorial chair. He was
praised as a liberal reformer who read Mark Twain. He was on a mission
to reverse the Church's position on contraception, cleaning up the
Vatican bank and dismissing many Masonic cardinals.
A word here about the Masonic cardinals:
The P-2 Lodge, as it was called, was founded in 1877 to provide for
provincial Freemasons - known as Propaganda Due (P-2). It became a
secret lodge in 1970 to recruit men of right-wing persuasion to prevent
a Communist takeover. It was involved in a financial scandal and its
offices were raided and membership lists were found. Many heads of the
Italian State services, government officials, police chiefs,
businessmen, journalists etc. were listed. This organization was
disbanded but still operated secretly. In fact, they are still
operating within Vatican circles to this very day.
Many Roman clerics were hostile towards Luciani. It was rumored he was
deliberately elected by cardinals keeping secrets that he was too weak
to bother them and his health would cause him to die prematurely in
office. However, to the surprise and consternation of those very same
cardinals, Pope John Paul I immediately investigated the Vatican Bank
and wanted to clean house of any prominent prelates who were
Freemasons.
He was about to make a series of dismissals and new appointments and
remove those accused of financial and other misdeeds. All this has been
construed as a motive for his murder.
The Vatican Bank Scandal:
The Vatican Bank (or The Institute for Works of Religion - IOR), was
personally owned and operated by the Pope and made loans to religious
projects all over the world. It was discovered that the bank exploited
its high status and engaged in risky speculation and illegal schemes,
including money laundering. Money was invested with Robert Calvi, head
of the bank in Milan. He was eventually convicted for currency fraud in
1981 - (over $1.3 billion dollars was missing from bank funds). Calvi
fled to England where he was found dead, hanging from a bridge in
London.
Another participant in the scandal was Michele Sindona, an advisor to
Pope Paul VI. Sindona was poisoned in 1986 in his prison cell. This
sordid financial fraud also was linked with the Masons, the Mafia, arms
dealers, political kickbacks and monies funneled through the CIA to
support Solidarity in Poland.
Was the Pope Poisoned?
Davis Yallop's book, "In God's Name: An Investigation into the Murder
of Pope John Paul I," (1984), speculates that digitalis was the poison
used. The Pope was taking medicine for low blood pressure, and just
half a teaspoon of digitalis could cause a fatal heart attack. But the
Pope also suffered from poor circulation and had suffered an eye
embolism in 1975. Switching pills or forgetting to take medication
could also have proven lethal. But it is uncertain who would have been
able to slip the digitalis into the Pope's liquid medication -
Effortil.
There are many contradictions surrounding his death. The initial report
issued by Cardinal Villot said the Holy Father had been found dead by
Sister Vincenzia and not by a secretary. One report had him dead in his
bathroom, the other by his desk in his bedroom. There were also
discrepancies about the time the body was found, 4:30 am or 5:30 am?
The official estimates was that he died at 11pm on September 28th. No
autopsy was performed. (The last Pope to be autopsied was Pius VII in
1830).
Another report stated the Pope complained of feeling sick but wouldn't
call a doctor. He suffered a pain and a violent cough during that
afternoon. It might have been a minor embolism. He was conferring with
two secretaries around 8pm. After dinner, he rushed down the hallway to
get a telephone call around 9:15 pm. This may have triggered the fatal
heart attack. Both cases are plausible. But what really happened that
night?
The Motives for Murder:
This spiritual leader of all the Roman Catholics, Albino Luciani, was
actually embarking on a revolution. He wanted to set the Church in a
new direction which was considered highly undesirable and dangerous by
many high ranking Church officials.
He wanted, first of all, to strip many of powers by dismissing them or
reassigning them into harmless positions. This directly involved the
Freemasons. There were over one hundred Masons within Vatican City
ranging from Cardinals to priests. Canon Law stated that to be a
Freemason was grounds for automatic ex-communication. Six men in
particular, stood to lose a great deal if Pope John Paul I remained in
power. (These were - Marcinkus, Villot, Calvi, Sindona, Cody and
Gelli). There was a suspicion of a conspiracy among these men with
Villot the instigator and Gelli the executioner.
Motives for the Pope's murder were in these series of dismissals and
new appointments he was about to make. The Pope also wanted the
Church's wealth shared with the poor. He was also on the verge of
reversing the Church's position on artificial birth control, as well as
cleaning up the messy Vatican Bank scandal. He was about to approve the
birth-control pill. In his "Humanae Vitae," he urged pastoral clergy
acceptance of contraception and also acknowledged those children born
by in-vitro fertilization. A remarkable and radical change from current
Church policy, indeed.
Does this prove assassination by poisoning? The alleged conspirators
tried to make it look like a natural death, according to Yallop. His
Holiness' domestics, secretaries, doctors, Swiss Guards, police force
and judiciary of the Italian State were forced into silence. Sindona,
Calvi (The Banco Ambosiano Group), Marcinkus and Cardinal Cody stood to
lose much if Albino Luciani were to carry out his specific course of
action. There was a growing list of people about to be seriously
affected by the purported action of the Pope, especially Cardinal Jean
Villot, the Pope's Secretary of State. Bishop Marcinkus was to be
replaced by Monsignor Abbo and Cardinal Villot was to be replaced with
Cardinal Benelli as Secretary of State for the Vatican. There was
apparently much corruption that the Pope was about to root out.
Poison was the most efficient way to have his death appear natural. It
would leave no tell-tale external signs. Digitalis was the most
probable. It would mask the conspiracy. This plan would have had to
involve intimate knowledge of Vatican procedures. There would also be
no autopsy. Other incriminating and outward signs of foul play would be
removed.
The Details:
Cardinal Villot's account was that it was a tragic accident. He alleged
that the Pope overdosed on his own medication. This explanation was
most improbable and defamatory. It almost insinuated that the Pope, so
overwhelmed with this burden of his office, committed suicide!
Everything was done to cover up this crime. However, no one would
believe in an accidental death. And Cardinal Villot happened to be a
Grand Master of the Masonic secret. He concocted a story for Sister
Vincenzia who discovered the body. Then he made her take a vow of
silence afterwards. She said she found the body in the bathroom, not
his bed.
The bottle of Effortil disappeared along with the Pope's glasses and
slippers, probably because there were traces of vomiting on them. This
was a symptom of digitalis poisoning. Also, the Pope's Will had
disappeared. The embalmers were called immediately after Cardinal
Villot confirmed the Holy Father's death at 5:30 am. The Cardinal then
made Sister Vincenzia take the vow of silence. Dr. Buzzonati (not Prof.
Fontana of the Vatican medical service, she should have been called
in), confirmed the death and attributed it to acute myocardial
infarction. The death occuring at 11 pm last evening (Sept. 28th). This
report was made around 6:00 am. A whole hour had passed. Eventually
Villot informed the other cardinals from around 6:30 am onward. No
sacrament of extreme unction was given! The hypothesis of a sudden
death seemed untenable to the personal doctor of the Pope's faithful
secretary Don Lorenzi.
In death, the Pope's features were twisted and contorted in agony. The
Signoracci brothers, the embalmers, attempted to remodel the face so
his death agony would be changed to show a calm expression. Many
people, however, had already seen the distorted features before these
embalmers did their work.
The sisters who served as maids and domestics, cleaned and polished the
Pope's chambers soon after his death. Any evidence, such as
fingerprints, was destroyed. Again, vomiting was one of the early
symptoms of a digitalis overdose. The secretaries packed up the Pope's
clothes, letters, notes and personal mementos. By 6 pm the evening of
September 29th, the Pope's 19 rooms of the Papal Apartments had been
thoroughly stripped. And the embalmed body would make an autopsy
useless. By 11 pm that same evening, practically all traces of his
reign had been removed. The memory of his presence in the Vatican had
been wiped clean. The alleged assassination was complete. So the murder
theory goes.
Many causes for suspicion aroused:
The Pope was in good health, according to his brother Edoardo. He
reported that His Holiness was given a clean bill of health after a
medical examination three weeks before his death.
A report in Time Magazine - October 9, 1978 - relating an opinion that
the untimely death of Pope John Paul I stirred deep suspicions of him
being poisoned.
The Third Secret of Fatima, which was never made public, revealed, some
authorities say, the outlines of the murder of a Pope.
The Vatican has thwarted any research and suppressed any investigation
into this matter from the very beginning.
SUMMARY OF EVENTS:
Early September 1978: Pope John Paul I asks Cardinal Jean Villot, the
Secretary of State for the Vatican, to investigate the Vatican Bank
operations. He also is considering the reversal of the Church's stand
on artificial birth control.
Later that month he presents Cardinal Villot with a list of those to be
transferred, reassigned or asked to request for resignation. These
lists are persons suspected of being Freemasons (that group called
P-2). Cardinal Villot happened to be Grand Master, and his name was at
the head of the list. This shift of power would have had a major impact
on the existing Vatican hierarchy and would also have affected its
financial practices.
September 29, 1978: John Paul I found dead in his bed. Cardinal Villot
issues false statements, removes key evidence from John Paul's room and
orders the body embalmed before an autopsy can be performed.
FURTHER EVENTS AFTER HIS DEATH:
October 1978: John Paul II replaces the dead Pope. None of Luciani's
instructions or edicts are carried out.
January 21, 1979: Murder of Judge Emillio Alessandrini, a magistrate
investigating the Banco Ambrosiano activities. Calvi and Sindona have
close ties to the Vatican.
March 20, 1979: Murder of Nino Pecorelli, an investigative journalist,
exposing membership and dealings of the Freemason's P-2 group.
July 11, 1979: Murder of Giorgio Ambrosioli following his testimony
concerning Sindona and Calvi in Vatican business circles.
July 13, 1978: Murder of Lt. Col. Antonio Varisco, head of Rome's
security service also investigating the activities of the P-2 group and
was speaking with Giorgio Ambrosioli two days before Ambrosioli's
death.
July 21, 1979: Murder of Boris Guilano, the Palermo police deputy who
spoke to Ambrosioli also two days before his death. This concerned
Sindona's money laundering of Mafia money channeled through the Vatican
Bank to Switzerland bank accounts.
October 1979: Bomb explodes in the apartment of Enrico Cuccia of
Mediobanca and a witness of G. Ambrosioli.
February 2, 1980: The vatican withdraws an agreement to provide
videotaped depositions of M. Sindona in his trial in the U.S. on
charges of fraud, conspiracy and misappropriation of funds in
connection with the collapse of the Franklin National Bank.
May 13, 1980: Attempted suicide of Sindona in jail.
June 13, 1980: Sindona sentenced to 25 years.
July 8, 1980: Attempted suicide of Roberto Calvi, also jailed for
fraud.
September 1, 1981: The Vatican Bank acknowledges its controlling
interests in a number of banks controlled by Calvi for more than one
billion dollars of debt.
January 2, 1981: A group of shareholders in Banco Ambrosiano send a
letter to John Paul II exposing connections between the Vatican Bank
and Roberto Calvi, P-2 and the Mafia. The letter is never acknowledged.
April 27, 1982: Attempted murder of Roberto Rosone, General Manager of
Banco Ambrosiano as he was trying to clean up the bank's operations.
June 17, 1982: Roberto Calvi found hanged to death from a bridge in
London. Days later $1.3 billion dollars was found missing from the
Banco Ambrosiano, Milan.
October 2, 1982: Guiseppe Dellacha, executive of Banco Ambrosiano found
dead from a fall out of one of the bank's windows.
March 23, 1986: Michele Sindona poisoned to death in the Italian jail
for which he was serving time for ordering the death of Giorgio
Ambrosioli.
Century 3, Quatrain 35:
When the sepulcher of the great Roman is found,
The day after a Pope shall be elected;
The Senate (Conclave) will not approve of him.
His blood is poisoned in the sacred chalice.
Century 10, Quatrain 12:
The one elected Pope will be mocked by his electors,
This enterprising and prudent person will suddenly be reduced in
silence,
They cause him to die because of his too great goodness and mildness.
Stricken by fear, they will lead him to his death in the night.
Century 4, Quatrain 11:
He who will have the government of the great cape
Will be lead to execute in certain cases.
The twelve red ones will spoil the cover.
Under murder, murder will come to be perpetrated.
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A poll conducted recently, resulted in 30% of the Italians are
convinced that John Paul I was assassinated...(that's 15 million
people).
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