Finance & EconomicsConfirmed
Vatican Bank, Banco Ambrosiano, and the Death of Roberto Calvi
Roberto Calvi, chairman of Banco Ambrosiano — Italy's largest private bank — was found hanging from Blackfriars Bridge in London on 18 June 1982. The initial ruling of suicide was overturned and the case reopened as murder in 2002. Banco Ambrosiano collapsed days after Calvi's death; $1.3 billion in unsecured loans had been made to shell companies controlled by or connected to the Istituto per le Opere di Religione (IOR — the Vatican Bank). Archbishop Paul Marcinkus, head of the IOR, was indicted by Italian prosecutors in 1987; the Vatican refused extradition citing sovereign immunity. The IOR settled with Ambrosiano creditors for $250 million in 1984 without admitting liability. The P2 Masonic Lodge (Licio Gelli) provided an additional layer of documented conspiracy. Multiple Italian parliamentary inquiries, international banking investigations, and journalist accounts — including Gerald Posner's *God's Bankers* — establish this as a confirmed financial and institutional conspiracy.