- The story behind the brutal murder of
the man called 'God's Banker' has never been fully resolved or his death
adequately explained to the American public, a naïve public kept from
the truth about so many things, including corruption in the Vatican.
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- The nickname 'God's Banker' was appropriately
attached by the Italian press to prominent Italian financier and Banco
Ambrosiano chairman, Roberto Calvi, for his illicit role in the decades
old scandal involving millions of dollars of stolen money through a wicked
and evil financial scam involving the principals controlling the Vatican
Bank, including the Mafia, the P2 Masonic Lodge, the Freemasons and the
Jesuits.
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- After the scandal broke in the Italian
papers in 1982, Calvi was found hanging from scaffolding under the Blackfriars
Bridge in London shortly after midnight on June 18, 1982.
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- His death was determined a suicide but
chilling evidence recently uncovered is proving Calvi was most likely killed
for knowing too much and able to point the finger behind the real culprits
behind the scandal, including high-level politicians, Church officials
and clandestine members of the P2 Masonic group, which Calvi was a member.
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- And the worldwide ramifications behind
Calvi's murder goes far deeper than hundreds of millions in lost loot,
but to the very bottom of the dark underworld connections between the cloth,
the Masonic groups and the Mafia.
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- His murder goes right to the heart of
the scandal, which many close to the Vatican openly claim could also eventually
open up what have been "closed doors" to the murder of Pope John
Paul I, the shooting of Pope John Paul II and other clandestine matters,
including Masonic affiliations of many high-level Vatican priests, on its
face a matter of expulsion from the Church under Canon Law 2338.
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- For rest of story go to www.arcticbeacon.com
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