The Banda della Magliana – the most powerful criminal organization in the 70s in Rome whose boss was a church benefactor (part ten)

There are some strange details in De Pedis’s tomb. De Pedis was buried in the Verano cemetery after his funeral, which was held in the church of San Lorenzo in Lucina (next to Piazza Colonna). However, when he got married in 1988, he told his wife Carla that he preferred to be buried in the church of Sant’Apollinare.

At the time, though, this appeared unfeasible because the only individuals allowed to be buried in the church were diocesan bishops, cardinals, and Roman pontiffs. But De Pedis would be buried in the church, and all because of a jail friendship he had developed. When De Pedis was incarcerated, Pietro Vergari, the rector of the basilica of Sant’Apollinare, met him and learned that he was a church benefactor.

There has long been mystery surrounding the burial of De Pedis in the church of Sant’Apollinare. There has been discussion of De Pedis doing a favor for Ugo Poletti, the president of the Italian Episcopal Conference (CEI). The “favor” was purportedly the mafia and Vatican’s intervention to recover the funds Cosa Nostra had invested in Banco Ambrosiano through Roberto Calvi. This money was transferred through the IOR and never received back because it ended up in the Polish union “Solidarnosc”‘s coffers.

It was found that four days after Vergani wrote to Poletti on March 6, 1990, requesting permission to bring the remains of the “benefactor” De Pedis, the then-President of the CEI gave his consent. De Pedis’s mortal remains were brought into the church on April 24, 1990.

Until the publication of Raffaella Notariale and Sabrina Minardi’s interview book “Criminal Secret” in 2010, no one was aware of De Pedis’s interment. The editorial team of the television program “Who Has Seen It” was then contacted, albeit anonymously, regarding Emanuela Orlandi’s disappearance and its connection to De Pedis and the Banda della Magliana. In 2012, De Pedis’s remains were taken out of the church and cremated, with the ashes being dumped into the sea.

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