A former Holy See ambassador and defrocked archbishop has been placed under house arrest ahead of what will be the first Vatican-held criminal trial on charges of child sexual assault.
Archbishop Jozef Wesolowski, who has been accused of soliciting sex from young boys on the street, is being held “in a location within the Vatican City State,” said the Rev. Federico Lombardi, spokesman for the Vatican, in a statement Tuesday. As the New York Times reported, the Vatican city-state has no jail facility for holding prisoners on a long-term basis.
The 66-year-old Wesolowski, who is both a citizen of the Holy See and Poland, had previously been given diplomatic immunity after church officials in the Dominican Republic learned of allegations that the former Vatican ambassador had been picking up young shoeshine boys on the waterfront while he was serving there, bribing them for sex with money and, in one case, epilepsy medicine. A local deacon alerted church officials to what was allegedly going on in a letter, which claimed he was arrested while trying to procure child victims for Wesolowski. The Vatican secretly recalled Wesolowski to Rome last year before he could be investigated by local authorities, according to the New York Times.
Calling it “the most terrible case I have ever seen,” Yeni Berenice Reynoso Gómez, the district attorney in Santo Domingo, said her investigators had identified at least four victims. In June, Wesolowski was defrocked in a canonical church proceeding, and his diplomatic immunity was revoked last month. He is appealing the June decision.








