In 1981, police raided the office of
Propaganda Due to apprehend the
Worshipful Master Licio Gelli and uncover further evidence against Roberto Calvi. Calvi was sentenced to four years in prison. He was released pending appeal and retained his position at the bank. Carlo de Benedetti of
Olivetti bought into the bank and became deputy chairman, only to leave two months later after receiving
Mafia threats and a lack of co-operation from Calvi. His replacement, longtime employee Roberto Rosone, was wounded in a Mafia shooting. The criminal organization responsible was the
Banda della Magliana (Magliana Gang), which had taken over Rome's underworld in the late 1970s, and had been linked to political events of the
anni di piombo (years of lead). In 1982, the bank was unable to account for $1.287 billion (equivalent to $ in present-day terms). Calvi fled the country on a false passport, and Rosone arranged for the
Bank of Italy to take over. Calvi's personal secretary, Graziella Corrocher, left a note denouncing Calvi before leaping to her death from her office window. Calvi's body
was found hanging from
Blackfriars Bridge in
London on June 18. During July 1982, funds to the offshore interests were cut off, leading to their collapse, and in August, the bank was replaced by the
Nuovo Banco Ambrosiano under Giovanni Bazoli.
Pope John Paul II pledged full transparency regarding the bank's links to the Vatican and brought in lay bankers, including German financial expert
Hermann Abs, a move that was publicly criticized by
Simon Wiesenthal, due to Abs's role as top banker to
Nazi Germany from 1938 to 1945. There was much argument over who should take responsibility for losses incurred by the Old Ambrosiano's off-shore companies, and the
Holy See (Vatican) eventually agreed to pay out a substantial sum without accepting liability. In April 1992,
Carlo De Benedetti, former deputy chairman of Banco Ambrosiano, and 32 other people were convicted of fraud by a Milan court in connection with the bank's collapse. Benedetti was sentenced to six years and four months in prison. In 1994, former Socialist Prime Minister
Bettino Craxi was indicted in the Banco Ambrosiano case, along with
Licio Gelli, head of
Propaganda Due, and former Justice Minister
Claudio Martelli. In April 1998, the
Court of Cassation confirmed Licio Gelli's 12-year sentence for the Ambrosiano crash. == Clearstream scandal ==