The global power of freemasonry - Gnostic Liberation Front

The global power of freemasonry - Gnostic Liberation Front The global power of freemasonry - Gnostic Liberation Front

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London.", La Nazione, Rome, 11 December 1981) He was, however, also a member of P2. On 18 June, he was found hanged beneath Blackfriars Bridge on the Thames in London, four miles from Chelsea Cloister, where he was staying - not far from London Freemasons' Hall. The official verdict, published by Scotland Yard, was suicide. He suffered badly from vertigo, however, and would never have arranged to climb down under the bridge to hang himself. In addition, it was concluded that he had first been strangled. The freemason Calvi, called God's banker, had just prior threatened to expose the P2 role in the bank crash. He was accused of 65 different crimes, including money laundering, fraud, falsifying of documents, and perjury. It is interesting to note that P2 members used to dress up as blackfriar monks (Dominicans) for their magic rites. Later on the ordinary police took over the investigation and concluded that it was murder. The day before Calvi's "suicide", his secretary Graziella Corrocher threw herself out the window on the fourth floor of the bank's main office in Milan. She had also kept the books for P2. And on 2 October 1982, another bank employee, Giuseppe Dellacha, jumped out the window of the bank and committed "suicide" (David Yallop, "In God's Name", London, 1985, p. 436). ■ 237

Supposedly Mafia black money (from robberies and kidnappings) were laundered at a financial centre in London with the aid of Calvi. This financial centre was also in close connection with the Grand Lodge in London, which was led by the Duke of Kent. In 1981, Calvi confessed before Judge Guido Viola in Milan: "I became a member of the Grand Lodge in London because Gelli and Umberto Ortolani talked me into it. If I had not done so, it would have been impossible for me to do business in London." The banker, mafioso and freemason (P2) Michele Sindona, who was a financial adviser to the Vatican and the Mafia, was arrested in 1980 in the United States, charged with ordering the gangster William Arico to murder the accountant Giorgio Ambrosoli in Italy. Sindona was sentenced to 25 years in prison in the United States. He was originally from Sicily. In 1986, he was extradited to Italy, to stand trial for commissioning murder, and sentenced to life in prison. In September 1986, he agreed to talk to investigators of the role of others in the Banco Ambrosiano case. Before he could do that, cyanide was slipped into his coffee in his TV-monitored cell in the Voghera prison. His killer was never found (Brian Freemantle, "The Octopus: Europe in the Grip of Organized Crime", London, 1995, p. 18). Sindona's last words were: "They have poisoned me." When Stephen Knight's book "The Brotherhood" was published in London in 1985, the British Parliament demanded an investigation of P2 connections to the British freemasonry. Gelli returned to Italy in early 1988, but he preferred to still live in Switzerland and France. Eventually he was rearrested in Switzer- land and extradited to Italy. He was sentenced to 12 years for fraud, but was soon released on probation. His fourteen masonic "brothers" were sentenced to long prison terms for complicity in the terror attack at Bologna, but were released in summer of 1990 for "lack of evidence". In May 1998, Gelli escape to the French Riviera, even though he was not allowed to leave Italy, but in September 1998 he was arrested in France. At a new trial Gelli's criminal role within P2 was 238

Supposedly Mafia black money (from robberies and kidnappings)<br />

were laundered at a financial centre in London with the aid <strong>of</strong> Calvi.<br />

This financial centre was also in close connection with the Grand<br />

Lodge in London, which was led by the Duke <strong>of</strong> Kent. In 1981, Calvi<br />

confessed before Judge Guido Viola in Milan: "I became a member <strong>of</strong><br />

the Grand Lodge in London because Gelli and Umberto Ortolani talked<br />

me into it. If I had not done so, it would have been impossible for me to<br />

do business in London."<br />

<strong>The</strong> banker, mafioso and freemason (P2) Michele Sindona, who was<br />

a financial adviser to the Vatican and the Mafia, was arrested in 1980<br />

in the United States, charged with ordering the gangster William<br />

Arico to murder the accountant Giorgio Ambrosoli in Italy.<br />

Sindona was sentenced to 25 years in prison in the United States.<br />

He was originally from Sicily. In 1986, he was extradited to Italy, to<br />

stand trial for commissioning murder, and sentenced to life in prison.<br />

In September 1986, he agreed to talk to investigators <strong>of</strong> the role <strong>of</strong><br />

others in the Banco Ambrosiano case. Before he could do that,<br />

cyanide was slipped into his c<strong>of</strong>fee in his TV-monitored cell in the<br />

Voghera prison. His killer was never found (Brian Freemantle, "<strong>The</strong><br />

Octopus: Europe in the Grip <strong>of</strong> Organized Crime", London, 1995, p.<br />

18). Sindona's last words were: "<strong>The</strong>y have poisoned me."<br />

When Stephen Knight's book "<strong>The</strong> Brotherhood" was published in<br />

London in 1985, the British Parliament demanded an investigation <strong>of</strong><br />

P2 connections to the British <strong>freemasonry</strong>.<br />

Gelli returned to Italy in early 1988, but he preferred to still live<br />

in Switzerland and France. Eventually he was rearrested in Switzer-<br />

land and extradited to Italy. He was sentenced to 12 years for fraud,<br />

but was soon released on probation. His fourteen masonic "brothers"<br />

were sentenced to long prison terms for complicity in the terror<br />

attack at Bologna, but were released in summer <strong>of</strong> 1990 for "lack <strong>of</strong><br />

evidence".<br />

In May 1998, Gelli escape to the French Riviera, even though he<br />

was not allowed to leave Italy, but in September 1998 he was<br />

arrested in France. At a new trial Gelli's criminal role within P2 was<br />

238

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