The Vatican City State tribunal has ordered the opening of two tombs in a small Vatican cemetery at the request of the family of Emanuela Orlandi, a young woman who disappeared in 1983. Emanuela Orlandi, a Vatican City resident and the daughter of a Vatican employee, disappeared in Rome on June 22, 1983, when she was 15.
In March, the family’s lawyer revealed the family had been sent a letter with a photo of an angel above a tomb in the Vatican’s Teutonic Cemetery, a medieval cemetery now reserved mainly for German-speaking priests and members of religious orders.
The letter said: “Look where the angel is pointing,” according to Laura Sgro, the lawyer.
She filed a formal petition with the Vatican to investigate the matter and possibly open the tombs below the sculpture of the angel.
Italian news reports in March quoted Sgro as saying there was evidence that at least one of the tombs below the angel statue had been opened at some point, the statue is not the same age as the marble on top of the tombs and someone continues to leave flowers there.
Alessandro Gisotti, interim director of the Vatican Press Office, said last week that the Vatican promoter of justice, Gian Piero Milano, and his assistant, Alessandro Diddi, ordered the opening of two tombs.
The tombs will be opened by police on July 11 in the presence of the Orlandi family and family members of the people buried there, Gisotti said.