"La situazione sta peggiorando. Gridate con noi che i diritti umani sono calpestati da persone che parlano in nome di Dio ma che non sanno nulla di Lui che è Amore, mentre loro agiscono spinti dal rancore e dall'odio.
Gridate: Oh! Signore, abbi misericordia dell'Uomo."

Mons. Shleimun Warduni
Baghdad, 19 luglio 2014

12 maggio 2026

Shaleta arrest warrant details embezzlement case

May 11. 2026

While a search warrant remains sealed by court order, a recently unsealed arrest warrant details the extent of financial crimes alleged against Chaldean Bishop Emmanuel Shaleta, whose resignation from ecclesiastical office was accepted by Pope Leo XIV in early March.
A redacted arrest warrant — omitting the names of key witnesses in the case — was ordered unsealed April 12 in the criminal case against Shaleta, who is facing money laundering and embezzlement charges.
The arrest warrant confirms reporting on the case from The Pillar, which in February broke the news that Shaleta had been accused of embezzlement and personal misconduct, amid a Vatican investigation that ended when both Shaleta and former Chaldean Patriarch Cardinal Rafeal Sako saw their resignations from office accepted March 10.
Shaleta, who previously led the Chaldean Catholic eparchy covering the western half of the U.S., was arrested at San Diego’s airport March 5, as he attempted to leave the United States with more than $9,000 in cash.
The bishop is accused of taking hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash from his eparchy, attempting to reimburse missing funds with checks signed by him from a cathedral charity account.
Shaleta pled not guilty March 9 to 16 criminal counts of money laundering and embezzlement, and saw his resignation from office accepted by Pope Leo the next day.
While most documents in the case remain sealed, the bishop’s recently unsealed arrest warrant details the case against him.
Consistent with The Pillar’s reporting, the warrant says that Shaleta first fell under suspicion in December 2024, when “discrepancies” were noticed in eparchy and cathedral bank accounts, including “approximately $427,345 missing from the [eparchy’s ‘needy account’] over an eight-month period.”
The warrant details the allegation that Shaleta perpetrated a rent scam, by directing a tenant to pay him monthly rent on an eparchial property in cash, and then writing checks from the eparchy needy account to cover the missing money in the cathedral account.
Between March 1 and October 31, eight such checks were written from the needy account, the arrest warrant recounted — most for $33,990, but the first for $34,000.
“The cash received by Bishop Shaleta was never placed into the [needy] accounts to reimburse the checks written to the [cathedral accounts],” the warrant alleged.
In addition to the rent scam, the arrest warrant recounted the charge that, “it appeared Shaleta would receive cash for church related trips, perpetual Masses, and other rental hall related costs.”
When that and other funds were found to be missing, “Bishop Shaleta was unable to provide documentation or records of how the cash was spent,” and “later claimed the cash was given to those in need in Iraq without providing further information,” the warrant’s affadavit alleged.
The bishop was released from jail in early March after making a bail of $125,000. 
A San Diego judge ordered the bishop to undergo GPS monitoring until his trial, noting the amount of money he is alleged to have stolen, and the fact that he was arrested while at the airport, with a flight booked to Europe, and more than $9,000 in his possession.
Shaleta is next due in court for a readiness hearing in June, with an eventual trial likely to begin in August
The Pillar first reported a Vatican investigation into Shaleta in February, concerning both the financial crimes detailed in the arrest warrant and the prospect of personal misconduct.
The bishop is alleged to have made frequent trips to a Tijuana brothel linked to the human trafficking industry, and known to have maintained a longstanding and close relationship to a woman with whom he shared a bank account and unfettered access to each others’ homes.
The Pillar also reported that while Shaleta submitted a letter of resignation from his diocesan post in late January, Sako lobbied at the Vatican and among Chaldean bishops to see the bishop transferred to an administrative post in Baghdad, as a high-ranking official of the Chaldean patriarchate.
Sako had previously acknowledged to The Pillar that he raised the prospect of a transfer to Vatican officials, but suggested the idea was floated only before the Vatican-ordered investigation into Shaleta was “clear.”
Sources have told The Pillar that the dicastery received a report on the case in late 2025, well before Sako polled Chaldean bishops about a transfer this year.
Sako’s resignation was accepted March 10, the same day as Shaleta’s, in a move widely taken among Chaldeans as indication of Vatican displeasure with the patriarch’s involvement in the case.
For his part, Shaleta has said he is the victim of a media campaign and of Chaldeans in his diocese who opposed his leadership.
If convicted, Shaleta could face 15 years in prison.

New Chaldean Patriarch: “Do not be afraid, just believe”

May 7, 2026
María Lozano

Mar Polis III Nona
Foto Patriarcato caldeo
In 2015, the then-Archbishop of Mosul left for Australia after his entire flock was exiled, following the rise of the Islamic State. One decade later, he returns to Iraq, now as the newly elected Patriarch of the Chaldean Church.

On May 29, His Beatitude Amel Shamon Nona will be officially installed at St. Joseph’s Cathedral in Baghdad. Before returning to Iraq to lead the Chaldean Catholic Church, the newly elected Patriarch spoke with Aid to the Church in Need (ACN) about his journey from the frontlines of persecution in Mosul to the challenges of the global diaspora.

You were the Bishop of Mosul during one of the most painful periods in recent history, the occupation by the Islamic State, and lived through the exodus of your people and the violence that forced so many to leave their homes. How does that experience of suffering shape your vision as Chaldean Patriarch?
It was a very difficult but defining time. Being a bishop in a city in constant danger, where every week or month, someone was killed, left a deep mark on me. But it also taught me that the faith of our people is their true anchor. Despite everything, they kept their hope alive. To suffer for being a faithful believer certainly deepens your way of looking at life. That is the best contribution of our people: they suffered immensely, yet they have this deep, unshakable belief that their lives must be full of faith and Christian principles. That is the hope I carry into this new mission.
You spent the past decade in Australia, leading the Chaldean diaspora there. How do you plan to bridge the gap between the Church in Iraq and those who have had to leave their homeland?
This is the great challenge of our time. The original home of our Church is in the Middle East, particularly in Iraq, but today, the majority of our people live in the diaspora. Having lived both realities – the agony of Mosul and the life of a shepherd in Australia – I know it is not easy, but it is not impossible. My mission is to build a bridge, particularly for the new generations born abroad who are searching for their roots, their identity, and their faith.
You have chosen as a motto, “Do not be afraid, just believe.” Why these specific words in such a turbulent time?
I believe the biggest challenge in the world today is fear – fear of the future, fear of losing our way of life, and fear of those around us. My motto is taken from Mark 5, when Jesus heals the daughter of Jairus. He does not just say: “Do not be afraid.” He adds “just believe.” That is an important nuance. We may have reasons to be afraid, but if we live our faith as the Lord wants, we can live with those fears while remaining full of faith. That is my belief for our people: we move forward not because the danger is gone, but because our belief is stronger.
In recent years, the Middle East has been the scene of recurring wars. As the new leader of the Chaldean Church, what message would you send to the international community regarding the future of your region?
The desire of all of us is to see a Middle East at peace. We cannot accept that every year, there is a new war in this or that country. The people in the Middle East, like everywhere else, want to live in serenity. What we ask of the international community is simply respect: respect for our peoples and for our sovereignty, so that we can live without the constant threat of war. We want to look at our young people and tell them, “You have a future,” but for that, we need the world to stop turning our land into a constant battlefield.
As you prepare for your installation in Baghdad, what is your message to the young people who are torn between staying in Iraq or seeking a future elsewhere?
The land where we have lived for thousands of years is vital to our faith. I respect the personal choice of anyone who needs to live where they feel they can thrive, but I tell them wherever you are, you have a mission. If you are in the Middle East, your way of achieving that mission is different from someone in the diaspora, but the goal is the same. Practice your faith, preach it through your actions, and live as the Lord wants. That is the basis of our life, regardless of our geography.
Looking ahead, how can organizations like ACN, who have stood by the Church in its darkest hours, support you in this new chapter?
I want to thank ACN from the bottom of my heart. When I was in Mosul between 2010 and 2014, in the midst of the most painful situations, ACN reached us when others could not. You helped us keep our community alive. For this new mission, I rely on your support, particularly for education and formation. If we have an educated generation that understands its faith, that is the best base for our people to stay and flourish. ACN has worked very well in the past, and I believe we will continue that vital work together to ensure that our people have a future and, above all, that they have hope.

3 maggio 2026

Concessione dell’Ecclesiastica Communio al Patriarca di Baghdad dei Caldei

28 aprile 2026

Il Santo Padre Leone XIV, in data 24 aprile 2026, ha concesso l’Ecclesiastica Communio richiestaGli, in conformità al Can. 76 § 2 del CCEO, da Sua Beatitudine Polis III Nona, canonicamente eletto Patriarca di Baghdad dei Caldei il 12 aprile 2026 dal Sinodo dei Vescovi della propria Chiesa sui iuris, celebrato a Roma.
Si pubblica di seguito il testo della Lettera che Sua Santità Leone XIV ha indirizzato al Patriarca di Baghdad dei Caldei per la concessione dell’Ecclesiastica Communio:

A Sua Beatitudine

POLIS III NONA

Patriarca di Baghdad dei CaldeiHo ricevuto la pregiata Lettera con la quale Vostra Beatitudine, canonicamente eletta Patriarca di Baghdad dei Caldei il 12 aprile 2026 dal Sinodo dei Vescovi di codesta Chiesa, celebrato a Roma, mi ha chiesto a norma del canone 76 § 2 del Codex Canonum Ecclesiarum Orientalium, la concessione della Comunione Ecclesiastica.
Al riguardo, è con animo colmo di gioia che Le concedo l’Ecclesiastica Communio, quale espressione e vincolo della piena comunione con la Sede Apostolica, nel comune servizio all’unità nella Chiesa e alla edificazione del Corpo di Cristo.
Mi è gradito elevare fervide preghiere affinché Vostra Beatitudine, quale Padre e Capo di codesta amata Chiesa sui iuris, eserciti con sollecitudine pastorale il ministero affidatoLe, guidando il Popolo di Dio secondo il Cuore di Cristo e confermandolo nella fede, nella speranza e nella carità.
Lo Spirito Santo La sostenga nel compimento della missione ricevuta, perché la Chiesa Caldea, ricca della sua antichissima tradizione apostolica e segnata dalla testimonianza luminosa di numerosi martiri e confessori, continui a rendere fecondo l’annuncio del Vangelo, come fece con mirabile spirito missionario, rafforzando la comunione ecclesiale nel territorio proprio e in quelli della sempre più vasta diaspora.
Nel rivolgere il mio paterno saluto ai Vescovi membri del Sinodo, al clero, ai religiosi e alle religiose, ai seminaristi, ai candidati alla vita consacrata e a tutti i fedeli laici, affido Vostra Beatitudine alla materna intercessione della Beata Vergine Maria, Madre della Chiesa, e alla protezione dei santi Addai e Mari.
L’elezione di Vostra Beatitudine è avvenuta nel giorno in cui la liturgia caldea fa memoria dell’incontro del Risorto con San Tommaso, dal quale trae origine la viva tradizione di codesta Chiesa; l’Apostolo che ha riconosciuto nelle piaghe luminose di Gesù la manifestazione misericordiosa del suo Signore e Dio accompagni il Suo ministero patriarcale nel segno della fede, che tanto coraggio e perseveranza domanda a molti fedeli delle comunità caldee che fronteggiano, da veri credenti, orgoglio della Chiesa, prove spesso alquanto impervie.
A Vostra Beatitudine imparto di cuore la Benedizione Apostolica, pegno di consolazione nel Signore.

Dal Vaticano, 24 aprile 2026