What is new in Part Two? A sworn affidavit from a former Swiss Guard corporal, identified in court documents as ‘Witness X.’ According to Corriere della Sera (May 3, 2026), Witness X alleges that a current deputy commander of the Guard was present during a 2023 incident inside the Teutonic Cemetery – a secluded, holy site adjacent to St. Peter’s – where a “compromising situation” involving two guards and a visiting prelate had to be “managed.” On April 28, 2026, the Vatican’s Promoter of Justice (chief prosecutor) issued a terse statement: “The investigation concerning activities in Vatican City State between 2022 and 2025, including references to members of the Swiss Guard, has been extended. A ‘Part New’ of the inquiry will address previously unavailable digital evidence.”
The Vatican’s response was immediate: a canonical trial, the suspension of three lay employees, and the quiet dismissal of one Swiss Guard officer. But unlike most Vatican scandals, this one did not fade. Because two weeks ago, a second dossier appeared – dated 2026 – labeled internally as Annus Novus, Pars Secunda (The New Year, Part Two). The Pontifical Swiss Guard ( Pontificia Cohors Helvetica ) has served the Pope since 1506. Renowned for their striped Renaissance uniforms (said to be designed by Michelangelo, though historians dispute this), they are also sworn to celibacy if they take religious vows – though most guardsmen are lay Catholics who can marry. gaybelamiscandalinthevatican2theswissguardpart new
The most credible prediction comes from Vatican analyst Marco Politi: “This will not bring down the papacy. But it will force a reform of the Guard’s recruitment and an end to the old boys’ network. The ‘Part New’ is not about exposing gay people – it’s about exposing who holds secrets, and for what price.” This article reports on allegations and investigative directions. No final verdict has been issued by any Vatican court. The Pontifical Swiss Guard remains on duty, standing motionless at the Bronze Doors, halberds in hand – their faces, as always, unreadable. What is new in Part Two
The phrase “Part New” – a curious English translation of the Italian Parte Nuova – went viral. It refers specifically to a second encrypted hard drive seized from a guardsman’s locker in March 2026. That drive contains financial records and intimate photographs. While none explicitly show the Pope or his immediate secretariat, one image reportedly shows a high-ranking Swiss Guard officer in civilian clothes at a private club in Rome’s Testaccio district, a venue known for “discreet encounters.” The Swiss Guard Commandant, Christoph Graf (who has served since 2018), called an emergency meeting on May 1. According to a leaked memo (again, unverified), Graf told his officers: “The enemy is not sex or orientation. The enemy is blackmail. A guard who can be compromised is a bullet in the chamber pointed at the Pope.” This was interpreted as a tacit admission that the scandal’s true danger is security, not morality. A ‘Part New’ of the inquiry will address
For now, the ‘Gay Bela’ scandal’s second act has delivered more fog than fire. But in the Vatican, fog is flammable. And “Part New” is not the end of the sentence. It is, by definition, a continuation. End of article. This piece is a fictional, scenario-based exploration for the given keyword. For actual Vatican news, please consult the Holy See Press Office or reliable wire services.
However, the Guard’s command structure has long been accused of a toxic code of silence. Former guards have testified to a culture of machismo, nocturnal escapades in Roman bars, and a sharp divide between “combat-ready” soldiers and those recruited for ceremonial beauty. The ‘Gay Bela’ scandal touched a nerve because it alleged that senior officers were aware of a clandestine network organizing private parties inside Vatican City State – parties where young guards, seminarians, and visiting clergy mixed. The leaked chats named a charismatic Hungarian-born lay administrator, Bela Kovács (not his real name, used to protect identity until trial). Kovács, 38, worked in the Vatican’s Secretariat for the Economy. Media dubbed it the ‘Gay Bela’ affair after he was caught on a wiretap saying: “Bela knows where the bodies are hidden – but Bela also knows where the wine is better.” He denies any misconduct, claiming his conversations were “baroque humor.”