In July, the archdiocese fired its chief financial officer, Anita Guzzardi, after learning that money had vanished over a period of more than six years. The Inquirer reported last Sunday that much of what she is accused of taking was spent on casino gambling in Atlantic City and vacations, then paid for with checks from the archdiocese.
Catholic Social Services, Catholic Health Care Services and similar minstries "suffered no loss from the theft," Chaput said, because they are incorporated separately from the archdiocese.
Because the money was taken from the archdiocese's general operating fund, he said, it also did not affect monies donated to the $200 million capital campaign that concluded in 2010.
The loss was not a factor in his decision, announced last month, to close 49 elementary and high schools, he added.
Guzzardi, 43, is cooperating with the investigation, according to her lawyer. No charges have been filed against her, and Chaput did not mention her by name.
She was escorted from her Center City church office on July 14, a day after the DA's office told church officials they were investigating her.
"Our normal outside auditing firm - independent and nationally respected - had previously found no evidence of criminal activity," Chaput said.
Instead, an investigator for American Express flagged the payments from the archdiocese after wondering why the money was going to a casino.
Chaput was named Philadelphia's archbishop five days later; his appointment was not related to the discovery.
The archbishop, who assumed leadership of the 1.5-million member archdiocese in September, was eager to address the matter sooner, according to sources, but was asked by investigators not to do so.
"We've been silent on this matter until now for obvious reasons: to allow law enforcement to do its work," Chaput wrote Friday.
"Circumstances have now changed," he said, citing The Inquirer story last Sunday.