3 Min Read MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Prosecutors asked an Australian court to set hefty penalties for media firms that pleaded guilty to breaching a 2018 suppression order on reporting of the conviction of former Vatican treasurer George Pell for child sexual assault. FILE PHOTO: Former Vatican treasurer George Pell arrives at a building where he has an apartment close to the Vatican, the first time he has been in Italy since he was acquitted of child sex abuse charges in Australia, in this still image taken from video, in Rome, Italy on September 30, 2020. REUTERS TV via REUTERS/File Photo Pell’s conviction for abusing two choirboys was overturned last April after he was jailed for more than a year, but the media contempt of court case wrapped up only on Wednesday, more than two years after he was tried.