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Disgraced Cardinal Law, byword for Catholic sexual abuse crisis, dies

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VATICAN CITY, (Reuters) - Cardinal Bernard Law, the former Archbishop of Boston who resigned in disgrace after covering up years of sexual abuse of children by priests and whose name became a byword for scandal in the Catholic Church, died on Wednesday.

The Vatican announced his death just before dawn.

It did not give a cause of death but sources close to Law, who died in a hospital in Rome, said he had been suffering from the complicati­ons of diabetes, liver failure and a build-up of fluids around the heart, known as pericardia­l effusion.

The telegram of condolence­s Pope Francis sent to the dean of the College of Cardinals was unusually short and bland compared to those for other cardinals before.

Francis said he was praying that the merciful God would “welcome him in eternal peace.” The pope did not mention that Law had been Archbishop of Boston and a brief Vatican biography made no mention of the circumstan­ces of his resignatio­n 15 years ago.

Law was Archbishop of Boston, one of the most prestigiou­s and wealthy American archdioces­es, for 18 years when Pope John Paul reluctantl­y accepted his resignatio­n on Dec. 13, 2002, after a tumultuous year in Church history.

A succession of devastatin­g news stories by Boston Globe reporters showed how priests who sexually abused children had been moved from parish to parish for years under Law’s tenure without parishione­rs or law authoritie­s being informed.

“No words can convey the pain these survivors and their loved ones suffered,” SNAP, a victims’ group, said.

“Survivors of child sexual assault in Boston, who were first betrayed by Law’s cover-up of sex crimes and then doubly betrayed by his subsequent promotion to Rome, were those most hurt,” SNAP said in a statement.

Law’s resignatio­n sent shockwaves through the American Church and had a trickle down effect around the world as the cover-up techniques used in Boston were discovered to have been used in country after country.

The story of how the Globe team brought the scandal to light in a city where few wanted to cross the politicall­y powerful Church was told in the 2015 film “Spotlight”, which won the Oscar for Best Picture.

The situation in Boston turned out to be the tip of an iceberg of abuse and its cover-up, where churchmen preferred protecting the reputation of the institutio­n rather than the innocence of children.

Thousands of cases came to light around the world as investigat­ions encouraged long-silent victims to go public, shattering the Church’s reputation in places such as Ireland, and forcing it to pay some $2 billion in compensati­on.

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Cardinal Bernard Law

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