True scale of abuse at two top Catholic schools likely to be worse than feared
abuse at two leading Catholic schools over four decades was likely to be “considerably” more widespread than conviction figures reflect, a report has found.
Monks at Ampleforth in North Yorkshire and Downside in Somerset hid allegations of “appalling sexual abuse” against pupils as young as seven to protect the Church’s reputation.
The Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA) made the claims in a withering report on the English Benedictine Congregation, which has 10 monasteries in England and Wales.
Ampleforth and Downside are two schools linked to the monasteries, run at times by “secretive, evasive and suspicious” Church officials who avoided reporting misconduct to police and social services.
Allegations going back to the 1960s encompassed “a wide spectrum of physical abuse, much of which had sadistic and sexual overtones”, said the report.
Ten individuals linked to the schools, mainly monks, have been cautioned or convicted over sexual activity or pornography offences involving a “large number of children”.
“The true scale of the abuse,
Inquiry: Professor Alexis Jay
however, is likely to be considerably higher,” the investigation led by Professor Alexis Jay found.
The report followed several weeks of evidence hearings at the inquiry last year, which included personal accounts from victims.
Victims were as young as 11 at Downside and seven at Ampleforth. One alleged offender at Ampleforth abused at least 11 children aged between eight and 12 over a “sustained period of time”, but died before police could investigate.
“Many perpetrators did not hide their sexual interests from the children,” the report found, allowing abusers at Ampleforth to prey on groups of pupils.
“The blatant openness of these activities demonstrates there was a culture of acceptance of abuSEXUAL sive behaviour,” the report said. This was fostered by the abbot leading the schools, it was said.
In 2001 the Nolan Report recommended all sexual abuse allegations within the Church must be referred to police, a position which many felt was “neither obligatory nor desirable”.
The report said: “For much of the time under consideration by the inquiry, the overriding concern in both Ampleforth and Downside was to avoid contact with the local authority or the police, regardless of the seriousness of the alleged abuse or actual knowledge of its occurrence.
“Rather than refer a suspected perpetrator to the police, in several instances the abbots in both places would confine the individual to the abbey or transfer him and the known risk to a parish or other locations.”
But details of the monk’s predatory past were not always passed on to monks at the abbey to which he was moved. “Some children were abused as a consequence,” the inquiry said.
Neither school has established a redress scheme for victims and “no public apology has been made” outside of the context of the inquiry, the report said.
The Catholic Church is one of 13 strands of public life being investigated for child protection failings by the IICSA.