Waikato Times

Pell to face sex charges

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George Pell will be the most senior Catholic leader to face a jury after being committed to stand trial on multiple historic sexual assault charges.

In a decision that will ring loud through the Vatican and around the religious world, Australia’s most senior Catholic and the man who a year ago oversaw management of the Vatican’s finances was yesterday committed to stand trial on half the charges he faced, involving multiple accusers.

However, magistrate Belinda Wallington struck out a series of serious charges at the start of her ruling, finding there was insufficie­nt evidence for him to be convicted by a jury.

Wallington committed the 76-year-old on charges against multiple complainan­ts, involving alleged sexual offending at a swimming pool in the 1970s in Ballarat, where the accused man was then working as a priest; and at St Patrick’s Cathedral in Melbourne in 1990s, when he was Archbishop of Melbourne.

Asked to enter a plea, Pell said in a loud, clear voice: ‘‘Not guilty.’’ Wallington took more than an hour to read through her decisions on the respective sets of charges, and the first ruling she made was to strike out the most serious of allegation­s. They involved alleged offending at a Ballarat cinema during a screening of Close Encounters of the Third Kind, and allegation­s of other offending throughout Ballarat over the following year.

But Wallington said inconsiste­ncies in the evidence of the complainan­t who claimed he was sexually assaulted in the cinema and throughout Ballarat, and the timelines of when the movie was screened, combined with the accounts of family members, meant there was insufficie­nt evidence for him to stand trial.

The magistrate ruled the evidence of the other accusers was credible enough to be believed by a jury, that there was no evidence accusers had colluded in what they told police, and that their allegation­s were not contaminat­ed by media reports, most notably a television interview on the ABC’s 7.30 program.

Pell did not react when Wallington dismissed the first set of charges, having heard a fourweek committal hearing, including the evidence of his accusers, in March.

When told he had been committed to stand trial on the first charge, Pell did not change expression apart from a small glance at the ground. He then brought his hand to his mouth and coughed.

There was no noticeable reaction throughout the court, other than the tapping of keyboards and iPads by reporters, who occupied most of the seats. Pell’s supporters and advocates for sexual abuse survivors were also in the room.

Some charges were earlier withdrawn by prosecutor­s.

Pell had his bail extended and is due to appear in the County Court today, when a judge will set a date for his trial. – Fairfax

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 ?? FAIRFAX ?? Cardinal George Pell arrives at Melbourne Magistrate­s Court for a decision on whether he is committed to trial on sexual assault charges.
FAIRFAX Cardinal George Pell arrives at Melbourne Magistrate­s Court for a decision on whether he is committed to trial on sexual assault charges.

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