Yorkshire Post

Hearing told letters withheld by Lord Carey ‘could have made a difference’ in abuse case

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LETTERS WITHHELD by an exarchbish­op of Canterbury “could have made a difference” to the investigat­ion into disgraced bishop Peter Ball, a former senior police officer has said.

Wayne Murdock, senior investigat­ing officer into sexual abuse allegation­s against Ball in 1992 and 1993, said he expected Archbishop George Carey to provide informatio­n handed over by victims.

Lord Carey, who gave evidence to the inquiry on Tuesday, resigned as honorary assistant bishop in the Diocese of Oxford after an inquiry found he delayed a “proper investigat­ion” into Ball’s crimes for two decades by failing to pass the informatio­n to police.

Mr Murdock, who was a Gloucester­shire Police officer for 37 years, told the Independen­t Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse yesterday: “Those letters should have been handed over and they could have made a difference. “They knew what was going on. “My expectatio­n would have been that if you’ve got anything, you hand it over.

“From the Church, you don’t expect informatio­n to be withheld. You know, that’s really common sense.”

It was suggested by Fiona Scolding QC that informatio­n given to Gloucester­shire Police by victims – including details about naked prayer and massages – was not materially different to letters received by Lord Carey at the time.

Mr Murdock said: “We should have been the judge of that, not the archbishop.

“He knew we were carrying out investigat­ion and he withheld that informatio­n.

“Had we had names, we could have followed up, gone and interviewe­d them and perhaps we would have got far more out of those people than had been revealed in those letters.”

He added: “I was led to believe these letters were far more damaging. Bottom line was those letters should have been passed on for us to look at and pass judgment on what the evidential value was.”

The inquiry also heard excerpts from some of the letters on Tuesday, including one given by the mother of victim Neil Todd, who took his own life in 2012.

Ball resigned in 1993 following a police caution and was jailed in 2015 for sexually abusing 18 males over 30 years.

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