Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Won’t resign, sentenced Australian archbishop says

- ROD MCGUIRK

CANBERRA, Australia — The most senior Roman Catholic cleric to be convicted of covering up child sex abuse said Wednesday that he would appeal the verdict and resist public pressure to resign as archbishop of an Australian city.

Adelaide Archbishop Philip Wilson said he would only offer his resignatio­n to Pope Francis if his appeal fails in the New South Wales state District Court.

“I am conscious of calls for me to resign and have taken them very seriously,” Wilson said in a statement. “However, at this time, I am entitled to exercise my legal rights and to follow the due process of law. Since that process is not yet complete, I do not intend to resign at this time.”

Wilson was sentenced in a Newcastle court on Tuesday to

12 months in detention for failing to report to police the repeated abuse of two altar boys by priest James Fletcher in the Hunter

Valley region north of Sydney during the 1970s.

He issued the statement hours after Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull echoed Fletcher’s victims by calling for Wilson to resign as archbishop.

Turnbull, a former lawyer who was born a Presbyteri­an but converted to Catholicis­m — his wife’s religion — in 2002, said he expected Wilson to resign when he was convicted in May.

“I’m surprised that he has not resigned. Clearly, given the outcome of the … prosecutio­n, he should resign,” Turnbull told reporters.

The 67-year-old cleric stood down from his official duties as archbishop days after he was convicted.

He remains free on bail and will return to court next month to find out whether he will serve his sentence in prison or at his sister’s house in home detention. He must serve a minimum of six months before becoming eligible for parole.

New South Wales Police Minister Troy Grant, who was a police detective in the 1990s when he uncovered widespread church child molesting in the Hunter Valley, condemned the Vatican’s support of Wilson. “I’m … disappoint­ed that the response from the Roman Catholic Church in their future plans for this offender nowhere meets community standards or expectatio­ns,” Grant said.

The Adelaide Archdioces­e did not immediatel­y respond to a request for clarificat­ion on whether Wilson would exhaust his appeal options before resigning.

If the District Court upholds a Newcastle magistrate’s verdict, Wilson would have another two tiers of appeal courts available to him in a process that could take years.

The federal government has initiated a redress plan involving churches and other nongovernm­ent organizati­ons to pay billions of dollars in compensati­on to victims of child sex abuse in Australian institutio­ns.

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