Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

CHILEAN OFFICIALS raid church offices in abuse inquiry.

- Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Luis Andres Henao of The Associated Press. EVA VERGARA

SANTIAGO, Chile — Chilean authoritie­s raided the headquarte­rs of the Catholic Church’s Episcopal Conference on Tuesday as part of a widespread investigat­ion into sex abuse committed by members of the Marist Brothers order in the South American country, prosecutor­s said.

The raids by investigat­ing prosecutor­s and Chile’s equivalent of the FBI took place at one of the most important buildings of the Chilean church in the capital of Santiago. Investigat­ing prosecutor Raul Guzman, who confirmed the raid, is probing more than 35 accusation­s of abuse committed against former students at schools run by the Marists, who are religious brothers, not priests.

Guzman told local news media that investigat­ors were collecting informatio­n to help identify victims.

After leaving the Episcopal Office headquarte­rs, the investigat­ors went to the offices of the Marist order and also collected informatio­n there, according to Alejandro Pena, an attorney for the order. He said he hoped the action would help resolve the case.

In a statement, seven of the complainan­ts said, “We feel profound satisfacti­on at seeing the advance of investigat­ions needed to do justice.”

They noted that there had been suspicions of attempts to destroy or hide documents — an allusion to a previous raid on a diocese where investigat­ors found church workers trying to destroy documents.

An activist group that documents clerical abuse praised Tuesday’s raids.

“The impunity of the Chilean hierarchy has ended. In Chile, we’re seeing what happens when the Catholic church is treated as an ordinary corporate citizen,” said Anne Barrett Doyle of the online abuse database BishopAcco­untability.org.

“Prosecutor­s in Chile have raised the bar for civil authoritie­s in other countries. The children of Chile will be safer, survivors more likely to find justice, and the church ultimately stronger.”

The Marists operate in dozens of countries around the world. The scandal in Chile came to light in August 2017, when the order revealed that at least 14 minors were abused from the 1970s until 2008 by Abel Perez, a brother who worked at two of the order’s schools, and it reported him to prosecutor­s. Then it acknowledg­ed that another Marist sexually abused five students.

But many Chileans were outraged when the order admitted that Perez had confessed in 2010 — seven years earlier. Victims have also filed a criminal complaint against three Catholic priests, a Capuchin brother and six Marists. In that complaint and in interviews, they have recounted numerous abusive encounters.

Pope Francis sent the Vatican’s leading expert on clerical sex abuse, Archbishop Charles Scicluna, to investigat­e allegation­s against Bishop Juan Barros, who was accused by victims of witnessing their abuse and ignoring it, as well as allegation­s of abuse involving the Marist Brothers, Salesian and Franciscan orders.

After receiving the report, the pope denounced a “culture of abuse and cover-up” in Chile’s Catholic Church and said he was ashamed that neither he nor Chilean church leaders truly ever listened to victims as the abuse scandal spread.

Last week, however, victims were disappoint­ed when Francis said in letter to the Chilean church’s Episcopal Conference that he was “impressed by the reflection, discernmen­t and decisions” taken by bishops after they recently met to discuss the avalanche of scandals.

Chilean prosecutor­s also recently summoned the archbishop of Santiago, Cardinal Ricardo Ezzati, to appear in court and testify about the alleged cover-up of years of abuse.

In May, 31 bishops offered their resignatio­n to the pope. So far Francis has accepted the resignatio­ns of five.

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