Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Francis spared sex-scandal fault

- NICOLE WINFIELD

ROME — A Vatican investigat­ion into former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick found that a series of bishops, cardinals and popes downplayed or dismissed reports of sexual misconduct, and determined that Pope Francis merely continued his predecesso­rs’ handling of the predator until taking action when a former altar boy alleged abuse.

The Vatican took the step Tuesday of publishing its twoyear, 449-page internal investigat­ion into the American prelate’s rise and fall in a bid to restore credibilit­y to the U.S. and Vatican hierarchie­s, which have been shattered by the McCarrick scandal.

The report put the lion’s share of blame on a dead saint: Pope John Paul II, who appointed McCarrick archbishop of Washington, D.C., in 2000, despite having commission­ed an inquiry that confirmed he slept with seminarian­s. The report found that John Paul believed McCarrick’s last-minute, handwritte­n denial: “I have made mistakes and may have sometimes lacked in prudence, but in the seventy years of my life I have never had sexual relations with any person, male or female, young or old, cleric or lay,” McCarrick wrote.

But the report also charts the alarm bells that were ignored, excused or dismissed in 1992-93 when six anonymous letters were sent to U.S. church officials and the Vatican’s ambassador to the U.S. alleging McCarrick was a “pedophile” who would sleep in the same bed with young men and boys. Those alarms continued, including when a Catholic psychiatri­st traveled to the Vatican in 1997 to report that his priest-patient was a victim of McCarrick’s sexual abuse.

McCarrick, 90, was defrocked by Francis last year after a Vatican investigat­ion confirmed the globe-trotting envoy and fundraiser had sexually molested adults as well as children. The case created a credibilit­y crisis for the church since the Vatican had reports from authoritat­ive cardinals dating to 1999 that McCarrick’s behavior was problemati­c, yet he became an influentia­l cardinal.

The findings accused bishops dead and alive of turning a blind eye to his misconduct and said McCarrick simply ignored informal restrictio­ns ordered up in 2006 after Pope Benedict XVI, after receiving another alarming report, decided not to investigat­e or sanction him seriously.

The report greatly undermined allegation­s that Francis was at fault for the McCarrick scandal that were lodged in 2018 by a former Vatican ambassador to the U.S. The report provided evidence that the ambassador, Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano, was part of the cover-up.

The report said Francis never lifted or modified Benedict’s informal restrictio­ns on McCarrick, as Vigano claimed, since the restrictio­ns were never enforced in the first place. The report provides evidence that Vigano was well aware during Benedict’s papacy that McCarrick had ignored them, saying in a 2012 letter to the Vatican that its written admonition to McCarrick “is a dead letter.”

“Pope Francis had heard only that there had been allegation­s and rumors related to immoral conduct with adults occurring prior to McCarrick’s appointmen­t to Washington,” the report says. “Believing that the allegation­s had already been reviewed and rejected by Pope John Paul II, and well aware that McCarrick was active during the papacy of Benedict XVI, Pope Francis did not see the need to alter the approach that had been adopted.”

Francis changed course after a former altar boy came forward in 2017 alleging McCarrick groped him when he was a teenager during preparatio­ns for Christmas Mass in 1971 and 1972 in New York. The allegation was the first solid claim against McCarrick involving a minor and triggered the canonical trial that resulted in his defrocking.

McCarrick now lives in a residence for priests as a layman.

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