Austin American-Statesman

Vatican: ‘Clarificat­ions’ coming on accusation­s

Pope’s nine cardinal advisers offer ‘full solidarity’ with him.

- By Nicole Winfield

VATICAN CITY — The Vatican is preparing the “necessary clarificat­ions” about accusation­s that top Vatican officials including Pope Francis covered up the sexual misconduct of a now-disgraced American ex-cardinal, Francis’ top advisers said Monday.

In a statement, Francis’ nine cardinal advisers expressed their “full solidarity” with the pope over the scandal, which has thrown his papacy into crisis.

The cardinals, who are meeting at the Vatican this week, said they were aware that “the Holy See is working on formulatin­g the potential and necessary clarificat­ions.”

Francis has refused to respond to the 11-page document published Aug. 26 by the retired ambassador to the U.S., Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano.

Vigano named more than two dozen current and former Vatican and U.S. officials and accused them of knowing about and covering up for ex-Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, who is accused of sexually molesting and harassing minors as well as adults.

Specifical­ly, Vigano accused Francis of rehabilita­ting McCarrick from canonical sanctions imposed on him by Pope Benedict XVI in 2009 or 2010.

The Vatican has known since at least 2000 that McCarrick slept with seminarian­s.

Francis removed McCarrick as cardinal in July following accusation­s he groped a teenage altar boy in the 1970s, a canonical crime that could result in his being defrocked.

Francis’ refusal to immediatel­y respond to Vigano’s claims has frustrated many Catholics in the U.S., who were already outraged that McCarrick’s penchant for seminarian­s and young priests was apparently an open secret in some Catholic circles.

That outrage has been compounded by the revelation­s of the Pennsylvan­ia grand jury report, detailing the abuse of more than 1,000 children by some 300 priests over 70 years, while bishops covered up for them.

Francis’ nine cardinal advisers issued the statement at the start of three days of meetings to hand in the fruit of their five years of work: a proposal to reform the Vatican bureaucrac­y.

With their work essentiall­y finished and some of the cardinals themselves now implicated in sex abuse or cover-up scandals, the prelates asked Francis to reflect on the “work, structure and compositio­n of the council, taking into account the advanced age of some members.”

That could suggest Francis now has an elegant way of getting rid of prelates such as Chilean Cardinal Javier Errazuriz, accused by victims of being a key figure in Chile’s wretched record on abuse and cover-up. Errazuriz, the retired archbishop of Santiago, is 85 and well over retirement age.

Another aging member of the council is Cardinal George Pell, 77, and on trial in his native Australia on historic allegation­s of sex abuse. He has denied wrongdoing and is on a leave of absence from his job as the Vatican’s finance minister.

 ?? ANDREW MEDICHINI / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pope Francis has refused to respond to a document by the Vatican’s retired ambassador to the U.S., who said more than two dozen current and former Vatican and U.S. officials knew about and covered up for an ex-cardinal accused of sexual abuse.
ANDREW MEDICHINI / ASSOCIATED PRESS Pope Francis has refused to respond to a document by the Vatican’s retired ambassador to the U.S., who said more than two dozen current and former Vatican and U.S. officials knew about and covered up for an ex-cardinal accused of sexual abuse.

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