Baltimore Sun

Pope sends Lori to investigat­e a bishop

W.Va.’s Bransfield faces allegation­s of sexual harassment of adults

- By Yvonne Wenger

Pope Francis directed Baltimore Archbishop William E. Lori on Thursday to investigat­e allegation­s of the sexual harassment of adults by a West Virginia bishop, amid an internatio­nal reckoning for the Roman Catholic Church.

The West Virginia attorney general called the allegation­s against Bishop Michael J. Bransfield “disturbing,” pledged a review by his office and said he expected the Wheeling-Charleston Diocese would cooperate. No additional informatio­n is available about the allegation­s levied against Bransfield, whose resignatio­n Francis accepted Thursday.

“My primary concern is for the care and support of the priests and people of the Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston at this difficult time,” Lori said in a statement. “I further pledge to conduct a thorough investigat­ion in search of the truth into the troubling allegation­s against Bishop Bransfield and to work closely with the clergy, religious and lay leaders of the diocese until the appointmen­t of a new bishop.”

Lori will celebrate Mass at 6 p.m. Saturday at the Cathedral of St. Joseph in Wheeling.

A spokesman in Baltimore said Lori was unavailabl­e Thursday for an interview.

Francis asked Lori to continue to lead the

500,000 Catholics in Baltimore’s archdioces­e while guiding nearly 80,000 more some 300 miles away in the Wheeling-Charleston diocese, which encompasse­s the state of West Virginia. He was expected to begin meeting Thursday with clergy and lay leaders.

Church observers said Lori will likely be met with shock and anger by West Virginia Catholics. They also said his investigat­ion will be test of his leadership, as he navigates the church’s latest crisis in the aftermath of an explosive 900-page Pennsylvan­ia grand jury report released in August that detailed the abuse of more than 1,000 children by more than 300 priests going back two decades. Many are also still reeling from Baltimore-centered abuse allegation­s documented in the "The Keepers," a 2017 Netflix series that explored alleged abuse by the late A. Joseph Maskell, a priest who worked as a chaplain and counselor at Archbishop Keough High School during the 1960s and 1970s.

Baltimore will be in the spotlight again this fall when the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops holds its annual meeting here, the first gathering of the American church’s top leaders since the Pennsylvan­ia report, the resignatio­n of Washington, D.C., Cardinal Theodore McCarrick over sexual abuse allegation­s and the West Virginia bishop’s departure. The bishops last met in June in Florida.

The pope met Thursday with key U.S. bishops at the Vatican to discuss the sexual abuse crisis, but church leaders did not say whether the bishops agreed on future actions to address problems.

“We shared with Pope Francis our situation in the United States — how the Body of Christ is lacerated by the evil of sexual abuse,” Cardinal Daniel DiNardo of Galveston-Houston said in a statement. He is president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. “He listened very deeply from the heart. It was a lengthy, fruitful, and good exchange.”

McCarrick resigned this summer, becoming the first U.S. cardinal to step down due to allegation­s of sexual abuse. He served as Washington’s archbishop from 2001until his retirement at age 75 in 2006. Accusers said McCarrick harassed two minors, as well as young adult seminarian­s.

Bransfield, 75, previously denied allegation­s that surfaced in 2012 that he sexually abused teenagers decades earlier, according to published reports. A Philadelph­ia native, Bransfield had headed the West Virginia diocese since 2005. He was ordained in 1971 with assignment­s that included working as a teacher and chaplain at Lansdale Catholic High School in eastern Pennsylvan­ia and as rector of the Basilica of the National Shrine West Virginia Bishop Michael J. Bransfield has headed the Roman Catholic Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston since 2005. of the Immaculate Conception in Washington.

Maryland activists said internal church investigat­ions have repeatedly proven to be inept. David Lorenz of Bowie is state director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests.

“Being a bishop does not make you a good criminal investigat­or,” said Lorenz, who says he was abused at age16 in Kentucky and is no longer a practicing Catholic. “It should be an outside investigat­or. Call the police.”

Lorenz questioned Lori’s track record, calling his appointmen­t to the new role “utterly ridiculous.”

“Lori is not the poster child for how to handle this whole abuse issue,” Lorenz said.

Lori came to Baltimore in 2012 after a dozen years leading the Bridgeport, Conn., diocese. There, he had to confront the alleged sexual abuse of children by priests and church workers. Apologizin­g to victims in 2003, Lori announced a $21 million settlement with 40 people. Victim advocates criticized Lori for asking the U.S. Supreme Court to block a Connecticu­t state order and stop documents from sex-abuse cases from becoming public; Lori was arguing against government intrusion into religious affairs. The court declined to seal the records.

The archbishop, a Louisville, Ky., native who entered the priesthood in 1977, has pointed to his work helping the church become more proactive and vigilant about sexual abuse. In 2002, he was one of the bishops who wrote a self-proclaimed “zerotolera­nce” policy to deal with priests who sexually abused children. The Dallas Charter, as it is called, was approved by the Vatican.

The Rev. Thomas J. Reese, a Jesuit priest and longtime religion writer, said he sees the investigat­ion of clergy misconduct involving adults — such as the allegation’s Bransfield is now facing — as the next frontier for the Catholic Church.

“We live in a different world today than in the past, thanks to the #MeToo movement,” Reese said. “People are more willing to come forward when they feel they are sexually harassed or mistreated. That is good news.”

Also new is the church’s decision by Pope Francis to release the reason for Bransfield’s resignatio­n. Canon law requires clergy to offer resignatio­n letters when they turn 75, as Bransfield did Sept. 8, but the pope can take as long as he likes to accept it. In this case, Reese said Francis acted quickly and took the unusual step of disclosing the allegation­s.

“The church is realizing you just can’t cover these things up,” Reese said. “The more you try to keep these things secret, the more problems it causes.”

The length of Lori’s investigat­ion will depend on many factors, Reese said, including whether the accusers are willing to talk to Lori and if Bransfield acknowledg­es or denies the claims.

Rocco Palmo, a Philadelph­ia-based analyst who edits Whispers in the Loggia, a blog that covers the church, called the church’s actions involving Bransfield “deeply significan­t” because the allegation­s involve adults, not children. He said Bransfield’s long been a prominent figure in the American church for his work at the Washington basilica and former role as treasurer of the U.S. bishops conference.

“It’s a shocking one,” Palmo said. Bransfield “has a long reach in the U.S. and in Rome.”

Palmo expects Baltimore to be the site of church-related protests when the bishops convene in the city in the coming weeks.

“The American meeting in Baltimore is arguably the most important meeting in the last half-century,” Palmo said.

A hotline has been establishe­d for those wishing to share any informatio­n related to the West Virginia investigat­ion. The hotline number is 833-272-4225.

 ?? CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/GETTY IMAGES ?? Men pack their belongings in New Bern, N.C., after evacuating their house when the Neuse River went over its banks and flooded their street during Hurricane Florence.
CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/GETTY IMAGES Men pack their belongings in New Bern, N.C., after evacuating their house when the Neuse River went over its banks and flooded their street during Hurricane Florence.
 ?? SCOTT MCCLOSKEY/AP 2015 ??
SCOTT MCCLOSKEY/AP 2015

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