Boston Herald

Latest clergy allegation­s graphic, disturbing

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When the Catholic priest sex abuse scandal broke in Boston there were five priests initially charged for their crimes. Now a nightmare scenario is playing out in Pennsylvan­ia where a full battalion of “predator priests” were implicated by a grand jury in the rampant, horrifying sexual abuse of more than 1,000 child and teen victims.

The details are graphic and disturbing.

More than 300 members of the clergy allegedly preyed on children over a number of decades, while their superiors allegedly systematic­ally obfuscated, lied, hid evidence and ran out the clock on statutes of limitation­s in thousands of cases across the state. If Boston is any marker, both the number of abused and accused will grow, drasticall­y.

Especially chilling is the church’s clinical damagecont­rol process that held law enforcemen­t at bay while providing layers of safe cover for the alleged perpetrato­rs, with plenty of accommodat­ions to ensure that their sexual appetites would continue to be satisfied. One priest was even given a job recommenda­tion for Disney World.

The dioceses’ own archives were so overtly damning that the effort to hide the truth from the outside world would necessitat­e the institutio­n itself to be nearly as involved in insulation as it was in the business of the gospel.

The report describes the alleged cover-up efforts in detail saying that for the Catholic Church, “The main thing was not to help children, but to avoid ‘scandal.’ That is not our word, but theirs; it appears over and over again in the documents we recovered.”

Analysis from the FBI found what the report calls “a playbook for concealing the truth” including moving and enabling known predators, discrediti­ng victims and trying to prevent the involvemen­t of outside expertise or law enforcemen­t.

The damage caused to the victims, their families, and the rest of the faithful is incalculab­le.

One has to wonder if all the abusers and those who protected them are removed, how many clergymen will be left standing?

 ?? AP PHOTOS ?? EXTREMELY EMOTIONAL: Victims of clergy sexual abuse and their family members react, above and left, as Pennsylvan­ia Attorney General Josh Shapiro, right, speaks during a news conference.
AP PHOTOS EXTREMELY EMOTIONAL: Victims of clergy sexual abuse and their family members react, above and left, as Pennsylvan­ia Attorney General Josh Shapiro, right, speaks during a news conference.
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