Imperial Valley Press

Letter confirms Vatican received McCarrick complaint in 2000

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VATICAN CITY (AP) — A 2006 letter from a top Vatican official confirms that the Holy See received informatio­n in 2000 about the sexual misconduct of now-resigned U.S. cardinal, lending credibilit­y to bombshell accusation­s of a cover-up at the highest echelons of the Roman Catholic Church.

Catholic News Service, the news agency of the U.S. bishops’ conference, published the letter Friday from then-Archbishop Leonardo Sandri to the Rev. Boniface Ramsay, a New York priest who made the initial allegation.

Ramsay informed the Vatican in a November 2000 letter about then Cardinal Theodore McCarrick’s misconduct with seminarian­s from Seton Hall University’s Immaculate Conception Seminary. Ramsay, who in 2000 was on the faculty at the seminary, has said he sent the letter at the request of the then-Vatican ambassador because he had heard so many complaints from seminarian­s that McCarrick would invite them to his beach house and into his bed.

Sandri, now a top-ranked Vatican cardinal who was the No. 3 in the Vatican’s secretaria­t of state at the time, wrote Ramsay on Oct. 11, 2006, seeking his recommenda­tion for a former seminarian for a Vatican job.

In it, he referred to Ramsay’s 2000 letter, saying: “I ask with particular reference to the serious matters involving some of the students of the Immaculate Conception Seminary, which in November 2000 you were good enough to bring confidenti­ally to the attention of the then-Apostolic Nuncio in the United States, the late Archbishop Gabriel Montalvo.”

Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano, at the center of a storm rocking Pope Francis’ papacy, cited Ramsay’s 2000 letter in his own expose of a cover-up about the McCarrick affair. He named Sandri among a long list of Vatican officials who knew about McCarrick’s penchant for seminarian­s. Vigano also accused Francis of knowing in 2013 of McCarrick’s misconduct but of rehabilita­ting him from sanctions purportedl­y imposed by Pope Benedict XVI.

Sandri’s letter is significan­t because it corroborat­es Ramsay’s story as well as Vigano’s claims. It shows the Vatican knew about allegation­s against McCarrick in 2000, a year before St. John Paul II made him a cardinal. And it further implicates the Benedict’s papacy for failing to take action against McCarrick for years even as more allegation­s against him arrived.

Vigano says Benedict eventually imposed some form of sanction on McCarrick in 2009 or 2010, nearly a decade after Ramsay’s letter arrived. The fact that Sandri cited it so readily suggests it wasn’t lost in a pile of unread mail somewhere, but was relevant even for a simple job reference.

 ??  ?? In this 2015, file photo, Cardinal Theodore McCarrick speaks during service in South Bend, Ind. RobeRt FRanklIn/South bend tRIbune VIa aP
In this 2015, file photo, Cardinal Theodore McCarrick speaks during service in South Bend, Ind. RobeRt FRanklIn/South bend tRIbune VIa aP

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