Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)
Grand jury says church covered for Pa. clergy
Excerpt: Dioceses cared more about PR than kids
HARRISBURG, Pa. — A grand jury investigating clergy sex abuse in six Pennsylvania Roman Catholic dioceses found that church leaders were more interested in preventing scandal than protecting children, in some cases discouraging victims from going to police or pressuring law enforcement officials to end or avoid investigations, according to a court filing.
The grand jury’s full report, nearly 900 pages long, is expected to be released in the next two weeks.
But a court filing made public Friday, resolving one of many legal disputes over the report, included excerpts from the grand jury’s findings on the role of church leaders in the clergy abuse scandal.
According to the document, the grand jury concluded that victims were “brushed aside, in every part of the state, by church leaders who preferred to protect the abusers and their institutions above all.”
“The main thing was not to help children, but to avoid ‘scandal,’” the grand jury report says.
“Several diocesan administrators, including the bishops, often dissuaded victims from reporting abuse to police, pressured law enforcement to terminate or avoid an investigation, or conducted their own deficient, biased investigation without reporting crimes against children to the proper authorities,” the report says.
The latest disclosures came in a filing by the state attorney general’s office and retired Erie Bishop Donald Trautman. He dropped his challenge to the report’s publication in its current form after prosecutors agreed some of its broad claims were not specifically directed at him.
Trautman, who headed the Erie Diocese from 1990 to 2012, issued a three-page statement that expressed his “disgust” with clergy sexual abuse. He said he moved to withdraw his case after concluding that his pending appeal likely would mean large parts of the report focused on Erie would otherwise remain blacked out for the immediate future, something he did not want.
Trautman said he has met or tried to meet with every victim of abuse and helped them obtain diocese-paid mental health treatment. He said he also worked with Erie prosecutors in 2002 to review Erie Diocese records on abuse allegations, and prosecutors announced no offenders were in a position to endanger children in the community. He said he also regularly reported accusations to police and removed at least 16 priests from active ministry over allegations of child abuse.
“There is no evidence that Bishop Trautman moved priests from parish to parish to ‘cover up’ abuse allegations or that he failed to take action when an allegation was raised,” according to the statement released by his lawyer, David Berardinelli. “There simply is no pattern or practice of putting the church’s image or a priest’s reputation above the protection of children.”
Attorney General Josh Shapiro said Trautman’s decision paves the way for victims from the Erie Diocese to have their story told without redactions.
“This was the right decision and should serve as a model for others who continue to fight the release of the report,” Shapiro said.