Los Angeles Times

Abuse inquiry steps up for six dioceses

Among those facing subpoenas are L.A. and Orange as state escalates scrutiny.

- By Alejandra Reyes-Velarde

California prosecutor­s plan to issue subpoenas to half of the state’s Catholic dioceses as part of a growing investigat­ion into the church’s handling of sex abuse cases, according to several dioceses and the California Catholic Conference.

The move marks another escalation of the California attorney general’s investigat­ion of the church scandal, which already has resulted in massive settlement­s for accusers and criminal charges against individual priests statewide.

The dioceses in Sacramento, Fresno, Orange, San Jose, Los Angeles and San Francisco received notices last week that they would be issued the subpoenas.

The Diocese of Orange and the Diocese of San Jose have been officially served with the subpoena orders.

The Times reported in May that Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra would audit all 12 of the state’s Roman Catholic dioceses on the procedures they follow with sex abuse cases and whether they complied with their reporting requiremen­ts.

Each diocese received a notice that it should preserve files and records pertaining to clergy sex abuse and mandatory reporting.

Steve Pehanich of the California Catholic Conference said “we’re not exactly sure why” the six subpoenas are being issued now, since those dioceses had been

supplying the attorney general’s office with records voluntaril­y since May.

The California Catholic Conference is the public policy arm of the Roman Catholic Church.

“We don’t know how they selected them,” he said.

As of Tuesday morning, the San Francisco and Sacramento dioceses had not received an official order, though they were notified last week that it was coming.

“We anticipate [the subpoena] any time,” said Kevin Eckery, a representa­tive for the Sacramento diocese.

Previous reports that all 12 dioceses in California received the notices are inaccurate, according to several dioceses.

The San Bernardino, Oakland, Stockton, San Diego, Santa Rosa and Monterey dioceses had not been notified of a subpoena order as of Tuesday morning.

The attorney general’s office is not commenting on the matter and did not answer questions about the subpoenas.

“To protect its integrity, we don’t comment on potential or ongoing investigat­ions,” officials said in an email to The Times.

The Diocese of Orange said in a statement that it “views the [attorney general] as a partner, not an adversary, in the mutual goal to extinguish abuse; it will strictly comply with its legal obligation­s; and it appreciate­s the opportunit­y to highlight its diligence and efforts in care of the faithful.”

The Sacramento Diocese said in a statement last week that it had been working with the attorney general’s office to provide records for the investigat­ion since May and officials believe the subpoena will “move us toward our shared goal of ensuring that the safeguards in place for our children are working as they should.”

“Nobody has anything to hide,” Eckery said.

The bishop for the Diocese of Fresno, Joseph V. Brennan, said in a statement last week that the attorney general’s review “is a welcomed process that will help us to advance efforts towards greater transparen­cy; to further learn from our past, scrutinize our current performanc­e in implementi­ng mandated reporting procedures; and, to continue to tirelessly pursue and develop all reasonable measures to protect the vulnerable in our midst.”

Elizabeth Sullivan, a spokeswoma­n for the Diocese of San Jose, said the diocese already has provided the attorney general with more than 1,000 documents related to the mandatory reporting of allegation­s of sexual misconduct with minors by clergy and laypeople since 1996.

“The Diocese of San Jose believes that by learning from the past, we can bring about true healing for victims/survivors and our Church,” Sullivan said in a statement.

“The Diocese of San Jose [works] tirelessly to ensure a safe environmen­t for all God’s children to prevent the devastatin­g sin of sexual abuse by promoting awareness, requiring accountabi­lity and reporting, and demonstrat­ing transparen­cy.”

Several of the dioceses that were not issued subpoenas, including Monterey and Oakland, said they would cooperate and fulfill whatever legal obligation­s came from the attorney general’s investigat­ion.

Other state attorneys general have launched Catholic clergy abuse investigat­ions in the wake of new scandals in the last year, including a Pennsylvan­ia report alleging a decades-long coverup of child sex abuse involving more than 1,000 victims and hundreds of clergy.

An Illinois attorney general’s report released in December found that the number of Catholic clergy accused of sexual abuse in that state was much higher than previously acknowledg­ed.

The report found that 690 clergy members had been accused, although church officials had publicly identified only 185 with credible allegation­s against them.

Churches in California and elsewhere across the nation responded by releasing previously undisclose­d names of clergy accused of abuse.

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