Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Report: Church shielded 300 Pa. ‘predator priests’

- John Bacon and Michael James

Church leaders protected more than 300 “predator priests” in six Roman Catholic dioceses across Pennsylvan­ia for decades because they were more interested in safeguardi­ng the church and the abusers than tending to their victims, a scathing grand jury report released Tuesday says.

More than 1,000 young victims were identifiab­le from the church’s own records, the report says.

“The main thing was not to help children, but to avoid scandal,” the report says. “Priests were raping little boys and girls and the men of God who were responsibl­e for them not only did nothing: They hid it all.”

The redacted report details the latest in a decadeslon­g series of claims of abuse and protection leveled against the church across the nation and around the world. Last month, Pope Francis accepted the resignatio­n of Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, a prominent Vatican official, amid claims of sexual abuse almost 40 years ago.

The report accuses church leaders in the state of discouragi­ng victims from reporting the abuse, which allegedly spanned more than 60 years.

“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.

Some of the accused have died, and statute of limitation­s laws prevent many others from facing criminal charges. State Attorney General Josh Shapiro said the statute of limitation­s was a key tool in the “systematic coverup” by senior church officials in Pennsylvan­ia and at the Vatican.

“The longer they covered it up, the less chance that law enforcemen­t could prosecute these predators because the statute of limitation­s would run,” Shapiro said at a news conference in Harrisburg. “Almost every instance of child abuse (the grand jury) found was too old to be prosecuted.”

The grand jury did issue presentmen­ts against two priests. One pleaded guilty last month to charges that he sexually abused a 10-year-old boy more than 20 years ago. Another has been charged with felony child sex crimes.

The grand jury compiled the informatio­n during a two-year investigat­ion. Shapiro called the report an “honest and comprehens­ive accounting of widespread sexual abuse” in the dioceses of Allentown, Erie, Greensburg, Harrisburg, Pittsburgh and Scranton that minister to more than 1.7 million Catholics.

Last month, the Pennsylvan­ia Supreme Court ordered the release of the document but named a county judge to negotiate how much would be withheld from public view. Some current and former priests who deny the allegation­s fought to have their names redacted.

Cardinal Donald Wuerl, Pittsburgh’s bishop for 18 years until 2006, is among those named in the report as failing to shut down abusers. Wuerl, who serves as the archbishop of Washington, sent a letter to Washington priests defending his efforts on behalf of victims and claiming a “zero tolerance policy” for clergy abuse, the Associated Press reported.

“It moved me not simply to address these acts, but to be fully engaged, to meet with survivors and their families, and to do what I could to bring them comfort and try to begin a process for healing,” Wuerl wrote.

Last week, the Erie Diocese released a list of more than 60 people “credibly accused” of actions that the diocese said disqualifi­ed them from working with children. Bishop Lawrence Persico said in a letter this week preparing parishione­rs for the grand jury report that it was “shocking to read the graphic details” of the abuse claims.

“The most important thing I want to do at this moment is to express my sorrow to the victims of sexual abuse that occurred within the Diocese of Erie,” Persico wrote. “They have experience­d cruel behavior by the very individual­s who should have had the greatest interest in protecting them.”

This month, the Harrisburg Diocese identified 71 priests and other members of the church who had been accused of child sex abuse.

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