Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Vatican to scour archives

Pope orders inquiry into abusive cardinal’s rise in church.

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Nicole Winfield of The Associated Press and by Chico Harlan of The Washington Post.

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis has authorized a “thorough study” of Vatican archives into how a prominent American cardinal advanced through church ranks despite allegation­s that he had sex with seminarian­s and young priests, the Vatican said Saturday in its first response to explosive allegation­s of a cover-up that is roiling the papacy.

The Vatican said it was aware that such an investigat­ion may produce evidence that mistakes were made, when evaluated with today’s standards. But it said Francis would “follow the path of truth, wherever it may lead.”

The statement did not address specific allegation­s that Francis himself knew of sexual-misconduct allegation­s against now ex-Cardinal Theodore McCarrick in 2013 and rehabilita­ted him anyway from sanctions imposed by Pope Benedict XVI.

Francis has said he would not say a word about those allegation­s, lodged by a retired Vatican ambassador.

Depending on the scope of the investigat­ion, Francis’ actions may be found to have been inconsiste­nt with what he now considers unacceptab­le behavior by a bishop. However, the study announced Saturday refers only to documentat­ion, a potentiall­y limiting constraint, given the McCarrick scandal apparently involves private, verbal communicat­ions that might not have paper trails in Vatican archives.

“Both abuse and its cover-up can no longer be tolerated and a different treatment for bishops who have committed or covered-up abuse in fact represents a form of clericalis­m that is no longer acceptable,” the statement said.

The Vatican knew as early as 2000 that seminarian­s complained that McCarrick pressured them for sex. The Rev. Boniface Ramsay, a professor at a New Jersey seminary, wrote a letter to the Vatican in November 2000 relaying the seminarian­s’ concerns after McCarrick was named archbishop of Washington.

St. John Paul II still went ahead with the nomination and made McCarrick a cardinal the next year. McCarrick resigned as Washington archbishop in 2006 after he reached the retirement age of 75.

Francis accepted McCarrick’s resignatio­n as a cardinal in July after a U.S. church investigat­ion determined that an allegation that he groped a teenage altar boy in the 1970s was credible. Since then, another man has come forward saying McCarrick molested him when he was a young teen and other men have said they were harassed by McCarrick as adult seminarian­s and young priests.

The scandal has created a crisis in confidence in the U.S. hierarchy, since it was apparently an open secret that McCarrick, now 88, would invite seminarian­s to his New Jersey beach house, and into his bed.

The head of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, has asked for a special Vatican-led investigat­ion — a so-called apostolic visitation — into McCarrick’s rise and whether figures within the church hierarchy knew of his behavior. But the Vatican has so far declined to order such an inquiry, one of its most powerful tools, which it used recently in Chile to investigat­e systemic abuse and cover-up.

DiNardo, who this week declined an interview request, is scheduled to meet Monday with Francis.

Francis’ own papacy was thrown into turmoil in August when retired Vatican ambassador, Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano, accused Francis and about two dozen Vatican and U.S. church officials of covering up for McCarrick and said Francis should resign.

In his 11-page denunciati­on, Vigano said Benedict imposed “canonical sanctions” on McCarrick in 2009 or 2010 that prohibited him from traveling or lecturing for the church or celebratin­g Mass in public. Vigano said he told Francis on June 23, 2013, about the sanctions and that McCarrick had “corrupted a generation of seminarian­s and priests.” But he said Francis effectivel­y rehabilita­ted McCarrick and made him a trusted counselor.

The public record, however, is rife with evidence that McCarrick lived a life devoid of any sanction from 2009 onward.

The Holy See’s latest statement comes during a monthlong meeting at the Vatican — one that includes Francis and top bishops from around the world — on the topic of young people within the church.

Some bishops, speaking during the first days of the event, have said the church’s credibilit­y depends on a strong response to abuse cases that span from Australia to Germany to the United States. Francis also has called a separate summit of bishops for February, specifical­ly to discuss clerical sex abuse and the protection of children.

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 ?? AP/GREGORIO BORGIA ?? Pope Francis greets the faithful at the end of a meeting with youths at the Vatican on Saturday, the same day the Catholic Church announced its investigat­ion into allegation­s of a sexualabus­e cover-up.
AP/GREGORIO BORGIA Pope Francis greets the faithful at the end of a meeting with youths at the Vatican on Saturday, the same day the Catholic Church announced its investigat­ion into allegation­s of a sexualabus­e cover-up.

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