Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Clergy-abuse list grows

More U.S. dioceses revealing names of accused priests.

- CLAUDIA LAUER

PHILADELPH­IA — Over the past four months, Roman Catholic dioceses across the U.S. have released the names of more than 1,000 priests and others accused of sexually abusing children in an unpreceden­ted public reckoning spurred at least in part by a grand jury investigat­ion in Pennsylvan­ia, an Associated Press review has found. Nearly 50 dioceses and religious orders have publicly identified accused priests in the wake of the Pennsylvan­ia report issued in mid-August, and 55 more have announced plans to do the same over the next few months, the AP found. Together they account for more than half of the nation’s 187 dioceses. The review also found that nearly 20 local, state or federal investigat­ions, either criminal or civil, have been opened since the release of the grand jury findings. Those investigat­ions could lead to more names and more damning accusation­s, as well as fines against dioceses and court-ordered safety measures. “People saw what happened in these parishes in Pennsylvan­ia and said, ‘That happened in my parish, too.’ They could see the immediate connection, and they are demanding the same accounting,” said Tim Lennon, national president of the board of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. The recently disclosed accusation­s date back six or seven decades in some cases, with the oldest from the 1910s in Louisiana. Most of the priests were long ago removed from ministry. An AP examinatio­n found that more than 60 percent are dead. In most cases, the statute of limitation­s for filing criminal charges or suing has run out. Neverthele­ss, advocates say exposing abusers nearly two decades after the scandal first broke out in Boston in 2002 is an encouragin­g step, in part because it gives some victims a sense of vindicatio­n after decades of official silence or denials. Also, it could increase pressure on dioceses to set up victims’ compensati­on funds, as the church has done in Pennsylvan­ia already. And it could result in the removal of abusers from positions outside the church that give them access to children. “This is a milestone. We are getting closer and closer to what this ought to be, the true coming to terms that would have to be at a national level,” said Joe McLean, who filed a lawsuit with other victims seeking to compel the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops to release files on alleged abusers nationwide. The Pennsylvan­ia investigat­ion, led by state Attorney General Josh Shapiro, identified nearly 300 “predator priests” dating back seven decades and accused church leaders of covering up for the abuses, in some cases by returning priests to duty after short stays in treatment centers or reassignin­g them. Advocates said the report had big impact because it was the largest to date in scope, encompassi­ng most of the state. Victims’ advocates and others, including some church officials, said the report was largely responsibl­e for the urgency now being shown by the church. Many bishops cited those findings and other scandals — including the resignatio­n over the summer of Washington Archbishop Theodore McCarrick, accused of groping an altar boy in the 1970s — in their letters to their congregati­ons. The biggest list of names has come from the Jesuits West Province, a religious order that encompasse­s nine Western states. It identified 111 priests. The New Orleans Archdioces­e and the Diocese of Syracuse, N.Y., named 61 and 57 respective­ly. The Great Falls-Billings, Mont., Diocese disclosed 47 names, including those of a few nuns, while the Los Angeles Archdioces­e reported more than 50 from the past decade or so. Some dioceses, like Peoria, Ill., released only names with no informatio­n on the allegation­s or the church’s response. Others detailed such things as parish assignment­s, numbers and dates of allegation­s — including an Omaha priest with 20 to 35 accusation­s against him — and attempts at treatment, restrictio­n and punishment. Thirteen dioceses have hired outside consultant­s including FBI agents and former judges to review their files, and dioceses that had previously been secretive are coordinati­ng to release statewide lists in such places as Texas and New Jersey. Bishop Anthony Taylor of the Little Rock Diocese disclosed the names of 12 priests in September and announced the hiring of a consultant to review diocesan files. “The Pennsylvan­ia grand jury report kind of helped us firm up our decision to move forward with what we were doing. It affected the timing rather than the decision,” he said.

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