Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

State gets flurry of new tips on clergy sex abuse

- By Liz Navratil Anyone with informatio­n can contact the Clergy Abuse Hotline by calling 888-538-8541 (a toll-free number) or sending an email to info@attorneyge­neral.gov. Liz Navratil: lnavratil@postgazett­e.com, 717-787-2141 or on Twitter @LizNavrati­l.

HARRISBURG — Almost as soon as the phone number flashed on-screen at a press conference about the blistering grand jury report examining Roman Catholic dioceses, calls began pouring into the clergy abuse hotline.

The staff of state Attorney General Josh Shapiro shuffled workers around, pulling in specially trained agents from its Child Predator unit to help sift through tips about misdeeds by religious officials.

By week’s end, 17 people were staffing the hotline and they had received more than 300 calls and emails — and the number was still growing. It was the single largest surge in calls since the line was created two years ago, following a similarly scathing report.

“Ouragents will call and speak to every person who has called the hotline, hear the facts and investigat­e where appropriat­e,” said Joe Grace, a spokesman for the attorney general’s office, whichstaff­s the line.

It’s too early to tell exactly what will come of the calls, but the last flurry of tips helped shape the two-year investigat­ion that found rampant child sexual abuse and a deliberate, systemic cover-up in six of the state’s Catholic dioceses.

That grand jury report released Tuesday examined seven decades of child sex abuse perpetrate­d by 301 “predator priests” and efforts by various church officials to keep their conduct hidden from the public. The grand jury wrote that it identified more than 1,000 victims but expects there are many more.

The hotline was establishe­d in 2016 by then-Attorney General Kathleen Kane, who announced its creation as she unveiled the results of a similar probe that uncovered rape and coverups in the Altoona-Johnstown diocese. The line received more than 100 tips within the first 48 hours. The results of those calls, combined with other evidence, helped guide the investigat­ion that led to the nearly 900-page report that was released Tuesday.

Past investigat­ions have led to lengthy reports aimed at examining how the religious hierarchy responds to allegation­s of misconduct, but prosecutor­s have frequently been hampered in their ability to file criminal charges because the statute of limitation­s had expired.

Current Pennsylvan­ia law allows criminal charges in some cases, depending on how long ago the incident happened, to be filed until the victim’s 50th birthday.

There is one bill in the state Legislatur­e that would eliminate the criminal statute of limitation­s in most future cases — in effect, adopting one of the grand jury’s key recommenda­tions. Such efforts have stalled in the past, as they often get tied to controvers­ial measures that would also offer windows for older survivors to sue — a measure championed by victims’ advocates but staunchly opposed by the church and insurance industry, which have argued it could deliver a crushing financial blow.

House Majority Lead-er Dave Reed, R- Indiana, has promised to bring the bill up for a vote when the House returns this fall, noting that it will likely be revised based on the grand jury’s recommenda­tions. It’s too early to know exactly what the revised bill will look like.

In the meantime, the attorney general’s office will continue to field calls and emails relating to clergy abuse. In addition to their normal hours, agents are scheduled to work in the evenings and through this weekend.

“It is our plan to be responsive to every single call,” Mr. Grace said.

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