Porterville Recorder

Report tags clergy accused of sex abuse in San Francisco bay

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SAN FRANCISCO — A law firm suing California bishops for the records of priests accused of sexual abuse released its own report Tuesday listing more than 200 clergy in the San Francisco Bay Area it says are accused of misconduct.

Minnesota-based Jeff Anderson & Associates compiled the list from lawsuits and public websites to publicize the breadth of the problem, said attorney Jeff Anderson. He accused church leaders of keeping quiet to protect themselves and the Roman Catholic Church, putting children at risk.

The Catholic Church is reeling from a grand jury report released in August that estimated hundreds of priests in Pennsylvan­ia molested more than 1,000 children since the 1940s. The report accused senior church officials of systematic­ally covering up complaints.

The report released Tuesday notes that the "vast majority of the claims" have not been proven in court. Anderson's firm first said the number of accused clergy was higher, but lowered the number because some of the accused clergy worked at more than one diocese.

Tuesday's report lists 135 clergy members accused in the Archdioces­e of San Francisco, including names, photos and background informatio­n, 95 accused in the Diocese of Oakland and 33 in the Diocese of San Jose. In San Jose, that's more than double the 15 included in a report released last week by Bishop Patrick Mcgrath.

"San Jose has done something that is less than the full truth," Anderson said, adding that bishops overall have "made a lot of promises, but we've seen no action and very few disclosure­s."

Mike Brown, spokesman for the Roman Catholic Archdioces­e of San Francisco, said Archbishop Salvatore J. Cordileone is conducting listening sessions. Brown said the archdioces­e could release a list of names as part of a broader response in November.

"To assist the victims is the primary concern, or any victims who have not come forward. It probably would help very much to have credibly accused clergy's names," Brown said.

A spokeswoma­n for the Oakland diocese, Helen Osman, referred The Associated Press to a statement earlier this month in which Oakland Bishop Michael C. Barber said he would release the names of credibly accused clergy within 45 days.

Liz Sullivan, spokeswoma­n for the Diocese of San Jose, said it is "heartbreak­ing to see the list of so many who have betrayed and abused innocent children in these horrific ways," and said the diocese is reviewing the names.

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