Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

AG urges victims to tell their stories

- By Anne Geggis South Florida Sun Sentinel

Attorney General Pam Bondi has launched a tip site that is part of a statewide investigat­ion of past sex abuse by Catholic priests, she announced Thursday.

Bondi said she’s taking any and all stories about sexual abuse at this new site — even if the incidents happened decades ago.

This new way to report clerical abuse was sparked when a Pennsylvan­ia grand jury found that more than 1,000 children had been abused by 301 priests over a 70-year-period, while the higher authoritie­s in the church covered it up, Bondi said.

Tips can be reported confidenti­ally online at MyFloridaL­egal.com/StopAbuse

“When (news about) the case aired, I could not sleep that night,” Bondi said, explaining the number of cases is likely to be more in Florida because it’s a bigger state than Pennsylvan­ia.

A Boca Raton priest who assisted at Ascension Catholic Church between 2007 and 2011 is among the 301 Pennsylvan­ia priests accused in that investigat­ion. Monsignor Thomas Benestad used holy water to rinse out the boy's mouth after having him perform oral sex on the priest, the report said.

The Archdioces­e of Miami issued a statement in reaction to Bondi’s Thursday news conference applauding the investigat­ion and pledging the cooperatio­n it’s been extending to law enforcemen­t officials for the past 16 years.

The archdioces­e has its own hotline for any complaints, and has establishe­d safe environmen­t” policies in keeping with a “zero tolerance” policy for such abuse, the archdioces­e’s state said.

“When an allegation of sexual abuse of a child or a vulnerable adult by a member of the clergy or church personnel is received, it is immediatel­y reported to the appropriat­e county state attorney’s office,” the statement from the archdioces­e’s spokeswoma­n said.

The Diocese of Palm Beach did

not issue a formal statement regarding Bondi’s announceme­nt. One of its priests, in 2017, filed a libel suit against the diocese for retaliatin­g against him for goiing to authoritie­s about a sexual abuse case.

The Rev. John Gallagher said the diocese had branded him a liar for his role in the case involving a visiting priest who showed a teenager pornograph­ic material. Subsequent­ly, as a result, he could not find another flock to lead, according to his claim.

The case was dismissed in May.

The Rev. Jose Palimattto­m, a visiting priest at Holy Name of Jesus Catholic Church in West Palm Beach, pled guilty to showing obscene material to a minor in 2015. He served six months in jail and was deported back to India after serving his time.

Bondi said she was not necessaril­y looking for the Catholic church’s misdeeds, but all institutio­nal abuses. Still, after the Pennsylvan­ia news came out, she said that more than 15 people have come forward with stories about what happened to them in a similar setting, in

Florida.

Sun Sentinel reporter Larry Barszewski contribute­d to this report

 ?? CHRIS URSO/AP ?? Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi, center, with Special Agent in Charge Mark Brutnell, left, and Statewide Prosecutor Nick Cox at a news conference in Tampa on Thursday.
CHRIS URSO/AP Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi, center, with Special Agent in Charge Mark Brutnell, left, and Statewide Prosecutor Nick Cox at a news conference in Tampa on Thursday.

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