Texarkana Gazette

Pope OKs probe into U.S. bishop as he meets with U.S. delegation

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VATICAN CITY—Pope Francis accepted the resignatio­n of a U.S. bishop Thursday and authorized an investigat­ion into allegation­s he sexually harassed adults, adding awkward drama to an audience with U.S. church leaders over the abuse and cover-up scandal roiling the Catholic Church.

The resignatio­n of West Virginia Bishop Michael Bransfield was announced just as the four-member U.S. delegation was sitting down with Francis in his private study in the Apostolic Palace. Among the four was Bransfield’s cousin, Monsignor Brian Bransfield, secretary-general of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.

The bishop had been investigat­ed for an alleged groping incident in 2007 and was implicated in court testimony in 2012 in an infamous Philadelph­ia priestly sex abuse case. He strongly denied ever abusing anyone and the diocese said it had disproved the claims. He continued with his ministry until he offered to retire, as required, when he turned 75 last week.

The Vatican said Francis accepted his resignatio­n Thursday and appointed Baltimore Archbishop William Lori to take over Bransfield’s WheelingCh­arleston diocese temporaril­y. Lori said in a statement that Francis had also instructed him to “conduct an investigat­ion into allegation­s of sexual harassment of adults against Bishop Bransfield.”

No details of the allegation­s were revealed and his diocese said it had “no idea” where Bransfield was after the Vatican ordered him to live outside the diocese.

Lori set up a hotline for potential victims to call, said the Vatican had instructed him to make the investigat­ion public, and vowed to conduct a thorough study into what he said were “troubling” claims against Bransfield, who was a major fundraiser for the Vatican via the Pennsylvan­ia-based Papal Foundation.

The revelation was the latest twist in an incredible turn of events in the U.S. church that began with the June 20 announceme­nt that one of the most prestigiou­s U.S. cardinals, Theodore McCarrick, had been accused of groping a teenage altar boy in the 1970s.

Francis removed McCarrick as a cardinal in July after a U.S. church investigat­ion found the allegation credible. After news broke of the investigat­ion, several former seminarian­s and priests came forward to report that they, too, had been abused or harassed by McCarrick as adults.

The McCarrick affair—coupled with revelation­s in the Pennsylvan­ia grand jury report detailing decades of abuse and cover-up in six dioceses—has fueled outrage among the rank-and-file faithful who had trusted church leaders to reform themselves after the abuse scandal first erupted in Boston in 2002.

Outrage has also been directed at Francis and the Vatican and has fueled conservati­ve criticism of Francis’ pontificat­e.

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