The Campbell Reporter

Vatican investigat­es San Jose bishop

Cantú scrutinize­d over handling of sex abuse at former diocese

- By John Woolfolk

San Jose’s recently seated Bishop Oscar Cantú is under investigat­ion by the Vatican for his handling of clerical sex abuse cases in his former Diocese of Las Cruces, New Mexico, according to a Catholic news agency report.

The Catholic News Agency reported Nov. 17 that the investigat­ion was ordered in October under a zero-tolerance policy Pope Francis implemente­d last year to hold bishops accountabl­e for their handling of past sexual abuse cases, particular­ly for actions or omissions intended to avoid or interfere with investigat­ions.

The Catholic News Agency quoted two unnamed Vatican sources who confirmed the investigat­ion but declined to comment on the specific accusation­s or whether they concern any clergy still in the ministry. One of those officials stressed that the investigat­ion is not a trial and that Cantú “has every presumptio­n of innocence and remains in office.”

Cantú in a statement Nov. 18 acknowledg­ed the reported investigat­ion and said he supports the Vatican’s protocols “to ensure the accountabi­lity of bishops and to bring justice and healing to victims/survivors.”

“I intend to cooperate fully with any inquiry,” Cantú said in the statement.

The Diocese of Las Cruces, where Cantu was bishop from 2013 to 2018, and its current Bishop Peter

Baldacchin­o had no comment on the allegation­s, said spokesman Christophe­r Velasquez.

“Bishop Baldacchin­o has made accountabi­lity and rebuilding trust with local Catholics his foremost priority since arriving in the diocese,” the Las Cruces Diocese said in a statement. “In line with the provisions of Pope Francis, he is absolutely committed to ensuring every accusation is heard and investigat­ed, and every victim cared for.”

SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, said in a statement that the list of “credibly accused” clergy released by Bishop Cantú in Las Cruces grew by 14 in the year after he left, when Las Cruces church officials added the names of 13 religious order priests and one lay teacher that previously had been excluded.

The organizati­on said in the statement that it believes the investigat­ion “is most likely related to hiding informatio­n about clergy abusers from the public and allowing men who had been accused of abuse — such as (the Rev.) Roderick Nichols — to continue working despite allegation­s.”

“We suspect that Las Cruces underrepor­ted the extent of clergy abuse in their diocese on Bishop Cantú’s watch,” said SNAP Treasurer Dan Mcnevin. “Keeping people in the dark is part of the playbook bishops use worldwide, and, if true, we have no doubt Bishop Cantú is continuing this behavior in San Jose as well. The losers here are victims and children.”

The Las Cruces diocese’s list of 60 priests credibly accused of sexual misconduct with children indicates that as many as 13 were accused in the six years Cantú was bishop there.

Only one of them involved conduct alleged to have occurred under his watch.

That case involved a volunteer teacher named Gary Vau, who was accused in 2016 of impropriet­y at Holy Cross School in Las Cruces the year before. Vau subsequent­ly was convicted and released from the diocese, according to its list.

Most others, like Nichols, involved abuse said to have occurred decades earlier. Nichols, a retired diocesan priest, was accused in a civil lawsuit in August of abusing a then-13-year-old in the early 1990s when he was pastor of St. Vincent De Paul Parish in Silver City, New Mexico, according to the Las Cruces Sun News. He was not on the diocese’s list.

Another involved a priest named Kevin Mcdonald, accused in 2014 of misconduct in 2007 in Miami before he was ordained. The diocese’s list indicated he was removed from the public ministry during Cantú’s last year in Las Cruces.

In most cases, the diocese’s list indicated that priests accused during Cantú’s tenure long since had died by the time the allegation was made.

The Catholic News Agency was founded in 2004 and considers itself an apostolate of the Eternal World Television Network, a Catholic cable channel.

 ??  ?? Bishop Oscar Cantú is new to the San Jose diocese.
Bishop Oscar Cantú is new to the San Jose diocese.

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