The Columbus Dispatch

Once-revered cleric helped church cover up sex abuse

- By Rachel Zoll

When the clergy sex abuse scandal erupted in Boston in 2002, Cardinal Bernard Law had every reason to think he would survive. Law had a place among the powerbroke­rs of the heavily Catholic city. He was a friend of U.S. presidents, an emissary of Pope John Paul II.

But after months of disclosure­s about how he had protected child-molesting priests, Law was driven out as the church found itself in crisis across the U.S. and around the world.

“We’re still reeling from the catastroph­ic damage to the Catholic church’s credibilit­y,” said Christophe­r Bellitto, an authority on church history at Kean University in New Jersey.

Law, the disgraced former archbishop of Boston, died Wednesday at age 86 in Rome after an illness and hospitaliz­ation. He had spent his final years leading an important basilica in Rome, but he was most remembered as an unlikely catalyst for the darkest chapter of American Catholicis­m.

He arrived in Boston in 1984 with a record of civil rights activism starting in the 1960s as a young priest in Mississipp­i, where he sometimes traveled in the trunks of cars for safety. He had lived in many countries and was educated at Harvard. He was devoted to building relationsh­ips with Jews and other Christians.

“The promise that he seemed to represent when he first came to Boston, it seemed to herald a new day,” said James O’Toole, a Boston College historian.

But that goodwill evaporated in 2002, when The Boston Globe began a series of stories about how Law and his predecesso­rs had failed to protect young people from pedophile priests.

The articles were partly based on previously confidenti­al church records. Amid the files, which held stomach-churning details of how priests had sexually assaulted children, were notes of sympathy and concern from church leaders, including Law, for the accused clerics.

“I realize this is a difficult time for you and for those close to you,” Law wrote in 1994 to thenpriest John Geoghan, who already had a record of allegation­s and would eventually be accused of molesting more than 130 children. “If I can be of help to you in some way please contact me. Be assured you are remembered in my prayers.”

Law said he relied on the faulty advice of physicians and psychiatri­sts in allowing priests to stay on in parishes. But the documents unearthed showed a record of church leaders ignoring pleas for help from parents and expressing hostility toward those who came forward to say they had been hurt.

Suddenly, the archbishop was now being seen in court, under the withering examinatio­n of attorneys for victims.

The Rev. Thomas Doyle, a former canon lawyer at the Vatican Embassy in Washington, said he once thought the cardinal would play a completely different role in how the church responded to abuse.

In 1984, when the case of a child-molesting former priest in Louisiana was drawing attention to the problem, Doyle and others tried to warn the nation’s bishops that abuse was widespread in American dioceses and they should clean house. “Bernard Law believed us and was an active supporter and advocate for what we were doing,” Doyle recalled.

When news reports began detailing how Law had sheltered guilty priests, Doyle was stunned.

“I had a hard time believing that the man I had known and trusted was behind one of the worst cover-ups in the country,” said Doyle, who became an advocate for victims. “I was even more stunned when I saw his arrogant attitude.”

The damage to the church can be counted not only in lost moral authority, but also in stark numbers: more than $3 billion in settlement­s with victims paid out since 1950, thousands of priests removed and a stain of scandal that may not be removed for generation­s.

Pope Francis is set to preside over Law’s funeral rites at a Mass on Thursday at St. Peter’s Basilica, an honor accorded to all Rome-based cardinals. But the pope said nothing about Law’s death during his weekly general audience Wednesday, and in a condolence letter he made no direct mention of the cardinal’s tenure in Boston.

 ?? [THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO] ?? Cardinal Bernard Law, used to rubbing elbows with presidents and prelates, found himself in the media spotlight in 2002 thanks to Boston Globe stories that uncovered the Boston diocese’s cover-up of sex abuse by its priests. Law resigned that year as archbishop.
[THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO] Cardinal Bernard Law, used to rubbing elbows with presidents and prelates, found himself in the media spotlight in 2002 thanks to Boston Globe stories that uncovered the Boston diocese’s cover-up of sex abuse by its priests. Law resigned that year as archbishop.

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