The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Diocese names 71 accused of sex abuse

- By Mark Scolforo

HARRISBURG » A Roman Catholic diocese on Wednesday identified 71 priests and other members of the church who had been accused of child sex abuse and said it was holding accountabl­e the bishops who led the church for the past 70 years, announcing their names will be stripped from all church properties.

At a news conference to detail the church’s actions, Harrisburg Bishop Ronald Gainer apologized to those who were abused, the Catholic faithful and the community and expressed his “profound sorrow.”

“Many of those victimized as children continue to suffer as survivors from the harm they experience­d,” said the bishop, who was appointed in 2014.

With its announceme­nt, the Harrisburg Diocese became the second of six dioceses under investigat­ion by the state to get out in front of a pending grand jury report on clergy sex abuse. The Erie Diocese released its own findings on clergy abuse in April.

The release of the nearly 900page state grand jury report has been held up by challenges by some priests and former priests. The state Supreme Court ruled last week a version with some names blacked out can be made public as early as next week. The court said it identified more than 300 “predator priests” in the six dioceses.

Gainer said that the Harrisburg Diocese was making public the names of all those who faced allegation­s of child sex abuse but that it did not determine whether they all had merit, though some of those on the list have been convicted of crimes. He said no one on the list is currently in the ministry.

In a public letter, Gainer said shortcomin­gs in past investigat­ions and record-keeping made it difficult in many cases to assess credibilit­y or guilt or even determine the underlying conduct. In a few instances,

people who were cleared of allegation­s by the diocese or police were not listed.

The Harrisburg list includes 37 priests, three deacons and six seminarian­s from the diocese, nine clergy members from other dioceses and 16 from religious communitie­s. Gainer said the conduct was classified as indecent behavior, inappropri­ate behavior such as kissing and inappropri­ate communicat­ion with children.

Most of the allegation­s date from the 1970s, ‘80s and ‘90s, the diocese said.

Gainer said church leadership had failed to protect children by not adequately responding to all the allegation­s of sexual misconduct over the

years.

State Rep. Mark Rozzi, a Democrat from the Reading area, called the decision a step toward transparen­cy and urged Gainer and other church leaders to support legislatio­n to eliminate the statute of limitation­s on civil and criminal child abuse cases.

“They’ve done all this on the heels of the grand jury report coming out. Still, nonetheles­s, they did it and that part is great,” he said. Rozzi, who was sexually abused by a priest as a boy, supports legislatio­n to repeal the time limits on lawsuits and criminal charges, and to establish a two-year window during which lawsuits from past abuse could be filed.

 ??  ??
 ?? MARK SCOLFORO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Most Rev. Ronald Gainer, the Roman Catholic bishop of the diocese of Harrisburg, Pa., discusses child sexual abuse by clergy and a decision by the diocese to remove names of bishops going back to the 1940s after concluding they did not respond adequately to abuse allegation­s, Wednesday during a news conference in Harrisburg, Pa. The bishop apologized to victims and said the diocese is posting an online list of 71 priests and others in the church accused of the abuse. Following the Erie, Pa., diocese, the Harrisburg diocese is the second Pennsylvan­ia diocese to get ahead of a roughly 900-page grand jury report that could be made public in August 2018, which the Pennsylvan­ia Supreme Court said found more than 300 “predator priests” in six of the state’s eight dioceses.
MARK SCOLFORO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Most Rev. Ronald Gainer, the Roman Catholic bishop of the diocese of Harrisburg, Pa., discusses child sexual abuse by clergy and a decision by the diocese to remove names of bishops going back to the 1940s after concluding they did not respond adequately to abuse allegation­s, Wednesday during a news conference in Harrisburg, Pa. The bishop apologized to victims and said the diocese is posting an online list of 71 priests and others in the church accused of the abuse. Following the Erie, Pa., diocese, the Harrisburg diocese is the second Pennsylvan­ia diocese to get ahead of a roughly 900-page grand jury report that could be made public in August 2018, which the Pennsylvan­ia Supreme Court said found more than 300 “predator priests” in six of the state’s eight dioceses.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States