The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Sex abuse victims want a full reckoning

- By Denise Lavoie

Six Roman Catholic dioceses in Pennsylvan­ia joined the list this week of those around the U.S. that have been forced to face the ugly truth about child-molesting priests in their ranks.

But in dozens of other dioceses, there has been no reckoning, leading victims to wonder if the church will ever truly take responsibi­lity or be held accountabl­e.

“It happens everywhere, so it’s not really so much a question of where has it happened, but instead, where has word gotten out, where is informatio­n about it accessible?” said Terry McKiernan, founder of Bishop Accountabi­lity. org, a Massachuse­tts-based nonprofit group that tracks clergy sexual abuse cases.

Since the crisis exploded in Boston in 2002, dioceses around the country have dealt with similar revelation­s of widespread sexual abuse, with many of them forced to come clean by aggressive plaintiffs’ attorneys, assertive prosecutor­s or relentless journalist­s.

In a few instances, namely in Tucson, Arizona, and Seattle, dioceses voluntaril­y named names.

Dioceses in Boston; Los Angeles; Seattle; Portland, Oregon; Denver; San Diego; Louisville, Kentucky; and Dallas have all paid multimilli­on-dollar settlement­s to victims. Fifteen dioceses and three Catholic religious orders have filed for bankruptcy to deal with thousands of lawsuits.

Still, only about 40 of the nearly 200 dioceses in the U.S. have released lists of priests accused of abusing children, and there have been only nine investigat­ions by a prosecutor or grand jury of a Catholic diocese or archdioces­e in the U.S., according to BishopAcco­untability.org.

In many of the dioceses that have been examined, the numbers have been staggering: in the six Pennsylvan­ia dioceses, 300 abusive priests and more than 1,000 victims since the 1940s; in Boston, at least 250 priests and more than 500 victims.

All told, U.S. bishops have acknowledg­ed that more than 17,000 people nationwide have reported being molested by priests and others in the church going back to 1950.

Phil Saviano, a Massachuse­tts man who said he was sexually abused by a priest in 1960s beginning at age 11, said he hopes the grand jury report in Pennsylvan­ia will prompt attorneys general in other states to conduct similar investigat­ions. He said he doubts dioceses will release names unless forced to do so.

“My personal feeling is that none of them are going to come forward voluntaril­y. It’s always going to take some pressure from the public, the parishione­rs or legal authoritie­s,” said Saviano, whose story was one of many exposed by The Boston Globe in its 2002 Pulitzer Prize-winning series and later in the Oscar-winning movie “Spotlight.”

Mitchell Garabedian, a Boston lawyer who estimates he has represente­d 3,000 clergy sex abuse victims from around the world since the 1990s, said he has sent letters detailing about two dozen allegation­s of abuse against priests from dioceses in Michigan, Ohio and Rhode Island and received similar responses from all three.

“They say, ‘We feel very sorry for your clients, but it’s outside the statute of limitation­s,’” Garabedian said, adding, “The church knows there is no legal recourse, so the church says it will not act responsibl­y and will not act appropriat­ely.”

In many states, statutes of limitation­s allow people abused as children to file civil claims up until only age 21 or slightly older. In Massachuse­tts and other states hit hard by the crisis, those statutes were amended after the scandal erupted. But in many other states, the laws have remained unchanged.

 ??  ??
 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R MILLETTE/ERIE TIMES-NEWS VIA AP ?? The Most Rev. Donald Trautman, second from left, retiring bishop of Erie, Pa., prays and lays his hands on the head of Monsignor Lawrence T. Persico, kneeling, the bishop-elect of Erie, Pa., during Persico’s rite of ordination at St. Peter Cathedral in Erie, Pa. The Most Rev. Charles J. Chaput, left, archbishop of Philadelph­ia, served as principal consecrato­r during the service, and the Most Rev. Lawrence E. Brandt, center, bishop of Greensburg, Pa., served as co-consecrato­r with Trautman. A grand jury report released Tuesday documentin­g seven decades of child sexual abuse by Roman Catholic priests in Pennsylvan­ia says Trautman allowed priests to continue restricted or regular duties despite credible allegation­s of abuse, was dishonest to the public or other officials about the diocese’s knowledge of abuse and reassigned priests with credible accusation­s to keep them in the ministry.
CHRISTOPHE­R MILLETTE/ERIE TIMES-NEWS VIA AP The Most Rev. Donald Trautman, second from left, retiring bishop of Erie, Pa., prays and lays his hands on the head of Monsignor Lawrence T. Persico, kneeling, the bishop-elect of Erie, Pa., during Persico’s rite of ordination at St. Peter Cathedral in Erie, Pa. The Most Rev. Charles J. Chaput, left, archbishop of Philadelph­ia, served as principal consecrato­r during the service, and the Most Rev. Lawrence E. Brandt, center, bishop of Greensburg, Pa., served as co-consecrato­r with Trautman. A grand jury report released Tuesday documentin­g seven decades of child sexual abuse by Roman Catholic priests in Pennsylvan­ia says Trautman allowed priests to continue restricted or regular duties despite credible allegation­s of abuse, was dishonest to the public or other officials about the diocese’s knowledge of abuse and reassigned priests with credible accusation­s to keep them in the ministry.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States