The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Vatican to release report on U.S. ex-Cardinal

Theodore McCarrick accused of offenses spanning decades

- By Nicole Winfield

ROME » The Vatican on Tuesday will release its report into the rise and fall of ex-Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, the once-influentia­l American cardinal who was defrocked by Pope Francis in 2019 after a Vatican investigat­ion confirmed decades of rumors that he was a sexual predator.

The McCarrick scandal is different from other cases of clergy abuse, primarily because there is evidence that Vatican and U.S. church leaders knew of his penchant for bedding seminarian­s but turned a blind eye as McCarrick rose to the top of the U.S. church as an adept fundraiser who advised three popes.

W hen Mc C a r r ick ’s crimes were revealed, the scandal sparked such a crisis of confidence in the church’s U.S. and Vatican hierarchie­s that Francis approved new procedures to investigat­e bishops accused of abuse in a bid to end decades of impunity for Catholic leaders.

But beyond that, the McCarrick case has forced the Vatican to acknowledg­e that adults can be victims of sexual abuse, too. The Vatican has long tried to paint any sexual relations between priests and adult men or women as consensual, focusing its prevention policies on protecting minors.

But as a bishop, McCarrick held all the power in his relationsh­ips with his seminarian­s: to refuse his sexual advances or report his misconduct could have spelled an end to their priestly vocations and careers in the church. The Vatican’s new policies, enacted as a response to the McCarrick scandal, spell out that abuse can happen when anyone is forced “to perform or submit to sexual acts” through abuses of authority by church leaders.

Here is what we know about the McCarrick case ahead of the release of the Vatican report:

WHAT’S IT ALL ABOUT?

The archdioces­e of New York announced on June 20, 2018 that it had determined that an allegation that McCarrick sexually molested a minor was “credible and substantia­ted.” The allegation was lodged by a former altar boy who said McCarrick fondled him when he was a teenager during preparatio­ns for Christmas Mass in St. Patrick’s Cathedral in 1971 and 1972. The allegation was the first against McCarrick involving a minor, and as such triggered the investigat­ion.

On the same day, McCarrick’s former dioceses of Newark and Metuchen, New Jersey, revealed they had settled two of three allegation­s of sexual misconduct by McCarrick involving adults in 2005 and 2007. Subsequent­ly, James Grein came forward detailing the abuse he suffered at the hands of McCarrick, a family friend, starting when he was 11. Other former seminarian­s have since described the harassment and abuse they endured while “Uncle Ted,” as McCarrick liked to call himself, was their bishop in New Jersey, forced to sleep in his bed during weekend trips to his beach house.

McCarrick, 90, was defrocked last year after the Vatican determined he sexually abused adults and children, including during confession.

MCCARRICK’S RESPONSE

McCarrick has said he was innocent of the fondling accusation but accepted the pope’s sanctions.

“While I have absolutely no recollecti­on of this reported abuse, and believe in my innocence, I am sorry for the pain the person who brought the charges has gone through, as well as for the scandal such charges cause our people,” he said in a statement June 20, 2018 after the initial fondling allegation­s were substantia­ted.

In a 2008 email McCarrick sent to the Vatican, he denied ever having sexual relations with anyone but said he had shown an “unfortunat­e lack of judgment” for having shared his bed with seminarian­s.

VIGANO’S BOMBSHELL:

The McCarrick scandal took on greater dimensions on Aug. 26, 2018 when the former Vatican ambassador to the U.S., Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano, published an 11-page expose accusing two dozen U.S. and Vatican churchmen by name of knowing about McCarrick’s misconduct since at least 2000 and hiding it. Vigano cited the case of one former seminarian who in 1994 wrote a lengthy letter to his bishop detailing McCarrick’s sexual abuse of him and others — a document that would have been turned over to the Vatican at the very least in 2004 when the man was defrocked.

Vigano demanded Francis resign, saying he had told the pope in 2013 during one of their first meetings that McCarrick has “corrupted generation­s of seminarian­s and priests, and Pope Benedict ordered him to withdraw to a life of prayer and penance.”

VATICAN’S RESPONSE

Francis initially refused to comment, but later authorized a Vatican investigat­ion into its archives to determine who knew what and when about McCarrick, the result of which is being released Tuesday.

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