The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Diocese names board to oversee sex abuse allegation­s

Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown has appointed a five-member board to oversee its handling of child sex abuse allegation­s against clergy

- By Joe Mandak

A Roman Catholic diocese has appointed a five-member board to oversee its handling of child sex abuse allegation­s against clergy as part of an agreement with the federal prosecutor who oversees western Pennsylvan­ia.

Acting U.S. Attorney Soo Song announced the agreement in March with Altoona-Johnstown Bishop Mark Bartchak after a state grand jury alleged a decadeslon­g abuse coverup. Song’s predecesso­r had threatened to sue the eight-county central Pennsylvan­ia diocese under a federal racketeeri­ng statute if reforms weren’t enacted.

Song and Bartchak on Thursday announced the names of the board members.

The board will be chaired by James W. Brown, former chief of staff to Democratic Sen. Bob Casey and his father, Democratic former Gov. Bob Casey. The other members are Walter “Pete” Carson, a former state police investigat­or; Eileen Dombo, a professor and assistant dean at The Catholic University of America; Mary Herwig, an abuse victim turned advocate; and J. Alan Johnson, a former U.S. attorney who is perhaps best known for his prosecutio­n of cocaine traffickin­g in Major League Baseball in an investigat­ion that centered on the Pittsburgh Pirates clubhouse in the 1980s.

The reform agreement also required the church to hire an outside expert to develop a new sex abuse prevention program for its priests, which it already has done.

Song has said Bartchak and the diocese worked with her office on the reforms. The collaborat­ion is similar to those undertaken in other U.S. dioceses, though that was usually in partnershi­p with state prosecutor­s.

A year ago, Pennsylvan­ia’s attorney general issued a scathing grand jury report detailing abuse by more than 50 priests and other clergy against hundreds of children going back decades while the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese was under different leadership. The grand jury did not accuse Bartchak of wrongdoing but found “the purge of predators is taking too long.”

The diocese seated in Altoona, about 90 miles (145 kilometers) east of Pittsburgh, is home to nearly 100,000 Catholics.

Under the Song-Bartchak agreement, the diocese must report credible abuse allegation­s to law enforcemen­t within 12 hours, immediatel­y take accused priests out of positions where they have contact with minors and place them on leave within 24 hours.

The diocese is also publishing the names, photos and assignment­s of diocesan priests who are subject to credible allegation­s, so the public knows who they are.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States