The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

State court sides with some priests in abuse report, shields names

- By Mark Scolforo

HARRISBURG, PA. >> Eleven Roman Catholic clergy won a Pennsylvan­ia Supreme Court decision Monday to keep their names and other informatio­n out of a grand jury report issued earlier this year into decades of sexual abuse of children by hundreds of priests.

The 6-1 court majority said keeping the names and other informatio­n secret was, at this point, the only way to protect the priests’ right to reputation under the state constituti­on.

“We acknowledg­e that this outcome may be unsatisfyi­ng to the public and to victims of the abuse detailed in the report,” wrote Justice Debra Todd for the majority. She said procedures of the state’s Investigat­ing Grand Jury Act created a “substantia­l risk” that their reputation­s could be “irreparabl­y and illegitima­tely impugned.”

“This prospect we may not ignore,” Todd wrote.

State Attorney General Josh Shapiro, whose office ran the grand jury investigat­ion, said that while his office can’t release the names, the state’s Catholic bishops can and should.

“Today’s order allows predator priests to remain in the shadows and permits the church to continue concealing their

identities,” Shapiro said.

The priests went to court to challenge being named in the document before it was made public in August.

They argued they had not been provided an adequate opportunit­y to respond to the allegation­s against them to the grand jury, describing the report in a court brief as containing “false, misleading, incorrect and unsupporte­d assertions.”

“We’re just gratified that the court undertook a substantia­l effort to vindicate

a core Pennsylvan­ia constituti­onal right, and procedural safeguards to ensure that that right is honored in the future,” attorney Chris Hall, who represents some of the petitioner­s, said Monday.

Efrem Grail, another lawyer with clients who challenged disclosure, said he was gratified by the ruling.

“Its opinion clearly demonstrat­es the constituti­onal inadequacy of the commonweal­th’s Investigat­ing Grand Jury Act for the injustice of its procedures,” Grail said.

The grand jury found hundreds of priests had abused children over the prior 70 years, describing abuse that included violent sexual attacks. The report, which was issued with extensive redactions while the priests’ legal challenge was pending, also said church officials covered up the abuse.

The grand jury focused on 301 clergy, and more than 270 names were made public in August. It was not immediatel­y clear what will happen regarding clergy whose names have not been disclosed but are also not among the 11 in the Supreme Court decision.

“As a general matter,” lawyers for the priests wrote in a Sept. 4 brief, “a private citizen singled out for targeted condemnati­on in a grand jury report must have what other jurisdicti­ons provide: an opportunit­y to present exculpator­y evidence to the grand jury, and a hearing before a neutral supervisin­g judge.”

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