The Sentinel-Record

Bishops request Vatican investigat­ion as abuse crisis grows

- DAVID CRARY

NEW YORK — Responding to what it calls a “moral catastroph­e,” the leading body of U.S. Catholic leaders said Thursday it would ask the Vatican to investigat­e the scandal involving a former cardinal who allegedly engaged in sexual misconduct with children and adult seminarian­s.

The request by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops for an investigat­ion into the actions of Theodore McCarrick came as the Vatican expressed “shame and sorrow” over a grand jury investigat­ion this week that found rampant sexual abuse of more than 1,000 children by about 300 priests is six Pennsylvan­ia dioceses over a 70-year period. Vatican spokesman Greg Burke said that victims should know “the pope is on their side.”

The Pennsylvan­ia scandal and the damaging allegation­s about McCarrick — one of the most influentia­l Catholics in the country — have engulfed the church in scandal reminiscen­t of what happened in Boston with clergy sex abuse in the 2000s.

The conference president, Cardinal Daniel DiNardo of Galveston-Houston, said a full investigat­ion is necessary “to prevent a recurrence, and so help to protect minors, seminarian­s, and others who are vulnerable in the future.”

Using formal church terminolog­y for high-level Vatican investigat­ions, DiNardo said he would travel to Rome and ask the Vatican to conduct an “apostolic visitation” to address the McCarrick case, working in concert with a group of predominan­tly lay experts.

DiNardo also deplored the findings of the grand jury report and said the bishops would work to create a new process to review allegation­s of misconduct by bishops.

“We are faced with a spiritual crisis that requires not only spiritual conversion, but practical changes to avoid repeating the sins and failures of the past,” DiNardo said. “I have no illusions about the degree to which trust in the bishops has been damaged by these past sins and failures.”

Any in-depth investigat­ion of the McCarrick case is likely to shed light on the timetable for when senior Catholic officials in the U.S. and at the Vatican know about the multiple allegation­s against McCarrick. Some U.S. Catholics sought to warn Vatican officials about McCarrick in 2000, but he was still appointed Washington archbishop and made a cardinal in 2001.

If the accusation­s against McCarrick are substantia­ted, that could confront Pope Francis with major decisions in terms of possible punishment­s.

McCarrick, the 88-year-old retired archbishop of Washington and confidante to three popes, was ordered removed from the public ministry by Francis in June. The sanction was issued pending a full investigat­ion into a “credible” allegation that he fondled a teenager more than 40 years ago in New York City.

Cardinal resignatio­ns are extremely rare, and McCarrick’s was the first time a prelate had lost his cardinal’s rank in a sexual abuse scandal.

There were also calls Thursday for the resignatio­n of Cardinal Donald Wuerl, who replaced McCarrick and also served in Pennsylvan­ia when some of the abuse allegedly occurred.

The release of the Pennsylvan­ia report this week worsened the crisis for the church, with dozens of examples of shocking abuse committed against children by priests.

Burke said Pope Francis is committed to reform and “those who have suffered are his priority, and the church wants to listen to them to root out this tragic horror that destroys the lives of the innocent.”

In the bishops’ statement, the council acknowledg­ed that “one root cause is the failure of episcopal leadership. The result was that scores of beloved children of God were abandoned to face an abuse of power alone. This is a moral catastroph­e. It is also part of this catastroph­e that so many faithful priests who are pursuing holiness and serving with integrity are tainted by this failure.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? GROWING CRISIS: The Most Rev. Joseph C. Bambera, Bishop of the Diocese of Scranton, discusses the release of the 40th statewide investigat­ing grand jury clergy sex abuse report that identifies 59 religious leaders in his diocese, during a press conference Tuesday in Scranton, Pa.
The Associated Press GROWING CRISIS: The Most Rev. Joseph C. Bambera, Bishop of the Diocese of Scranton, discusses the release of the 40th statewide investigat­ing grand jury clergy sex abuse report that identifies 59 religious leaders in his diocese, during a press conference Tuesday in Scranton, Pa.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States