The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

U.S. bishops: Sex claims show U.S. cardinal’s ‘moral failure’

- By Gillian Flaccus

The president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops said Wednesday that sex abuse allegation­s against former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick dating back decades raise serious questions about how the claims could stay secret for so long as the retired archbishop from Washington, D.C., rose in prestige and power.

Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo said the allegation­s against his former colleague reveal a “grievous moral failure” and urged anyone who has experience­d sexual abuse at the hands of the church to come forward. DiNardo reminded bishops in the United States to take those reports seriously and contact the police when required.

“Both the abuses themselves, and the fact that they have remained undisclose­d for decades, have caused great harm to people’s lives and represent grave moral failures of judgment on the part of church leaders,” he said in a statement.

“One way or another, we are determined to find the truth in this matter,” said DiNardo, who is also the archbishop of Galveston-Houston, in Texas.

The statement comes as church officials deal with abuse issues anew, more than a decade after the biggest mass clergy abuse settlement­s in U.S. history and the release of tens of thousands of documents that were long sealed in priest personnel files.

In an open letter Tuesday, a contributo­r to the conservati­ve Catholic magazine First Things urged Catholics to withhold donations to the U.S. church until an independen­t investigat­ion determines which U.S. bishops knew about McCarrick’s misdeeds — a “nuclear option” aimed at making church members’ sense of betrayal heard.

In Pennsylvan­ia, a Roman Catholic diocese on Wednesday identified 71 priests and other members of the church who had been accused of child sex abuse and said it was holding accountabl­e the bishops who led the church for the past 70 years, announcing that their names will be stripped from all church properties.

McCarrick, the Washington archbishop from 2000 to 2006, was previously one of the highest, most visible Catholic Church officials in the United States and was heavily involved in the church’s yearslong response to allegation­s of priest abuse.

Pope Francis ordered the 88-year-old removed from public ministry on June 20 after a church panel determined that allegation­s he sexually abused a teenager in New York more than 40 years ago were “credible and substantia­ted.”

The former altar boy alleged that McCarrick, then a priest, fondled him during preparatio­ns for Christmas Mass at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in 1971 and 1972.

 ?? ROBERT FRANKLIN — SOUTH BEND TRIBUNE VIA AP, FILE ?? In this file photo, Cardinal Theodore Edgar McCarrick speaks during a memorial service in South Bend, Ind. The president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops said Wednesday that sex abuse allegation­s against the ex-Cardinal dating back decades...
ROBERT FRANKLIN — SOUTH BEND TRIBUNE VIA AP, FILE In this file photo, Cardinal Theodore Edgar McCarrick speaks during a memorial service in South Bend, Ind. The president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops said Wednesday that sex abuse allegation­s against the ex-Cardinal dating back decades...

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