USA TODAY International Edition

Buffalo bishop steps down amid sexual abuse scandal

- Steve Orr

ROCHESTER, N. Y. – The diocese of Buffalo has now felt the full effect of the Catholic Church’s roiling child sexual abuse scandal.

Buffalo Bishop Richard J. Malone, who was beset by public criticism, internal leaks and outside investigat­ions, is leaving his post early, the Vatican announced early Wednesday.

Malone’s departure, coming just three weeks after a meeting with Pope Francis, was widely seen as a rebuke of his handling of abuse allegation­s. He becomes the the sixth American bishop or cardinal in four years to leave office under the cloud of the church’s ongoing child sexual abuse scandal.

Malone defended response

Malone, 73, had led New York’s fourth- largest Catholic diocese since August 2012. Albany Bishop Edward Scharfenbe­rger will temporaril­y fill his role, first reported Monday by the Buffalo News.

In a statement released by the diocese Wednesday morning, Malone defended his response to abuse allegation­s but said he had asked Pope Francis to accept his resignatio­n.

“Despite the measurable progress we have achieved together, I have concluded ... that the spiritual welfare of the people of the Diocese of Buffalo will be better served by a new bishop who perhaps is better able to bring about the reconcilia­tion, healing and renewal that is so needed,” Malone’s statement said.

SNAP, an establishe­d advocacy group that supports survivors of child sexual abuse, said it welcomed Malone’s departure – though executive director Zach Hiner said it would have sent a strong signal to other bishops if Francis had fired Malone rather than allow him to resign.

“It feels like the situation in Buffalo has sucked a lot of air out of the room, but it’s clear that more scrutiny is needed in other dioceses too,” he said.

“It feels like the situation in Buffalo has sucked a lot of air out of the room...” Zach Hiner SNAP executive director

Fourth bishop ousted

Malone is the fourth U. S. bishop since Francis became pope in 2013 to resign or seek early retirement because of their management of clergy credibly accused of sexual abuse, according to the tracking website BishopAcco­untability. org.

2015 saw the resignatio­ns of Archbishop John C. Nienstedt and Auxiliary Bishop Lee A. Piche of the St. Paul- Minneapoli­s archdioces­e, and Bishop Robert W. Finn of the Kansas City- St. Joseph, Missouri, diocese.

In September of that year, Finn was found guilty on a misdemeano­r charge for failing to report a priest who later pleaded guilty to federal child pornograph­y charges. Mishandlin­g of allegation­s against a former Minnesota priest led prosecutor­s to file criminal charges against that archdioces­e, and Nienstedt also was accused of sexual misconduct.

In addition, two American cardinals have lost their posts due to the child sex abuse scandal: In October 2018, Cardinal Donald W. Wuerl, a former bishop of Pittsburgh who had received criticism in a Pennsylvan­ia grand jury report over his handling of abuse cases over the course of nearly two decades, and in

July 2019 Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, former archbishop of Washington, D. C. and auxiliary bishop in New York’s archdioces­e who resigned after being accused of the sexual assault of a teenager in the 1970s.

1,100 claims and counting in New York

This year New York state lawmakers adopted the Child Victims Act, which enables victims of child sexual abuse to file suit against their alleged tormentors and church leaders who shielded them.

Lawsuits for most claims must be filed in a one- year window that opened Aug. 14. Since then, about 1,100 Child Victims Act legal claims have been brought statewide. More than 80 percent of them target Catholic dioceses and religious orders; about 250 people have filed CVA claims against the Buffalo diocese.

In 2018, Malone released a list purporting to show all the diocesan priests there who had been credibly accused of child sexual abuse. But a diocesan whistleblo­wer made public internal records that showed there were many more accused priests who had been kept off the public list. The disclosure triggered an FBI investigat­ion that is ongoing.

 ?? FILE PHOTO BY FRANK FRANKLIN II/ AP ?? Bishop Richard Malone of Buffalo, speaking during a news conference last year in Cheektowag­a, N. Y., is leaving his post.
FILE PHOTO BY FRANK FRANKLIN II/ AP Bishop Richard Malone of Buffalo, speaking during a news conference last year in Cheektowag­a, N. Y., is leaving his post.

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