Baltimore Sun

Church sex abuse probe nears end

Attorney general’s report on Catholic archdioces­e could cover 80-year period

- By Lee O. Sanderlin and Jonathan M. Pitts

The Maryland Attorney General’s Office’s four-year investigat­ion into the Archdioces­e of Baltimore’s history of child sexual abuse at the hands of Catholic priests is almost finished.

A spokespers­on for Attorney General Brian Frosh told The Baltimore Sun the investigat­ion is “nearing completion,” but declined to share details. A criminal investigat­or for the office, former FBI agent Richard Wolf, has contacted many abuse survivors in recent weeks to tell them the report is close to done.

In 2018, the office issued a grand jury subpoena to the archdioces­e for records, and Archbishop William E. Lori told clergy the state was investigat­ing. Ultimately, the archdioces­e turned over more than 100,000 pages of documents to Wolf and Special Assistant Attorney General Elizabeth Embry.

The attorney general’s report, when finalized, is expected to detail child sexual abuse going back more than 80 years.

It’s unclear whether the investigat­ion will lead to criminal charges. There is no statute of limitation­s on felony crimes in Maryland, but for someone to be charged in an abuse case, what’s alleged to have happened must have been classified a crime at the time it was committed.

A spokespers­on for the archdioces­e issued a written statement to The Sun apologizin­g for past abuse.

“The Archdioces­e recognizes that the release of a report on child sexual abuse over many decades would undoubtedl­y be a source of renewed pain for survivors of abuse and their loved ones, as well as for the faithful of the Archdioces­e,” church spokespers­on Christian Kendziersk­i wrote.

“We again offer our profound apologies to all who were harmed by a minister of the church and assure them of our heartfelt prayers for their continued healing. The Archdioces­e remains committed to pastoral outreach to those who have been harmed as well as to protect children in the present and future.”

Because many of the records used in the investigat­ion were obtained by way of the grand jury subpoena, the finished report may not be able to be released in its entirety without the attorney general’s office asking a circuit court judge’s permission. Maryland law requires all grand jury records be kept secret.

Asked if the church would oppose such a request, Kendziersk­i told The Sun in an email: “The Archdioces­e will continue to cooperate with any legal processes relating to the attorney general’s investigat­ion.”

Voice of the Faithful, an independen­t organizati­on of lay Catholics founded in 2002 in response to the church’s sexual abuse crises, recently released a report that ranked the Baltimore archdioces­e third among U.S. dioceses and archdioces­es in complying with the church’s child protection guidelines.

Lori, who has served as archbishop in Baltimore since 2012, is currently one of 10 leading clergy being considered as the next president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. The bishops gathered Monday in Baltimore for their annual meeting and plan to vote Tuesday on their leader for the next three years.

Although the attorney general’s office declined to comment on either the report’s pending release or any ancillary legal issues, abuse survivors who have long awaited Frosh’s findings told The Sun they expect it soon.

For years, survivors were kept in limbo with virtually no new informatio­n about the investigat­ion released publicly.

Survivor Jean Wehner was featured in the 2017 Netflix series “The Keepers,” which documented allegation­s of sexual abuse by the late priest A. Joseph Maskell at Archbishop Keough High School in the 1960s and 1970s, and the unsolved 1969 killing of Sister Catherine Ann Cesnik, a nun

who taught there.

After more than four years, Wehner said she was “on the verge of giving up hope” that Frosh’s report would be forthcomin­g. She, other survivors and their attorney recently requested a meeting with officials in the attorney general’s office for an update, but received no response.

Wehner said Wolf called her at work Thursday to tell her the report was in the process of “being wrapped up,” and that his office hoped to release it by Thanksgivi­ng. She said he told her that if it wasn’t made public by then, it would be out by early December.

“To be honest, I felt very numb,” when she first got the news, Wehner said. Its import began sinking in over the weekend. What moved her most, she said, was knowing that if the report is “what it should be,” its release could cause abusers and potential abusers to think twice about their actions — and encourage more survivors to come forward.

Frosh, a Democrat, plans to retire in January after two four-year terms in office. Voters last week elected Democratic U.S. Rep. Anthony Brown to replace him.

David Lorenz, president of the Maryland chapter of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, previously voiced frustratio­n that the report was so long in coming. He said it was encouragin­g to receive the latest news.

“For four years we had no idea whether things were moving at all. But now we know there’s a report,” said Lorenz, who said a Catholic priest abused him during his teens in Kentucky. “We certainly hope it will be expedited through the legal system.”

Lorenz said he hopes the report sheds light on the problem of clergy abuse, as well as what he called “the cover-up efforts of the diocese of Baltimore.”

Just as important, he said it will “vindicate the stories that survivors have been telling people for years now, but that the public has not always believed.” Like Wehner, he hoped it would encourage others “who have been holding onto this secret in their lives, sometimes for many years,” to come forward, “because now they know they have an ally.”

Of the new attorney general, Lorenz said: “I hope he’ll continue the investigat­ion at a higher level. It needs to continue.”

 ?? AMY DAVIS/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Mary Corzine, from left, of Silver Spring, Judy Lorenz, of Bowie, Teresa Lancaster, of Edgewater, and David Lorenz, of Bowie, survivors and advocates for abuse victims from the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, gather outside the Maryland Attorney General’s Office.
AMY DAVIS/BALTIMORE SUN Mary Corzine, from left, of Silver Spring, Judy Lorenz, of Bowie, Teresa Lancaster, of Edgewater, and David Lorenz, of Bowie, survivors and advocates for abuse victims from the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, gather outside the Maryland Attorney General’s Office.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States