Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Diocese lists names of 108 priests accused of child abuse

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The Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn, New York, on Friday published the names of more than 100 priests who have been credibly accused of sexually abusing minors over the diocese’s 166-year-history.

The diocese said that the bulk of cases involved priests ordained between 1930 and 1979 and that there’ve been just two cases since the Catholic Church enacted reforms in 2002.

The diocese said the 108 accused priests represent less than five percent of clergy who’ve served its churches. It said about two-thirds of the people on the list are dead.

“We know this list will generate many emotions for victims who have suffered terribly,” Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio said in a statement. “For their suffering, I am truly sorry.”

Brooklyn’s disclosure follows the release of similar lists by other dioceses around the country. DiMarzio said he hoped having the names public will provide a layer of healing for victims “on their journey toward wholeness.”

In 2004, the diocese started an independen­t hotline that collects abuse reports and sends them directly to local prosecutor­s. In 2017, the diocese establishe­d a compensati­on program for abuse victims.

Last year, the diocese reached a $27.5 million settlement with four men who said they were abused as boys by a volunteer parish worker.

The victims’ lawyers say 67-year-old Angelo Serrano, a lay teacher of religion at St. Lucy’s-St. Patrick’s Church in Brooklyn repeatedly abused the victims between 2003 and 2009.

Serrano is serving a 15year sentence after pleading guilty in 2011 to inappropri­ate course of sexual conduct with a child.

A lawyer for the men, Peter Saghir, said the diocese’s disclosure of the names of accused clergy “is a positive step in the right direction.” But, he said the church should go further by providing the names of others who’ve been accused, such as lay teachers and parochial school faculty.

“Needless to say, the revealing of these names still doesn’t erase the scars and the pain that many of these victims of sexual abuse carry with them through their lives,” said Saghir.

Roman Catholic dioceses in more than two dozen states have named suspected abusers in the wake of a landmark grand jury report last year in Pennsylvan­ia. Nearly 2,000 accused clergy members and others nationwide have been identified, a review by The Associated Press found.

New York’s attorney general is investigat­ed the handling of sex abuse allegation­s in the Roman Catholic church and has issued subpoenas to all eight dioceses in the state.

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