Los Angeles Times

Cleric quits amid scandal

Pope accepts the resignatio­n of D.C. archbishop accused of covering up abuse.

- By Tom Kington Kington is a special correspond­ent.

ROME — Pope Francis has accepted the resignatio­n of Cardinal Donald Wuerl, the archbishop of Washington, D.C., following a series of accusation­s that the American prelate covered up sexual abuse abuse within the Roman Catholic Church.

Wuerl, 77, one of the most prominent leaders to be swept up in the church scandal, has been under pressure to quit since August, when a damning grand jury investigat­ion of abuse in Pennsylvan­ia was released. It accused Wuerl, the former bishop of Pittsburgh, of covering up abuse and ignoring the harassment of seminarian­s by his predecesso­r as archbishop of Washington, Theodore McCarrick.

But on Friday, Pope Francis, while accepting his resignatio­n, appeared to absolve Wuerl of guilt, suggesting he had merely made “mistakes” and asked him to stay on the job until a successor could be found.

“You have sufficient elements to ‘justify’ your actions and distinguis­h between what it means to cover up crimes, or not to deal with the problems and commit some mistakes,” Francis wrote in a letter to Wuerl, which was published by his archdioces­e.

By resigning, Wuerl was putting “God’s Project first,” Francis wrote, adding, “I am proud and thank you.”

He then said, “I ask you to remain as Apostolic Administra­tor of the Archdioces­e until the appointmen­t of your successor.”

Wuerl has been a key supporter of Francis in the U.S. as conservati­ve opposition mounts to the pope’s mercyover-dogma style. The cardinal has himself been criticized by conservati­ve Catholics for declining to refuse Communion to pro-choice politician­s.

During his career Wuerl forged a reputation as a reformer determined to halt sex abuse in the church and fought against a reluctant Vatican to defrock a predator priest, Anthony Cipolla, in the 1980s when he was bishop of Pittsburgh.

But the grand jury report this year documentin­g abuse by more than 300 priests over decades in Pennsylvan­ia named Wuerl 200 times, suggesting he was guilty of covering up for offenders during his tenure in Pittsburgh from 1998 to 2006, and for moving accused priests to new posts where they could commit abuse again.

In August, Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano, a former nuncio to the U.S., accused Wuerl of knowing that McCarrick was inviting young seminarian­s into his bed and doing nothing about it.

Vigano said he found it “laughable” when Wuerl claimed to be unaware of McCarrick’s behavior.

McCarrick resigned from the College of Cardinals in July, the first cardinal to do so in a century.

Wuerl first offered his resignatio­n to Francis when he turned 75, the normal retirement age for bishops, but was kept on. He resubmitte­d his resignatio­n on Sept. 21 as his parishione­rs called for him to step down.

The Vatican’s brief announceme­nt Friday that Francis had accepted Wuerl’s resignatio­n came in the midst of a Vatican synod that has drawn bishops from around the world, and two days before the canonizati­on at the Vatican of assassinat­ed Salvadoran priest Oscar Romero and Pope Paul VI.

Wuerl said in a statement Friday that Francis’ decision to accept his resignatio­n “can allow all of the faithful, clergy, religious and lay, to focus on healing and the future.”

He added, “Once again for any past errors in judgment I apologize and ask for pardon.”

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