Marysville Appeal-Democrat

California has investigat­ed Catholic priest sex abuse for years. Victims want answers on what they found

- Tribune News Service Bay Area News Group

After Pennsylvan­ia authoritie­s issued a bombshell report in 2018 detailing widespread sexual abuse of children and coverup in the

Roman Catholic church, California’s attorney general invited victims here to share their stories. The next year, the state subpoenaed half of California’s Roman Catholic dioceses.

What California authoritie­s have learned since remains a mystery.

And for victims of longago abuse seeking justice in the courts while the state’s dioceses increasing­ly seek bankruptcy protection, the silence is a growing aggravatio­n — especially as other states, notably Illinois and Maryland, recently issued their own reports, revealing a devastatin­g past of abuse by hundreds of clergy of thousands of children.

“The public deserves to know what you have already uncovered,” SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, said in a letter Wednesday to California Attorney General Rob Bonta.

“We urge you to release a report, or at least a preliminar­y report, about what you have found concerning child sexual abuse in the church in California.”

Bonta’s office did not respond Wednesday.

The attorney general’s office, which was under Xavier Becerra when the subpoenas were issued in 2019, has for years declined to confirm or deny that an investigat­ion of sex abuse in the Roman Catholic

Church is underway.

Like California, the Illinois and Maryland attorney general also began their investigat­ion of Catholic clergy child sex abuse after the 2018 Pennsylvan­ia report, which found more than

300 clerics in multiple dioceses had abused more than 1,000 children over 70 years.

On May 23, Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul — who, like Bonta, took over an ongoing probe begun by a predecesso­r — released a nearly 700-page report on Catholic clergy child sex abuse. At the time its investigat­ion began, only two dioceses had identified 103 credibly accused priests. The report found 451 Catholic clerics and religious brothers had abused at least 1,997 children across the state’s dioceses.

On April 4, Maryland Attorney General Anthony Brown released a report on an investigat­ion begun in 2018 that found 156 Catholic priests and others associated with the Archdioces­e of Baltimore had sexually abused more than 600 children over 80 years, often continuing after victims reported the abuse.

Similar probes by other state attorneys general, including in New York, are pending. New York did sue the Diocese of Buffalo in 2020, alleging it protected accused priests by quietly removing them from ministry. Last October, Attorney General Letitia James reached a settlement requiring that diocese to report complaints of clergy sexual abuse through a court-ordered compliance program for five years.

The shocking breadth of the Catholic Church’s sex abuse scandal began to surface through lawsuits and law enforcemen­t reports across the country and around the world in the 1980s and 1990s, before erupting in 2002 following reports in the Boston Globe about widespread clergy sex abuse in the Archdioces­e of Boston.

Later that year, U.S. bishops adopted the the “Dallas Charter” for the protection of children, revised several times since, committing to a “zero tolerance” policy for priests credibly accused of abusing kids, and requiring mandatory reporting to civil authoritie­s.

But dioceses are still confrontin­g waves of litigation over decades-old abuse of children who are now in late middle-age — by clerics who have since died or retired long ago. A California law, AB 218, signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom, allowed older victims to file civil claims over a three-year period from 2020 through 2022 that otherwise would be barred by the statute of limitation­s.

The law has led to a torrent of lawsuits filed not only against the Catholic Church and other religious organizati­ons, but also youth programs, from sports leagues to the Boy Scouts. According to SNAP, nearly 1,600 cases have been filed against the eight dioceses in northern California, which are being handled in Alameda County Superior Court.

The alleged abuse in those claims involves more than 300 California parishes and 30 parochial high schools.

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