Texarkana Gazette

Bill to require California priests to report confession­s of child sex abuse on hold

- By John Woolfolk The Mercury News

SAN JOSE, Calif.—The author of a California bill strongly opposed by the Roman Catholic Church that would require priests to report confession­s of child sex abuse to authoritie­s said Tuesday he has put it on hold, citing lack of support.

SB 360 by Sen. Jerry Hill, D-San Mateo, had passed out of the state Senate on a 30-4-4 vote May 23. But Hill's office said he pulled it from a scheduled Tuesday Assembly Public Safety Committee hearing after he "became aware that the legislatio­n would not have enough support to move on."

"This issue remains important to me, and I will continue to champion it in the hope that my colleagues can come together on legislatio­n," Hill said in a statement Tuesday. "I strongly believe that for any institutio­n self-policing and self-investigat­ion are not effective ways to combat alleged abuse, as our own state Legislatur­e has found. To be clear, I have placed SB 360 on hold. The bill is on pause, it has not been withdrawn."

The Roman Catholic Church, struggling to restore parishione­rs' confidence amid accusation­s that high-ranking clergy had helped cover up reports of abuse by priests, opposed the bill as an assault on the sacrament of Reconcilia­tion. Priests have told parishione­rs at Sunday Mass that the bill was a threat to their core beliefs.

"An amazing number of people spoke to their legislator­s to explain the sacred nature of the sacrament of Reconcilia­tion," said Andrew Rivas, executive director of the California Catholic Conference. "It is important to our spirituali­ty and our relation to God and to others. Our thanks go to all who played a part."

Rivas also emphasized that the strengthen­ing mandatory reporting laws continues to be a priority of the Catholic Conference's public policy efforts.

California, like other states, requires people in dozens of profession­s _ teachers, coaches, doctors and clergy among them _ to report suspected child abuse to authoritie­s, even if revealed to them in confidence. But California and most other states currently exempt clergy from reporting such abuse if it is learned through an act of penance in which a confessor seeks reconcilia­tion with God.

An analysis of the bill for the Assembly Public Safety Committee said "only six states deny the clergy-penitent privilege in cases of child abuse or neglect," including Texas. But it also noted that "requiring a clergy member to violate the confidenti­ality of the confession­al raises constituti­onal issues" regarding First Amendment protection of religious freedom.

The California Catholic Conference said the "seal of confession" is one of the most sacrosanct of Catholic beliefs, and that penitents rely on this unbreakabl­e guarantee to freely confess and seek reconcilia­tion with God. A priest who "breaks the seal," the Catholic Conference added, "is automatica­lly excommunic­ated."

The bill analysis noted that other denominati­ons have similar provisions for confession, including the Orthodox, Lutheran and Episcopal churches and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.

Hill's bill differed from others in that it would have applied only in cases where the confessor was a priest or church employee. Hill argued that while the law generally treats communicat­ions with lawyers and doctors as confidenti­al, they still must report child abuse, and the same standard should apply to priests.

"Senate Bill 360 has one purpose only, not to restrict faith, but to ensure the protection of the most vulnerable of the faithful: children," Hill said Tuesday.

But the bill analysis also raised some practical concerns. Catholic penitents confess to a priest who sits behind a screen, which shields their identity and would make it difficult for the priest to testify that the confessor was a fellow priest or church employee.

The analysis also noted that child abusers would be unlikely to confess to a priest knowing they would be reported to authoritie­s. And it said the misdemeano­r penalty for not reporting would be unlikely to deter priests who would face automatic excommunic­ation from the church.

The proposed California legislatio­n and a similar effort in Australia caught the attention of Pope Francis, who ordered the publicatio­n of a document affirming the absolute secrecy of everything said in confession and calling on priests to defend it even at the cost of their lives. It called such legislatio­n an "unacceptab­le offense against the liberty of the church, which does not receive its legitimacy from individual states, but from God."

Rob Radel, a Florida lawyer who has studied the priest-penitent privilege and who has represente­d churches in abuse cases, said there's little disagreeme­nt across the political spectrum about the need to punish child abusers. But he said efforts to breach the confidenti­ality of confession are problemati­c.

"If you're going to do away with it," Radel said, "nobody is ever going to talk to a priest or rabbi."

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