The Columbus Dispatch

German prosecutor­s examined late pope in abuse probe

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BERLIN – German prosecutor­s looking into historical cases of sexual abuse by clergy in the Munich archdioces­e said Tuesday that they initially investigat­ed the late Pope Benedict XVI on suspicion of being an accessory to abuse, but later dropped the probe.

Munich prosecutor­s examined 45 cases of possible wrongdoing by church officials that arose from a report into how the archdioces­e handled abuse cases between 1945 and 2019.

The then-cardinal Joseph Ratzinger was archbishop there from 1977-1982, and the report by a law firm commission­ed by the archdioces­e and released in January 2022 faulted his handling of four cases during that time.

Benedict, who died in December nearly 10 years after his retirement as pope, asked forgivenes­s for any “grievous faults” in his handling of abuse cases, but denied any personal or specific wrongdoing.

Prosecutor­s said that that “three (at the time) living church personnel managers” were listed as suspects for a time during their investigat­ion, German news agency dpa reported. They were Benedict; Cardinal Friedrich Wetter, his

successor in Munich who served from 1982-2008; and Gerhard Gruber, a former vicar general.

They said that all the proceeding­s were dropped over time because they failed to turn up a “sufficient suspicion of criminal action” by the three. In the two cases in which Ratzinger’s possible involvemen­t was looked at, that was because they fell under the statute of limitation­s, as did any possible accusation­s of being an accessory, dpa reported.

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