The Mercury News

Vatican adds law on abuse of adults

- By Nicole Winfield

VATICAN CITY >> Pope Francis has changed Catholic Church law to explicitly criminaliz­e the sexual abuse of adults by priests who abuse their authority and to say that laypeople who hold church office also can be sanctioned for similar sex crimes.

The new provisions, released Tuesday after 14 years of study, were contained in the revised criminal law section of the Vatican’s Code of Canon Law, the in-house legal system that covers the 1.3 billionmem­ber Catholic Church and operates independen­tly from civil laws.

The most significan­t changes are contained in two articles, 1395 and 1398, which aim to address shortcomin­gs in the church’s handling of sexual abuse. The law recognizes that adults, not only children, can be victimized by priests who abuse their authority. The revisions also say that laypeople holding church positions, such as school principals or parish economists, can be punished for abusing minors as well as adults.

The Vatican also criminaliz­ed priests “grooming” minors or vulnerable adults to compel them to engage in pornograph­y. The update represents the first time church law has officially recognized as a criminal act the method used by sexual predators to build relationsh­ips with victims they have targeted for sexual exploitati­on.

The new law, which is set to take effect on Dec. 8, also removes much of the discretion that long allowed bishops and religious superiors to ignore or cover up abuse.

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