The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)
Abuse prevention experts: Red flag raised
At first glance, the handwritten postcards and letters look innocuous, even warm, sometimes signed off by ”Uncle T.“or ”Your uncle, Father Ted.“
But taken in context, the correspondence penned by disgraced exCardinal Theodore McCarrick to the young men he is accused of sexually abusing or harassing is a window into the way a predator grooms his prey, according to two abuse prevention experts who reviewed it for The Associated Press. Full of flattery, familiarity and boasts about his own power, the letters provide visceral evidence of how a globetrotting bishop made young, vulnerable men feel special and then allegedly took advantage of them.
The AP is exclusively publishing correspondence McCarrick wrote to three men ahead of the promised release of the Vatican’s own report into who knew what and when about his efforts to bed wouldbe priests. Access to an archbishop for young men seeking to become priests ”is a key piece of the grooming process here,“said one of the experts, Monica Applewhite.
Pope Francis defrocked McCarrick, 89, in February after a church investigation determined he sexually abused minors as well as adult seminarians. The case has created a credibility crisis for the Catholic hierarchy , since McCarrick’s misconduct was reported to some U.S. and Vatican higherups, but he nevertheless remained an influential cardinal until his downfall last year.
McCarrick has declined to comment on his case, except to say in an initial statement last year that he was innocent but accepted the Holy See’s decision to remove him from ministry. McCarrick lawyer J. Michael Ritty declined to comment on the correspondence.