Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Disgraced religious order tried to get abuse victim to lie

- By Nicole Winfield and María Verza

MILAN >> The cardinal’s response was not what Yolanda Martínez had expected — or could abide.

Her son had been sexually abused by a priest of the Legion of Christ, a disgraced religious order. And now she was calling Cardinal Valasio De Paolis — the Vatican official appointed by the pope to lead the Legion and to clean it up — to report the settlement the group was offering, and to express her outrage.

The terms: Martínez’s family would receive 15,000 euros ($16,300) from the order. But in return, her son would have to recant the testimony he gave to Milan prosecutor­s that the priest had repeatedly assaulted him when he was a 12-yearold student at the order’s youth seminary in northern Italy. He would have to lie.

The cardinal did not seem shocked. He did not share her indignatio­n.

Instead, he chuckled. He said she shouldn’t sign the deal, but should try to work out another agreement without attorneys: “Lawyers complicate things. Even Scripture says that among Christians we should find agreement.”

The conversati­on between the aggrieved mother and Pope Benedict XVI’s personal envoy was wiretapped. The tape — as well as the six-page settlement proposal — are key pieces of evidence in a criminal trial opening next month in Milan. Prosecutor­s allege that Legion lawyers and priests tried to obstruct justice, and extort Martínez’s family by offering them money to recant testimony to prosecutor­s in hopes of quashing a criminal investigat­ion into the abusive priest, Vladimir Reséndiz Gutiérrez.

Lawyers for the five suspects declined to comment. The Legion says they have professed innocence. A spokesman said that at the time, the Legion didn’t have in place the uniform child protection policies and guidelines that are now mandatory across the order.

De Paolis is beyond earthly justice — he died in 2017 and there is no evidence he knew of, or approved, the settlement offer before it was made. But the tape and documents seized when police raided the Legion’s headquarte­rs in 2014 show that he had turned a blind eye to superiors who protected pedophiles.

In addition, the evidence shows that when De Paolis first learned about Reséndiz’s crimes in 2011, he approved an in-house canonical investigat­ion but didn’t report the priest to police. And when he learned two years later that other Legion priests were apparently trying to impede the criminal investigat­ion into his crimes, the pope’s delegate didn’t report that either.

And a few hours after he spoke with Martínez,

De Paolis opened the Legion’s 2014 assembly where he formally ended the mandate given to him by Benedict to reform and purify the religious order. The Legion had been “cured and cleaned,” he said.

In fact, his mission hadn’t really been accomplish­ed.

Benedict had entrusted De Paolis, one of the Vatican’s most respected canon lawyers, to turn the Legion around in 2010, after revelation­s that its founder, the late Rev. Marcial Maciel, had raped his seminarian­s, fathered three children and built a cult-like order to hide his crimes.

There had been calls for the Vatican to suppress the Legion. But Benedict decided against it, apparently determinin­g in part that the order was too big and too rich to fail. Instead, he opted for a process of reform, giving De Paolis the broadest possible powers to rebuild the Legion from the ground up and saying it must undergo a profound process of “purificati­on” and “renewal.”

But De Paolis refused from the start to remove any of Maciel’s old guard, who remain in power today. He refused to investigat­e the cover-up of Maciel’s crimes. He refused to reopen old allegation­s of abuse by other priests, even when serial rapists remained in the Legion’s ranks, unpunished.

More generally, he did not come to grips with the order’s deep-seated culture of sexual abuse, cover-up and secrecy — and its long record of avoiding law enforcemen­t and dismissing, discrediti­ng and silencing victims. As a result, even onetime Legion supporters now openly question his reform, which was dismissed as ineffectiv­e by the Legion’s longtime critics.

“They always try to control victims, minimize them, defame them, accuse them of exaggerati­ng things,” said Alberto Athié, a former Mexican priest who has campaigned for more than 20 years on behalf of clergy sexual abuse victims, including victims of the Legion.

 ?? LUCA BRUNO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Yolanda Martinez Garcia cries during an interview at her home in Milan.
LUCA BRUNO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Yolanda Martinez Garcia cries during an interview at her home in Milan.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States