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Catholic Church Sexual Abuse Scandal

Why the Roman Catholic Church still struggles with sexual abuse scandals

Bishop Ronald Gainer of the Catholic Diocese of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, held a Mass of Forgiveness on Aug. 17, 2018, three days after the release of a sweeping grand jury report on clergy abuse around the state.

In an internal diocese memo from Erie in northwestern Pennsylvania, a priest admitted to being “aroused” while tutoring a boy, hugging him and sharing sexually suggestive text messages with multiple boys.

The priest’s bishop admonished him to “cease and desist,” but Catholic Church leaders didn’t pass that information along to authorities until six years later – and only then in response to a grand jury subpoena. 

The Rev. David Poulson resigned from the diocese this past February, three months before he was charged with sexually abusing two boys.

Poulson’s case is an example of how abuse and cover-up continue to plague the Catholic Church, even after the scandal first exploded into the national consciousness 16 years ago in Boston. Since then, the church has vowed to reform and paid out billions of dollars of parishioners' tithes to victims. 

► Aug. 17:'Go home, be a good priest': How 25 bishops responded to sex abuse
► Aug. 17:Faithful pray for priest abuse victims at Mass of Forgiveness

In March, a Vatican tribunal found the archbishop of Guam, Anthony Apuron, guilty of “certain accusations” involving the sexual abuse of minors.

In July, Pope Francis accepted the resignation of retired Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, former archbishop of Washington, D.C., who was accused of sexually abusing a minor 47 years ago.

A women prays before leaving St. Patrick Cathedral in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, after a Mass of Forgiveness.

And in Pennsylvania, Poulson was one of the 301 predator priests identified in a sweeping grand jury report released Tuesday that detailed child sexual abuse in six Pennsylvania Catholic dioceses and religious leaders' efforts to cover it up. The investigation identified more than 1,000 victims.

“There is an entrenched infrastructure of secrecy in the Catholic Church that continues to reward concealment rather than disclosure,” said Anne Barrett Doyle of BishopAccountablity.org, a group that collects data and researches sex abuse in the church.

Much still remains hidden about clergy sex abuse across the USA, she said. That is why the Catholic Church continues to struggle with it.

Most of Tuesday’s grand jury report, one of the most extensive public accountings of abuse within the Catholic Church to date, deals with events before the early 2000s. And the report points to promising signs in the past 16 years, saying victims “are no longer quite so invisible.”

The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops adopted the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People in 2002. It set procedures for addressing allegations of clergy sexual abuse of minors and came after The Boston Globe's investigation into priest abuse and the ensuing national crisis.

Still, the scandals and cover-ups have continued. In multiple states, the church has resisted efforts to reform statute of limitations laws to allow people abused as children, sometimes decades ago, to seek compensation through civil lawsuits.

► Aug. 16:After 2 days of silence, Vatican condemns priest sex abuse
► Aug. 16:Catholic Church had 'playbook' to keep priest abuse secret, FBI said

"It prevents more victims if we get exposure," said Florida lawyer Michael Dolce, a survivor of child sex abuse  who advocated for Florida to repeal its statute of limitations for such crimes. "It raises the information in the community as a whole by exposing the secrecy."

The grand jury report and Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro criticized actions the church took since 2002:

• In 2002, a victim inspired by the revelation of abuse in the Boston Archdiocese reported that a priest in the Allentown Diocese abused her. The district attorney didn’t pursue a criminal case, citing the statute of limitations, and the diocese and its lawyer “attempted to undermine and discredit” the victim and her family, according to the grand jury report.

• In June 2002, the bishop in the Erie diocese wrote to a victim that he was shocked the victim would “go to the press directly rather than contact me regarding the past.”

• In 2013, the Greensburg Diocese received email from a victim concerned after seeing photos of a priest on a parish website, even though the priest was dismissed from the church a decade earlier after multiple complaints of child sexual abuse.

• In 2014, Harrisburg Bishop Ronald Gainer wrote to the Vatican to recommend that one accused priest not be removed from the priesthood even though he was taken from active ministry. Gainer wrote that the priest should "be permitted to live out his remaining years in prayer and penance, without adding further anxiety or suffering to his situation, and without risking public knowledge of his crimes."

In a statement after the grand jury report, the Harrisburg diocese said the letter didn’t accurately represent the action taken and was not part of a cover-up.
    
“Only when they’ve been forced again into a corner are they doing the right thing,” state Rep. Mark Rozzi, a Pennsylvania legislator who testified before the grand jury as an abuse victim, said Wednesday in a radio interview. 

Without the grand juries, “they would still be doing exactly what they have always done,” he said.

► Aug. 16:40 Pennsylvania priests confessed their crimes; little was done afterward
► Aug. 15:'Men of God' kept it secret as priests systematically abused kids 

Hilary Scarsella, who studies sexual violence and trauma as a doctoral candidate in theological studies at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, said the church needs to put concerted energy into an external, independent analysis of what has enabled this problem for so long and then systematically clean it up.

“The Catholic Church has shown itself to be incapable and untrustworthy of managing this problem on its own,” Scarsella said. “They need outside folks to come in, and they need to be accountable to victim-centered experts to help them deal with this.”

Ed Mahon reports for the York (Pa.) Daily Record, Holly Meyer reports for the Nashville Tennessean and Xerxes Wilson reports for the Wilmington (Del.) News Journal. Follow them on Twitter: @edmahonreporter@HollyAMeyer and @Ber_Xerxes

Related

► Aug. 15:Priest recommended for Disney World job after sexual abuse allegations
► Aug. 15:Victims hope Pennsylvania is 'wake up call' other dioceses need
► Aug. 15:Priests used gold crosses to ID kids as abuse targets
► Aug. 15:Survivors of priest abuse flood hotline 'to tell their stories, seek justice'
► Aug. 15:Catholic reaction to priest abuse report varies between strong and silent

► Aug. 14:Church protected more than 300 'predator priests,' grand jury says
► Aug. 14:Clergy abuse report puts spotlight on state's statute of limitations
► Aug. 14:Names, details of 301 Pennsylvania priest sex abuse allegations
► Aug. 14:Pennsylvania grand jury report: Read the full document
► Aug. 11:Some priests named in clergy sex abuse report remain in ministry

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