Los Angeles Archbishop Jose Gomez
on Thursday announced dramatic actions in response to the priest abuse scandal,
saying that Cardinal Roger Mahony would be stripped of public duties in the
church and that Santa Barbara Bishop Thomas J. Curry has stepped
down.
Gomez said in a statement that
Mahony -- who led the L.A. archdiocese from 1985 to 2011 -- "will no longer have
any administrative or public duties."
Gomez also announced the church
has released a trove of confidential church files detailing how the Los Angeles
archdiocese dealt with priests accused of
molestation.
Gomez wrote in a letter to
parishioners that the files would be disturbing to
read.
"I find these files to be brutal
and painful reading. The behavior described in these files is terribly sad and
evil. There is no excuse, no explaining away what happened to these children.
The priests involved had the duty to be their spiritual fathers and they
failed," he wrote. "We need to acknowledge that terrible failure
today."
Gomez's statement came a week
after the release of internal Catholic church records. The records showed 15
years before the clergy sex abuse scandal came to light, Mahony and Curry
discussed ways to conceal the molestation of children from law enforcement.
Those records represent just a fraction of the files the church released
Thursday. The Times is now reviewing those files.
The records released last week
offer the strongest evidence yet of a concerted effort by officials in the
nation's largest Catholic diocese to shield abusers from police. The newly
released records, which the archdiocese fought for years to keep secret, reveal
in church leaders' own words a desire to keep authorities from discovering that
children were being molested.
The records contain memos written
in 1986 and 1987 by Mahony and Curry, then the archdiocese's chief advisor on
sex abuse cases. In the confidential letters, Curry proposed strategies to
prevent police from investigating three priests who had admitted to church
officials that they had abused young boys.
Curry suggested to Mahony that
they prevent the priests from seeing therapists who might alert authorities and
that they give the priests out-of-state assignments to avoid criminal
investigators. Mahony, who retired in 2011, has apologized repeatedly for errors
in handling abuse allegations.
Gomez's letter detailed changes
in the status of Curry and Mahony in the church.
"Effective immediately, I have
informed Cardinal Mahony that he will no longer have any administrative or
public duties. Auxiliary Bishop Thomas Curry has also publicly apologized for
his decisions while serving as Vicar for Clergy. I have accepted his request to
be relieved of his responsibility as the Regional Bishop of Santa Barbara,”
Gomez wrote in a letter.
The records were released hours
after a judge signed an order requiring the church to do
so.
In a written order, Los Angeles
County Superior Court Judge Emilie H. Elias gave the church a Feb. 22 deadline
to turn over about 30,000 pages of internal memos, psychiatric reports, Vatican
correspondence and other documents.
“Let’s just get it done,” Elias
said in court Thursday.
Her order brought to a close five
and a half years of legal wrangling and delays and set the stage for a raft of
new and almost certainly embarrassing revelations about the church’s handling of
pedophile priests.
The files Elias ordered released
are the final piece of a landmark 2007 settlement between the archdiocese and
about 500 people who said clergy abused them. As part of that $660-million
settlement, the archdiocese agreed to hand over the personnel files of accused
abusers. Victims said the files would provide accountability for church leaders
who let pedophiles remain in the ministry; law enforcement officials said the
records would be important investigative tools.
But the release was delayed for
years by appeals and the painstaking process of reading and redacting 89 files,
some hundreds of pages long. A private mediator in 2011 ordered the church to
black out the names of victims and archdiocese employees not accused of abuse,
saying he wanted to avoid “guilt by association.”
Earlier this month, at the urging
of the Los Angeles Times and the Associated Press, Elias ordered the names
restored, saying the public had a right to know what Mahony and others in charge
did about abuse. The church complained about the cost of restoring the
redactions and suggested to the judge earlier this week that generic cover
sheets for the files listing top officials and their dates of service should
suffice.
After criticism from attorneys
for the victims and the media, the church abandoned that plan and its lawyers
said in court Thursday “anybody in a supervisory role” would be named in the
documents. Elias’ order specified that the names of the archbishop, the vicar
who handled clergy abuse, bishops and the heads of Catholic treatment centers
for pedophiles be included. LA Times
On Monday, retired Catholic
priest Neil Doherty, an accused serial child rapist who pleaded no contest in
one case, was sentenced in Florida to 15 years in prison.
UPI Also on Wednesday, a Catholic
priest and a former parochial school teacher were convicted in Philadelphia of
molesting an altar boy in the late 1990s. UPI The Catholic Church has been
rocked in recent decades by accusations that it tried to cover up the sexual
abuse of children by priests and has paid out billions in settlements to abuse
victims, bankrupting several U.S. dioceses. Daily
Star Sexual abuse of children by
Catholic priests has been widely reported throughout the world, with the
countries of Canada, Ireland, United States, United Kingdom, Mexico, Belgium,
France, Germany and Australia receiving the most attention. The United States
and Ireland are the only countries that conducted nationwide inquiries.
digitaljournal.com In the U.S., Ireland, the Channel
Islands, the list seems to go on and on -- new sordid stories of child sexual
abuse are being investigated, at times, linking to a disturbing hierarchy of
silence in institutions which were considered "sacred," -- be it the Catholic
Church, the BBC or even Penn State football. The Huffington
Post The majority of the sexual abuse
by Catholic priests takes place with children between the ages of 11 and 14. The
Huffington Post
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