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Friday, March 26, 2010

Vatican Justice? 20 percent of priests who were sexual abusers were subjected to canonical trials

Keeping the record straight on Benedict and the crisis
by John L Allen Jr on Mar. 26, 2010
http://ncronline.org/users/john-l-allen-jr
"Ratzinger's top deputy at the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith on sex abuse cases, Maltese Monsignor Charles Scicluna, recently gave an interview to an Italian Catholic paper in which he said that of the more than 3,000 cases eventually referred to Rome, only 20 percent were subjected to a full canonical trial. In some reporting, including the Thursday piece in The New York Times, this figure has been cited as evidence of Vatican "inaction."

Once again, however, those who have followed the story closely have almost exactly the opposite impression.

Back in June 2002, when the American bishops first proposed a set of new canonical norms to Rome, the heart of which was the "one strike and you're out" policy, they initially wanted to avoid canonical trials altogether. Instead, they wanted to rely on a bishop's administrative power to permanently remove a priest from ministry. That's because their experience of Roman tribunals over the years was that they were often slow, cumbersome, and the outcome was rarely certain.

Most famously, bishops and experts would point to the case of Fr. Anthony Cipolla in Pittsburgh, during the time that Donald Wuerl, now the Archbishop of Washington, was the local bishop. Wuerl had removed Cipolla from ministry in 1988 following allegations of sexual abuse. Cipolla appealed to Rome, where the Apostolic Signatura, in effect the Vatican's supreme court, ordered him reinstated. Wuerl then took the case to Rome himself, and eventually prevailed. The experience left many American bishops, however, with the impression that lengthy canonical trials were not the way to handle these cases.

When the new American norms reached Rome, they ran into opposition precisely on the grounds that everyone deserves their day in court -- another instance, in the eyes of critics, of the Vatican being more concerned about the rights of abuser priests than victims. A special commission of American bishops and senior Vatican officials brokered a compromise, in which the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith would sort through the cases one-by-one and decide which ones would be sent back for full trials.

The fear at the time was that the congregation would insist on trials in almost every case, thereby dragging out the administration of justice, and closure for the victims, almost indefinitely. In the end, however, only 20 percent were sent back for trials, while for the bulk of the cases, 60 percent, bishops were authorized to take immediate administrative action, because the proof was held to be overwhelming.

The fact that only 20 percent of the cases were subjected to full canonical trial has been hailed as a belated grasp in Rome of the need for swift and sure justice, and a victory for the more aggressive American approach to the crisis. It should be noted, too, that bypassing trials has been roundly criticized by some canon lawyers and Vatican officials as a betrayal of the due process safeguards in church law.

Hence to describe that 20 percent figure as a sign of "inaction" cannot help but seem, to anyone who's been paying attention, rather ironic. In truth, handling 60 percent of the cases through the stroke of a bishop's pen has, up to now, more often been cited as evidence of exaggerated and draconian action by Ratzinger and his deputies.

Obviously, none of this is to suggest that Benedict's handling of the crisis -- in Munich, at the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, or as pope -- is somehow exemplary. An accounting needs to be offered if this pope, and the church he leads, hopes to move forward. For that analysis to be constructive, however, as opposed to fueling polarization and confusion, it's important to keep the record straight."
[John Allen is NCR senior correspondent. His e-mail address is jallen@ncronline.org.]

Bridget Mary's Response to John Allen's Article
Yes, it is important to set the record straight. But how could justice prevail if the victims and the accused were not present at these Vatican trials? What kind of justice is this kind of sham trial?
Pope Benedict has many questions to answer. The bottom line is what would Jesus have done?
The pope is called to follow the Gospel, and serve God's people as the servant to the servants of God.
Now Pope Benedict, we call on you to tell the truth to the people of God. We need answers to questions like: why were victims and the accused not present at these secretive Vatican trials? How can justice happen if the victims and accused are not present at the trials? Why were the bishops sworn to pontifical secrecy? Why were known pedophiles not defrocked? Why were women priests and our followers automatically excommunicated and pedophiles and the bishops who gave them a pass, promoted? Why were bishops like Cardinal Law, who covered up and shifted known pedophiles in the Boston area, promoted to top Vatican positions? Only answers to these and many more questions will set the record straight. Bridget Mary Meehan, RCWP

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