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From the LA Times: The archdiocese’s cover-up




http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/editorials/la-ed-mahony-clergy-abuse-files-20130123,0,1998210.story

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The archdiocese’s cover-up

The release of confidential files on 1980s clergy sex abuse in the Los Angeles Archdiocese is the beginning of the end of a long and sordid saga.

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Cardinal Mahony’s moral failure

On Monday, a series of memos and letters filed in a civil case confirmed that Cardinal Roger M. Mahony, seen above in 2007, and other church leaders plotted to shield pedophile priests rather than turn them over to police and prosecutors. (Los Angeles Times / January 22, 2013)

Priestly sexual abuse, churchly cover-ups

 

Shine a light on church sexual abuse 

 

January 23, 2013

 

For years, the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles fought to keep secret its confidential files concerning pedophile priests. Hundreds of sex abuse victims hoping for a full accounting of what church leaders knew about the growing scandal and what they did to stop it were rebuffed time and again.

But the cover-up is finally coming to an end. On Monday, a series of memos and letters filed in a civil case confirmed that Cardinal Roger M. Mahony and other church leaders plotted to shield pedophile priests rather than turn them over to police and prosecutors.

The documents, which date to 1986 and 1987, show how Mahony and Msgr. Thomas J. Curry, his top advisor on sex abuse cases, discussed strategies to keep priests from coming to the attention of law enforcement. Curry proposed to Mahony that certain priests be kept from seeing therapists, who would have been obliged to alert police; in other cases, priests were sent out of state to avoid criminal investigations. One cleric — who had admitted molesting undocumented immigrant children for decades, and even threatened one with deportation if he reported the abuse to police — was not allowed by Mahony to return to California from a treatment center, for fear that it would spark criminal or civil action.

The confidential files of at least 75 more abusers are expected to be released during the next few weeks as part of a 2007 legal settlement with some 500 abuse victims.

Sadly, few people will be shocked to learn that the archdiocese failed to protect children who had put their trust in the church, or that it refused to bring to justice the priests who betrayed that trust. Church officials in Boston, Philadelphia and elsewhere behaved similarly for decades, often shuffling priests from parish to parish to conceal abuse and thwart investigations, allowing those pedophiles to prey on new victims.The latest revelations will also come as little surprise to survivors of clergy abuse. They have long accused the church hierarchy, including Mahony, of caring more about the church than its victims, more about public relations than about protecting the vulnerable. Mahony, who has repeatedly apologized for mishandling the cases, sounded contrite again Monday, saying he had been too naive and had failed to understand the lasting impact such abuse would have on the lives of young victims.

It’s true that these horrendous events happened years ago, when public attitudes toward child abuse were evolving. But it’s difficult to take Mahony’s claims of naivete seriously, given how keenly aware he seems to have been of both the actions of his priests and their legal ramifications. He knew these were criminal acts even as he sought to hide them from public scrutiny.

The church’s expressions of regret also ring hollow given its ongoing battle to keep the names of its leaders from appearing in the documents when they are finally released. Just this month, the archdiocese again asked a Los Angeles court to keep the names private.

Fortunately, a judge rejected that request. Only when the files have been released, including the names of all the people who participated in these crimes and the cover-up that followed, will the church have made good on its promise to reveal the whole truth.

Copyright © 2013, Los Angeles Times




    8 Responses to “From the LA Times: The archdiocese’s cover-up”

  1. Frank Lostaunau Says:

    Bishop Thomas J. Curry: http://www.google.com/imgres?hl=en&client=firefox-a&sa=X&tbo=d&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&biw=964&bih=526&tbm=isch&tbnid=_kIjDgRXa8Oz2M:&imgrefurl=http://site.catholicfavors.com/blog/tag/msgr-stuart-swetland-stated-that-the-department-of-health-and-human-services-federal-health-mandate-may-affect-religious-activities-washington-dc/&docid=s-4HRiJyw25UtM&itg=1&imgurl=http://cua-galleries.s3.amazonaws.com/Inaugural%252520Symposium:%252520Day%2525201/003_symposium_Day1.JPG&w=840&h=559&ei=D8YCUcufObDxiQLcpIDoAg&zoom=1&iact=hc&vpx=4&vpy=221&dur=2868&hovh=183&hovw=275&tx=128&ty=134&sig=116874333587467637770&page=1&tbnh=154&tbnw=231&start=0&ndsp=17&ved=1t:429,r:5,s:0,i:100

  2. Frank Lostaunau Says:

    Frank Lococo: http://www.whdlaw.com/ViewTeamMember.aspx?id=281

  3. Thomas Says:

    It is not a terrible day for Catholics when justice comes for the innocent, and corruption is brought into the arena of public and laity scrutiny. This abuse and cover-up has got to stop! A Church leadership betrothed to the entrails of the devil, without regard and abandon of what is right—the needs of all of God’s people…

    Their utterances are meaningless in an age of science, and for persons of free thought and free expression. What we actually understand though are the lies and corruption that comes from hierarchy have damaged the Church way way way beyond recovery. Jackals…who have lost their search for communion and for God. In community, all search and find together. It is time for the good priests to search out and find their destiny void of all corruption from those who mannage their lives.

    Get the sin out of the Church once and for all…call a Council and unburden the people of God. And…may every judge open the records so that the public is well informed and can protect their children. Stop promoting and rewarding the criminals of the Church!!!!!!!

  4. Frank Lostaunau Says:

    Bishop Curry is retired and lives in 3 milliion dollar humble cottage!

    http://thisculturalchristian.blogspot.com/2013/01/mahony-crony-bishop-curry-of-santa.html

    is he precious or what?

  5. Frank Lostaunau Says:

    apology? http://www.kcoy.com/story/20711797/santa-barbara-bishop-apologizes-in-catholic-church-cover-up

  6. Michael Skiendzielewski Says:

    But Bishop Curry was forced to, releasing this statement saying:

    “I wish to apologize for those instances when I made decisions regarding the treatment and disposition of clergy accused of sexual abuse that in retrospect appear inadequate or mistaken.”

    Only US Catholic Church leadership could understand this Curry statement as an APOLOGY. For all other reasonable, mature and sensible adults, this is certainly NOT AN APOLOGY.

  7. Thomas Says:

    They should all come together and apologize—the innocent with the guilty. They all carry the same guilt…knowing the sin and the crimes of clerics and playing musical chairs with the abusers instead of fourcing them out and away from the likelihood of ever harming other shildren. For those who did not actively seek to protect, their silence does not clear them of fault. Enablers are not protected, their poor choice was to protect the purity of an institution…instead to void what is humanly superior…the protection of the innocent. In this case…children.

    Sometimes, the beauty of the Church will show through the deep cracks of it’s brokenness as in the funeral mass of Stan Musial in St. Louis…and at other times, her stains are the darkest stripes imaginable.

    The question is…why is it that hierarchy will not do what they taught us to do so long ago…to tell the truth? And for every victim…and for every survivor that the world will not hear or believe—they can still look at beauty and say…”I know what you did to me”.

  8. Thomas Says:

    Cry babies…confession is good for the entire community. Error has no rights.


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