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Closing Submissions

26 February 2009

 Some of the many media articles on closing submissions at the Cornwall Public Inquiry.  The CP stories were picked up far and wide. Note that Allison Jones yet again advances the Citizens for Community Renewal novel notion that Cornwall is the site of rampant “homophobia.”

Three-year, $40M Cornwall inquiry urged to debunk rumours of pedophile ring   

Lethbridge Herald 

Thursday, 26 February 2009 

CORNWALL, Ont. - Murky allegations that a pedophile clan operated with impunity in eastern Ontario were cast as fabrications spread by a misguided police officer and embraced by a panic-stricken community during four days of final submissions at the Cornwall inquiry.

Public agencies ill-equipped to handle sex abuse allegations, the equation of homosexuality with pedophilia, and the presumption of guilt of accused abusers were all cited as factors in how rumours of the sex ring took root.

While the mandate of the inquiry, which has cost $40 million to date, was to examine institutional response to decades-old allegations of abuse, the majority of the submissions, which began Monday, focused on discrediting the clan theory.

Many suggested the blame for the sensational story, which provincial police found no evidence of in an earlier probe, could be placed on former Cornwall police officer
Perry Dunlop.

On Thursday, Commissioner G. Normand Glaude was urged to conclude in his report, due July 31, that the allegations were a paranoid myth.

"There is no doubt that this commission was formed largely in response to the persistence of this 'story,"' David Sherriff-Scott, lawyer for
the Diocese of Alexandria-Cornwall, submitted to the inquiry.

"The commission, therefore, should unequivocally and unreservedly put the story to rest and declare that, after more than three years of probing, the story is false."

Vulnerable witnesses were easily manipulated by Dunlop into concocting an explosive tale of ritual sexual abuse. And supporters of Dunlop, who was seen as a local hero for his crusade against pedophiles, became a group of "media-savvy conspiracy theorists" who "exacted maximum damage on those targeted," the inquiry heard.

"It is important for you to set out exactly how these allegations were constructed and by whom," Cornwall Police Service lawyer John Callaghan told Glaude. "It's important because the conspiracy theorists will never die.

"Long after you leave town, the bloggers, the gossip hounds, will continue to gather behind some grassy knoll in Cornwall and tell of a conspiracy."

Closing submissions from the diocese and Cornwall police took the position that two witnesses, one known as
C8, the other a man named Ron Leroux, fabricated stories of a pedophile ring.

"It was (then) propagated by the reckless incompetence and lack of judgment of Perry Dunlop, who could not discern fact from fiction," Sherriff-Scott told the inquiry.

It began in 1992, Sherriff-Scott said, when a 35-year-old
former altar boy alleged he had been sexually abused by a priest and a probation officer. The man reached a settlement with the diocese for $32,000 and didn't pursue charges against either man.

Dunlop leaked the allegations to the local Children's Aid Society and the information eventually appeared in the media. The man launched a complaint against Dunlop.

"Mr. Dunlop became convinced that he was being scapegoated, bullied, harassed and isolated," which caused him to mistrust all public institutions, Sherriff-Scott said.

"In the ensuing storm he simply fell apart."

By early 1994 Dunlop was on sick leave, suffering from mental health challenges and was on multiple medications to deal with conditions such as depression, the inquiry has heard.

Still, he pursued his own investigation, believing a pedophile ring was being operated by prominent locals and being covered up by even more high-profile officials, Sherriff-Scott said.

It was in this environment that Dunlop interviewed C8, who led him to Leroux.

Leroux told Dunlop he witnessed a clan of pedophiles who wore robes, burned candles and sexually abused young boys during weekend meetings in the 1950s and early 1960s.

In June 2007, Leroux told the inquiry that he fabricated the tale.

"Mr. Dunlop, who had been radicalized by his experiences and suffering from the problems he was having, was too lacking in judgment to do anything but snap at this story," Sherriff-Scott said.

Dunlop's former police force was less generous in their submissions, making no mention of Dunlop's mental distress.

Instead, they painted a picture of a man who, along with his lawyer, allegedly took the lead in actively changing Leroux's statements and adding names to a list of alleged pedophiles to fulfil personal vendettas.

In 1997, provincial police launched an investigation and laid 114 charges against 15 people, but
found no evidence of a pedophile ring.

Of the men charged,
only a bus driver was convicted. Four died before their cases came to trial, four were acquitted, four had the charges against them withdrawn, and two had the charges against them stayed over delays.

Two community groups told the inquiry this week that "inept" public institutions created a void that sent alleged abuse victims flocking to Dunlop, who became the "alternate constabulary."

Dunlop, who has since moved to British Columbia and
no longer works in law enforcement, refused to testify at the inquiry and was jailed for seven months on civil and criminal contempt convictions.

The group
Citizens for Community Renewal also suggested belief in a pedophile clan was able to gain a foothold due in part to rampant homophobia.

The lawyer for the estate of an accused child sexual abuser who committed suicide said public hysteria flourished due to the lack of a presumption of innocence for people accused of such crimes.

Pedophile paranoia gripped Ont. city: lawyer

    

Ottawa Sun 

 

Last Updated: 26th February 2009, 12:54pm 

 

By ALLISON JONES, THE CANADIAN PRESS 

 

CORNWALL, Ont. — A widespread paranoia that officials in eastern Ontario engaged in the sexual abuse of children for decades can be blamed largely on corrupt witnesses and a police officer suffering from mental health issues, a public inquiry heard Thursday.

 

The pedophile clan theory was “a series of falsehoods” that was “manufactured and produced by (Ron) Leroux’s deliberate strategy to mislead,” lawyer David Sherriff-Scott told the Cornwall inquiry.

 

“It was propagated by the reckless incompetence and lack of judgment of (Const.) Perry Dunlop, who could not discern fact from fiction.” Sherriff-Scott, a lawyer for the Diocese of Alexandria-Cornwall, presented to the Cornwall inquiry his version of the complex tale of the controversy that has gripped the city for years.

 

While its mandate is to examine the institutional response to sexual abuse allegations, many of the parties involved have advanced theories as to why some members of the public latched on to the pedophile clan rumour.

 

It began in 1992, Sherriff-Scott said, when a 35-year-old former altar boy alleged he had been sexually abused by a priest and a probation officer. The man reached a settlement with the diocese for $32,000 and didn’t pursue charges against either man.

 

Dunlop leaked the allegations to the local Children’s Aid Society and the information eventually appeared in the media. The man launched a complaint against Dunlop.

 

That was the beginning of the end, Sherriff-Scott said.

 

“Mr. Dunlop became convinced that he was being scapegoated, bullied, harassed and isolated,” Sherriff-Scott said, which caused him to mistrust all public institutions.

 

“In the ensuing storm he simply fell apart.”

 

By early 1994 Dunlop was on sick leave, suffering from mental health challenges and was on multiple medications to deal with conditions such as depression, the inquiry has heard.

 

He nevertheless ruthlessly pursued his own investigation of historical child sex abuse in Cornwall, believing a pedophile ring was being operated by prominent locals and being covered up by even more high-profile officials, Sherriff-Scott said.

 

It was in this environment that Dunlop interviewed a witness known only as C8, who saw Dunlop as a father figure and wanted to please him, Sherriff-Scott told the inquiry. C8 told Dunlop he had been abused by several men, including Ron Leroux, who never faced charges on those allegations.  

 

When Leroux wouldn’t assist Dunlop with his investigation to root out pedophiles, Dunlop held the prospect of C8’s evidence over his head, Sherriff-Scott said.

 “This resulted in Mr. Leroux developing a strategy to tell lies to protect himself and to persuade Mr. Dunlop that he was an invaluable witness,” Sherriff-Scott said in the diocese’s submissions.  

Leroux told Dunlop he witnessed a clan of pedophiles who wore robes, burned candles and sexually abused young boys during weekend meetings in the 1950s and early 1960s.

 

“Mr. Dunlop, who had been radicalized by his experiences and suffering from the problems he was having, was too lacking in judgment to do anything but snap at this story,” Sherriff-Scott said.  

 

In June 2007, Leroux told the inquiry that he fabricated the tale.

 

Provincial police launched an investigation in 1997 and laid 114 charges against 15 people, though only one was ever convicted. The Project Truth probe found no evidence of a pedophile ring.  

 

Sherriff-Scott told the inquiry that despite the scores of allegations against priests, probation officers and others that emerged in the 1990s, the amount of historical sexual abuse in the city was no different than in any other Canadian community.

 

What was different about Cornwall was the media and public reaction to the allegations, which emerged in an “environment of ignorance” that allowed Dunlop’s theories to take root.

 

“There is no doubt that this commission was formed largely in response to the persistence of this ‘story,”’ said the diocese’s submissions.

 

“The commission, therefore, should unequivocally and unreservedly put the story to rest and declare that, after more than three years of probing, the story is false and that it should be relegated to the fiction shelf, where it belongs.” 

In its submissions, the diocese also admitted to mistakes that were made in the way it handled sexual abuse complaints. For instance, allegations against a priest ultimately convicted in 1986 of sexually abusing four young men should have been taken to police sooner, Sherriff-Scott said in the submissions.

In addition, a priest convicted of sexual offences in the U.S. should not have been allowed to work for the ministry, the diocese said.   


Three-year, $40M Cornwall inquiry urged to debunk rumours of pedophile ring  

News Talk 1010 CFRB Toronto 

Thu, 2009-02-26 20:14. 

By: Allison Jones, THE CANADIAN PRESS 

 

CORNWALL, Ont. - Murky allegations that a pedophile clan operated with impunity in eastern Ontario were cast as fabrications spread by a misguided police officer and embraced by a panic-stricken community during four days of final submissions at the Cornwall inquiry. 

 

Public agencies ill-equipped to handle sex abuse allegations, the equation of homosexuality with pedophilia, and the presumption of guilt of accused abusers were all cited as factors in how rumours of the sex ring took root. 

 

While the mandate of the inquiry, which has cost $40 million to date, was to examine institutional response to decades-old allegations of abuse, the majority of the submissions, which began Monday, focused on discrediting the clan theory. 

 

Many suggested the blame for the sensational story, which provincial police found no evidence of in an earlier probe, could be placed on former Cornwall police officer Perry Dunlop. 

 

On Thursday, Commissioner G. Normand Glaude was urged to conclude in his report, due July 31, that the allegations were a paranoid myth. 

 

"There is no doubt that this commission was formed largely in response to the persistence of this 'story,"' David Sherriff-Scott, lawyer for the Diocese of Alexandria-Cornwall, submitted to the inquiry. 

 

"The commission, therefore, should unequivocally and unreservedly put the story to rest and declare that, after more than three years of probing, the story is false." 

 

Vulnerable witnesses were easily manipulated by Dunlop into concocting an explosive tale of ritual sexual abuse. And supporters of Dunlop, who was seen as a local hero for his crusade against pedophiles, became a group of "media-savvy conspiracy theorists" who "exacted maximum damage on those targeted," the inquiry heard. 

 

"It is important for you to set out exactly how these allegations were constructed and by whom," Cornwall Police Service lawyer John Callaghan told Glaude. "It's important because the conspiracy theorists will never die. 

 

"Long after you leave town, the bloggers, the gossip hounds, will continue to gather behind some grassy knoll in Cornwall and tell of a conspiracy." 

 Closing submissions from the diocese and Cornwall police took the position that two witnesses, one known as C8, the other a man named Ron Leroux, fabricated stories of a pedophile ring. 

"It was (then) propagated by the reckless incompetence and lack of judgment of Perry Dunlop, who could not discern fact from fiction," Sherriff-Scott told the inquiry. 

 

It began in 1992, Sherriff-Scott said, when a 35-year-old former altar boy alleged he had been sexually abused by a priest and a probation officer. The man reached a settlement with the diocese for $32,000 and didn't pursue charges against either man. 

 

Dunlop leaked the allegations to the local Children's Aid Society and the information eventually appeared in the media. The man launched a complaint against Dunlop. 

 

"Mr. Dunlop became convinced that he was being scapegoated, bullied, harassed and isolated," which caused him to mistrust all public institutions, Sherriff-Scott said."In the ensuing storm he simply fell apart." 

 

By early 1994 Dunlop was on sick leave, suffering from mental health challenges and was on multiple medications to deal with conditions such as depression, the inquiry has heard. 

 

Still, he pursued his own investigation, believing a pedophile ring was being operated by prominent locals and being covered up by even more high-profile officials, Sherriff-Scott said. 

 

It was in this environment that Dunlop interviewed C8, who led him to Leroux.

 

Leroux told Dunlop he witnessed a clan of pedophiles who wore robes, burned candles and sexually abused young boys during weekend meetings in the 1950s and early 1960s. In June 2007, Leroux told the inquiry that he fabricated the tale. 

  

 "Mr. Dunlop, who had been radicalized by his experiences and suffering from the problems he was having, was too lacking in judgment to do anything but snap at this story," Sherriff-Scott said. 

Dunlop's former police force was less generous in their submissions, making no mention of Dunlop's mental distress. 

 

Instead, they painted a picture of a man who, along with his lawyer, allegedly took the lead in actively changing Leroux's statements and adding names to a list of alleged pedophiles to fulfil personal vendettas. 

 

In 1997, provincial police launched an investigation and laid 114 charges against 15 people, but found no evidence of a pedophile ring. 

 

Of the men charged, only a bus driver was convicted. Four died before their cases came to trial, four were acquitted, four had the charges against them withdrawn, and two had the charges against them stayed over delays. 

 

Two community groups told the inquiry this week that "inept" public institutions created a void that sent alleged abuse victims flocking to Dunlop, who became the "alternate constabulary." 

 

Dunlop, who has since moved to British Columbia and no longer works in law enforcement, refused to testify at the inquiry and was jailed for seven months on civil and criminal contempt convictions. 

 

The group Citizens for Community Renewal also suggested belief in a pedophile clan was able to gain a foothold due in part to rampant homophobia. 

 

The lawyer for the estate of an accused child sexual abuser who committed suicide said public hysteria flourished due to the lack of a presumption of innocence for people accused of such crimes. 

Three-year, $40M Cornwall inquiry urged to debunk rumours of pedophile ring 

Metronews.ca Vancouver 

February 26, 2009 08:00 

ALLISON JONES Canadian Press 

CORNWALL, Ont. - Murky allegations that a pedophile clan operated with impunity in eastern Ontario were cast as fabrications spread by a misguided police officer and embraced by a panic-stricken community during four days of final submissions at the Cornwall inquiry.

Public agencies ill-equipped to handle sex abuse allegations, the equation of homosexuality with pedophilia, and the presumption of guilt of accused abusers were all cited as factors in how rumours of the sex ring took root.

While the mandate of the inquiry, which has cost $40 million to date, was to examine institutional response to decades-old allegations of abuse, the majority of the submissions, which began Monday, focused on discrediting the clan theory.

Many suggested the blame for the sensational story, which provincial police found no evidence of in an earlier probe, could be placed on former Cornwall police officer Perry Dunlop.

On Thursday, Commissioner G. Normand Glaude was urged to conclude in his report, due July 31, that the allegations were a paranoid myth.

"There is no doubt that this commission was formed largely in response to the persistence of this 'story,"' David Sherriff-Scott, lawyer for the Diocese of Alexandria-Cornwall, submitted to the inquiry.

"The commission, therefore, should unequivocally and unreservedly put the story to rest and declare that, after more than three years of probing, the story is false."

Vulnerable witnesses were easily manipulated by Dunlop into concocting an explosive tale of ritual sexual abuse. And supporters of Dunlop, who was seen as a local hero for his crusade against pedophiles, became a group of "media-savvy conspiracy theorists" who "exacted maximum damage on those targeted," the inquiry heard.

"It is important for you to set out exactly how these allegations were constructed and by whom," Cornwall Police Service lawyer John Callaghan told Glaude. "It's important because the conspiracy theorists will never die.

"Long after you leave town, the bloggers, the gossip hounds, will continue to gather behind some grassy knoll in Cornwall and tell of a conspiracy."

Closing submissions from the diocese and Cornwall police took the position that two witnesses, one known as C8, the other a man named Ron Leroux, fabricated stories of a pedophile ring.

"It was (then) propagated by the reckless incompetence and lack of judgment of Perry Dunlop, who could not discern fact from fiction," Sherriff-Scott told the inquiry.

It began in 1992, Sherriff-Scott said, when a 35-year-old former altar boy alleged he had been sexually abused by a priest and a probation officer. The man reached a settlement with the diocese for $32,000 and didn't pursue charges against either man.

Dunlop leaked the allegations to the local Children's Aid Society and the information eventually appeared in the media. The man launched a complaint against Dunlop.

"Mr. Dunlop became convinced that he was being scapegoated, bullied, harassed and isolated," which caused him to mistrust all public institutions, Sherriff-Scott said.

"In the ensuing storm he simply fell apart."

By early 1994 Dunlop was on sick leave, suffering from mental health challenges and was on multiple medications to deal with conditions such as depression, the inquiry has heard.

Still, he pursued his own investigation, believing a pedophile ring was being operated by prominent locals and being covered up by even more high-profile officials, Sherriff-Scott said.

It was in this environment that Dunlop interviewed C8, who led him to Leroux.

Leroux told Dunlop he witnessed a clan of pedophiles who wore robes, burned candles and sexually abused young boys during weekend meetings in the 1950s and early 1960s.

In June 2007, Leroux told the inquiry that he fabricated the tale.

"Mr. Dunlop, who had been radicalized by his experiences and suffering from the problems he was having, was too lacking in judgment to do anything but snap at this story," Sherriff-Scott said.

Dunlop's former police force was less generous in their submissions, making no mention of Dunlop's mental distress.

Instead, they painted a picture of a man who, along with his lawyer, allegedly took the lead in actively changing Leroux's statements and adding names to a list of alleged pedophiles to fulfil personal vendettas.

In 1997, provincial police launched an investigation and laid 114 charges against 15 people, but found no evidence of a pedophile ring.

Of the men charged, only a bus driver was convicted. Four died before their cases came to trial, four were acquitted, four had the charges against them withdrawn, and two had the charges against them stayed over delays.

Two community groups told the inquiry this week that "inept" public institutions created a void that sent alleged abuse victims flocking to Dunlop, who became the "alternate constabulary."

Dunlop, who has since moved to British Columbia and no longer works in law enforcement, refused to testify at the inquiry and was jailed for seven months on civil and criminal contempt convictions.

The group Citizens for Community Renewal also suggested belief in a pedophile clan was able to gain a foothold due in part to rampant homophobia.

The lawyer for the estate of an accused child sexual abuser who committed suicide said public hysteria flourished due to the lack of a presumption of innocence for people accused of such crimes.
 News from ©The Canadian Press, 2009 

Three-year, $40M Cornwall inquiry urged to debunk rumours of pedophile ring

Canadaeast.com

 

Published Thursday February 26th, 2009

 

Allison Jones, Canadian Press

 

[theinquiry.ca:  this article was also linked from Utah Court reporting and litigation services http://www.court-reporting-firms-services.com/utah.php]

 

CORNWALL, Ont. - Murky allegations that a pedophile clan operated with impunity in eastern Ontario were cast as fabrications spread by a misguided police officer and embraced by a panic-stricken community during four days of final submissions at the Cornwall inquiry.

 

Public agencies ill-equipped to handle sex abuse allegations, the equation of homosexuality with pedophilia, and the presumption of guilt of accused abusers were all cited as factors in how rumours of the sex ring took root.

 

While the mandate of the inquiry, which has cost $40 million to date, was to examine institutional response to decades-old allegations of abuse, the majority of the submissions, which began Monday, focused on discrediting the clan theory.

 

Many suggested the blame for the sensational story, which provincial police found no evidence of in an earlier probe, could be placed on former Cornwall police officer Perry Dunlop.

 

On Thursday, Commissioner G. Normand Glaude was urged to conclude in his report, due July 31, that the allegations were a paranoid myth.

 "There is no doubt that this commission was formed largely in response to the persistence of this 'story,"' David Sherriff-Scott, lawyer for the Diocese of Alexandria-Cornwall, submitted to the inquiry.

"The commission, therefore, should unequivocally and unreservedly put the story to rest and declare that, after more than three years of probing, the story is false."

 

Vulnerable witnesses were easily manipulated by Dunlop into concocting an explosive tale of ritual sexual abuse. And supporters of Dunlop, who was seen as a local hero for his crusade against pedophiles, became a group of "media-savvy conspiracy theorists" who "exacted maximum damage on those targeted," the inquiry heard.

 

"It is important for you to set out exactly how these allegations were constructed and by whom," Cornwall Police Service lawyer John Callaghan told Glaude. "It's important because the conspiracy theorists will never die.

 

"Long after you leave town, the bloggers, the gossip hounds, will continue to gather behind some grassy knoll in Cornwall and tell of a conspiracy."

 

Closing submissions from the diocese and Cornwall police took the position that two witnesses, one known as C8, the other a man named Ron Leroux, fabricated stories of a pedophile ring.

 

"It was (then) propagated by the reckless incompetence and lack of judgment of Perry Dunlop, who could not discern fact from fiction," Sherriff-Scott told the inquiry.

 

It began in 1992, Sherriff-Scott said, when a 35-year-old former altar boy alleged he had been sexually abused by a priest and a probation officer. The man reached a settlement with the diocese for $32,000 and didn't pursue charges against either man.

 

Dunlop leaked the allegations to the local Children's Aid Society and the information eventually appeared in the media. The man launched a complaint against Dunlop.

 

"Mr. Dunlop became convinced that he was being scapegoated, bullied, harassed and isolated," which caused him to mistrust all public institutions, Sherriff-Scott said.

 

"In the ensuing storm he simply fell apart."

 

By early 1994 Dunlop was on sick leave, suffering from mental health challenges and was on multiple medications to deal with conditions such as depression, the inquiry has heard.

 

Still, he pursued his own investigation, believing a pedophile ring was being operated by prominent locals and being covered up by even more high-profile officials, Sherriff-Scott said.

 

It was in this environment that Dunlop interviewed C8, who led him to Leroux.

 

Leroux told Dunlop he witnessed a clan of pedophiles who wore robes, burned candles and sexually abused young boys during weekend meetings in the 1950s and early 1960s.

 

In June 2007, Leroux told the inquiry that he fabricated the tale.

 

"Mr. Dunlop, who had been radicalized by his experiences and suffering from the problems he was having, was too lacking in judgment to do anything but snap at this story," Sherriff-Scott said.

 

Dunlop's former police force was less generous in their submissions, making no mention of Dunlop's mental distress.

 

Instead, they painted a picture of a man who, along with his lawyer, allegedly took the lead in actively changing Leroux's statements and adding names to a list of alleged pedophiles to fulfil personal vendettas.

 

In 1997, provincial police launched an investigation and laid 114 charges against 15 people, but found no evidence of a pedophile ring.

 

Of the men charged, only a bus driver was convicted. Four died before their cases came to trial, four were acquitted, four had the charges against them withdrawn, and two had the charges against them stayed over delays.

 

Two community groups told the inquiry this week that "inept" public institutions created a void that sent alleged abuse victims flocking to Dunlop, who became the "alternate constabulary."

 

Dunlop, who has since moved to British Columbia and no longer works in law enforcement, refused to testify at the inquiry and was jailed for seven months on civil and criminal contempt convictions.

 

The group Citizens for Community Renewal also suggested belief in a pedophile clan was able to gain a foothold due in part to rampant homophobia.

 The lawyer for the estate of an accused child sexual abuser who committed suicide said public hysteria flourished due to the lack of a presumption of innocence for people accused of such crimes.  

Pedophile paranoia gripped Ont. city due to witness lies, cop's crusade: lawyer

790 CIGM  Sudbury

 

February 26, 2009 - 10:50 am

By: Allison Jones, THE CANADIAN PRESS

 

CORNWALL, Ont. - A widespread paranoia that officials in eastern Ontario engaged in the sexual abuse of children for decades can be blamed largely on corrupt witnesses and a police officer suffering from mental health issues, a public inquiry heard Thursday.

 

The pedophile clan theory was "a series of falsehoods" that was "manufactured and produced by (Ron) Leroux's deliberate strategy to mislead," lawyer David Sherriff-Scott told the Cornwall inquiry.

 

"It was propagated by the reckless incompetence and lack of judgment of (Const.) Perry Dunlop, who could not discern fact from fiction."

 

Sherriff-Scott, a lawyer for the Diocese of Alexandria-Cornwall, presented to the Cornwall inquiry his version of the complex tale of the controversy that has gripped the city for years.

 

While its mandate is to examine the institutional response to sexual abuse allegations, many of the parties involved have advanced theories as to why some members of the public latched on to the pedophile clan rumour.

 

It began in 1992, Sherriff-Scott said, when a 35-year-old former altar boy alleged he had been sexually abused by a priest and a probation officer. The man reached a settlement with the diocese for $32,000 and didn't pursue charges against either man.

 

Dunlop leaked the allegations to the local Children's Aid Society and the information eventually appeared in the media. The man launched a complaint against Dunlop.

 

That was the beginning of the end, Sherriff-Scott said.

 

"Mr. Dunlop became convinced that he was being scapegoated, bullied, harassed and isolated," Sherriff-Scott said, which caused him to mistrust all public institutions.

 

"In the ensuing storm he simply fell apart."

 

By early 1994 Dunlop was on sick leave, suffering from mental health challenges and was on multiple medications to deal with conditions such as depression, the inquiry has heard.

 

He nevertheless ruthlessly pursued his own investigation of historical child sex abuse in Cornwall, believing a pedophile ring was being operated by prominent locals and being covered up by even more high-profile officials, Sherriff-Scott said.

 

 It was in this environment that Dunlop interviewed a witness known only as C8, who saw Dunlop as a father figure and wanted to please him, Sherriff-Scott told the inquiry. C8 told Dunlop he had been abused by several men, including Ron Leroux, who never faced charges on those allegations.

When Leroux wouldn't assist Dunlop with his investigation to root out pedophiles, Dunlop held the prospect of C8's evidence over his head, Sherriff-Scott said.

 

 "This resulted in Mr. Leroux developing a strategy to tell lies to protect himself and to persuade Mr. Dunlop that he was an invaluable witness," Sherriff-Scott said in the diocese's submissions.

Leroux told Dunlop he witnessed a clan of pedophiles who wore robes, burned candles and sexually abused young boys during weekend meetings in the 1950s and early 1960s.

 

 "Mr. Dunlop, who had been radicalized by his experiences and suffering from the problems he was having, was too lacking in judgment to do anything but snap at this story," Sherriff-Scott said.

In June 2007, Leroux told the inquiry that he fabricated the tale.

 

Provincial police launched an investigation in 1997 and laid 114 charges against 15 people, though only one was ever convicted. The Project Truth probe found no evidence of a pedophile ring.

 

Sherriff-Scott told the inquiry that despite the scores of allegations against priests, probation officers and others that emerged in the 1990s, the amount of historical sexual abuse in the city was no different than in any other Canadian community.

 

What was different about Cornwall was the media and public reaction to the allegations, which emerged in an "environment of ignorance" that allowed Dunlop's theories to take root.

 

"There is no doubt that this commission was formed largely in response to the persistence of this 'story,"' said the diocese's submissions.

 

"The commission, therefore, should unequivocally and unreservedly put the story to rest and declare that, after more than three years of probing, the story is false and that it should be relegated to the fiction shelf, where it belongs."

 

In its submissions, the diocese also admitted to mistakes that were made in the way it handled sexual abuse complaints. For instance, allegations against a priest ultimately convicted in 1986 of sexually abusing four young men should have been taken to police sooner, Sherriff-Scott said in the submissions.

 

 In addition, a priest convicted of sexual offences in the U.S. should not have been allowed to work for the ministry, the diocese said.