Boston church releases list of 159 priests accused of sex abuse since 1950; 91 names left off

Washington Post

25 August 2011

By Associated Press

BOSTON — Cardinal Sean O’Malley on Thursday released a long-awaited list of priests accused of child sex abuse in Boston in the last 60 years, but he opted not to include certain priests, including ones who died without being publicly charged.

In a letter, O’Malley said 248 of Boston’s priests and two deacons have been accused of child sex abuse since 1950. But he said he decided against releasing 91 of the names, including the deceased priests who weren’t publicly accused; those working in Boston under religious orders or other dioceses; and priests named in unsubstantiated accusations that never went public.

Each of the 159 names published Thursday has been made public previously, though not necessarily by the archdiocese. They include still-active priests who were cleared of abuse after being publicly accused.

O’Malley acknowledged that some people may have wanted him to “go further” and release more names. But he cited concerns about due process and the damage to the reputations of priests — alive and dead — when accused of decades-old crimes that are difficult to verify.

“In the present environment, a priest who is accused of sexually abusing a minor may never be able to fully restore his reputation, even if cleared after civil or canonical proceedings,” O’Malley said. “Reputational concerns also become acute in cases concerning deceased priests, who are often accused years after their death with no opportunity to address the accusations against them.”

O’Malley said the archdiocese’s effort to compile a single list of accused clerics was a step toward taking responsibility for clergy sex abuse. A national scandal broke in Boston in 2002 which revealed church leaders had shifted pedophile priests between parishes while hiding their crimes.

“I carry with me every day the pain of the church’s failures,” O’Malley said.

Stephen Clifford, who says he was abused by a priest while growing up in Wellesley, said he was pleased the archdiocese was “letting some more daylight in” but disappointed his abuser, who is dead, wasn’t listed. Clifford never went public with his accusation, which the archdiocese found credible enough to agree to pay for Clifford’s therapy, he said.

“I know that they know what this priest did to me,” Clifford said. “And the fact that he’s not on this list really makes me wonder, ‘Gosh, how many more are there like him that should be on the list, who aren’t?’”

Boston has been pressured to publish a list — as other dioceses have — since O’Malley said in a 2009 letter that the archdiocese was considering improving its policy on releasing information about accused clergy.

In recent months, prominent victims’ attorney Mitchell Garabedian, and the watchdog group BishopAccountability.org have independently released new names of accused priests, while expressing doubts the archdiocese ever intended to be truly forthcoming. BishopAccountability.org has estimated at least 350 religious workers in Boston have a substantive abuse accusations against them, based on the percentages from other dioceses that have disclosed their number of accused.

Advocates for abuse victims say such public lists ensure that credibly accused priests don’t remain active and also provide victims with validation, which is a crucial step toward healing. They accused O’Malley of inflicting more suffering on victims as months passed with no list.

The Rev. Richard Erikson, outgoing vicar general at the Boston Archdiocese, said the time it took to release the list reflects exhaustive efforts to ensure it was complete, fair and accurate.

David Clohessy of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests said the list is woefully inadequate, but “every scintilla of disclosure” matters, because people will know to beware of the men listed.

“If one kid is kept away from one these priests because of this belated, begrudging and incomplete list, that’s still very significant,” he said.

In his letter, O’Malley said of the 91 names he didn’t release, 62 were deceased clergy. Twenty-two were priests — nine of them now in active ministry — who faced an abuse accusation that was never substantiated or made public. Four were priests or ex-priests under preliminary investigation. Three were defrocked or dismissed by the time they faced accusations that haven’t been made public.

O’Malley said he didn’t release names of accused religious order priests or priests from other dioceses “because the Boston Archdiocese does not determine the outcome in such cases; that is the responsibility of the priest’s order or diocese.”

But BishopAccountability has said religious orders are secretive, and called it a matter of “common decency” for O’Malley to release the names, since no one else will.

“O’Malley chose the safe course today,” the group said in a statement Thursday. “He chose to err today on the side of protecting priests, not children.”

In his letter, O’Malley also gave statistics he said showed the archdiocese’s efforts to protect children are working. He said of the 198 clergy sex abuse allegations reported to the archdiocese in the last six years, 4 percent involve incidents that allegedly happened since 1990. The percentage is consistent with prior analysis that showed the most of the abuse occurred between 1965 and 1982, he said.

O’Malley said he wasn’t trying to downplay the “heinous” abuse or the church’s mistakes, but rather “give the faithful some confidence that the policies adopted by the church to protect its children starting in the early 1990s have been effective.”

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COMMENTS

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617patrick 

The Catholic church is still the world’s largest pedophile protection program, and they will only give you critical safety information if you rip it out of them.

In any other part of society, if someone is accused in court, it’s made public, especially when it concerns child safety.

Cardinal O’Malley is your typical Catholic bishop. He promised this over two years ago, and finally delivered, but only part of what he promised. He will wait and delay as long as he possibly can to do the basic things that any other group in society would have done years ago. Great religion, horrible church.

Parents – keep your children away from Catholic priests. It still isn’t safe

 

8/25/2011 11:48:48 PM EDT

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Xavier3

 Read about the 239 accused priests who served in the Archdiocese of Boston at http://bishop-accountability.org/member/psearch.js… That list at least includes religious order priests whose names are public elsewhere, whom O’Malley refuses to include. I’m sure we won’t see the Jesuits, Franciscans, and other order superiors fill in the gaps. That would be too honest and healing for survivors. Did O’Malley even bother to ask them to include their accused priests names?

Never mind that a bishop has the authority to allow or not allow a religious order priest to function in Boston. Prior bishops accepted those who went on to abuse or either abused before coming. O’Malley as their successor holds it’s not his domain; washes his hands of the matter. Sorry, go pound sand.

8/25/2011 10:48:22 PM EDT

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Xavier3 

Go to www.BishopAccountability.org and check the database of publicly accused priests under the Archdiocese of Boston, or by priest’s name. Read about the 22 priests the church cannot make up its mind about, who are on administrative leave and whose cases are still in process years after receipt of allegations. Makes one suspicious of the standards in canon law. Wonder if a decade from now we will still be waiting on results.

Then look up the records with priests name searches for the 55 deceased priests we know about only because their names are already in the public domain. Among these are truly horrific abusers (I do NOT say “alleged” abusers after reading so many files about many of them). Joseph Birmingham, anyone?

But hey, “There has been no formal determination of guilt in these cases.” That’s one of those exonerating pinpoint accuracies that perjures the truth of what actually happened, but infuriates anyone interested in meaningful transparency.

Try for example the case of Allan E. Roche, and compare the antiseptic service record O’Malley releases versus what really happened at http://www.boston.com/globe/spotlight/abuse/docume… p. 14-15.

Unless a survivor files a lawsuit, we will never know the names of other deceased priests the archdiocese is keeping hidden. And of course the statute of limitations for civil action has long expired. How convenient! O’Malley would fight vigorously against “window” legislation to allow past victims to file lawsuits, as happened in CA where hundreds of perpetrators were identified as a result.

There are families who deserve to know why their child’s life turned so destructive, even if the priest already died without a public accusation. It’s still a “keep the secrets” mentality. We hear only about 20% of abuse is reported.

8/25/2011 10:20:59 PM EDT 

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drwho13 

“Each of the 159 names published Thursday has been made public previously, though not necessarily by the archdiocese.”

So in fact Cardinal Sean O’Malley released nothing; the secrets of the Church remain secure.

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snapjudy 

Not a good excuse…

“But he said he decided against releasing 91 of the names, including the deceased priests who weren’t publicly accused; those working in Boston under religious orders or other dioceses; and priests named in unsubstantiated accusations that never went public.”

All credibly accused priests need to be listed.. besides their victims are most likely still alive and hurting..

Judy Jones, SNAP Midwest Associate Director. 

 

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