Posts Tagged Archdiocese of Philadelphia
Sentence in Philly Clergy Sexual Abuse Case Stuns Courtroom
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Clergy Sexual Abuse, Voice of the Faithful on June 12, 2013
In a sentence that stunned the packed courtroom, a Philadelphia judge today sentenced a Catholic priest to 6 to 12 years in prison, and a former parochial teacher 8 to 16 years, for the serial sexual assault of a 10-year-old altar boy in the late 1990s.” By Philadelphia Inquirer staff writer Joseph Slobodzian
Star Witness’ Story in Philadelphia Sex Abuse Trials Doesn’t Add Up / National Catholic Reporter
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Clergy Sexual Abuse, Voice of the Faithful on April 30, 2013
Former Philadelphia Inquirer reporter Ralph Cipriano says that after sitting in on all 16 weeks of the two archdiocese trials in Philadelphia, he came away with a different take than the district attorney on his ‘historic’ prosecution of the church. Cipriano says what he witnessed was a couple of show trials shrouded in official secrecy and staged for political benefit. While (Monsignor William) Lynn became the main focus of the prosecution, the men at the top of the church hierarchy who gave Lynn his orders (including Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua, Bishop Edward Cullen and Bishop Joseph Cistone) were given a pass.”
By Ralph Cipriano, former reporter for The Philadelphia Inquirer and the Los Angeles Times, in National Catholic Reporter. Read Cipriano’s article by clicking here.
Former Head of US Bishops’ Diaconate Office Banned in Philadelphia Over Women Deacons
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in church reform, Voice of the Faithful on December 7, 2012
A former key U.S. Catholic bishops’ conference staffer has been told he is not allowed to speak publicly in the Philadelphia archdiocese because he co-authored a book investigating the possibility of ordaining women as deacons. William Ditewig, a theologian and deacon who previously served as the head of the bishops’ secretariat for the diaconate, has been told his public presence in the archdiocese would cause ‘doctrinal confusion.'” By Joshua J. McElwee, National Catholic Reporter
Can We Believe the Archdiocese? | Catholics4Change
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in church reform, Clergy, Clergy Sexual Abuse, Voice of the Faithful on November 6, 2012
Can We Believe the Archdiocese? | Catholics4Change.
“On October 15, the Archdiocese of Philadelphia announced its decision to restore Rev. Joseph DiGregorio to ministry, a priest credibly accused of the sexual exploitation of a minor. It did so while releasing as little information as possible,” Sister Maureen Turlish.
Penn State case bad, but church sex abuse worse / USA TODAY Column
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Clergy Sexual Abuse, Voice of the Faithful on August 1, 2012
“But the Philadelphia archdiocese is not likely to suffer the same fate as Penn State, even though three grand juries found it left pedophile priests free to prey upon children for years after church officials became aware of them. That’s because saving the church from scorn was more important to them than protecting children from those monsters,” DeWayne Wickman, Columnist, USA TODAY
Comeuppance for the Church Hierarchy
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Clergy Sexual Abuse, Voice of the Faithful on July 30, 2012
“A dose of criminal justice was long overdue in the pedophile priest scandal. It was meted out in Philadelphia Tuesday (July 24, 2012) when Msgr. William Lynn became the highest-ranking Roman Catholic official in the United States to be sentenced to prison. He was convicted of child endangerment and sentenced to up to six years after a trial that starkly detailed how diocesan leaders shielded predatory priests and rotated them through parishes to prey anew. The sentence should be a clear warning to church officials that criminal law, not church evasion, is the law of the land when it comes to protecting innocent children.”
From editorial in The New York Times, Comeuppance for the Church Hierarchy, July 29, 2012
What can we make of Sandusky/Lynn, Penn State/Catholic Church?
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Catholic Bishops, Clergy, Clergy Sexual Abuse, Statutes of Limitations, Uncategorized, Vatican, Voice of the Faithful on July 24, 2012
By Bill Casey, former Voice of the Faithful Trustee and member of VOTF Northern Virginia
The highest ranking Roman Catholic Church official to be found guilty of covering up crimes against children in the Church’s decades-old clergy sexual abuse scandal was sentenced today in a Philadelphia court. Msgr. William Lynn, former head of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia office that made priest assignments, was sentenced to up to six years in prison for child endangerment, transferring pedophile priests secretly. Lynn’s trial was a textbook example of how the Church has fought to maintain its reputation and treasure at the expense of innocence and the destructive effects of child abuse. With Lynn’s conviction and sentencing, concerned Catholics and others could only hope for more accountability.
Contrast how the Church’s scandal has played out against another secular child molestation scandal at Pennsylvania State University. One glaring disparity between the two is that children abused by clergy most often must seek justice through civil trials while the Church maintains perpetrators and abettors in their clerical positions.
The underlying crimes in these contrasting examples–Church and secular–are the same:
- the sexual abuse of children and cover-up by hierarchical officials;
- callous disregard for the harm done to vulnerable children in favor of protecting the image, reputation and honors of the institution; and
- shifting of the story from the lifelong wounds and needs of the actual victims to the “victimhood” of the perpetrators and others who get caught in the consequences.
But when evidence of such horrific wrongdoing at Penn State, a secular institution, seeped out, and was confirmed by a full independent investigation, those responsible were held accountable by appropriate criminal and civil actions brought in the name of the victims. The conviction of former football coach Jerry Sandusky on 45 counts of child sexual abuse, the resignations/firings of the highest university staff by the Board of Trustees, the unprecedented NCAA sanctions levied against Penn State yesterday and the inevitability of civil lawsuits to follow show clearly how secular society generally holds its citizens accountable for gross malfeasance and crimes.
In the Catholic Church, however, the hierarchy has covered up systemic abuse of children in diocese after diocese, religious order after religious order. Church officials claim exemption from the way secular society treats these crimes based on their self-perpetuated views that clergy are separate, above and exempt from the same norms that apply to everyone else. So, when the Church commits crimes:
- no full independent investigation by qualified investigators outside the hierarchy’s control takes place;
- statutes of limitations run out, too often precluding criminal or civil reviews of evidence, while the hierarchy fights tenaciously against statute of limitation reform in state after state; and
- no local boards of trustees, a la Penn State, are available to judge the merits of the revelations on the grounds of ethical behavior, common decency and Gospel values.
The bishop in every Catholic diocese is accountable to no one, under Canon Law, except the pope. In the United States, the Vatican has held not a single bishop accountable for failing to do what decency, ethics and Gospel values alone, not to mention civil law, would expect from leaders of a secular institution, let alone a religious one.
The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, the closest approximation of an oversight body such as the NCAA, is toothless under Canon Law and, in my opinion, cowardly under any other standard.
If not for the work of survivor advocates, the media and the courts (in those limited cases where courts have jurisdiction), the public would continue to hear only the hierarchy’s spin on reality after allegations of clergy sexual abuse come to light.
In those cases of Church wrongdoing that have gone to trial, however, the evidence of what happened at the time of abuse and thereafter follows the same pattern as at Penn State, and at almost every other organization that thinks the truth can be hidden. Fortunately, unlike the Catholic hierarchy, most secular institutions cannot keep the evidence hidden, and none escapes accountability when the evidence is revealed, evaluated and judged.
The time has come, and long since passed, for the same kind of accountability that is applied to secular institutions like Penn State to be applied to the Church. The time has come, and long since passed, for the full truth, full justice and full accountability that is applied to secular institutions to be applied to the Catholic hierarchy.
Justice and accountability, severe as they are, have been applied at Penn State.
Nothing comparable has occurred within the Catholic Church.
Editor’s Note: For more commentary on this issue see:
- Archdiocese Issues Absurd & Enraging Response to Lynn Sentence
- My Take: Why NCAA Is Taking Sex Abuse More Seriously than the Catholic Church, CNN Belief Blog
- The Betrayal that Shook Happy Valley, The Washington Post
- A Reckoning at Penn State, The New York Times
- Voice of the Faithful Lists of Government & Academic Reports on Clergy Sexual Abuse
The verdict in Philadelphia | National Catholic Reporter
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Catholic Bishops, Clergy, Clergy Sexual Abuse, Vatican, Voice of the Faithful on June 26, 2012
Jerry Sandusky’s conviction of 45 counts of child abuse pushed Msgr. Lynn’s child endangerment conviction to the back pages of the news, but those who needed to hear about Lynn’s verdict, heard it — “not a chancery official in the land can think that covering up for an abuser will protect the institution.”
Parish Priest Speaks Out On Silence | Catholics4Change
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Catholic Church Finances, Clergy Sexual Abuse, Vatican, Voice of the Faithful on June 25, 2012
This parish priest points out from the pulpit regarding clergy sexual abuse and Msgr. Lynn’s conviction on child endangerment that “those directly in charge, the bishops, have yet to claim or accept responsibility for their own horrific part in this painful scandal.”
The 21st Century American Catholic: Guilty!
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Catholic Bishops, Catholic Dissent, Clergy, Clergy Sexual Abuse, Vatican, Voice of the Faithful on June 25, 2012
This blog was posted June 23 by a theologian/educator close to the situation in the Philadelphia Archdiocese and offers another view on Msgr. Lynn’s conviction on June 22 —
