New York
(AFP) - More than 300 "predator" priests in Pennsylvania are accused
of abusing over 1,000 children across seven decades, a grand jury said Tuesday
in a devastating report that decried a systematic cover-up by the Catholic
Church.
It is
thought to be the single most comprehensive report to date into abuse in the US
church, since The Boston Globe first exposed pedophile priests in Massachusetts
in 2002.
But while
Tuesday's report led to charges against two priests, one of whom has pleaded
guilty, the majority of those responsible are dead and the vast majority of
crimes happened too long ago to prosecute, officials said.
The
two-year investigation by a grand jury into all but two Pennsylvania dioceses
turned up dozens of witnesses and half a million pages of church records
containing "credible allegations against over three hundred predator
priests."
More than
1,000 child victims were identifiable, but the "real number" was
"in the thousands," the grand jury estimated, given those children
whose records were lost or who were afraid to ever come forward.
Victims
were often traumatized for life, driven to drugs, alcohol and suicide, the
grand jury said. The only recourse was to recommend changes to the law and
expose what had happened to make sure such widespread abuse was never repeated.
One cleric
raped a seven-year-old girl in hospital after she had her tonsils out, the report
said. Another child drank juice, only to wake up the next morning bleeding from
his rectum and unable to remember what had happened.
'Abuse,
deny, cover up'
A priest
forced a nine-year-old boy to give him oral sex, then rinsed out his mouth with
holy water to "purify him." Another priest abused five sisters from
the same family, including one from the age of 18 months to 12 years.
When the
youngest victim of the family told her parents in 1992, a police search of the
priest's home found panties, plastic containers of pubic hairs, vials of urine
and sexually suggestive photographs of young girls.
The church
ignored credible allegations against him for years, and the priest died
awaiting trial, Pennsylvania's Attorney General Josh Shapiro said.
"The
pattern was abuse, deny and cover up," Shapiro said. "As a direct
consequence of the systematic cover-up by senior church officials almost every
instance of child sexual abuse we found is too old to be prosecuted."
So far only
two new priests are being charged with crimes that fall within the statute of
limitations. One, accused of ejaculating in the mouth of a seven-year-old,
pleaded guilty earlier this month, prosecutors said.
The other
allegedly assaulted two boys, one of them for eight years starting from the age
of eight. His alleged crimes continued until 2010.
The grand
jury called for changes in the law that would scrap the statute of limitations
for child sex abuse, give victims more time to file civil lawsuits and tighten
legislation compelling people to report abuse they find out about.
"Despite
some institutional reform, individual leaders of the church have largely
escaped public accountability," the report said.
'Hid it
all'
"Priests
were raping little boys and girls, and the men of God who were responsible for
them not only did nothing; they hid it all. For decades."
Church
elders were instead promoted and predator priests allowed to remain in ministries
for 10, 20 even 40 years after leaders learned of their crimes as the list of
victims got longer and longer, Shapiro said.
Between
5,700 and 10,000 Catholic priests have been accused of sexual abuse in the
United States, but only a few hundred have been tried, convicted, and sentenced
for their crimes, according to the watchdog Bishop Accountability.
Since the
abuse crisis became public in the 2000s, the US church has spent more than $3
billion in settlements, according to Bishop Accountability.
The group
has documented settlements for 5,679 alleged victims of Catholic clergy -- only
a third of 15,235 allegations that bishops say they have received through 2009.
One estimate suggests up there were 100,000 US victims.
The Boston
Globe won a Pulitzer Prize in 2003 for work by its investigative team exposing
sexual abuse in the Catholic Church. That story was turned into Oscar-winning
Hollywood movie, "Spotlight," starring Michael Keaton.
Faced with
a growing number of cases worldwide and repeated criticism over the Church's
response, Pope Francis in 2013 brought in new legislation covering child sex
abuse and pornography and sentences of up to 12 years for priests.
The church
in Chile has most recently been rocked by accusations of a wide-scale cover-up
of child abuse during the 1980s and 1990s.
Child abuse scandals surrounding the Catholic Church pic.twitter.com/uZvX3g9QXN— AFP news agency (@AFP) August 15, 2018
Former Australian archbishop Philip Wilson, convicted of concealing abuse by a paedophile priest in the 1970s, is to serve his 12 months' sentence in home detention https://t.co/WvdDkboULn pic.twitter.com/rNLlBVnFbL— AFP news agency (@AFP) August 14, 2018

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