BOSTON -- Pressure from the pedophilia scandal in the Archdiocese of
Boston has led to an unprecedented openness among American bishops
about abuse allegations in their own dioceses.
While many key details remain secret -- and critics say much more
information should be released -- rank-and-file Roman Catholics have
been learning more than ever about sexual molestation by clergy.
Since January, when the Boston case first gained national
attention, bishops have suspended or forced the resignation of at
least 26 priests among the more than 47,000 nationwide. The bishops
said their actions were prompted by abuse allegations.
The announcements have been accompanied in some communities by a
rare public accounting of past cases and settlements with victims.
In Pennsylvania, officials in five of the state's eight
dioceses revealed that 58 priests have faced credible accusations
of abuse over the past half-century. Some of the alleged abusers
are now dead or retired.
In Missouri, the Diocese of St. Louis this month removed two
priests who had been accused of abuse years ago, then released
their names. The Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph acknowledged
Monday that it had paid $25,000 in 1996 to settle an abuse claim
against a priest, but did not release his name.
In Maine, the Diocese of Portland last month ordered two
priests to announce their histories of sexual abuse to their
parishes.
The Diocese of Albany, N.Y., this month revealed it had quietly
paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to settle child molestation
cases against nine priests since 1977.
The Los Angeles Times reported that up to a dozen Southern
California priests have been ousted over allegations of sexual
abuse dating as far back as 10 years ago. A Los Angeles Archdiocese
spokesman would not say whether priests have been removed.
"The bishops are being forced to slowly and painfully change
institutional behavior to conform with the mechanisms of a court
system and a free press," said Jason Berry, author of "Lead Us
Not Into Temptation, Catholic Priests and the Sexual Abuse of
Children."
"That has never happened before."
Most of the hundreds of child molestation lawsuits dioceses have
settled since the mid-1980s have been kept confidential. But The
Boston Globe persuaded a judge to unseal 10,000 documents in
January concerning former priest John Geoghan, revealing the Boston
Archdiocese had evidence Geoghan molested children for years but
allowed him to serve anyway. More than 130 people have come forward
to say Geoghan abused them.
In the outcry that followed, Cardinal Bernard Law dramatically
changed the archdiocese's policy on handling such accusations. He
suspended 10 clergy and, for the first time, notified prosecutors
of allegations against 80 priests.
At least 21 of the other 191 American dioceses said the Boston
case prompted them to re-examine their policies on abuse
accusations or review personnel records to see if any priests
accused of molestation were serving in parishes.
"We're updating the policy to make sure it's the best policy it
can be and in tune with society," said Greg Kail, spokesman for
the Archdiocese of Denver. "The hardest thing is that the vast
majority of our priests nationwide are committed to their vocation
... the very public problems being reported are hurtful, and
perhaps cloak honest people in a cloud of suspicion."
Parishioners have had mixed reactions to the details being
released.
"I think we have to realize that they are men, they are human,
we have a problem and we have to deal with it," said Vincent
Thomas, a 24-year-old Philadelphia Catholic, after the local
archdiocese announced that 35 priests had molested children over
the past 50 years.
In Maine, many were angry the two priests were forced to
confess.
"What has been gained by this public crucifixion?" asked
Roland Daigle of Madawaska, a town in the northern Maine region
where the two clergy serve.
Advocates for victims feel the church hasn't been open enough.
They want bishops to release the names of priests who molested
children so perpetrators cannot endanger others. They also want
documentation which proves that priests guilty of molestation have
been disciplined and removed from parishes.
"The bishops have assumed for the longest time that because the
church is 2,000 years old and has weathered scandals in the past,
they could weather this," Berry said. "Now, the church is on a
cultural collision with American society and the expectations of
openness and the idea that institutions must be held accountable."
Copyright 2002 by ThePittsburghChannel. All rights reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.