Cardinal Pell surprised by
Royal Commission statements
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| Cardinal George Pell (file photo) (AAP Image) |
In a statement issued on Thursday, Cardinal Pell says some
of the views of the Royal Commission concerning his actions with regard to
child sexual abuse are not supported by the evidence.
By Vatican News
Cardinal George Pell says he was “surprised” at some of the
views expressed by Australia’s Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to
Child Sexual Abuse. In a statement, the Cardinal said, “These views are not
supported by the evidence”.
Although the Royal Commission’s delivered its Final
Report to Parliament in December 2017, findings related to Cardinal Pell
had been redacted due to ongoing legal proceedings. The case against Cardinal
Pell was concluded on 7 April 2020, when the Australian High Court overturned
his conviction, saying the evidence produced at his trial “did not establish
guilt to the requisite standard of proof".
The newly released findings from the Royal Commission are critical of Pell’s involvement in several cases involving notorious instances of clerical abuse primarily in the 1970s and 80s.
The newly released findings from the Royal Commission are critical of Pell’s involvement in several cases involving notorious instances of clerical abuse primarily in the 1970s and 80s.
Statements from Melbourne and Ballarat
Both the Archbishop of Melbourne and the Bishop of Ballarat
issued statements on Thursday following the publication of the previously
redacted material from the final report.
The current Archbishop of Melbourne, Peter Comensoli, said,
“It is good that all the material from Case 35 of the Royal Commission into the
Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has now been made fully
available”. Bishop Paul Bird of Ballarat echoed that statement .
In his statement, Archbishop Comensoli once again apologized
unreservedly “for the failure of the Catholic Archdiocese of Melbourne to
responsibly care for and protect our young people and vulnerable adults”.
Bishop Bird likewise acknowledged “the past failings in governance in the
Diocese that allowed the terrible abuse of so many children who were entitled
to feel safe in their interactions with the church”, as well as “the tragic
consequences of that abuse to those abused and their families”.
Both Bishops re-iterated the Church’s commitment to ensure
the safety of children and vulnerable persons. “Child safety and care is not a
project with an end date”, said Archbishop Comensoli. “It requires life-long
vigilance”.
Statement by Cardinal Pell
In a separate statement also issued on Thursday, Cardinal
Pell said he was “especially” surprised by statements in the final report
concerning the case of George Ridsdale, a priest who committed more than 130
acts of abuse against children over the course of several decades beginning in
the 1960s. Diocesan officials, including Pell, were involved in decisions to
transfer Ridsdale between parishes. The Commission looked especially at two
personnel meetings, which took place in 1977 and 1982. The Cardinal’s statement
notes evidence presented to the Commission that Ridsdale’s offences were not
known to officials at the time those decisions were made. Pell left the diocese
in 1984.
Cardinal Pell also took issue with the final report’s views
with regard to the Peter Searson case while Pell was an Auxiliary Bishop in the
Archdiocese of Melbourne. Searson was accused of abusing children in parishes
and schools over more than a decade beginning in the 1960s. He was never
formally charged, however, on the basis of those allegations. Pell says that he
met in 1989 with a delegation from a parish at which Searson was assigned. No
mention was made of sexual assaults, and the delegation did not ask for
Searson’s removal, Pell’s statement says. Pell adds that shortly after being
named Archbishop of Melbourne in 1996, he placed Searson on administrative
leave, and removed him from the parish less than two months later, in May 1997.
This story is developing and may be updated.

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