BishopAccountability.org
 
  'Whistleblower' Catholic Priest Writes to Top Baptists

The Lawfuel
April 12, 2007

http://lawfuel.com/show-release.asp?ID=11639

He Warned Catholic Bishops of Sex Scandal 20 Years Ago; Now He Prods Protestants to Act

Just Like Catholic Bishops, Baptist Officials Claim 'No Authority'

Baptist President Repeats 'Powerlessness' Claim; SNAP Disputes That

Washington, April 12 Lawfuel - Lawsuit Newswire — A priest and canon

lawyer who first warned of the Catholic sex scandal in the mid-1980s has

written to officials of the largest Protestant denomination urging them to act now to better protect kids.

Father Thomas Doyle of Vienna, Virginia is prodding Southern Baptist

officials to consider that, to make children safer, they may need to find

"a new way" to institute accountability for Baptist clergy.

A self-help group for victims of clergy sex abuse has been urging

Southern Baptists to do what Catholics and other faith groups have done by establishing a review board to hear molestation reports and instituting a 'zero-tolerance' policy.

The Chicago-based support group called SNAP, the Survivors Network of

those Abused by Priests and other Clergy (SNAPnetwork.org), delivered those requests to Southern Baptist officials last September. They took no action on SNAP's requests, and said they have "no authority" over autonomous Baptist churches.

Doyle points out that the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops also

claimed to have "no direct authority" over any diocese, "each of which is

civilly and canonically independent." Yet in 2002, after hundreds of

victims spoke up and the scandal reached national proportions, an oversight mechanism was nevertheless finally created.

Southern Baptist president Frank Page responded to Doyle that, while

Catholic bishops claimed to have "no authority," Baptist officials "truly

have no authority."

"Where there's a will, there's a way," said David Clohessy of St.

Louis, SNAP's national director. "If Baptist officials genuinely cared

about this problem, they would find a way to effectively address it."

"Whether religious leaders claim 'no authority' or 'truly no

authority,' it's still kids who are left at risk," said SNAP-Baptist

coordinator, Christa Brown of Austin, who maintains the

StopBaptistPredators.org website. "If kids are going to be made safer,

Southern Baptists must find a way to rid their ranks of clergy predators

and to hold accountable leaders who turn a blind eye. How many more wounded kids will it take before Baptist officials take action?"

Doyle's letter and a link to Page's reply are at

http://www.stopbaptistpredators.org/documents/thomas_doyle.html

 
 

Any original material on these pages is copyright © BishopAccountability.org 2004. Reproduce freely with attribution.