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Garda Connivance in Stifling Abuse Inquiries Deplored
By Carol Coulter
Irish Times
November 27, 2009
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/ireland/2009/1127/1224259547597.html
[This feature includes:
• Church
'Routinely Covered Up' Child Sexual Abuse for 30 Years, by Carl O'Brien
and Patsy McGarry, Irish Times (11/27/09)
• Vatican
and Nuncio Ignored Letters on Abuse, by Patsy McGarry and Paddy Agnew,
Irish Times (11/27/09)
• Murphy
Report: Background and Composition, by Patsy McGarry and Carol Coulter,
Irish Times (11/27/09)
• 30
Years of Church and State Cover-Up of Child Sex Abuse, by Paul Cullen,
Irish Times (11/27/09)
• Cult
of Loyal Obedience at Heart of Lies and Cover-Up, by Patsy McGarry,
Irish Times (11/27/09)
• Garda
Connivance in Stifling Abuse Inquiries Deplored, by Carol Coulter,
Irish Times (11/27/09)
• Abuse
Continued for Years Due to Protection of Priests, by Carl O'Brien,
Irish Times (11/27/09)
• Bishops
Lied and Covered Up, by Mary Raftery, Irish Times (11/27/09)]
GARDA ROLE: "THE CONNIVANCE by the Garda in effectively stifling
one complaint and failing to investigate another, and in allowing Fr 'X'
to leave the country is shocking."
This is the verdict of the commission which compiled the Dublin
diocesan report on the manner in which the law enforcement arm of
the State dealt with one priest who was a serial child sex abuser.
In relation to another, it states: "The commission considers that
Chief Supt O'Connor had inappropriate dealings with Bishop Kavanagh. It
appears that Bishop Kavanagh tried to influence the conduct of the investigation
and clearly did his best to ensure there would be no publicity."
However, it added in relation to this case involving "one of the
most serious serial abusers investigated by the commission": "His
attempts to influence the process were unsuccessful because the lower-ranking
gardaí had done their job properly."
The pattern that emerges from the report as a whole is that when complaints
against priests first emerged from 1960 onwards gardaí were inclined to
minimise their seriousness and failed to investigate them adequately,
at times even facilitating the accused to evade justice.
However, from the late 1990s, when there was much greater awareness of
such crimes, investigations tended to be much more thorough, with the
Garda inquiry into clerical abuse that began in 2002 being "effective,
co-ordinated and comprehensive".
Very senior Garda officers come in for criticism, including then Garda
commissioner Daniel Costigan, who held office in 1960. In 1960, the UK
authorities contacted him because a security officer at a photographic
film company in the UK had referred colour film, sent to them by a priest
identified as "Fr Edmondus" for processing, to Scotland Yard.
They contained 26 transparencies of the private parts of small girls aged
10 or 11 years. This priest abused a number of children in Crumlin hospital,
and was later convicted.
Mr Costigan asked Archbishop McQuaid to take over the case because a priest
was in question and gardaí "could prove nothing". "The
commission considers that it was totally inappropriate and a breach of
duty for the Garda commissioner to simply hand over the complaint to Archbishop
McQuaid without carrying out any thorough investigation," it says.
However, it adds: "The gardaí handled the subsequent complaints appropriately."
The commission is also highly critical of the manner in which gardaí dealt
with complaints against an unnamed priest in 1986, whose behaviour had
led to his being sent for a time to the US. On his return he had been
staying in a house owned by Chief Supt Joe McGovern, to whom he made certain
limited admissions.
The superintendent "got involved in the matter" and the investigation
stopped, though the investigating officer had referred the matter to the
DPP. The priest returned to the US.
This sequence of events, and the "connivance" of the Garda with
his leaving the country, was described as "shocking" by the
commission.
The commission criticises the office of the DPP in relation to certain
cases. In that of Fr Donal Gallagher, a complaint was made by a social
worker in 1993 about abuse of deaf girls in a training centre.
The file was sent to the DPP for guidance, but the then DPP said he would
not presume to direct the superintendent about an investigation. "There
is no doubt that further investigation was warranted," the commission
says.
It also draws attention to a number of decisions not to prosecute by the
DPP, most commonly because of the perceived delay in making the complaint.
It points out that, before the mid-1990s, a delay of just a year in bringing
a complaint could have led to a decision not to prosecute. However, a
seminal judgment was delivered by the Supreme Court in 1997 which stated
that in cases of child sex abuse no time limit should be put on bringing
prosecutions, but a number of factors should be considered in judging
whether the delay was reasonable.
Another Supreme Court ruling in 2006 further clarified the law, this time
focusing on whether there would be any prejudice to the accused in conducting
his defence. These rulings led to several prosecutions in "old"
cases.
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