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Cardinal
Should Release 35 Priest Files Now
By Kate Bochte Survivors Network of Those Abused by
Priests February 5, 2014
http://www.snapnetwork.org/cardinal_should_release_35_priest_files_now
It took almost nine years - and dozens of lawsuits -
to get records on 30 archdiocesan predator priests released by
the Chicago archdiocese.
That's fewer than half of the 65 predator priests
George admits to, and less than one fourth of the 121 predator
priests listed by an independent group called
BishopAccountability.org.
So at this rate, we'll get another 35 predator
priests' records in around 2025, assuming that dozens more
victims file dozens more lawsuits and insist on more disclosure.
And we'll never see the records of the other 56
predator priests who worked and abused in the Chicago
archdiocese but who George refuses to take any responsibility
for (because another Catholic entity, a religious order, signs
their paychecks).
According to the Tribune, “The archdiocese said it is
developing a method to release the rest of the files.” What
“method” is needed?
It's not rocket science. Someone has to read the files
and redact the names of victims, then release them. That's it.
Each file might take a day or two, but not more. (Recall that
last month, victims' attorneys got 6,000 pages of records. A
week later, they were able to make those records available to
the public.)
Keep in mind too that Catholic employees are members
of a feudal system. They aren't union employees. They can't sue
Cardinal George if they feel he's been unfair to them. (We know
of only a handful of cases in which predator priests have sued
their bishops. We know of no cases in which those predator
priests have succeeded.)
So Cardinal George doesn’t have to worry about legal
headaches when he releases this information.
He should of course worry that every day he sits on
these files, he's endangering kids and protecting current and
former clerics who commit and conceal heinous crimes against
kids, and those who may, right now, be committing and concealing
more heinous crimes against kids. We know of thousands of
lawsuits in which bishops have been charged with concealing
crimes against children.
For that secrecy and recklessness, Cardinal George,
and his archdiocesan, has been sued dozens and dozens and dozens
of times. And hundreds of lives have been shattered.
So George should stop discussing “methods” of
transparency and start actually practicing transparency.
Starting tomorrow, he should release one file every day until
all predators' files are disclosed.
Cardinal George's public relations staffers insist
that they do what they can to protect kids. But if that were
true he would not protect cleric's reputations and endanger
children's safety.
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