| Releasing Predators" Names Is Not Enough, SNAP Says
SNAP
February 17, 2014
http://www.snapnetwork.org/mn_releasing_predators_names_is_not_enough_snap_says
Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 862 7688 home, 314 503 0003 cell, SNAPdorris@gmail.com)
Recalcitrant Twin Cities church officials have been forced to finally make nine more predators' names public by a safety-conscious judge and victim. But Catholic officials must go further. They have shielded these predators for years. Now they must warn citizens and Catholics about them, not just in Minnesota but in every state they worked.
It's irresponsible for Twin Cities Catholic officials to do what protects them – suspend these predators, when caught, from local parishes – while doing little or nothing to protect others.
Archbishop John Nienstedt, Bishop Lee Piche and Bishop Andrew Cozzens must use their tremendous resources – pulpit announcements, parish bulletins, diocesan websites, newspaper ads and personal visits to the places these predators worked.
We're especially worried about Fr. Freddy Montero, who is now reportedly living among even more vulnerable families in Ecuador – who almost certainly don't know his criminal past.
We challenge archdiocesan officials to disclose how many child molesting clerics "remain under investigation" and when each of these so-called investigations began. It's been clear for a long time that Catholic officials move extraordinarily slowly when they're confronted with clergy sex abuse reports and eventually only announce a finding of “substantiated” when they're virtually forced to do so.
Finally, we reject the premise that some company hired by the archdiocese had to scour files to find these names. It's not like they are buried in some Byzantine vault that must be excavated. St. Paul Catholic officials have known about all of these predators for years, if not decades. They could have and should have disclosed the names years, if not decades, ago.
Catholic officials don't need to hire more people to search their files. They need to 'man up' and search their consciences. They need to disclose every name of every child molesting Catholic employee – cleric or lay person, living or dead, archdiocesan or religious order, whether they're required to or not. Until they do, their reputations will remain in tatters, children will remain at risk, and victims will remain in shame and self-blame.
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