| One Prosecutor Joins Call for Grand Jury Vs. Archdiocese
SNAP
July 15, 2014
http://www.snapnetwork.org/mn_one_prosecutor_joins_call_for_grand_jury_vs_archdiocese
St. Paul prosecutor and state representative John Lesch says, according to Minnesota Public Radio, that “a call from survivors for a grand-jury investigation (into the St. Paul Catholic archdiocese) has some merit.”
"Of course it's rare, but if there is a situation that is tailor-made for a grand jury, I think this is it," he said.
We applaud his thinking and his courage. We continue to be dreadfully disappointed in Ramsey County Attorney John Choi who seems to spend more time explaining his inaction than he does taking action against the clearly complicit and corrupt Catholic officials who head the Twin Cities archdiocese.
Our 25 years of working with victims, witnesses, whistleblowers, police, prosecutors and lawmakers has taught us one crucial lesson: almost always, “where there's a will, there's a way.” Sure, many laws are inadequate and archaic. Sure, Catholic officials shrewdly cover their tracks in clergy sex cases. Sure, many victims don't come forward promptly.
But time and time again, despite these obstacles, we've see law enforcement officials be aggressive and creative and successful in pursuing criminal charges against members of the Catholic hierarchy. The biggest hurtle seems to be finding not the one case or the one legal tool or the one investigative maneuver or the one whistleblower. It seems to be finding the political will.
We aren't lawyers, police or prosecutors. We assume Choi is doing some worthy action to quietly to bring some of these high-ranking, self-serving and morally bankrupt Catholic officials to justice. But we also firmly believe he can and should do more (as Lesch suggests).
We urge Choi to get on the right side of history and insist that police officers and his own staff do more to investigate those who commit AND those who conceal heinous sexual violence against children in the church.
At the very least, Choi should again make an impassioned plea for victims, witnesses and whistleblowers to come forward. The more time goes by and the more horrors that get exposed, the more hopeless people with knowledge or suspicions about clergy sex crimes become. They should be prodded, again, to call police and prosecutors immediately. Those kinds of public pleas can make a real difference.
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