Straight Talk about the Catholic Church
By Bill Donohue, President
Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights Website
and
New York Times
April 11, 2011
http://www.catholicleague.org/nytstraighttalk.php
[This statement was posted on the Catholic
League website, and it ran as a full-page advertisement in the
New York Times. Below we provide an image of the advertisement,
followed by the web version of the statement. See also a PDF
of the newspaper version.]
When the Boston Globe exposed massive wrongdoing in the Boston
Archdiocese in 2002, Catholics were understandably angry. And when
more horror stories surfaced elsewhere, we were furious. But now
our anger is turning on those who are distorting the truth about
priestly sexual abuse. That some are exploiting this issue for ideological
and financial profit seems plain.
Every time a new wave of accusations surfaces in one diocese, not
coincidentally we see a spike in accusations in other dioceses.
What is not often reported is that the vast majority of new accusations
extend back decades. For example, for the first quarter of this
year, 80 percent of the cases of alleged abuse involve incidences
that occurred before 2000.
In March, an 80 year-old man came forward in St. Louis claiming
he was abused 70 years ago by a priest who has been dead for a half
century. This is not an anomaly: the same phenomenon has happened
in other dioceses. Unfortunately, too often bishops have been quick
to settle, thus inspiring more claims. When $225,000 is dished out
to a Michigan man who claims he was abused in the 1950s by a priest
who died in 1983—and the diocese admits the accusation is
unsubstantiated—it encourages fraud.
A common belief, fostered by the media, is that there is a widespread
sexual abuse problem in the Catholic Church today. The evidence
is to the contrary: In 2004, the John Jay College of Criminal Justice
issued its landmark study and found that most of the abuse occurred
during the heyday of the sexual revolution, from the mid-1960s to
the mid-1980s. What we are hearing about today are almost all old
cases. To wit: from 2005 to 2009, the average number of new credible
accusations made against over 40,000 priests was 8.6. This is a
tribute to the reform efforts that have taken place: 5 million children
and 2 million adults have gone through a safe environment program.
Indeed, there is no religious, or secular, institution that can
match this record, either in terms of the low rate of abuse or the
extensiveness of a training program.
Penn State professor Philip Jenkins has studied this problem for
years. After looking at the John Jay data, which studied priestly
sexual abuse from 1950-2002, he found that “of the 4,392 accused
priests, almost 56 percent faced only one misconduct allegation,
and at least some of these would certainly vanish under detailed
scrutiny.” Moreover, Jenkins wrote that “Out of 100,000
priests active in the U.S. in this half-century, a cadre of just
149 individuals—one priest out of every 750—accounted
for over a quarter of all allegations of clergy abuse.” In
other words, almost all priests have never had anything to do with
sexual molestation.
The refrain that child rape is a reality in the Church is twice
wrong: let’s get it straight—they weren’t children
and they weren’t raped. We know from the John Jay study that
most of the victims have been adolescents, and that the most common
abuse has been inappropriate touching (inexcusable though this is,
it is not rape). The Boston Globe correctly said of the John Jay
report that “more than three-quarters of the victims were
post pubescent, meaning the abuse did not meet the clinical definition
of pedophilia.” In other words, the issue is homosexuality,
not pedophilia.
When the National Review Board, a group of notable Catholics, issued
its study in 2004, the team’s chief, attorney Robert S. Bennett,
said that “any evaluation of the causes and context of the
current crisis must be cognizant of the fact that more than 80 percent
of the abuse at issue was of a homosexual nature.” One of
the members, Dr. Paul McHugh, former psychiatrist-in-chief at Johns
Hopkins, has said that “This behavior was homosexual predation
on American Catholic youth, yet it’s not being discussed.”
By the way, the figures after 2004 haven’t changed—eight
in ten cases involve homosexuality. Worldwide, the Vatican estimates
that 60 percent of the cases are same-sex, 30 percent are heterosexual
and 10 percent involve pedophilia.
Though the data belie the conventional wisdom, it’s hard
to break stereotypes. The assault on priests as child abusers has
become a staple in the arsenal of Jay Leno, Bill Maher, Denis Leary,
George Lopez, “The View” panelists, and others. So it
is hardly surprising to learn that a stranger approached New York
Archbishop Timothy Dolan at the Denver airport last month saying,
“I can’t look at you or any other priest without thinking
of a sexual abuser.” Indeed, most priests I know do not dress
in priestly garb when traveling—they’ve had to deal
with similar instances.
Why are priests being singled out when the sexual abuse of minors
among other segments of the population is on-going today? According
to Virginia Commonwealth University professor Charol Shakeshaft,
the nation’s leading education expert on this issue, “the
physical sexual abuse of students in schools is likely more than
100 times the abuse by priests.” We know from the work of
Jenkins, and others, that there is no reason to believe that the
rate of abuse is higher among Catholic priests than among the clergy
of other religions. Moreover, there has been a slew of stories over
the past few years detailing the extent of this problem in the Orthodox
Jewish community; some rabbis still insist that sexual abuse cases
should be handled internally. No wonder Jenkins maintains, “As
a result of the furious investigations of the past decades, and
particularly the John Jay study, the U.S. Catholic clergy are now
the only major group on the planet that has ever been subjected
to such a detailed examination of abuse complaints, using internal
evidence that could not have come to light in any other way.”
It would be nice if we could all get on the same page regarding
the proper remedies. But just three months ago, Federal District
Court Judge Jack B. Weinstein took a “compassionate”
view toward a man found guilty of collecting thousands of explicit
pictures of children, as young as three, that he downloaded from
a child porn website. Weinstein slammed existing legal penalties
for the crime, saying, “We’re destroying lives unnecessarily.
At the most, they should be receiving treatment and supervision.”
How often has the Church been ripped for following the advice of
psychiatrists who thought they could “fix” molesters?
To be sure, that was the zeitgeist several decades ago, as virtually
every institution and profession can testify. Indeed, the punitive
approach so favored today would have been cause for condemnation
at that time had it been followed. Interestingly, a report on this
situation in Ireland correctly concluded that had more bishops followed
canon law, instead of seeking a more “compassionate”
strategy, much of the problem could have been avoided.
The real damage done by the therapeutic approach is that it fostered
the phenomenon of reassigning priests after they were treated. The
exact same thing happened in the teaching profession. Indeed, moving
treated teachers to new school districts is so common that it is
called “passing the trash.” While moving treated priests
to new parishes is no longer tolerated, the New York Times found
that the practice of moving abusers around who work in New York’s
state-run homes is commonplace.
Mandatory reporting of sexual crimes is not uniform in law or practice.
In New York State, several attempts to blanket the clergy and other
professionals have been met with resistance. Not by the bishops—but
by Family Planning Advocates (the lobbying arm of Planned Parenthood)
and the New York Civil Liberties Union (NYCLU). Planned Parenthood
counselors routinely learn about cases of statutory rape; mandatory
reporting would obviously work against their clients’ interests.
Even where mandatory reporting is law, such as in the state-run
homes, it is seldom followed (more than 95 percent of the time the
authorities are not contacted).
Calls for suspending the statute of limitations have regularly
been made. But even if one sets aside the fundamental due process
reasons why such laws exist, what is most disturbing about this
issue is that they almost never apply to public employees. Unless
explicitly stated, laws that revise the statute of limitations leave
untouched those in education: they are protected by “sovereign
immunity,” making transparent what the real goal is—“getting
the priests.” And when proposed changes apply to teachers,
in every state where this has happened, teachers’ unions and
school superintendents have organized to register their objections.
Why, then, should bishops who protest these revisions be criticized
for doing so?
When the bishops met in Dallas in 2002 to consider reforms, panic
gripped the conference. If there was one cleric who saw what the
rush to judgment would do to the rights of priests it was the late
Cardinal Avery Dulles. Sadly, events have proven him right. Quite
frankly, it is more acceptable in our society today to defend the
rights of Gitmo detainees than Catholic priests.
Grand juries are launched with the specific directive of investigating
“sexual abuse of minors by individuals associated with religious
organizations and denominations,” but then quickly evolve
into the single-minded pursuit of priests; in Philadelphia, those
who initially reviewed the accusations weren’t even called
to testify. The unseemly practice of attorneys searching for new
“victims” in bars and prisons is a disgrace. Just as
sick is the sight of attorneys advertising for alleged victims of
priests, but refusing to represent those abused by others. It has
gotten so bad that dioceses are now being sued for “wrongful
death” in cases where an alleged victim kills himself after
his accusation was found wanting. And when AP runs a story on the
“scandal” of allowing ex-priests to go unmonitored—as
if someone is monitoring non-priest abusers—the bias shines
through.
There is a huge difference between an accusation, a credible accusation,
a substantiated accusation and a finding of guilt. But not when
it applies to priests. I once had a female reporter lambaste me
in my office when I expressed my opposition to proposals calling
for all dioceses to publish the names of accused priests. I then
asked her for her boss’ name and phone number. Startled, she
asked why. “Because I want to press charges against you for
sexually harassing me,” I intoned, “and then I want
to see your name posted on your employer’s website.”
She got the point.
BishopAccountabilty.org is accessed by reporters and lawyers for
information on priestly sexual abuse, though the standards it uses
cannot pass the smell test. It admits that the database “is
based solely on allegations reported publicly” and that it
“does not confirm the veracity of any actual allegation.”
Swell. Furthermore, it says that “If an individual is ‘cleared’
or ‘exonerated’ by an internal church investigation
and/or a diocesan review board decision, the individual remains
in the database.” Ditto for cases where a priest faces an
allegation for an act which occurred after he left the Catholic
Church; even lawsuits against the dead are listed. There is no other
group in the U.S. which is subjected to such gross unfairness. No
wonder wildly exaggerated claims have been made based off of such
collected “evidence.”
Perhaps no reform made in Dallas has proven to be more intrinsically
dangerous than demands for “zero tolerance.” It all
sounds so macho, but priests on the ground know first-hand what
it means. Obviously, there should be no wiggle room in the most
serious cases, but when priests are sued for “emotional”
abuse, or violating “boundary issues,” the door is left
wide open for exploitation. Dulles got it right when he said that
“A priest who uttered an inappropriate word or made a single
imprudent gesture is treated in the same way as a serial rapist.”
Even worse, we now have the specter of a priest being suspended
because a woman heard a kid in a playground call him a pedophile;
she promptly called the cops. Joe Maher, president of Opus Bono
Sacerdotii, a group that monitors the incidence of falsely accused
priests, says that “at least a thousand priests…have
been removed and remain out of public ministry because of unproven
accusations.”
Because the Catholic Church is often criticized for not following
a “zero tolerance” policy, the Catholic League did some
investigation of its own. Here’s what we found. Almost every
media outlet, teachers’ union and religious organization we
examined does not have a “zero tolerance” policy in
place for sexual misconduct (or any other offense). The few that
do make no mention of mandatory reporting.
These organizations are not wrong for not having the same kind
of policy that the Catholic Church has. The New York Times seems
to understand this matter when applied to schools. In an editorial
titled, “The Trouble With ‘Zero Tolerance,’”
it noted that schools which have adopted these policies have created
conditions where children are being “arrested for profanity,
talking back, shoving matches and other behavior that would once
have been resolved with detention or meetings with the students’
parents.” The NYCLU agreed saying, “De facto zero tolerance
causes wrongful arrests, searches and suspensions of students in
too many of the city’s neediest schools.” Yet as recently
as April 2, the Times issued another editorial insisting the bishops
follow this flawed policy.
No amount of reform will ever satisfy some. Attorneys like Jeffrey
Anderson, and his well-greased friends at SNAP, a professional victims’
group, are dogmatic in their convictions; their hatred of the Catholic
Church is palpable. Similarly, when others tell the bishops we’re
going to “sue the s*** out of you,” and are informed
that the goal is to put an “out of business” sign in
front of every parish, school and charitable center, it is evident
that the Church needs to fight back with greater vigor.
What accounts for the relentless attacks on the Church? Let’s
face it: if its teachings were pro-abortion, pro-gay marriage and
pro-women clergy, the dogs would have been called off years ago.
The British atheist Richard Dawkins is no fan of Catholicism. But
he is honest enough to say that the Catholic Church “has been
unfairly demonized over the issue, especially in Ireland and America.”
Now if Dawkins gets it, why can’t others?
Bill Donohue
President
Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights
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