Paying tribute to the reporting that exposed priest sex abuse

MASSACHUSETTS
The Patriot-Ledger

By Roy J. Harris Jr.

Jan. 25, is not a particularly remarkable day for most journalists, except among the top editors of America’s newspapers and news websites.

It is the deadline for submitting entries for the Pulitzer Prizes, the most prestigious awards for U.S. journalism, dating to 1917. That’s 95 years of honoring great reporting, along with accomplishment in arts and letters acknowledged by the non-journalism branch of the prizes.

As it happens, I’m in Los Angeles talking today to classes at the University of Southern California’s Annenberg School of Journalism. My topic: what I consider the best example of Pulitzer-winning team investigative reporting since Watergate. That reporting, in the Boston Globe, began running 10 years ago this month.

On Jan. 6, 2002, the Globe first vividly documented the Catholic Church hierarchy’s cover-up of priests who sexually abused young parishioners – igniting a scandal still resonating around the U.S. and the world. Rightly, most of the anniversary’s attention so far has focused on the progress made by abuse victims and their families, and the way the issue still resonates within the Church.

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