Do priests work for the Vatican?

UNITED STATES
Palm Beach Post

by Opinion Staff

An anonymous plaintiff who says he repeatedly was raped by a priest in the 1960s has lost his attempt to hold the Vatican financially responsible.

In this file photo provided by the Vatican, Pope Benedict XVI addresses a crowd in St. Peter’s Square. A judge in Portland has ruled that priests do not work for the Vatican, so the Holy See cannot be held financially responsible for child abuse by priests.

A federal judge in Portland, Oregon, has ruled that the priest, Andrew Ronan, was not an employee of the Vatican, so the Holy See cannot be named as a defendant in the lawsuit.

According to The Associated Press, Judge Michael Mossman ruled that that “there was insufficient evidence to decide that the Vatican has both directional and operational control over priests in the United States.”

Ronan, who is accused of abusing children in Ireland and in the United States, died in 1992. The plaintiff says the Vatican is responsible for its failure to protect children as the priest moved from place to place.

A lawyer representing the church, however, says Ronan was kicked out of the priesthood very quickly after the Vatican learned of the allegations.

So, the Vatican gets credit for kicking him out, but he wasn’t the priest’s employer?

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.