24 September 2018 | by Michael Sean Winters
US bishops establish system for addressing episcopal misdemeanours
The Tablet
Cardinal Tobin
Cardinal Tobin has been granted permission not to attend next month's Youth Synod
The Administrative Committee of the U.S.
bishops’ conference met last week “at this time of shame and sorrow” and
announced efforts to confront the clergy sex abuse crisis that returned
to the forefront of Church life in the U.S. this summer. The committee
consists of the chairs of all conference committees as well as regional
representatives, about 35 bishops in all.
The committee approved establishing a
third-party reporting system for complaints of sexual misconduct by a
bishop, whether the misconduct be with a minor or with an adult. They
asked their Committee on Canonical Affairs and Church Governance to
“develop proposals for policies addressing restrictions on bishops who
were removed or resigned because of allegations of sexual abuse of
minors or sexual harassment of or misconduct with adults, including
seminarians and priests.”
As well, the body began developing a Code
of Conduct for bishops regarding sexual abuse of a minor, sexual
misconduct towards an adult, or “negligence in the exercise of his
office related to such cases.” Finally, the committee said it supported a
full scale investigation into “the situation regarding Archbishop
Theodore McCarrick,” and specifically called for lay experts to
participate in such an investigation.
It was unclear on whose authority an
investigation into allegations against McCarrick would be conducted as
access to documents of the Holy See would be required. Cardinal Daniel
DiNardo, president of the bishops’ conference, had previously called for
an apostolic visitation into the matter, and he met with Pope Francis
earlier this month, but no such visitation was announced. The vice
president of the conference, Archbishop Jose Gomez, also attended the
meeting with the pope as did conference General Secretary Monsignor
Brian Bransfield, and Boston’s Cardinal Sean O’Malley who was already in
Rome for the Council of Cardinals meeting.
The next plenary meeting of the U.S.
bishops’ conference will be in November in Baltimore and discussions of
how to implement these and other measures of accountability are expected
to dominate discussion.
In a related development Michigan Attorney
General Bill Schuette announced an investigation into clergy sex abuse,
making his state the eighth since the Pennsylvania grand jury report was
released in August to open such an investigation. He also announced a
hotline and website at which victims can report abuse.
“This investigation is and will continue to
be independent, thorough, transparent, and prompt,” Schuette stated on
his official website. “My department and this investigation will find
out who knew what, and when.” There are seven dioceses in Michigan and
the investigation will cover all of them.
Civil authorities in Illinois, Maryland,
Missouri, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York and Wyoming have already
announced similar investigations into clergy sex abuse cases by Catholic
clergy.
Meanwhile Cardinal Joseph Tobin of Newark
announced that he had asked, and received, permission from Pope Francis
to be excused from attending next month’s synod of bishops. Newark has
been especially hard hit by the clergy sex abuse scandal after reports
surfaced that a previous archbishop, Theodore McCarrick, had sexually
harassed and abused seminarians at a beach house while serving in
Newark.
“After the revelations of the past summer, I
could not see myself absent for a month from our archdiocese and from
you, the people entrusted to my care,” Tobin said in a letter to the
faithful. “After prayer and consultation, I wrote to Pope Francis asking
that he dispense me from attending, but assuring him that I strongly
support the objectives of the Synod and that I would obey whatever he
decided. The Holy Father responded the next day with a beautiful
pastoral and compassionate message. He told me that he understands why I
need to stay close to home, and he released me from the obligation to
attend the Synod next month.”
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