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Pa. report on clergy sexual abuse is critical of Cardinal Wuerl

Wuerl defends oversight of Pittsburgh diocese after grand jury report (海角社区app's Megan Cloherty)

WASHINGTON 鈥 A report released Tuesday from a Pennsylvania grand jury聽finds that more than a thousand children were allegedly abused by Catholic priests, and it’s critical of how Washington’s archbishop handled abusers.

Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro detailed the alleged abuse by 301 in six dioceses, including Pittsburgh, where Cardinal Donald Wuerl had served as bishop for 18 years.

There are multiple instances in the 900-page report where Wuerl is said to have reported priests’ abusive behavior to the Vatican, but also approved the transfer and continued ministry of known offenders.

In addition, the grand jury concluded that Catholic bishops and other diocesan leaders tried to shield the church from bad publicity and financial liability by covering up abuse, failing to report accused clergy to police and discouraging victims from going to law enforcement.

The grand jury said it believes the 鈥渞eal number鈥 of abused children might be 鈥渋n the thousands鈥 since some records were lost and victims were afraid to come forward. The report said clergy committed the abuse over a period decades, beginning in the mid-1950s.

Victim advocates call the report the largest and most exhaustive such review by any U.S. state. The grand jury scrutinized abuse allegations in six of Pennsylvania鈥檚 eight dioceses that, collectively, minister to more than half the state鈥檚 3.2 million Catholics.

Earlier on Tuesday,聽Wuerl told 海角社区app that the report painted what calls “a very, very dark picture.”

“It turns out about 5 percent of the priests in Pennsylvania over those 70 years had some allegation against them,” said Wuerl,聽one of the highest-profile cardinals in the United States.

A third of the priests said to be accused in this report were from the Pittsburgh diocese, where Washington’s archbishop had served as bishop from聽1988 through 2006.

Earlier on Tuesday, he defended how abuse allegations were handled under his watch, and said he believed the yet-to-be-released report would support that. But he added that it “doesn’t take away the pain.”

“The priests against whom there were allegations during my time there, those priests聽we dealt with,” Wuerl said. “I think the report is going to show that we moved very, very quickly, that we acted 鈥 I would hope this is going to confirm 鈥 that we acted with diligence and concern to prevent any future acts of abuse.”

This included聽a 鈥渮ero tolerance鈥 policy for clergy who committed abuse, he told The Associated Press, and a process to address allegations.

Prior to the report’s release, Wuerl said the expected findings served as a reminder that caring for abuse survivors should always be “our very first action.”

“We have to be there for them and with them.”

Father George Zirwas

One particularly horrifying case detailed in the grand jury鈥檚 report is that of Father George Zirwas, who was accused of multiple instances of abuse from 1987 to 1995. (As bishop, Wuerl oversaw Zirwas starting in 1988.)

The grand jury found that years earlier, Zirwas had been involved with a ring of other pedophile priests. A victim identified as 鈥淕eorge鈥 detailed how he had been told to strip for both the priest who had befriended him (Zirwas) and these other priests when he was a teenager.

鈥淭he priests began a conversation about religious statues and asked George to get up on a bed. As the priests watched, they asked George to remove his shirt. They then drew an analogy to the image of Christ on the cross, and told George to remove his pants so that his pose would be more consistent with the image of Christ in a loincloth. At that point, the priests began taking Polaroid pictures of George. As the picture taking continued, the priests directed George to take off his underwear. George was nervous and complied.

鈥 鈥 George stated that his photographs were added to a collection of similar photographs depicting other teenage boys.鈥

Those photos, Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro said, were 鈥渃hild porn which they produced and shared on church grounds.鈥 The victim鈥檚 testimony to the grand jury was reportedly one of the first times he ever disclosed the abuse, but records revealed the diocese was reportedly aware of the priests鈥 conduct.

Internal documents detailed complaints from 1987 to 1995 accusing Zirwas of 鈥渦nwanted sexual contact,鈥 inappropriate touching and groping of underage boys, as well as an incident of providing alcohol to a teen.

鈥淶irwas continued to function as a priest during this period and was reassigned to several parishes,鈥 the report said. He was sent to a mental hospital for evaluation in December 1988, but upon release continued in the ministry and served in other parishes.

He was placed on a leave of absence in 1994, and then requested an assignment in Miami, saying it was necessary 鈥渄ue to 鈥榝alse rumors鈥欌 floating around the diocese, according to the grand jury report. At one point, he even threatened legal action against diocese personnel 鈥渃oncerning his relationship to the public scandals which surfaced in 1988,鈥 the grand jury wrote.

鈥淲ithin days, Zirwas was returned to ministry by Bishop Donald Wuerl,鈥 the report said. Months later, another complaint was made involving the sexual assault of an underage boy and Zirwas was again placed on a leave of absence.

He eventually moved to Florida and then on to Cuba.

Zirwas informed the diocese in 1996 that he knew of other Pittsburgh priests鈥 involvement in illegal sexual activity, the report found, and 鈥渄emanded that his sustenance payments be increased鈥 in exchange for that information. Wuerl replied with instructions to provide the names of the priests involved or to 鈥渟tate that he had no knowledge of what he had previously claimed鈥 to get any additional assistance.

The priest then disavowed any knowledge of priests being involved in illegal sexual activity in a letter to the diocese. 鈥淶irwas was granted an additional financial stipend and his sustenance payments were continued,鈥 report said.

鈥淚t does not appear that the diocese shared with the police Zirwas鈥 statement that he had information on other priests鈥 criminal activity,鈥 the report said.

Zirwas was murdered inside his Havana apartment in 2001.

Extraordinary scope

The Pennsylvania report echoes the findings of many earlier church investigations around the country 鈥 and in other Pennsylvania dioceses 鈥 in its description of widespread sexual abuse by clergy and church officials鈥 concealment of it.

What distinguished this probe was its extraordinary scope:

Yet the grand jury鈥檚 work might not result in justice for Catholics who say they were molested as children. While the nearly two-year probe has yielded charges against two clergymen 鈥 including a priest who has since pleaded guilty, and another who allegedly forced his accuser to say confession after each sex assault 鈥 the vast majority of priests already identified as perpetrators are either dead or are likely to avoid arrest because their alleged crimes are too old to prosecute under state law.

The document comes at a time of renewed scrutiny and fresh scandal at the highest levels of the U.S. Catholic Church. Pope Francis stripped 88-year-old Cardinal Theodore McCarrick of his title and ordered him to a lifetime of prayer and penance amid allegations that McCarrick had for years sexually abused boys and had sexual misconduct with adult seminarians.

In the report, the grand jury accused Wuerl of coining a phrase used to describe the abuse coverup: “Circle of Secrecy.”

A statement issued soon afterward by the Washington Archdiocese denies that they are Wuerl’s words, and that the phrase “did not relate in any way to efforts by the church to cover up allegations of abuse, and that the report used the phrase in a completely different way.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Megan Cloherty

An award-winning journalist, Megan Cloherty is podcast host and producer of the 鈥22 Hours: An American Nightmare.鈥 She previously served as 海角社区app Investigative Reporter covering breaking news, crime and courts.

Jack Pointer

Jack contributes to 海角社区app.com when he's not working as the afternoon/evening radio writer.

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