Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Friday, August 26, 2011
Boston Archdiocese Expands Disclosure of Priests Accused of Sexual Abuse
The Archdiocese of Boston yesterday announced a change in its policy regarding disclosure of names of priests accused of sexually abusing minors. Since 2002, the Archdiocese has had a policy of notifying law enforcent authorities of all allegations of sexual abuse of children. However, the names of priests were publicly disclosed only after either a criminal conviction or defrocking by the Church. Under the new policy, names will now also be disclosed where (1) an accused priest is voluntarily laicized; (2) a priest has been publicly accused and is on administrative leave, but Church proceedings have not been completed; (3) priests who had been laicized and subsequently were publicly accused of sexual abuse; and (4) priests who were publicly accused after they had died or who died before or during proceedings against them. The Archdiocese published the names of 159 priests, of whom 25 had been publicly accused but the accusations against them were found to be unsubstantiated. Another 91 names of accused priests were not posted. These were mostly cases where accusations had never been made public and either could not be substantiated, or had not been substantiated when the priest died. CNN, reporting on the policy change, quoted the director of SNAP, an advocacy group for victims, who called the disclosures "belated," "begrudging" and "incomplete".