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Catholic Church Sent Paedophile Priests Away "for Them to Be Fixed': Prosecutors Turned Blind Eye to Abuse

By Graham Grant
Daily Mail
June 9, 2017

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4586830/Catholic-Church-sent-paedophile-priests-fixed.html

The Catholic Church in Scotland has admitted it made a 'huge mistake' by sending paedophile priests away to be 'fixed' rather than prosecuting them.

A senior cleric said yesterday that abuse was seen as a 'sin' and the church focused more on 'treating' child molesters than on helping their young victims.

He said there were occasions when prosecutors turned a blind eye and agreed not to bring charges on the condition abusers received therapy, with their crimes seen as a 'moral fault that could be fixed by prayer and retreat'.

The Catholic Church in Scotland has admitted it made a 'huge mistake' by sending paedophile priests away to be 'fixed' rather than prosecuting them

Some abusers were sent to a hospital in Ireland, he revealed.

Monsignor Peter Smith, former chancellor of the Archdiocese of Glasgow, told a hearing of the Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry in Edinburgh that abuse had 'always been seen as a serious sin for a cleric' and that there was an internal court process for accused priests.

But he said the 'reality was these processes were seldom used' because the abuse was seen as a 'sin' that could be 'sorted'.

He acknowledged that was a 'dreadful misunderstanding' and when asked by the inquiry's lead counsel Colin MacAulay QC if a criminal trial was 'relatively rare', Monsignor Smith said: 'It was [seen as] better to fix the person, to stop them sinning, to redeem them – and that was a huge mistake.'

Monsignor Smith, of St Paul's Parish Church in Whiteinch, Glasgow, said some of those accused were sent to a 'hospital facility in Ireland', where they were treated by psychologists.

Some alleged abusers were removed from the church for good but others were considered to be 'fixed' and returned to the ministry, he said, adding that cases of abuse were not 'talked about or shared by bishops' – because it was 'embarrassing'.

He said: 'It still is horrendously embarrassing that such things could have been done to an innocent party.'

He insisted that there was 'most definitely an assessment of risk' posed by alleged abusers and it had 'not been an amateur arrangement'. But he admitted: 'Many of these places thought that therapy was sufficient… We know sadly and to the cost of many innocent people that that wasn't true.'

A senior cleric said yesterday that abuse was seen as a 'sin' and the church focused more on 'treating' child molesters than on helping their young victims

Monsignor Smith insisted prosecutors did believe at the time that the most appropriate action was treatment and that 'a year in prison might not be as helpful as a year in therapy'.

The matter was discussed between the prosecutor and the bishop, but the families of victims were not consulted 'as a routine'.

Canon Thomas Boyle, former assistant secretary of the Bishops' Conference, who last week issued an apology to victims on behalf of the Catholic Church, said they had let victims down.

He said: 'We didn't hear them. We didn't understand the nature of abuse – that it wasn't a moral fault that could be fixed.'

Judge Lady Smith asked: 'Could it really have been the case people were not aware that some people were a risk ... that there was something about their familiarity with children that wasn't right?'

Canon Boyle said 'that's the learning curve we have been on'. He added that the church was determined to 'learn from past mistakes'.

He said: 'We want survivors to have peace, we want them to be able to live lives as if these things did not happen. It would be great if we could give them their childhoods back – we couldn't do that.'

The inquiry continues.

 

 

 

 

 




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