BishopAccountability.org

Archbishop Philip Wilson trial: Defence seeks to prove a ‘good tendency’ to report child sexual abuse allegations

By Sam Rigney
herald
April 9, 2018

http://www.theherald.com.au/story/5331156/defence-seeks-to-prove-archbishops-good-tendency-to-report-abuse-allegations/

ACCUSED: Adelaide Archbishop Philip Wilson is confronted by the media after leaving Newcastle Local Court on Monday.
Photo by Darren Pateman

ACCUSED: Adelaide Archbishop Philip Wilson outside Newcastle courthouse ahead of the resumption of his hearing on Monday.
Photo by Darren Pateman

LEGAL REPS: Archbishop Philip Wilson's legal team, barristers Stephen Odgers, SC, and Simon Buchen, outside Newcastle courthouse on Monday.
Photo by Darren Pateman

THE high-powered legal team of Philip Edward Wilson are seeking to call evidence from two people, including one of Australia's most influential clerics, to prove the accused Adelaide Archbishop had a tendency to report allegations of child sexual abuse to the authorities.

The landmark hearing into allegations Archbishop Wilson concealed child sexual abuse allegations against Hunter priest Jim Fletcher resumed in Newcastle Local Court on Monday, four months after it began with the revelation that the Adelaide Archbishop had been given a “working diagnosis” of Alzheimer’s disease.  

Barrister Stephen Odgers, SC, who represents Archbishop Wilson, the most senior Catholic cleric in the world to be charged with concealing child sex allegations involving another priest, sought an “advanced ruling” from Magistrate Robert Stone to tender the statement of two people, including Senior Catholic priest Monsignor David Cappo, to show he had a tendency to report allegations of child sexual abuse and not conceal them. 

Crown prosecutor Gareth Harrison opposed the defence application and said that if Mr Stone allowed it he would seek to call evidence from three people that he said showed the Archbishop had a tendency to protect the church. 

The 67-year-old has pleaded not guilty to failing to advise police between April, 2004 and January, 2006 that Father Fletcher allegedly indecently assaulted Peter Creigh when he was 10 years old in 1971.

If successful that would mean Archbishop Wilson would not be required to run a defence and the charge would be dismissed. 

The prosecution must prove that Mr Creigh told Archbishop Wilson, then a junior Maitland-Newcastle priest, about the sexual abuse in 1976 and that Archbishop Wilson remembered it and had a belief that the allegations were true between 2004 and 2006, after Fletcher had been charged with child sex offences and before his death in jail. 

Mr Odgers said the tendency evidence was crucial to the case.

“Those tendencies make it more likely that he didn’t have in his head at that time a memory of this 1976 allegation,” Mr Odgers said.

“Or alternatively, makes it more likely that he didn’t believe it. “If he remembered it and believed it he would have reported it, as was his tendency at the time.”

 




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