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Vatican Urged to Reveal Status of Ousted US Archbishop

Associated Press
December 18, 2018

https://www.news24.com/World/News/vatican-urged-to-reveal-status-of-ousted-us-archbishop-20181217

Pope Francis.

A prominent US archbishop is asking the Vatican for answers about the status of an investigation into alleged sexual misconduct by his predecessor, who was forced to resign in 2015.

St. Paul and Minneapolis Archbishop Bernard Hebda wrote a remarkable letter to his flock on Friday in which he revealed he sent the Vatican in 2016 a new allegation of improprieties with minors against retired Archbishop John Nienstedt.

County prosecutors informed Hebda of the allegation, he said. It accused Nienstedt of inviting two minors to his hotel room in 2005 at a Vatican-organised youth rally in Germany to change out of wet clothes, the archbishop wrote.

Protecting children from predator priests

Hebda said Nienstedt "then proceeded to undress in front of them and invited them to do the same". He noted that Nienstedt denied the allegation.

Nienstedt was forced to resign as archbishop after Minnesota prosecutors charged the Twin Cities archdiocese with failing to protect children from a predator priest who was later convicted of molesting two boys.

Nienstedt was one of the first US bishops known to have been forced from office for botching sex abuse investigations. He also faced allegations of engaging in inappropriate sexual behavior with adults. He denied misconduct, and the archdiocese hired two law firms to investigate, but the results were never made public.

Hebda said as far as he knew, the Vatican suspended the 2014 investigation when Nienstedt resigned in June 2015. He called for a resolution to that probe, and for information about the alleged World Youth Day incident.

"My opinion is this allegation needs to be fully addressed before a definitive resolution of Archbishop Nienstedt's suitability for ministry can be made," Hebda wrote.

The Vatican didn't immediately respond to a request for comment Monday.

Nienstedt, who was bishop of New Ulm at the time of the alleged incident in Germany, didn't immediately respond to a request for comment. But he denied it in an email to the Minneapolis Star Tribune and welcomed an investigation.

"I do deny the veracity of this allegation," he said. "That being said, I don't want to speak poorly of the men making these accusations. I welcome an impartial look at the facts and the opportunity to defend myself."

Nienstedt's case has taken on new relevance given the sex abuse scandal surrounding ex-Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, the retired archbishop of Washington now accused of sexual misconduct with both adult seminarians and at least one minor.

Hebda and Auxiliary Bishop Andrew Cozzens have held up both the McCarrick and the Nienstedt scandals as evidence of the need for a lay-led mechanism to review misconduct allegations against bishops, who are answerable only to the pope.

Hebda said he is doing what he can within his authority by forbidding Nienstedt from exercising public ministry in his archdiocese. But he said Nienstedt's fate is ultimately in the Vatican's hands.

"The matter remains unresolved for the accusers, for Archbishop Nienstedt and for the public," he said. "I share the frustration that is felt by them."

 

 

 

 

 




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