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Judges Reserve Decision on Pell Leave to Appeal

By Mark Bowling
The Tablet
March 12, 2020

https://www.thetablet.co.uk/news/12581/judges-reserve-decision-on-pell-leave-to-appeal

Australia’s highest court has reserved a decision whether Cardinal George Pell will be allowed to appeal his conviction for child sex offences.

After two days of arguments from Cardinal Pell’s barrister and the prosecution, a seven-judge panel of the High Court of Australia has called for further written submissions.

Legal parties have been given two days to provide material for the judges to consider, although a future court date is yet to be set.

If granted special leave for an appeal, Cardinal Pell’s legal team will argue that the 78-year-old should be acquitted of molesting two choirboys in 1996 and 1997.

One of the boys gave evidence against Cardinal Pell, while the second died in 2014, without disclosing any abuse.

Cardinal Pell is Australia’s most senior Catholic and the former financial controller of the Vatican. He has served one year of a six-year jail term for child sex abuse.

He was found guilty of sexually abusing two 13-year-old choirboys in the priest’s sacristy after Sunday Mass when he was the Archbishop of Melbourne in 1996. He then assaulted one of the boys again a few weeks later.

Appearing before the High Court on 11 March, Pell’s barrister, Bret Walker SC for Pell submitted that the Cardinal should be acquitted.

He argued that just because the complainant (the surviving choirboy – now a man in his thirties) was believable, there was other evidence that should not be discounted.

Mr Walker told the court that during Pell’s first appeal in 2019, judges may have been unduly influenced by the complainant’s testimony by watching a recorded video of it rather than just reading the transcript of his evidence.

Appearing before the High Court on 12 March, Victorian Director of Public Prosecutions Kerry Judd QC shifted position on key evidence in the case – the timeframe that would have allowed Cardinal Pell to molest the boys after Mass in Melbourne’s St Patrick’s Cathedral.

Throughout the Pell case, the prosecution has argued that the offending occurred during five or six minutes when Pell and the choirboys were said to be alone in private prayer in the sacristy.

In a crucial departure from that position, prosecutor Ms Judd told the High Court judges it could not be stated for certain how long the private prayer time lasted.

She said the five to six minutes of private prayer time may now have been longer, depending on what unfolded in the cathedral on the day.

Mr Walker had earlier argued the evidence pointed to “compounding improbabilities”, including that Pell would not have had the time or opportunity to molest the boys in the sacristy after Mass.

He said it was Pell’s custom to greet churchgoers on the cathedral steps after Mass and he would then be accompanied into the sacristy to de-robe amid a “hive of activity”.

Cardinal Pell remains in Barwon Prison near Geelong outside Melbourne while the High Court judges consider his fate.

 

 

 

 

 




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