BishopAccountability.org

This international paedophile has died leaving millions - and there could be people in Greater Manchester entitled to the money

By Damon Wilkinson And Sam Tobin
Manchester Evening News
August 09, 2020

https://bit.ly/3iv7p7h

Michael Studdert

Studdert is believed to have abused children in Wales, England, Poland, Denmark, and Italy

Disgraced former Radio 1 DJ Chris Denning is known to have corresponded with Michael Studdert

Victims of a paedophile priest may be entitled to some of his near £5m estate.

Michael Studdert, who worked in Langley in Middleton in the 1960s, is believed to have abused children in England, Wales, Poland, Denmark and Italy.

The former Anglican minister died in 2017 aged 78.

Most of his £4.7m estate was left to a charity he set up to help support families of Clergy in the Church of England.

But the High Court has now ruled it cannot be spent until potential victims are found.

A judge has also ordered the executors of Studdert's estate to set up a website to try and find those who may have been abused by him.

Studdert was convicted on three occasions of various charges relating to the possession, importing, making or distribution of indecent images of children between 1988 and 2006.

He was jailed alongside Paedophile Information Exchange founder Thomas O’Carroll in December 2006, after more than 100,000 indecent images were found at his home in Surrey.

Studdert, who was Curate at All Saints and Martyrs, Langley, between 1966 and 1969, was banned from exercising any priestly function within the Church of England for the rest of his life shortly after that conviction.

He is not known to have ever been convicted of the sexual assault of a child but a judge has said he is 'satisfied Studdert had committed historic sexual assault in England and Wales', as well as in Poland, Denmark and Italy.

Evidence compiled by a firm of solicitors appointed to manage his estate found Studdert was 'likely' to have had sexual contact with children in Poland, where he had 'strong connections', and had also travelled with O’Carroll 'extensively' in eastern Europe.

The executors also received two letters sent to Studdert after his death by disgraced former Radio 1 DJ Chris Denning, who is currently 'serving a 13-year sentence for sexual offences committed against boys' and 'has a history of sexual offences committed in the Czech Republic and Slovakia'.

Studdert left most of his millions to the EAC Educational Trust, a registered charity he set up in 1985 to 'relieve poverty and to advance education for the benefit of the public and particularly amongst the families of clergy of the Church of England, single parent families and other poor families'.

But his executors applied to the High Court 'because they were rightly concerned that the estate might be subject to claims from survivors of historic abuse', Chief Master Marsh said in a ruling.

Following a series of hearings between January 2019 and this April, the court found 'there is a real prospect that the deceased may have committed historic sexual assault here and abroad, and ordered Studdert’s executors not to distribute any of the rest of his estate.

The court also found that these historic assaults 'may have given rise to personal injury claims against the deceased and hence his estate', although 'no claims have been intimated and the (executors) are not aware of the identity of any possible claimants'.

Chief Master Marsh previously ordered the executors to pay the 'relatively small' amounts Studdert had left to his 'Polish friends' and also to contact the police and the Church of England to find out if they had any further information about potential abuse by Studdert.

He also ordered them to 'create dedicated websites' in English, Polish, Danish and Italian with details of Studdert’s date of death and criminal convictions, as well as advertising the website on Twitter, Facebook, and Wikipedia.




.


Any original material on these pages is copyright © BishopAccountability.org 2004. Reproduce freely with attribution.