MILWAUKEE (WI)
National Catholic Reporter
Joshua J. McElwee | Jul. 11, 2013 NCR Today
A former adviser to now-Cardinal Timothy Dolan has written to defend the prelate’s actions when he served as archbishop of Milwaukee, saying the shifting of some $57 million from the archdiocese’s treasury to a cemetery trust fund in 2007 was not an attempt to protect the money from lawsuits by sexual abuse survivors.
Instead, the head of the archdiocese’s finance council wrote Thursday, the decision was made following the unanimous recommendation of the council in order to “preserve and maintain cemeteries as sacred places forever.”
Shifting of the money has been a key point of discussion following the release July 1 of thousands of pages of records from the Milwaukee diocese regarding its handling of cases of sexual abuse by clergy. Abuse survivors have alleged that the transfer of the funds was done to protect the money from lawsuits of victims and impending bankruptcy proceedings.
Dolan, who was Milwaukee’s archbishop from 2002 to 2009 but now serves as the archbishop of New York and president of the U.S. bishops’ conference, has repeatedly denied that claim. The Milwaukee archdiocese filed for bankruptcy in January 2011.
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