Historical Abuse Inquiry: Irish police ‘aware’ of Smyth abuse in 1970s

NORTHERN IRELAND/IRELAND
BBC News

Police in Dublin were aware of the abuse by a notorious paedophile priest as far back as the early 1970s, an inquiry has heard.

Northern Ireland’s Historical Abuse Inquiry has been examining the activities of Fr Brendan Smyth.

New evidence has shown that police were aware of his activities more than 20 years before he was convicted.

The inquiry heard on Monday that Smyth admitted he could have abused hundreds of children.

Smyth was at the centre of one of the first clerical child sex abuse scandals to rock the Catholic church in Ireland.

He was convicted in the 1990s of more than 100 indecent assaults against children over a 40-year period.

He died in prison in 1997 after a heart attack.

Diagnosis

For years, authorities had been trying to get access to documents regarding Smyth held by St Patrick’s Hospital in Dublin.

The hospital had been treating Smyth in 1973.

On Wednesday, the documents were presented to the inquiry, revealing that he was initially being treated for “homosexual problems”.

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