ERIE (PA)
GoErie.com
November 11, 2018
By Ed Palattella
Former bishops challenged women’s accounts that they spoke up about a priest and child pornography. Grand jury report supports the women, though wounds run deep.
The grand jury report on the Roman Catholic Church in Pennsylvania, including the Catholic Diocese of Erie, has vindicated victims of child sexual abuse.
The report has also supported three women who once had strong connections to the church.
The women are not abuse victims.
They were, according to the grand jury report, whistleblowers in the Erie diocese.
As the 884-page report, released in August, continues to reverberate — it prompted a response from Pope Francis and calls for changes in state legislation — the experience of the three women offers another example of the report’s wide-reaching effects.
For the victims, the report provides proof that their complaints of abuse by clergy, though unheeded for years, were valid.
“We have heard them,” the grand jurors, in their report, said of the victims.
For the three women — Sally Beres, Ann Caro and Helen Rusnak— the report provides more public affirmation that, nearly 40 years ago, they acted appropriately when they expressed concerns about a priest.
The three said they alerted the Catholic Diocese of Erie to child pornography and other pornography found in the early 1980s in the office of the Rev. Robert F. Bower, of Edinboro — only to have the diocese reject their concerns and later publicly dispute that they had even raised them.
The ramifications were lasting. Beres said she lost her job as a church secretary, and she and Caro and Rusnak said they were ostracized for speaking up about Bower. All three said they remain estranged from the church they embraced for much of their lives.
“I lost my religion,” Beres, 70, said in a recent interview.
Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.