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29 Jan 2011

Murphy report reveals Vatican and Irish bishops enabled Dublin priest to rape hundreds of boys for decades

Google News - Associated Press December 17, 2010

Vatican tried to keep Irish child rapist as priest



DUBLIN (AP) — The Vatican tried to stop Dublin church leaders from defrocking a particularly dangerous pedophile priest and relented only after he raped a boy in a pub restroom, an investigation reported Friday.

Dublin Archbishop Diarmuid Martin said he fully accepted the findings of the latest chapter in Ireland's investigation into child abuse by Catholic Church figures.

Martin called Tony Walsh an "extremely devious man" who should never have been ordained a priest, and said the report highlighted how the church had grown too powerful and arrogant in 20th century Ireland.

A state-ordered investigation into Dublin Archdiocese cover-ups reported last year that Catholic officials had shielded scores of priests from criminal investigation over several decades and didn't report any crimes to the police until 1995. The findings sent shockwaves through the church and forced three Irish bishops to resign.

A chapter dealing with Walsh was censored from the original report because he was still facing a criminal trial. The Department of Justice published the chapter Friday following the 56-year-old Walsh's Dec. 6 conviction for repeatedly raping three boys three decades ago. He received a 12-year prison sentence.

The investigators — a judge and lawyers acting independently of the Irish government — concluded that Walsh actually raped and molested hundreds of boys while serving as a Dublin priest from 1978 to 1996, a rein of terror that church leaders never effectively stopped.

They described Walsh as "probably the most notorious child sexual abuser" of the 46 cases they investigated covering the years 1975-2004. Walsh often performed as an Elvis impersonator in a traveling Catholic song-and-dance production popular with children called the "All Priests Show." The report found this increased his easy access to so many victims.

The fact-finders based their conclusions on previously confidential Dublin and Vatican documents and interviews with key church figures that took five years to gather. They found that Dublin Archdiocese leaders spent several years arguing over whether Walsh should be defrocked, sent to counselors in England, or assigned to duties that kept him away from children.

They finally expelled him from the priesthood at a 1993 canonical trial — the first in Ireland in three decades. But Walsh successfully appealed the verdict to the Vatican, which ordered him to be sent for 10 years to a monastery instead.

The investigators documented how Rome relented only after police finally opened a 1995 criminal probe into the mountain of abuse reports — including Walsh's recent sexual assault of a boy in a pub restroom following the funeral of the victim's grandfather.

This article was found at:

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jPgGTvY1xdbOh0weSAeFFf3nxyPQ?docId=3ca2c5ebde384076962b96f0c9d09dfc

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The Independent - Ireland December 18, 2010

Church 'failed hundreds of children' over Walsh inaction


By John Cooney | Religion Correspondent



THE Catholic Church in Dublin failed hundreds of children by allowing a "most notorious child abuser" to continue his pattern of depraved sexual abuse for nearly two decades after first receiving complaints.

Archbishop of Dublin Dr Diarmuid Martin said last night that the church was "loved and respected" by parishioners who raised concerns about the activities of ex-cleric Tony Walsh, but it in turn "failed them".

The Dublin diocese "acted as a world apart. It had often become self-centred and arrogant", said Dr Martin as he again apologised for the appalling litany of failings laid bare in a newly published chapter of the Murphy Report.

Dr Martin's stinging criticism came as it was learned last night that the Murphy Report investigating the handling of clerical child sex abuse allegations in the Cloyne Diocese is expected to be given to Justice Minister Dermot Ahern next week.

This report will further rock the church, as it will examine ex-Bishop of Cloyne John Magee's handling of allegations of abuse made against 19 priests over a 13-year period, between 1996 and 2009.

He resigned after being found by the church's own internal board of investigation of having put in danger children in schools and parishes after failing to implement new nationally agreed protection measures.

Still further damage to the church's moral authority was revealed last night, with confirmation from the Labour Party that religious orders still owe the State hundreds of millions of euro in contributions that were promised after the abuse scandals in industrial schools and reformatories.

The figures, obtained by education spokesman Ruairi Quinn, show that out of €348m pledged last year in cash and property after the Ryan Report, just 6pc has been handed over, and no property has been transferred.

More than €26m is still outstanding from the original Indemnity Deal, negotiated in 2002, under which the religious orders pledged to hand over €128m in cash and property.

Vile

But the latest blow to the church came at midday yesterday, with the delayed release of the shocking section of the Murphy Report into the archdiocese of Dublin devoted specifically to the vile deeds of jailed ex-cleric Tony Walsh.

It described Walsh as "probably the most notorious child abuser to have come to the attention of the commission"; a man who was likely to have assaulted hundreds of children.

The commission hit out at Rome's handling of Walsh's appeal against being laicised -- listed in the report under the pseudonym Fr Jovito.

The previously unpublished chapter said:

  • The Vatican wanted Walsh to serve 10 years in a monastery rather than force him out of the Catholic Church.
  • Within two days of his appointment in Ballyfermot in 1978 the parents of a young boy complained that he had abused their son -- but the matter was dropped. A vicar general, Monsignor Glennon, accepted Walsh's denials, saying "he impressed me as telling the truth". A similar complaint a year later was also dropped.
  • The commission found that by March 1985, at least seven priests in the Dublin archdiocese were aware of concerns about Walsh's behaviour.
  • Walsh "denied nothing" when confronted by Monsignor Alex Stenson, then chancellor of the archdiocese, but he was merely moved to Westland Row, where the parish priest was not made aware of Walsh's paedophilia.
  • Mgr Stenson again confronted Walsh in May 1988 after more complaints -- the archbishop and auxiliary bishops decided to send Walsh for treatment in the UK, but on his return the abuse continued.
  • The report said it was unacceptable that two gardai who had concerns about Walsh failed to pursue a thorough criminal investigation. It added that the archdiocese should have informed the gardai of all of its concerns but did not do so.
  • Pope John Paul II only dismissed Walsh in 1996 after a direct appeal for action by Cardinal Desmond Connell.

Walsh was jailed for 16 years last week on 17 counts of child abuse -- clearing the way for the publication of Chapter 19 of the Murphy Report.


This article was found at:

http://www.independent.ie/national-news/church-failed-hundreds-of-children-over-walsh-inaction-2465668.html


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