Cardinal Pell, professing innocence, will face charges in Australia

IMAGE: CNS/Paul Haring

By Cindy Wooden

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Proclaiming his innocence after being
charged with sexual abuse, Australian Cardinal George Pell said, “I’m
looking forward finally to having my day in court.”

“I’m innocent of these charges. They are false. The
whole idea of sexual abuse is abhorrent to me,” he said June 29 during a
brief news conference in the Vatican press office.

Greg Burke, director of the Vatican press office, said Pope
Francis had granted Cardinal Pell a leave of absence from his position as
prefect of the Vatican Secretariat for the Economy so that he can work on his
defense.

Cardinal Pell, Burke added, will not participate in any
public liturgies while his case is being considered.

“These matters have been under investigation now for two
years,” Cardinal Pell told the press. “There’s been relentless
character assassination, a relentless character assassination, and for more
than a month claims that a decision on whether to lay charges was imminent.”

Without giving specifics about the number of charges or the
incidents, police in Australia’s Victoria state announced June 29 that charges
had been filed against the cardinal and that he has been called to appear in
court July 18.

Victoria Police Deputy Commissioner Shane Patton told
reporters June 29, “Cardinal Pell is facing multiple charges in respect of
historic sexual offenses and there are multiple complainants relating to those
charges.”

Patton also told reporters, “It is important to note
that none of the allegations that have been made against Cardinal Pell have
obviously been tested in any court yet.”

“Cardinal Pell, like any other defendant, has a right
to due process and so therefore it is important that the process is allowed to
run its natural course,” Patton added.

In his statement, Cardinal Pell said he had kept Pope
Francis informed “during these long months” when police and the Australian
media were talking about the possibility of charges being made.

“I have spoken to him on a number of occasions in the
last week, I think most recently a day or so ago,” Cardinal Pell said of
Pope Francis. “And we talked about my need to take leave to clear my name,
so I’m very grateful to the Holy Father for giving me this leave to return to
Australia.”

Cardinal Pell said he had spoken to his lawyers about the
timing of his return to Australia and also had consulted his doctors about the
trip.

In February 2016 Australia’s Royal Commission Into
Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse allowed Cardinal Pell to testify
by video link from Rome because a heart condition prevented him from traveling
to Australia.

A year ago, in July, allegations surfaced in a report by the
Australian Broadcasting Corp. featuring several people who accused Cardinal
Pell of sexual assault; at least one of the accusations had been found to be
unsubstantiated by an Australian court in 2002. Some accusations dated to the
late 1970s, when Cardinal Pell was a priest in Ballarat, Australia.

Speaking to reporters at the Vatican June 29, the cardinal
said, “All along I have been completely consistent and clear in my total
rejection of these allegations. News of these charges strengthens my resolve,
strengthens my resolve. And court proceedings now offer me an opportunity to
clear my name and then return here, back to Rome, to work.”

When the allegations surfaced last year, Cardinal Pell
dismissed them as “nothing more than a scandalous smear campaign,”
and a statement issued by his office said that “claims that he has
sexually abused anyone, in any place, at any time in his life are totally
untrue and completely wrong.”

In October, Australian police questioned Cardinal Pell in
Rome regarding the accusations.

While Burke, the Vatican spokesman, told reporters that the
Vatican respects the Australian justice system, he also said people should
remember that Cardinal Pell “has openly and repeatedly condemned as
immoral and intolerable the acts of abuse committed against minors” and,
as a bishop, “introduced systems and procedures both for the protection of
minors and to provide assistance to victims of abuse.”

Archbishop Anthony Fisher of Sydney, in a statement released
shortly after the cardinal’s news conference, said, “Many people will be
shocked, as I have been, by the news that Victoria Police have issued charges
against Cardinal George Pell in relation to sexual abuse allegations.”

“Cardinal Pell has repeatedly and vehemently rejected
these allegations and insisted that he is completely innocent,” the
archbishop said. “He will now have the opportunity to put his case in
court and is determined to clear his name.”

“The George Pell I know is a man of integrity in his
dealings with others, a man of faith and high ideals, a thoroughly decent
man,” the archbishop added.

Archbishop Fisher said the Archdiocese of Sydney will “assist with the cardinal’s accommodation and support, as it would for any of its bishops or priests” as the legal process unfolds, however, he said, “it is not responsible for the cardinal’s legal bills arising from these matters.”

“Where complaints of abuse are made, victims should be
listened to with respect and compassion and their complaints investigated and
dealt with according to law,” Archbishop Fisher said. At the same time, “no
one should be prejudged because of their high profile, religious convictions or
positions on social issues.”

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Contributing to this story was Carol Glatz.

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