IMAGE: CNS photo/Bob Roller
By Mark Pattison
WASHINGTON
(CNS) — An increase in calls to dioceses to report claims of clergy sexual
abuse has happened before, and is likely to happen again in the wake of the
credible claim lodged against Cardinal Theodore E. McCarrick, retired archbishop of
Washington, according to the head of the U.S. bishops’ Secretariat for Child and Youth Protection.
Those
claims and inquiries, though, won’t solely be about Cardinal McCarrick, said
Deacon Bernie Nojadera, executive director of the secretariat.
Deacon
Nojadera said the most noticeable such example was following the Boston Globe’s
“Spotlight” series examining clergy sex abuse in the Archdiocese of Boston in
early 2002. Another such example he gave was the release of the movie “Spotlight,”
based on the newspaper’s reportage. In the film’s case, though, he added, abuse
reports “weren’t just about clergy sex abuse, but all kinds of abuse.”
Much of
this results, he said, “because there’s this invitation (by dioceses) to survivors
to please come forward.”
When
they do, diocesan victim assistance coordinators realize “you only have one
shot” to engage with someone reporting abuse, Deacon Nojadera said.
Deacon
Nojadera, in a June 20 interview with Catholic News Service, outlined the
difference between “credible” and “substantiated” claims of abuse. Both terms
were used in the Archdiocese of New York’s report of the complaint against
Cardinal McCarrick in the 1971 incident.
“Credible”
means “it could have happened,” Deacon Nojadera said. “There’s truth to this.”
“Substantiated,”
though, means “there’s evidence to back this up,” he added. That evidence is
born out in a police investigation of the incident, a practice followed by the
New York Archdiocese in the complaint against Cardinal McCarrick. “There’s
something that points to (the fact) that this, indeed, did happen.”
In his
June 20 statement accepting the Vatican’s directive he cease any public ministry, Cardinal
McCarrick said he did not recall the incident and “believe(s) in my innocence.”
The
incident was 47 years ago. Given all of the reports of abuse that have been
filed since 2002 when the scandal in Boston was exposed, it may seem hard to
believe that there are those who still had not reported abuse.
“We’ve
had people report abuse from the Thirties,” Deacon Nojadera told CNS. Each
person who was victimized by abuse gets ready to discuss it at their own time,
he added, although for some “that will be a secret they keep with them and go
with them to the grave.”
Fear,
embarrassment and shame factor into the unwillingness to report abuse. Some victims
live “in a small diocese, a small town, where everybody knows everybody,” he said, and
are wary of reporting abuse given those circumstances.
Those who
do come forward, however, will be treated “with the utmost respect” by those
they contact at the diocese, the deacon said. Should there be an influx, most dioceses have
forged partnerships with hospitals, mental health professionals and the Catholic
Charities agencies in their dioceses to provide services a victim needs.
Just as
the diocesan net has widened to offer assistance to victims, the number and
kinds of people showing an interest in preventing abuse and rendering aid also has expanded. What used to be known as a “safe environment leader-victim
assistance leader” conference has since been rechristened the “Child and Youth
Protection Catholic Leadership Conference,” with one held recently in New Orleans,
attracting bishops and vicar generals.
“It’s
not just one or two people in a diocese, not just one or two people in a
parish” who are addressing abuse, Deacon Nojadera said.
Now,
with one of the highest-ranking U.S. church officials having been credibly
accused of abuse, will the reporting of abuse stop anytime soon?
“I get
asked this at conferences,” Deacon Nojadera said. “and I tell them it will stop
with the Second Coming.”
– – –
Follow Pattison on Twitter: @MeMarkPattison
– – –
Copyright © 2018 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. www.catholicnews.com. All rights reserved. Republishing or redistributing of CNS content, including by framing or similar means without prior permission, is prohibited. You may link to stories on our public site. This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To request permission for republishing or redistributing of CNS content, please contact permissions at cns@catholicnews.com.