8.6 C
New York
Thursday, March 13, 2025

Bishop Anthony Pierce, aged 84, found guilty of indecent assault

A FORMER Bishop of Swansea & Brecon, the Rt Revd Anthony Pierce, has been sentenced to 4 years and one month after pleading guilty to indecent assault.

Bishop Pierce, 84, was sentenced at Swansea Crown Court on Wednesday, after admitting five counts of indecent assault on a male child under the age of 16 (News, 7 February).

In a press release read to the court, the victim said that, while the abuse was happening, he had “an awesome sense of embarrassment, as I couldn’t feel the courage to say no”.

He said that he had been left unable to form relationships, and developed an alcohol dependency, BBC News reported.

Judge Catherine Richards, passing sentence, told Bishop Pierce that he was “expected to be trusted and revered. Any parent or adult at the moment would understandably have trusted that their child was protected with you, and you’d act in accordance along with your professed Christian values. Instead, you began to groom him.”

The offences occurred over five years, from 1985, when he was a parish priest. He was Bishop of Swansea & Brecon from 1999 until his retirement in 2008.

Bishop Pierce will spend half of his sentence in prison, before likely being released on licence. He will likely be on the sex-offenders register for all times.

A spokesperson for the Church in Wales said that the sentence “reflects the shocking nature of those offences and the gross breach of trust which they represent”, and confirmed that Bishop Pierce would now face a church disciplinary tribunal.

The current Bishop of Swansea & Brecon, the Rt Revd John Lomas, will ask the tribunal to contemplate deposing Bishop Pierce from Holy Orders.

“Anthony Pierce has abused his position, disgraced his Church, and, worst of all, has inflicted appalling and lasting trauma on his victim. Our thoughts and prayers are with the victim on this case, who has shown immense courage in reporting what are deeply painful experiences. We offer him probably the most heartfelt apology for what he has needed to endure,” the spokesperson said.

The abuse was disclosed to the Church in 2023, and prompted an internal inquiry, which found that one other allegation had been made in 1993, by a unique person, but not passed on to police until 2010, by which period the alleged victim had died.

It was announced last month that an independent review of the handling of the 1993 allegation had been commissioned.

Related Articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Stay Connected

0FansLike
0FollowersFollow
0SubscribersSubscribe

Sign up to receive your exclusive updates, and keep up to date with our latest articles!

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

Latest Articles