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Catholic church is stonewalling sex abuse investigation, Washington attorney general says

The Catholic church is refusing to cooperate with a Washington state investigation into whether it unlawfully used charitable trust funds to cover up sexual abuse by priests, Attorney General Bob Ferguson said Thursday, asking a court to force the Seattle Archdiocese to show over a long time of records.

The archdiocese called the allegations a surprise, saying in a press release that it welcomed the investigation and has been collaborating since receiving a subpoena last July. The archdiocese shares the state’s goals — “stopping abuse and helping victim survivors on their path to healing and peace,” it said.

“We have a superb understanding of the content of our files and we’ve got no concern about sharing them with the Attorney General lawfully and fairly,” the statement said.

Ferguson, a Catholic himself, told a news conference that the archdiocese has refused to supply even a single document that had not already been made public, claiming an exemption as a spiritual institution. The archdiocese disputed that as well, saying it offered this week to supply private deposition documents, but that the attorney general’s office said it wasn’t interested.

Ferguson said the archdiocese ignored a second subpoena issued this spring looking for records on how the church handled allegations of sex abuse, including financial records related to the way it could have spent charitable trust money moving priests from parish to parish after they were accused of sex abuse.

“The church has more information than it has shared with the general public,” Ferguson said. “We consider the general public is entitled to see those records.”

Some 23 states have conducted investigations of the Catholic church, and thus far at the least nine have issued reports detailing their findings. In some cases, those findings have gone far beyond what church officials had voluntarily disclosed.

For example, the six Catholic dioceses in Illinois had reported publicly that there had been 103 clerics and spiritual brothers credibly accused of kid sex abuse. But in a scathing report last 12 months, the Illinois attorney general’s office said it had uncovered detailed information on 451 who had sexually abused at the least 1,997 children.

Similarly, Maryland last 12 months reported staggering evidence of just how widespread the abuse was: More than 150 Catholic priests and others related to the Archdiocese of Baltimore sexually abused over 600 children and infrequently escaped accountability. In 2018, a Pennsylvania grand jury found that greater than 300 Catholic clerics had abused greater than 1,000 children in that state over the prior 70 years.

The Seattle Archdiocese has published an inventory of 83 clerics it says were credibly accused, and it says that starting within the Nineteen Eighties it was certainly one of the primary within the nation to start adopting policies to deal with and forestall sexual abuse by priests. Sexual abuse by church personnel peaked in 1975, and there have been no reports since 2007, the archdiocese said.

But despite a long time of lawsuits by survivors of clerical sex abuse, the extent of the scandal in Washington state stays unknown, Ferguson said, since the church has not released its files or explained why it found allegations against other priests lower than credible.

Accusers, who’ve long demanded that the church open its books, welcomed Ferguson’s announcement and said they regretted its necessity. Transparency is crucial for the church to heal, said Terry Carroll, a member of the steering committee at Heal Our Church, a Catholic church reform organization in Washington.

“We call on the church and its legal representatives to cooperate fully with the investigation by granting full access to all relevant records, including internal chancellery memos, attorneys correspondence and financial information,” Carroll said in the course of the news conference Thursday. “Church members and survivors deserve no less.”

Ferguson’s investigation is civil, not criminal, and focuses on the three dioceses in Washington — Seattle, Spokane and Yakima. He said the Spokane and Yakima dioceses have refused to supply documents, however the attorney general’s office shouldn’t be yet looking for court orders to force them to comply.

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