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Court sides with 11 priests in Pennsylvania abuse report and won’t release their names

The Pennsylvania Supreme court has ordered that the names of 11 priests accused of sexual abuse in a grand jury report remain permanently redacted.

The Pennsylvania Supreme court has ordered that the names of 11 priests accused of sexual abuse in a grand jury report remain permanently redacted.

Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro had requested that the priests’ names be made public. The clergymen are among more than 300 “predator priests” accused of sexually abusing more than 1,000 child victims. The names of more than 270 priests were made public when the report was released in August.

‘Constitutional rights to reputation’

In its opinion released Monday, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court said that the priests’ names should remain redacted “to protect their constitutional rights to reputation.”

“We acknowledge that this outcome may be unsatisfying to the public and to the victims of the abuse detailed in the report. While we understand and empathize with these perspectives, constitutional rights are of the highest order, and even alleged sexual abusers, or those abetting them, are guaranteed by our Commonwealth’s Constitution the right of due process,” the court said.

In a dissenting opinion, Chief Justice Thomas Saylor argued for an evidentiary hearing before a supervising judge to determine whether the grand jury record supported the priests’ identification.

The reaction from survivors

Shaun Dougherty, whose abuse began when he was 10 and who gave his first statement on the ordeal in 2012, said the best-case scenario would have been being able to see all the names.

“But honestly, for those victims that are out there across the country still, the second-best thing would be to have some redacted because the redaction of the 11 names is going to cause an outrage among the victims’ communities, an outrage amongst the Catholic parishioners, an outrage amongst the states attorneys’ general offices, and all of the outrage is simply going to lead to necessary reforms moving forward,” he said.

Other survivors expressed outrage at the news.

Juliann Bortz, a survivor who has been involved in the fight against clergy abuse since 2002, said the judgment was stinging and she was on an emotional roller coaster.

“I feel defeated today for myself, just defeated,” she told CNN. “I’ll probably keep on fighting, but it’s taken a lot. It’s taken its toll.”

Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests said the church should release the names anyway.

“There should be a moral imperative to do the right thing, not a legal impetus,” the organization said.

SNAP said the ruling showed a need for changes to statutes of limitations.

Shapiro, the attorney general, condemned the court’s decision in a statement issued Monday.

“Today’s order allows predator priests to remain in the shadows and permits the Church to continue concealing their identities,” he said. “The public will not relent in its demand that anyone involved in this widespread abuse and cover up be named.”

Shapiro also called on the Catholic Church, which is not barred by the order, to name the 11 priests.

A spokesman for the Diocese of Harrisburg told CNN: “The Diocese of Harrisburg released a thorough and complete list of clergy and seminarians with accusations of child sexual abuse before the release of the Attorney General’s Report.”

In another statement, the Diocese of Allentown said: “The Diocese of Allentown did nothing to delay or block the grand jury report or to support anyone who tried to do so.”

The arguments

The priests have claimed that the grand jury’s findings were false or misleading, that they were denied due process of law and that the release of their names would impair their reputations. Their court action had delayed the report’s publication.

But the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ordered the report’s release on August 14 with redactions in sections where litigation was ongoing.

The 11 priests had argued that they were not given the opportunity to defend themselves or present their cases in the grand jury investigation, which they said failed to provide adequate due process protections for those to be named in the report.

Furthermore, they argued that statements by Shapiro — for example accusing them of seeking to “bury the sexual abuse by priests upon children, and cover it up forever” — meant they would not be able to get unbiased consideration if they were to present to any additional grand jury proceedings.

The Commonwealth had argued that the the grand jury could have been recalled — or a new grand jury convened — to hear the priests’ testimony, with a supervisory judge to determine if the evidence supported their identification.

The report

The grand jury report released in August says internal documents from six Catholic dioceses in Pennsylvania showed that more than 300 “predator priests” had been credibly accused of sexually abusing more than 1,000 child victims.

“We believe that the real number of children whose records were lost or who were afraid ever to come forward is in the thousands,” it says.

“Priests were raping little boys and girls, and the men of God who were responsible for them not only did nothing; they hid it all. For decades. Monsignors, auxiliary bishops, bishops, archbishops, cardinals have mostly been protected; many, including some named in this report, have been promoted.”

The lengthy report, investigates clergy sexual abuse dating to 1947 in six dioceses: Allentown, Erie, Greensburg, Harrisburg, Pittsburgh and Scranton.

READ THE GRAND JURY REPORT

At a news conference announcing the report’s release in August, Shapiro called it the “largest, most comprehensive report into child sexual abuse within the Catholic Church ever produced in the United States.”