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RNS
NEWS STORY Vatican
secrecy keeps victims, accused in the dark By
DANIEL BURKE (RNS) — Daniel Donohue
doesn’t know when the call will come. Donohue testified against
the priest at a church tribunal in 2006 and again 2007. Since then,
he has heard almost nothing about his case from the Archdiocese of New
York or the Vatican. “There is nothing I
can do, no one I can talk to, no information forthcoming,” said
Donohue, who now lives in Portland, Ore. The priest and his family likely
live under the same cloud of unknowingness, Donohue notes. Like other sex abuse cases
moving through Catholic Church’s canon law system, Donohue’s
is veiled by “pontifical secrecy,” a little-known policy
that is gaining new prominence as the church weathers another wave of
coverup accusations. Participants in church sex abuse trials are bound by oath not to divulge details about the proceedings, or at what stage the case is; not even victims and accused priests are kept apprised.
Archdiocesan spokesperson
Joseph Zwilling said he could not comment directly on Donohue’s
situation, but said final verdicts on clergy sex abuse cases are generally
publicized. “If the case were concluded, the results would be
made known,” Zwilling said. “The process happens in secret,
but the outcome happens in the public forum.” Even when the trials and
appeals are over, participants are not allowed to talk about them. “It’s
canon law,” said Rev. John Beal, a canon law expert at Catholic
University in Washington. “But it’s a stupid law.” Even reading about the secret
trials can be a canonical crime. In 2008, after the Rev. Gerald Vosen,
an accused Wisconsin priest, wrote about his experience in a book, the
local bishop told Catholics “to destroy the book or return it.” Buying Vosen’s book,
Bishop Robert Morlino of Madison said, would be a breach of the pontifical
secret, and “may result in a canonical crime being declared on
the individual involved.” Until 1974, pontifical secrecy
was called “the secret of the Holy Office of the Universal Inquisition,”
the former name of the Vatican bureau that prosecutes heresy and other
church crimes, Beal said. The punishment for violating the confidentiality
clause was automatic excommunication, which could only be lifted by
the pope. Later, not only sex abuse
cases, but also diplomatic correspondence, the preparation of papal
documents, and the vetting of candidates for bishop came under the purview
of pontifical secrecy. It remains a serious canonical crime to break
the secret, but no longer carries a penalty of automatic excommunication,
Beal said. There are good reasons for secrecy on sex abuse cases, canon lawyers said at a recent seminar hosted by the US Conference of Catholic Bishops in Washington. In US courts, where a speedy trial is a constitutional right, jurors, and sometimes witnesses, are sequestered, limiting opportunities for tampering.
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