Article Title
Stirred by Sexual Abuse Report, States Take On Catholic Church
Link to Article: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/09/06/nyregion/catholic-sex-abuse.html
Source: New York Times
Author(s): Sharon Otterman and Laurie Goodstein
Date: September 6, 2018
Synopsis of Article
In the wake of the Pennsylvania grand jury report on clergy sexual abuse [40th Statewide Investigating Grand Jury Report 1 Interim — Redacted], multiple state attorneys general have launched probes and inquiries into the sexual abuse of minors by Catholic clergy in their own states.
This wide-ranging article delves into a number of issues, among which are the following:
- In the three weeks following the release of the Pennsylvania grand jury report, the attorneys general of the following states have announced investigations into child sexual abuse by Catholic clergy: Illinois, Missouri, Nebraska, and New Mexico.
- New York State Attorney General (Barbara Underwood) has indicated the following (according to the article):
Her office’s criminal division wanted to work with local district attorneys to prosecute any individuals who have committed criminal offenses that fall within the applicable statutes of limitations. In New York State, the attorney general’s office cannot convene a grand jury, so it must work in concert with local district attorneys.
- Underwood used the attorney general’s authority to oversee nonprofit organizations, including religious institutions, to issue subpoenas covering all documents related to sexual abuse and the church’s response to that abuse over decades, including information from secret or confidential church archives.
- The office of New Jersey State Attorney General (Gurbir Grewal) announced the following (according to the article):
He had appointed Robert D. Laurino, the former acting prosecutor of Essex County, to lead a task force that will investigate clergy sex abuse and any effort to cover up claims of assault. The task force will have subpoena power through a grand jury in order to compel testimony and demand the production of documents.
The article also reveals that, in at least one case, the state attorney general’s investigation may be intended to give cover to the affected dioceses. It is worth excerpting from the article at length here:
But the probes announced in various states were not equally independent or combative. In Missouri, Attorney General Joshua D. Hawley said last month that he will conduct an “independent review” of files that the archbishop of St. Louis, Robert J. Carlson, had just volunteered to make available to review. The two men each released letters about the arrangement on the same day, after survivors of sexual abuse by priests had organized protests calling for an investigation.
Mr. Hawley, a Republican running for the United States Senate, said in a telephone news conference that his power is limited because under Missouri law, he cannot convene a grand jury or issue subpoenas for documents.
But a lawyer for abuse victims called his claim a “half truth.” The lawyer, Nicole Gorovsky, who previously served as a federal prosecutor and an assistant attorney general in Missouri, said that Mr. Hawley could convene local district attorneys in Missouri and coordinate their efforts, as he has done on other issues. Those local district attorneys could then issue subpoenas for far more documents than those voluntarily provided by the bishops.
“He’s allowing the perpetrator to run the investigation,” Ms. Gorovsky said in an interview. “It’s exactly backwards.”
NOTE: Hawley won his race for the US Senate seat formerly held by Claire McCaskill and joins the Senate in 2019.