Top Vatican officials — including the
future Pope Benedict
XVI — did not defrock a priest who
molested as many as 200 deaf boys, even though several American bishops
repeatedly warned them that failure to act on the matter could embarrass the
church, according to church files newly unearthed as part of a lawsuit.
The internal correspondence from bishops in Wisconsin
directly to Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, the future pope, shows that while church
officials tussled over whether the priest should be dismissed, their highest
priority was protecting the church from scandal.
The
documents emerge as Pope Benedict is facing other accusations that he and
direct subordinates often did not alert civilian authorities or discipline
priests involved in sexual abuse when he served as an archbishop in Germany and
as the Vatican’s chief doctrinal
enforcer.
The
Wisconsin case involved an American priest, the Rev. Lawrence C. Murphy, who
worked at a renowned school for deaf children from 1950 to 1974. But it is only
one of thousands of cases forwarded over decades by bishops to the Vatican
office called the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, led from 1981 to
2005 by Cardinal Ratzinger. It is still the office that decides whether accused
priests should be given full canonical trials and defrocked.
In
1996, Cardinal Ratzinger failed to respond to two letters about the
case from Rembert G. Weakland, Milwaukee’s archbishop at the time. After eight
months, the second in command at the doctrinal office, Cardinal Tarcisio
Bertone, now the Vatican’s secretary of state, instructed the
Wisconsin bishops to begin a secret canonical trial that could lead to Father Murphy’s dismissal.
But
Cardinal Bertone halted the process after Father Murphy
personally wrote to Cardinal Ratzinger protesting that he should not be put on trial because he had already
repented and was in poor health and that the case was beyond the church’s own
statute of limitations.
“I
simply want to live out the time that I have left in the dignity of my
priesthood,” Father Murphy wrote near the end of his life to Cardinal
Ratzinger. “I ask your kind assistance in this matter.” The files contain no
response from Cardinal Ratzinger.
The
New York Times obtained the documents, which the church fought to keep secret,
from Jeff Anderson and Mike Finnegan, the lawyers for five men who have brought
four lawsuits against the Archdiocese of Milwaukee. The documents include
letters between bishops and the Vatican, victims’ affidavits, the handwritten notes
of an expert on sexual disorders who interviewed Father Murphy and minutes of a final
meeting on the case at the Vatican.
Father
Murphy not only was never tried or disciplined by the church’s own justice
system, but also got a pass from the police and prosecutors who ignored reports
from his victims, according to the documents and interviews with victims. Three
successive archbishops in Wisconsin were told that Father Murphy was sexually
abusing children, the documents show, but never reported it to criminal or
civil authorities.
Instead
of being disciplined, Father Murphy was
quietly moved by Archbishop William E. Cousins of Milwaukee to the Diocese of Superior in northern Wisconsin in 1974,
where he spent his last 24 years working freely with children in parishes,
schools and, as one lawsuit charges, a juvenile detention center. He died in
1998, still a priest.
Even
as the pope himself in a recent letter to Irish Catholics has emphasized the
need to cooperate with civil justice in abuse cases, the correspondence seems
to indicate that the Vatican’s insistence on secrecy has often impeded such
cooperation. At the same time, the officials’ reluctance to defrock a sex
abuser shows that on a doctrinal level, the Vatican has tended to view the
matter in terms of sin and repentance more than crime and punishment.
The
Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, was shown the documents and was
asked to respond to questions about the case. He provided a statement saying that Father Murphy had certainly violated “particularly
vulnerable” children and the law, and that it was a “tragic case.” But he
pointed out that the Vatican was not forwarded the case until 1996, years after
civil authorities had investigated the case and dropped it.
Father
Lombardi emphasized that neither the Code of Canon Law nor the Vatican norms issued
in 1962, which instruct bishops to conduct canonical investigations and trials
in secret, prohibited church officials from reporting child abuse to civil
authorities. He did not address why that had never happened in this case.
As
to why Father Murphy was never defrocked, he said that “the Code of Canon Law
does not envision automatic penalties.” He said that Father Murphy’s poor
health and the lack of more recent accusations against him were factors in the
decision.
The
Vatican’s inaction is not unusual. Only 20 percent of the 3,000 accused priests
whose cases went to the church’s doctrinal office between 2001 and 2010 were
given full church trials, and only some of those were defrocked, according to a
recent interview in an Italian newspaper with Msgr. Charles J. Scicluna, the
chief internal prosecutor at that office. An additional 10 percent were
defrocked immediately. Ten percent left voluntarily. But a majority — 60
percent — faced other “administrative and disciplinary provisions,” Monsignor
Scicluna said, like being prohibited from celebrating Mass.
To many, Father Murphy appeared to be
a saint: a hearing man gifted at communicating in American Sign Language and an
effective fund-raiser for deaf causes. A priest of the Milwaukee Archdiocese,
he started as a teacher at St. John’s School for the Deaf, in St. Francis, in
1950. He was promoted to run the school in 1963 even though students had
disclosed to church officials in the 1950s that he was a predator.
Victims give similar accounts of
Father Murphy’s pulling down their pants and touching them in his office, his car, his mother’s country house, on class excursions
and fund-raising trips and in their dormitory beds at night.Arthur Budzinski said he was first molested when he went to Father Murphy for confession
when he was about 12, in 1960.
“If
he was a real mean guy, I would have stayed away,” said Mr. Budzinski, now 61,
who worked for years as a journeyman printer. “But he was so friendly, and so
nice and understanding. I knew he was wrong, but I couldn’t really believe it.”
Mr.
Budzinski and a group of other deaf former students spent more than 30 years
trying to raise the alarm, including passing out leaflets outside the Milwaukee
cathedral. Mr. Budzinski’s friend Gary Smith said in an interview that Father
Murphy molested him 50 or 60 times, starting at age 12. By the time he
graduated from high school at St. John’s, Mr. Smith said, “I was a very, very
angry man.”
In
1993, with complaints about Father Murphy landing on his desk, Archbishop
Weakland hired a social worker specializing in treating sexual offenders to
evaluate him. After four days of interviews, the social worker said that Father
Murphy had admitted his acts, had probably molested about 200 boys and felt no
remorse.
However,
it was not until 1996 that Archbishop Weakland tried to have Father Murphy
defrocked. The reason, he wrote to Cardinal Ratzinger, was to defuse the anger
among the deaf and restore their trust in the church. He wrote that since he
had become aware that “solicitation in the confessional might be part of the
situation,” the case belonged at the doctrinal office.
With
no response from Cardinal Ratzinger, Archbishop Weakland wrote a different
Vatican office in March 1997 saying the matter was urgent because a lawyer was
preparing to sue, the case could become public and “true scandal in the future
seems very possible.”
Recently
some bishops have argued that the 1962 norms dictating secret disciplinary
procedures have long fallen out of use. But it is clear from these documents
that in 1997, they were still in force.
But
the effort to dismiss Father Murphy came to a sudden halt after the priest
appealed to Cardinal Ratzinger for leniency.
In
an interview, Archbishop Weakland said that he recalled a final
meeting at the Vatican in May 1998 in which he failed to persuade Cardinal Bertone and other doctrinal
officials to grant a canonical trial to defrock Father Murphy. (In 2002,
Archbishop Weakland resigned after it became public that he had an affair with
a man and used church money to pay him a settlement.)
Archbishop
Weakland said this week in an interview, “The evidence was so complete, and so
extensive that I thought he should be reduced to the lay state, and also that
that would bring a certain amount of peace in the deaf community.”
Father
Murphy died four months later at age 72 and was buried in his priestly
vestments. Archbishop Weakland wrote a last letter to Cardinal Bertone
explaining his regret that Father Murphy’s family had disobeyed the
archbishop’s instructions that the funeral be small and private, and the coffin
kept closed.
“In
spite of these difficulties,” Archbishop Weakland wrote, “we are still hoping
we can avoid undue publicity that would be negative toward the church.”
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