I have written on numerous occasions that I despaired Pell’s trial would become a circus that overwhelmed everything around it and everything that had come before it.
And here we are.
The High Court found there existed “a significant possibility that an innocent person has been convicted because the evidence did not establish guilt to the requisite standard of proof.”
Justice has now been done. George Pell’s conviction has been quashed.
It is reasonable to conclude that the failed pursuit of one man has overshadowed the ugly history of clerical child sex offending. Meanwhile, the significant role of another institution in this litany of misery remains locked in darkness.
We need to understand our history and not accept a sanitised version of it. And there is no time better than now to examine the role of the Catholic Church and the Victoria Police Force who often worked hand in glove to bury their culpability in the most serious of crimes.
Clearly, one has been more successful with this act of deception than the other. And that needs to change.
I received a letter from the son of a police officer just last week. He told the story of his father, as a young uniformed police officer on foot patrol around the parliamentary grounds with another similarly youthful cop alongside him. They came across two men in a public toilet engaged in a lewd act. They detained and sought to charge the two men; one was a priest, the other a member of parliament.
The charges did not proceed, no action was taken but the two young coppers remained as loose ends – eyewitnesses to the sordid episode which by then had involved multiple senior police officers and the offenders in a conspiracy to pervert the course of justice.
The two young coppers were dragged into the Chief Commissioner’s office and given two options – leave the police force immediately or seek transfer as far away from Melbourne as possible. One chose Mildura, the other Hamilton in Victoria’s west where he stayed and rose to the rank of Inspector. That was 1946.
In 1956, a young police constable, Denis Ryan detained a priest, John Day after Day was found drunk, semi-naked and in the company of two prostitutes in St Kilda. Day was released without charge. Ryan asked a senior officer why the priest was not brought to account and was told, “Short of murder, no priest would ever be charged in Victoria.” The senior officer explained that in the unlikely event a priest was charged, a group of police officers within the force would intervene and knock the charges over.
In Unholy Trinity, the book I wrote with Denis Ryan, we detailed a story where two detectives were in the process of charging a priest for child sex offences at Brunswick Police Station. It was alleged the priest had preyed upon boys at the nearby Don Bosco Youth Centre. The priest sat forlorn in the lock up. But not for long. A senior detective, Frank Rosengren burst into the interview room and demanded the two detectives drop the investigation immediately. The charges were dropped, the priest was released, and the two detectives were told to consider themselves lucky they still had jobs. That was 1960.
In 1962, Denis Ryan, a staunch Catholic and by then a detective constable was approached by a more senior officer, Fred Russell. Russell asked Ryan to join a group of police whose job he described as “ensuring priests did not come to grief in the courts.” Ryan declined the offer. Eight years later, Russell became the head of the Criminal Investigation Branch.
Denis Ryan attempted to prosecute an outrageous offender, Monsignor John Day in Mildura. Ryan lost his job. Senior police attended the diocesan office of the Bishop of Ballarat, Ronald Mulkearns and told him of Day’s offending. Day was not charged. Instead he was moved out of Mildura and placed in another parish, Timboon, near Warrnambool. That was 1972.
Three years later in the parish of Inglewood near Bendigo, police commenced an investigation into Gerald Ridsdale. Ridsdale had been a prolific offender since he was ordained a priest in 1961. He had been shanghaied around the Ballarat Diocese, from Ballarat to Apollo Bay, Mildura and Warrnambool but this was the first time we know of that he came under the scrutiny of police.
A Bendigo detective took one victim statement to Mulkearns in Ballarat in an effort to have Ridsdale transferred.
One resident of Ingelwood, an ex-cop himself, described the scene in his hometown. “All of a sudden, detectives came up from Bendigo. Then he (Ridsdale) was gone.”
Shortly afterwards, a detective travelled to Ballarat and met with Bishop Mulkearns to tell him Ridsdale would not be charged, but they thought he was guilty and should undergo therapy.
Just to be clear, Ridsdale was no low-level offender, “a fiddler” as victims often describe priests with wandering hands. One victim described Ridsdale “as the sort of man who would rape you and then threaten to kill you if you ever told a living soul about what had happened.”
Ridsdale who would later describe himself as “out of control” in Inglewood, would go on to offend at Edenhope, Bungaree and Mortlake, where he would be out of control again.
We might think these cosy, collusive arrangements between the Victoria Police Force and Church were driven by the pressures of sectarianism within the force, a force divided between Catholicism and freemasonry, where both protected their own. There is certainly some truth to that back then.
But by the mid-1980s those pressures had started to ease, driven largely by the decline of freemasonry.
Ridsdale was sent to Mortlake by Mulkearns in January 1981. The extent of his offending in that town of 1,000 people is difficult to conceive. It is said that almost every boy between the ages of 8 and 14 suffered some form of sexual abuse at the hands of Ridsdale.
He was shuffled out of Mortlake in 1982 by Mulkearns when the weight of his crimes became impossible to ignore. Mulkearns sent him to Sydney, where he offended again and again.
By this time, Victoria Police had taken an active interest in Ridsdale and this would lead to his first conviction in 1993 after he pleaded guilty to 30 counts of indecent assault against nine boys aged between 12 and 16 between 1974 and 1980.
But here again there is anecdotal evidence of certain police inveigling themselves on the outcome, tampering with evidence, victim statements disappearing. Ridsdale’s more serious crimes involving penetrative rape were not pursued at this time. He was sentenced to 12 months’ imprisonment with a non-parole period of three months.
I know of one victim who had made a statement to VicPol detectives in 1985 alleging Ridsdale had raped him in 1983. The victim is now a police officer in another jurisdiction.
At the time of the offence, the victim’s father was ill in hospital suffering from cancer. It was thought he would not survive. Ridsdale raped the teen at the man’s home in Mortlake and then took the 40-minute drive to Warrnambool Base Hospital to administer the last rites.
The victim’s statement went missing and was never found. He contacted VicPol’s Sano Task Force several years ago but they had no knowledge of his allegations and inquiries confirmed the statement had vanished. That episode would form the basis of charges to which Ridsdale pleaded guilty almost a quarter of a century after his first conviction.
Recently, I became aware of three priests in Ballarat in the 1990s who had a number of things in common. They had all been expelled from seminaries for misconduct. All three were considered to be inappropriate persons to join the priesthood. But Bishop Mulkearns persisted and sponsored their training in other seminaries. They would all become child sex offenders.
With a light, however dim, now shining on the Ballarat Diocese, those three priests were considered potentially embarrassing and were asked to leave the priesthood. They weren’t laicised as far as I can tell. Their names feature in the annual Australian Catholic Directory; where they were ordained, what parishes they served. In the edition of the directory the following year, they were gone. Vanished. Like ghosts.
All three had been persuaded to leave the arms of the Church. They had all come to the attention of police but were never charged nor subject to any police investigation. They were waved through and allowed to set themselves up as ordinary citizens in communities that could have no idea what threat they posed. That was 1995.
By this time, there were police engaged in the earnest investigation of offending priests and other clerics. They invariably describe their work at the time as unsupported by senior colleagues. One detective who first brought the monstrous Christian Brother Ted Dowlan to justice wrote memos to senior police almost begging for the establishment of a task force. His requests were ignored.
Other detectives carried out their investigations largely in private, deeply suspicious of sharing information with colleagues in the fear that their investigations would be compromised.
That is the potted history. There’s more, of course. In Ballarat, in Melbourne and elsewhere in Victoria. It speaks of manifest failures, wilful ignorance and systemic corruption.
When we move to the present and VicPol’s Sano Task Force’s attempt to prosecute George Pell ending in ignominy, the question must be asked, did Victoria Police seek to erase its dismal history by the failed pursuit of one man, a prince of the Church?
Consider an alternate reality where John Day had been charged and sentenced to a long term of imprisonment for his crimes against children in Mildura in 1972. Or if Ridsdale had been brought before the courts and prosecuted in Inglewood, 1974. Hundreds of victims would have been spared the trauma of abuse. There is no other way of looking at it.
We understand the Catholic Church’s failings, the miserable felonious business of covering up and moving clerical paedophiles onto other parishes and new groups of unsuspecting victims. What is barely known is the role of the police in facilitating those crimes.
There’s no shortage of guilt. More than enough to go around.
This column was first published at The Australian on 8 April, 2020
Hey, by the way, Milton says hello to the denizens of Jack’s bar and advises that due to his recent move and associated technical issues he can’t yet join us. He does say that he’s moved into a place in close proximity to a pub and club strip but reckons he might have mistimed his professional reinvention as a lap dancer!
OMFG Still the same old Milton! Pervert city…😞😞😂😂
One thing this pandemic has done is to enhance the technical online skills! Stuff I had never envisaged myself as even comprehending, let alone actually utilising, have become essential skills.
Both daughters cried “we know nothing about Zoom meetings – too hard” – so it was left to mother to work this out.
Voila, fairly easy. Well, so far. The scheduled meeting hasn’t happened yet.
But I do have a Zoom yoga lesson hosted by my cousin in the the UK to attend tonight. Bloody hell, yoga doesn’t do much for me. (I just cheat with the slow breathing thing – makes me feel queasy if I do what they say I should) A couple of scotches on the rocks may loosen up the recalcitrant limbs somewhat – although the first session gave me some insight as to how much those medieval baddies must have felt on the rack!
Full of security holes Boa = be careful
I don’t bend well enough for Yoga. And if I get into a downward facing dog, there I need to stay until help comes along.
Downward Dog is sheer torture. But I did it. But i understand where you’re coming from, Dwight.
It’s quite funny really because for the class I’m doing this with it’s 10am – 7pm here. So they’re thinking morning tea and scones – meanwhile I’m 2 whiskies into this and not feeling the pain 😁. But I haven’t told them!
Keep pushing Boa. 😞 After a few more you won’t even feel the need to get up for the afternoon. A self-isolation day that’s shorter! Yay!👍
Carl, Razor and Trivalve – Just going back to the comment I made that you responded to on the last one, I don’t know if you’ve been following the way Victoria is handling the plague crisis but it could be reasonably described as an effing shambles. Victoria is now a police state in the very literal sense of being a place where that which is not explicitly authorised is illegal. And what is explicitly authorised is more or less decided on the spot by any plod who gets it into their head to give you a hard time.
The last place I lived and worked where you didn’t leave home without official sanction; where there was a question mark over the potential of every activity to get you into trouble; where you were constantly scanning for police and looking over your shoulder to see who was watching and listening was . . . Iraq when Saddam Hussein was still in power.
I wrote an email to my state MP last night, a bit pissed and cranky (yeah, I know – hard to believe) demanding the opposition do something to force the government to settle down instead of just going along with it all. She answered with her customary grace and politeness (I felt like a prick) and told me a few stories of the feedback she’s getting from businesses in the electorate. These lock-downs and arbitrary rules are just killing them (and I know – I work for one). She told me that the way police are interpreting essential travel means that a person who goes into an electronics store and buys a fridge won’t be fined, but if they catch you walking out with a popcorn maker you’re done!
Now, I don’t know – maybe a parent stuck at home with six bored kids would say that a popcorn maker is the most essential item in their kitchen. But what I do know is that we should NEVER, under ANY circumstances be having to check ourselves lest the purchase of an ordinary item of kitchenware turns us into a criminal.
So, yes I get the saving lives part. But unlike the many fans of totalitarianism in the comments sections over at The Oz, running a society is not just about saving lives. There are other considerations. And the wholesale removal of civil rights that our governments have rushed to worries me a lot more than any disease.
Sorry for the long post, Jack. Just had to get all that out!
TBLS
All laws are made to keep the bottom 20% in line.
If you subscribe to Darwin’s theory let it rip but they might be the only survivors.
It remains to be seen if the Canadian, Dutch and Swedish methods will be better in the longer term,
Meanwhile, we are faced with a total economic collapse if it goes on for too long.
There are reports out of Sth Korea that one can be re-infected.
I am not too sure if the current society could face up to 50 million deaths that the Spanish flu inflicted. If one took the population increase into account this would translate into 250 million?
All I know is things will not be the same when this is over and the comfortable retirement life style that I worked my guts out for is probably totally stuffed.
Meanwhile the Gaia crowd are starting to climb out from under their rocks.
One has to put one’s faith in the experts. As for the pollies – since only about 1% ,or less, of the population ever took any interest in their pre-selection, we get what we deserve.
“One has to put one’s faith in the experts”
Well, not really. A pertinent point Alexander Downer has made is that if you give any problem over entirely to “the experts” then they’ll attack the problem to the n’th degree from their point of expertise. Doctors will go at it with no regard for anything other than saving lives. Military people will go at it in a way that prioritises military considerations. Police will treat it as a policing problem. Same with engineers, etc.
We hire governments to take a more balanced approach. There are people who have said, in as many words, that there is NOTHING about this situation that matters other than saving lives. I disagree. There are LOTS of other things to worry about!
Who or what is this bottom bottom 20%?
Can’t comment on Victoria BLS but I can say from a Qld perspective our Commissioner and for that matter the Premier (that hurt) have constantly talked about being reasonable. Unfortunately some of our more zealous members are creating problems. 99% are showing compassion and common sense. 1000’s of warnings and much educative advice given. We aren’t doing the drones or the driving through parks shouting at people stuff either. Sunbaking on beaches have generally been warnings but patience is running out there. It probably won’t surprise you those who enjoy writing traffic tickets for a living are the ones least adapting to the compassion and common sense model.
The outliers are the scary ones–and in a real “end of days” situation, would be the ones doing summary executions. Did you catch the video of the Malibu police using patrol boats to chase down a lone paddleboarder? How about the Philly cops dragging a man off a bus for not wearing a face mask? The official idiocy award of the last couple of days goes to the governor of Michigan, for closing all the garden centers–now you can’t plant your own garden! The private idiocy award to the woman in the UK who left a nasty note on her neighbor’s car for making non-essential trips. The neighbor is a nurse and was going to work on the pandemic front line.
Next door neighbour just told me his daughter’s friend got busted coming out of a Bunnings with pot plants. $1652 fine, thanks very much. Presumably if she’d walked out with something the plod deemed “essential” she’d have been OK.
I just don’t understand why there are people – a LOT of them – who don’t have a problem with this. It’s hard to imagine a more literal definition of the police state.
Just so I’m understanding these restrictions you mention TBLS, I called the local Police station today. I asked if I’m allowed to take a neighbour (who doesn’t drive) with me to the supermarket for essential groceries & to a Chemist to fill her prescription. He then read the rules out loud & said “So all good”. Not wanting a huge fine I asked for his name just in case, which he happily gave me. I then quickly asked if I could get soil at a garden centre & he said no. What’s the go with limiting vege growing?
I’m very confused & frankly mate, if I was to believe in these rampant theories over 5G installation, it might make more sense. 😞😷
Well said. One of the problems I see in the decision process at all levels is that the decision makers have no skin in the game–my friends in hospitality and retail have lost their jobs–but the people making the decisions never will. The public service (except for the obligatory nod to “doctors, nurse, firefighter, etc) is overpaid and oversized. James Allen has has a good piece the Speccie about it. If you’re bored read Nassim Nicholas Taleb’s Skin in the Game. People with nothing at risk make bad decisions.
Campbell Newman fan are we?
I just read where VicPol has issued a number of $1652 fines for the protestors in Preston. Let’s see if the magistrates do what I bet they will–and void them all, because reasons.
Well, the courts aren’t sitting for the most part, Dwight, so I don’t know how any of these penalties can be imposed if people are smart enough. I probably shouldn’t tell you all this but the best way of avoiding any fine is choosing to have the matter dealt with in court. As hearings approach, write to the court and seek leave to have the matter at a later date. Keep doing that and the fine will go away.
Being that my last stint of jury duty netted me only four hours over three weeks, I could see what the courts were up against.
Exactly right, Jack. The courts are closed and there is going to be a MONSTROUS backlog of work when they re-open again. What are the authorities going to do? Launch another ten million prosecutions for failure to pay plague-related fines?
No way in the world.
Voltaire says the courts are still sitting albeit without juries, TBLS. He was right and I was wrong on that. I have noticed a significant delay in one matter (or is it two?) – the appeals of Messrs Roger Rogerson and Glen McNamara. They both filed separately with the intention they be heard separately (the hearing was scheduled for late last month) but an efficient registrar of the NSW Supreme Court decided they should be heard in the same court at the same time. One to watch if only for our amusement but given delays elsewhere in the system, not until September now with a listings hearing in May. Wityth no sport on the telly, surely this should be televised.
JTI,
Actually just about all NSW and Federal courts ARE sitting though no jury trials for obvious reasons – and they have been slow to rev up adopting (3 different !!) types of videoconferencing for virtual courts!!
Give a petty bureaucrat (not the courts) extra powers and you can be pretty sure that they just can’t help themselves: falling over to exercise them without sense or discretion…. the ultimate nanny state of People’s Republic of Victoria with a police force which has not distinguished itself over the past 3 decades would be the last I would wish to see given the additional powers but the Mexicans seem relatively content with the situation!
Suspect the source of the problem was legislation not properly framed giving the wallopers too much powers. You can’t sit on a park bench on your own? I saw a photograph of a woman sitting on her own at Rushcutters Bay park. She was told to exercise or go home. Ridiculous stuff.
Noted. Cheers mate. 😁
Cheers BLS, it’s probably quite natural that local reactions to the present restrictions differ from area to area, depending on the impact the “China virus” is having. For example, where I am on the coast its regarded as a “hot spot”. So I’m prepared to have a fairly benign reaction to the odd spot of injudiciousness perpetrated by the local constabulary. I have every confidence that we’ll come out the other side of this present situation OK, and the George Orwell dystopian-like regime that we’re currently experiencing will be just a distant memory.
In the meantime, keep your head down, wash your hands and good luck.
I too get the saving lives part TBLS & I am mostly self-isolating but it beats me that with all these new daily rules, nobody making these rules factors in other vital errands you need to undertake for those you love.
My 87 year old mother who’s ailing fast, doesn’t drive & lives alone on the other side of town admitted yesterday she’d been without bread, butter & Panamax for four days & my son can’t find one tin of my new granddaughter’s formula on local supermarket shelves.
What do you do? I know what I did. 😗
Of course. The fact is, governments routinely pass bad laws with potential for abuse and misapplication, even with all the time and information in the world available to them. Deliberately draconian laws passed in a mad panic in the absence of very much information at all provide literally limitless potential for abuse and injustice.
I’m not a person naturally antagonistic to law enforcement; far from it. I don’t envy any of the authorities having to interpret and apply all this rubbish. But like I said in my original post, this would be the perfect time for a body like the Australian Human Rights Commission to step up and remind our legislators that human rights don’t just go away because they’re inconvenient in the moment. And the AHRC is currently missing in action.
Never let them forget, Jack.
BLS, I actually wrote a lengthy post about JTI’s article but when it boils down to it your simple 5 words here sum it up pretty well so I deleted it. Agreed never let them forget!
George Pell can thank modernity, not God, that his new found freedom was largely, if not entirely reliant on the legal standard and application of “beyond reasonable doubt”. Sometimes referred to as “to a moral certainty”.
However, it seems ironic that the same George Pell’s house of God very much frowns upon allowing such latitude for its worshippers to question whether such church dogma as “immaculate conception” and “virgin birth”, is beyond reasonable doubt. Or even perhaps not being quite so incontrovertibly true. God forbid!
And just another quick observation, both pious and political. George Pell is back in the black* while our economy is back in the red. I feel sorry for Josh.
* i.e. robes
Brilliant analogy Carl! A church who tells small children they will go to hell for not attending mass every Sunday has housed pederasts for eon’s.
Many moons ago my son, along with four other first grade non-catholic students, were told by the parish priest to go sit in the back row of the church because “God didn’t recognise them in here.” True story.
I was right there. as the nasty prig was to find out after the service.
Your son will have been the better for learning about life and nature from someone like you Bella than some stuffy arsehole whose only joy in life is intimidating small children.
Thanks Razor that’s so nice of you.
The school I speak of was highly recommended by many I knew well but I changed him to a school without the Jesus influence in Grade 2 & he thrived. No cane either. Man, those Catholics just love to inflict pain on little kids. It’s a sickness.
My son is my only one, owns & operates a renovation business with 4 employees, now in his mid-thirties, recently married & just had my 1st grandchild, a girl!
This new Nana is very happy she
removed him early on from a school that only fostered resentment & fear.
Beats me why they are that way. 😪
Congrats on the first grandling Bella! We haven’t any yet but I must admit I can’t wait.
Modernity?
According to Talmud, “every man is innocent until proved guilty. ”
“Proof lies on him who asserts, not on him who denies”, is attributed to the second and third century jurist Paul.
Yes Dwight, there’s a lot to be digested with regards to the application of “modernity” in a religious context. I think I was attempting to contrast the need for present day freedom of thought with the tightly held dominance of a number of questionable theistic beliefs and positions.
Pell not a very pleasing individual, Carl, not my type of cove at all but suspect hes hopelessly Institutionalised and it shows in his mannerisms. I doubt strongly he will now be given much to do, surely not, hes close to 80, no longer of use to the Vatican but he will still be revered by the Faithful of the Catholic Church. Cheers
Boa
Your question on Canada on the last blog.
If the map I just looked at, Canada is one of the three western nations not in any form of lock down – along with the Netherlands and Sweden.
There are a few more in the Balkans
The Catholic Church brand has been tarnished for at least a generation.
I know a couple who never missed a Sunday Mass who will now not go anywhere near the joint.
There is another friend who think that they are just making up excuses – but there again he nearly ended up a priest.
If this virus bites hard, one could expect a resurgence in numbers though.
Some catchups from previous:
NFY: Hey NFY, good to see you back!
VOLTAIRE: Yep, I agree about the Nordic Noir Voltaire. Like your wife, I have binge-watched many series…. just one more episode, just another – and before you know what’s happened the whole 10 episodes have been devoured!! Exit is on my list – I’ll get onto it
I don’t bother with Netflix and the like. Find that ABC and SBS on Demand are more than enough.
Yes, I’m hoping that Killing Eve manages to retain its oomph. I really loved the fashion statements of Vilanelle!
RAZOR: Yep, I know what you mean. A couple of espresso martinis – say no more!!
Boa,
Both EXIT and False Flag are SBS on Demand.
Agree with you that while there is very little on normal channels of freeview, SBS on Demand and to a lesser extent, ivew for ABC, are fantastic resources to the extent that there is no need (for my part) to seek PayTV…. though I confess I would like to see the resumption of sport (both playing it and watching it).
Vilanelle (and her handler together with MI5 head) are simply fantastic – as characters and superbly acted….
Sobering article, Jack. Just awful. ……..
Wonderful insightful Column, Mr Insider, on a subject you have often written about but sadly Child Abuse just seems to go on and on, Jail Sentences don’t seem to be doing the trick imho. I don’t know what the answer is but must say its wonderful to see the Disgusting Risdale and the like taken off the streets , sadly way too late.
“There’s no shortage of guilt. More than enough to go around”, you say and I agree we can point the finger day in day out but for Gods sake lets Pray the abuse of Children STOPS!