Humble servant of the Nation

Failures of church and state created monster Gerald Ridsdale

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Gerald Ridsdale, the former Ballarat priest has pleaded guilty to a further 20 offences against 11 victims and his conviction formally handed down.

On the basis of convictions, numbers of victims and number of offences, Ridsdale is the worst sex offender in this country’s history. While Ridsdale’s defence team laughably called for the prospect of parole, he must die in jail.

I read a copy of one man’s victim impact statement over the weekend. It made me weep. It was no surprise that, when he delivered it to the court yesterday, County Court Judge Irene Lawson also broke down in tears. The court adjourned briefly while the judge composed herself. In all ten of the 11 victims in this round of prosecutions provided statements, detailing lives in disarray, filled with emotional, lifelong pain, surviving rather than living.

Despite having their moments in court, the mystical, magical word ‘closure’ and all it connotes continues to elude them.

The obvious question is how did a pedophile priest, active for thirty years or more, with more than 60 victims having now come forward, escape justice for so long? Ridsdale had been offending against children from the moment he became a priest in 1962. He was first convicted of child sex offending in 1993.

The answer, in part, lies in the conduct of the Ballarat diocese under Bishop Mulkearns and his predecessor, Bishop James O’Collins. These senior figures within the Church, effectively the chief executive officers of the Ballarat diocese were aware of Ridsdale’s offending and merely shuffled him around the diocese to new parishes and new groups of children.

I could mount a very solid argument that the Ballarat diocese was a criminal organisation. Certainly it behaved as if it was, destroying evidence, perverting the course of justice, facilitating monstrous crimes, aiding and abetting the rape of children and then covering it up and moving the offending priests on when the protests from parishioners grew too loud.

The usual modus operandi of this sociopathic priest and others like him, was to prey on vulnerable children, kids battling emotionally with their families in distress due to marital breakdown, illness in the family or often when the parents or guardians were regarded as so devout they would never believe their children had they come forward and reported being raped by a priest.

In that respect, Ridsdale was a cold, calculating criminal. But by the time he was shanghaied to Mortlake in Victoria’s west in the early 1980s, he was out of control. He still stuck to his ruse of preying on especially vulnerable kids but his M.O. had started to change. He had begun raping kids spontaneously, opportunistically.

In the last day, we have also heard the incomprehensible and appalling crime of a father bringing his pre-teen aged daughter to Ridsdale and presenting her to the priest to be sexually assaulted.

Ridsdale’s actions were those of a man who did not fear consequence. He did not fear it because he had learned that he would not be held to account. The diocese would do nothing more than require his removal from one parish before moving him onto another. More significantly, he understood the police would do nothing.

This may be an old story to some but it needs to be repeated. In 1972 in Mildura a police detective, Denis Ryan sought to prosecute a paedophile priest, Monsignor John Day. Like Ridsdale, Day’s victims number in the hundreds. Day was protected by the most senior detective in Mildura, Detective Sergeant Jim Barritt. When Ryan sought assistance from senior Victoria Police, all hell broke loose. Ultimately Ryan had his career destroyed by senior police while Day was removed from the Mildura parish under the watchful eyes of the police and their co-conspirator, Bishop Ronald Mulkearns. He was let loose on another parish where he offended again.

Day was never charged and died unpunished in 1978.

Consider what lessons Ridsdale might have learned from this scandal. He and other paedophile priests in the diocese had effectively been given the green light. They could prey on children with impunity.

What lessons could be learned for victims? They learned the hard lesson that there was no point in coming forward. The fix was in. Is it any wonder under these circumstances that victims took on average more than two decades to report to police while many, many others will never come forward?

Members of VicPol understood precisely what had happened to Ryan. Many privately sympathised with him. But the lesson for them was, don’t open that disgraceful can of worms. It will cost you your job.

What we do know is the rate of offending escalated in the wake of the Mildura scandal. Ridsdale, who had been present in Mildura in the late 1960s and offended against children there, came to the view that he could rape children without ever being brought to book.

Consider, too, what might have happened had Day been charged and prosecuted in 1972 as he should have been. In this alternate universe, would paedophile priests like Ridsdale continue to prey on children, knowing a long jail sentence was coming their way? How would their boss, Bishop Mulkearns, have responded? The old cover up and move on strategy would have stopped there and then.

Of course we will never know but it is an entirely reasonable conclusion to draw that literally hundreds of victims would have been spared the enduring trauma of child sexual abuse had police done their basic duty.

Did this collaboration between Church and VicPol end in 1972? I believe it did not and there is evidence today of reports from victims not being acted on, statements from victims made to police going missing and watered down prosecutions, where priests like Ridsdale faced lesser charges while the more serious offences were not pursued.

Some of these instances may involve investigative ineptitude, some where police failed to act out of fear for the consequences on their own careers. It is worth noting those senior police involved in the Day scandal, whose perverted sense of loyalty to the Church, contrary to the oath they had all taken to protect and serve the people of Victoria, continued to rise through the ranks in VicPol. One retired as an Assistant Commissioner, one the head of Homicide, another the head of the CIB.

Apologies have been issued to Ryan by Victoria Police and its failures quietly acknowledged. But VicPol to date has failed to apologise to victims arising out of the Day conspiracy and I believe it has failed to do so because it strikes at its essence. No police force can act without public confidence and there can be no greater blow to public confidence than the historical failure of police to protect the state’s most vulnerable members.

Sadly, the state’s dirty secrets have been flung further into the shadows. What we can say is that without VicPol’s historical complicity with the Ballarat Diocese to suppress the investigation of clerical child sexual abuse, Ridsdale would not have become the monster he is today.

This column was published in The Australian 16 August 2017.

51 Comments

  • Penny says:

    Good on you JTI for not letting this go. We were in Mildura for a couple of weeks this year and not one day went by that I didn’t think of what happened to Denis Ryan and the despicable behavior of Monsignor John Day. I wonder too how the current crop of police in Mildura are regarded……trust and belief in the protection of children has been broken badly and I would imagine that the relationship would take a long time to repair. I do know that there were allot of dark secrets in Ballarat from friends who live there, but until the Ridsdale case was brought into the public domain I don’t think anyone outside of Ballarat had any clue about the criminal behavior of the Catholic Church in that town.
    I have a personal friend who trained as a Catholic priest in Brisbane, whose father was a senior member of the Queensland police force. He was incredibly scared of his father, (ibut left the priesthood against his fathers wishes anyway. Some of the stories about what he had seen though before he left were really quite disturbing

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Virtually every victim I have spoken to has little time or trust for police. That’s what scandals like this do, they break trust.

    • Razor says:

      I look at it as a balance scale Penny. When the police do good a stone gets put on one side of the scale, bad and a stone gets taken off. The trouble with something like this is more than one stone gets taken away and what do you have to do well to get the balance right again. In my experience you start with a genuine apology. Secondly you do NOT listen to lawyers and play legal games with the victims if they litigate. Thirdly you get Senior officers into the town and lead very visibly from the front by way of community engagement over a long period of time. You do not do this to just get people back ‘onside’. You do this because you recognise a great wrong has been done and as a senior officer you are responsible for not only the good in the organisation but the bad as well.

  • BASSMAN says:

    What about these priests daily saying they would rather go to jail than break the so called sanctity of the confessional.All this in homage to a God that nobody has seen and a heaven or hell that not one single person or returned to tell us about.One thing is for sure.The abuse is real.The kids are real.And it is only the tip of the iceberg.There must be heaps unreported.

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    Strewth poor old PM Turnbull starting to look “plumb nekked”, Mr Insider! “The dual citizen spotlight has fallen on a third Turnbull government minister, who may have inherited British citizenship from his father.Experts believe Justice Minister Michael Keenan is a “citizen by descent” of United Kingdom, unless he or or his father went through the formal renunciation process.”
    http://tinyurl.com/yac3r74g

  • Rhys Needham says:

    Did Victoria Police ever come up as a case study in its own right in the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses, Jack? Or wasn’t that part of the remit?

    Another comment under the actual article intrigued me as well, for one: why didn’t some of the more sectarian Protestants or Freemasons or maybe freethinkers try and get to the bottom of the Catholic Mafia’s relationships with the many paedophiles and paedophile rings, so it seems, in the Ballarat diocese, if only to discredit the Micks and Paddies?

    I just hope there are mechanisms and lessons in place to make sure that similar sociopaths and predators or moral cowards (to put it mildly) like Ridsdale, Day, and Mulkearns don’t slip through the net next time (and to make sure there’s no assistance for them to do so either).

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Some believed the freemasons within the force orchestrated the conspiracy, Rhys and that it came directly from the Chief Commissioner, Reg Jackson, who was a freemason. It makes sense but I’ve seen no direct evidence of it. Jackson as Chief Commissioner was scandal averse. VicPol under his leadership was still recovering from the Kaye Inquiry where three police, including the head of Homicide, Det-Inspector Jack Ford, were jailed for running rackets around the then illegal abortion industry. That was 1971 and the dying days of the Bolte Gov. Had the The Mildura episode been put into a sharp public spotlight, it would have sent VicPol into Royal Commission territory.

  • The Outsider says:

    Jack, were there any consequences for DS Jim Barritt, and is he still alive?

    If so, is there any planned action against him?

    • Jack The Insider says:

      No, he died in the 1980s. We heard from his sister after the book was published and she told us that she had been sexually abused as a teen on numerous occasions by Barritt. He was a very strange man.

  • Boadicea says:

    Someone over the all comments that he is having a very cosy time in jail -with homosexual lover, three meals a day, out of the firing line and quite content.
    Sorry, but if that’s true, in my opinion he should have been castrated.

  • Bella says:

    I very much admire your steadfast committment in chasing justice for Mr Ryan and the unknown number of assaulted victims JTI.

    What stood out for me after reading Unholy Trinity was the staggering fact that any fully functioning adult would provide protection or run a cover for another adult, whom you knew without a shadow of doubt, was sexually abusing children. Giving a “green light” as you say to scum like Risdale makes them guilty too & I’m quite shocked that actions that amount to being a ‘back-up’ is not seen as a punishable crime
    Whether they are bishops, priests, cops or parents, they are guilty.

    I’m astounded that this church, who are a rule unto themselves, still has gullible followers. Who actually knows for certain where else they’re still able to hide their god-men in the shadows.
    Regards, Bella

    • Milton says:

      I agree with you Bella on about 95% of your comments. It is a disgrace, and a lifelong sentence, and worse…
      The RC’s seem to be the go to targets, yet this abuse transcends ideologies, Beyond that, should we have a RC into sexual abuse in indigenous communities?

  • JackSprat says:

    Jack
    Ever since I have read your book I have been followed the saga with interest and absolute disgust at the cover ups and lack of integrity from all in authority.
    I read the accounts in the paper today of some of the victims of Ridsdale and got quite emotional. The victims may not want monetary compensation but in my view that is the only way this is going to be stopped for ever. Send the Catholic Church broke with multi-million dollar compensation for EACH victim. That will make any organisation in the future think twice. When the Bishop loses his palatial residence and becomes a permanent resident of the local caravan park, he will have time on his hands to contemplate the sins of his organisation.
    Christine what’s her face of VicPol was a star under the pommie NSW police commissioner Peter Ryan who was a master at cooking the books.
    What would be interesting is to find out who actively opposed Julia in her path to have the Royal Commission formed. From memory, it was no easy task.

  • Tracy says:

    The Catholic Church is no better than any other criminal organization and should pay the price accordingly and I trust I am allowed to say that I don’t believe that anyone in the church at the time didn’t know that it was going on. Delete that if you think it’s not printable in current circumstances, Jack
    I’m a coward, saw the headline for the 10 year old girl but couldn’t read it, can’t read any of it, it’s the being a parent thing😓

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    Its a terrible story on all fronts, Mr Insider. Just seeing a photo of Gerald Ridsdale makes my skin crawl. It does show the massive hold the Catholic Church had on people as am sure many kids told their parents but nothing happened. The Catholic Church should hang its head in shame imho. So much for being remotely Religious! Rot in hell Gerald Ridsdale and all those involved in the massive cover up over all those years! Scumbags all!

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