Humble servant of the Nation

Don’t accept sanitised history of clerical abuse

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Bishop Ronald J. Mulkearns

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

215 Comments

  • Richard Fox says:

    ‘Professor Peter Daryl Evans, head of the School of Biophysics at the University of Woolloomooloo, and Dr Annabelle Natalie “Belle” Gibson, world renowned oncologist, are pleased to announce their engagement. Following their wedding, they will be honeymooning at an unnamed destination that does not have an extradition treaty with Australia.’

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    It comes as no surprise (and some posters on here may have already noted) that conspiracy theories and related commentary are already being circulated around the world, reportedly by prominent British academics, on the cause, effect and cure of COV-19. For example, it has been suggested that masts for the new 5G mobile phone technology is a distribution source for the pandemic, while drinking cow’s urine is a therapeutic curative.

    My own view, for what its worth, is that at some time in the far distant future our great grandchildren’s grand children, living in a CO2 free world, will debate digitised history, with a fair degree of incredulity and skepticism, on how mankind (as it was then known) nearly f—ed up planet earth and brought it to the precipice of extinction, largely by consuming vast quantities of BBQ bats brains and pangolin pate. And our distant offspring will wonder, debate and endlessly argue as to whether such recorded accounts ever occurred in what they would probably consider to be perhaps a strangely humanoid world centuries past.

    And who could blame them?

    • The Bow-Legged Swantoon says:

      A mate believes 5G can be used to beam voices directly into people’s heads and was used by the US in Iraq under a program called ‘The Voice of God’. He believes this is why the Americans were able to defeat Iraq’s military so quickly – pretending to be Allah, some CIA bloke just told them to drop their weapons.

      Not wanting to spoil a good conspiracy I didn’t tell him that I saw the state of some of those Iraqi forces before the invasion in 2003 and the reason they were defeated so quickly was because they were poorly-equipped, badly-led and ripe for desertion, having been left to their fate by a leadership that didn’t give a toss about them.

  • BASSMAN says:

    Just remember….the High Court did NOT find Pell innocent. People should consider this. The general consensus ‘out there’ is that he is now innocent Bald!

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      “Groan” Cheers

    • Carl on the Coast says:

      Most learned folks know that Courts do NOT find people “innocent” Bassy. Its either guilty or not guilty. But do YOU know that, is the question?

    • Razor says:

      Actually Bassy the did say they were of the opinion an innocent man may have been convicted.

    • Dwight says:

      Name a single court anywhere that ever declared someone innocent.

    • John L says:

      Bassy
      I am no lawyer but the basic tenet of our law is ‘Innocent till proven guilty”.
      The High Court decision basically said the case was not proven beyond reasonable doubt.
      Ergo he is innocent in the eyes of the law.
      Leave it go.

  • Dismayed says:

    Someone mention Canada? In Canada those who applied for the COVID-19 Emergency Response benefit on Tuesday. (It takes two minutes to apply online.) Their first payment showed up on Friday. Less Than 3 business days. That is government working for the people.

  • Not Finished Yet says:

    TRIVALVE: I have no idea now why I gave myself such a silly name,. It was about nine years ago and I had been following the blog for a while, when I decided to make a comment on ‘Go Forth and Procreate Australia’. It either makes me sound as if I am about 90 but just still breathing, or like someone who prattles on endlessly. Still, it’s a bit late to change it now.
    BOA: Thank you for your greeting. One does like to be missed.
    PENNY: I hope your husband is making a good recovery now. I always considered you to be one of the voices of sanity on this blog. If you happened to encounter at the hospital a young Chinese Australian doctor named Melissa, we have known her since she was four years old and our families have shared every Christmas Day for the last 20 years.
    BELLA: I know you appreciate the natural world. Yesterday afternoon as I was sitting at the computer, a wedge -tailed eagle slowly glided by about 100 metres away and just above eye level. I only see them about three times a year at home, so it was a real treat.

    I only intend to make one comment on the Pell case and I deliberately did not read most of the articles in the Inquirer section yesterday. My one comment is that the entire legal and judicial system is an abysmal failure when it comes to dealing with these awful crimes. I will be ridiculed by the legal fraternity, but women and children do not lie when it comes to sexual assault. Why on earth would they put themselves through the trauma? It’s so hard to get successful prosecutions that it is time that rape and other crimes of sexual assault should be judged on the balance of probabilities.

    And JTI, when did our august journal decide to sink to tabloid headlines? Pell was not declared innocent.

    • Razor says:

      Unfortunately NFY men, women and children do lie about sexual assault. I have personally seen it on numerous occasions. When the systems actions are going to imprison someone for a long time and destroy their reputation and family do you want to be 51% sure or would you rather be about 90% sure? The systems not perfect but it’s better than anything else we have.

    • Carl on the Coast says:

      NFY, a belated cheers to see you back on Jack’s blog. I have always valued the good sense and sound judgement offered in your contributions, including this current one.

      Whilst I realise the topic du jour naturally invokes a wide range of both instinctive and intuitive comment, I believe there is validity in having a contrary view to the one you hold i.e “women and children do not lie when it comes to sexual assault”. I think there maybe a proviso missing from your claim, but I’ll leave that to others to figure out. Suffice to say, I note you may have deliberately, or otherwise, not used the word “never” instead of “do not”.

      Apologies for nitpicking, but I think the law was founded on nitpickers.

    • Bella says:

      Thanks for sharing NFY I believe all wild nature offers is priceless & myst be treated as such. What you witnessed was a gift in my book.🦅

    • Boa says:

      Hey NFY,: How lovely. A wedgie in full flight is a sight to behold. There are signs that nature is enjoying having a free rein on the planet at the moment. Even dolphins in the canals in Venice. And here in Sandy Bay we had a great big fur seal sunbathing on a platform just off the beach!
      How nice it would be if things stayed that way. But I fear once this pandemic has moved on there will be a frantic rush to stimulate the economy, no matter what. I find that scary – especially down here where we have a govt intent on enticing tourists to the detriment of the environment. I suspect there is a fair bit of activity under the radar whilst everyone’s attention is diverted right now.

      • Carl on the Coast says:

        Boa, yes it would be a good thing if nature/wildlife is enjoying a breather right now. But I suspect there are still many areas where it is still struggling post the bushfires. Regarding your concluding comment, I wasn’t quite sure about your reference to a “fair bit of activity under the radar”. If you were alluding to a spot of hanky-panky, I’d say that’s a very good thing indeed.

    • Penny says:

      Thanks NFY, I don’t feel very sane at the moment though. Things going well for my husband, he’s not progressing as fast as he would like……he thinks he should be going on his 10k daily walks by now (three weeks after the 2nd knee operation) and he’s a bit grumpy that he’s not, but in the surgeon and physiotherapists eyes he’s a very good example of focus and determination. The nurses and medical staff at both the Royal Darwin and Darwin Private Hospitals are outstanding, but not sure if we came across your friend Melissa.
      We look forward to setting off on our delayed trip down the West Coast in a few months, across the Nullarbor and then spending a few weeks in your beautiful part of the world. By then I might have regained my sanity 🙂

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    Poor old Joe Biden, Mr Insider, lets not lose compassion for the 77yo who will face Donald Trump the “Pitbull” for the Presidency.

    We read: “A Washington Post poll in late March found that just 24 per cent of Biden supporters felt highly enthusiastic about his candidacy – the lowest for a Democratic presidential candidate in 20 years of polls.” Strewth!

    Joe is battling on with his low Budget Fight, Streaming “Virtual Town Halls” from the Basement of his Delaware Home, to its seems very few people.

    I feel as an act of Mercy i should switch my allegiance to old Joe, who at one point said he was campaigning for the US Senate! Then again…………………

    • Jack The Insider says:

      If it is mental deterioration you seek, you should watch a few of Trump’s briefings. On the weekend he was trying to explain that C-19 was a bacilli – “a brilliant germ” that developments in antibiotics could no longer treat. It was embarrassing. Oh, and on Twitter he wished everyone a Happy Good Friday. Now, there’s something you don’t often hear.

      • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

        I most definitely do not seek his “mental deterioration” Mr Insider, Biden seems a good and decent chap but way out of his depth.

        Trump is Trump and I heard first hand in Orlando Florida last year the way he speaks and let me tell you he will never change for anyone, Gaffes he has made aplenty. He is fearless and just the Person the USA needs in these difficult times imho and will romp the Election in daylight second.

        • Jack The Insider says:

          Successful politicians need luck and he got very lucky in 2016, not least of all to come up against a candidate who thought she should win because it was her turn. His luck is not looking so good now. If this is anywhere approaching a normal election, the idea that he won’t lose states and if I understand you, pick a few up (I wonder if you’d like to nominate which these might be) is bizarre. You need to understand that a shift of half a million votes of around 130 million cast in the right states and he’s gone. He lost the popular vote by three million last time and has a much more difficult pathway to 270 this time around. Quick question, what is Joe Biden’s home state?

      • Razor says:

        My favourite was being open for business on Easter Sunday.

  • Boa says:

    Dreary Sunday here. Cold, overcast and windy ☹
    I had to switch off Hazzard’s presser. It was just too hard to watch that bumbling idiot . Article from David Penberthy in our local rag absolutely ripping into him and the whole NSW government for their inept handling of this and attempts to pass the buck. Watching Hazzard is quite scary.
    We have a problem down here. Special presser this afternoon with details of how they intend to contain the cluster in the NW which seems to be gathering muscle.
    A gloomy Easter Sunday . Gave up on the Zoom meeting. Didn’t work. Instead we used FaceTime – which was a hoot. One can put on all sorts of funny effects. Good for a laugh and fun for the kids. Someone worked out how to have more than two on the air at the same time. Nobody quite sure who managed that – but it worked.
    One thing about this time is the opportunity it has given to think about one’s priorities. I never thought I could leave this beautiful island – but am thinking about being closer to my children on the mainland …..

  • John L says:

    Anybody got a technique for knowing what day of the week it is or does it not matter any more?

  • Bella says:

    I have of course read Unholy Trinity & tonight re-read this concise column a few times JTI so I’d like to say that aside from the abusive Catholic Church clergy running decades of protection for their own child rapists, how will it ever come to pass that those monstrous detectives in Victoria’s Police Force who systematically corrupted the law be properly charged with the crimes they undertook?
    Sorry for this long-winded sentence JTI, but I find it completely abhorrent when monsters with power answer to no-one.

    Finally, I don’t believe Pell is innocent & I take exception to the speed by which the Pope rushed to exonerate his main man. It was a sly, unnecessary slap in the face to every last one of his Church’s victims, but then we know that’s how they operate. Shame on all of them.

    • Jack The Insider says:

      We’re working on a couple of bad boys now, Bella.

      • Bella says:

        Here’s to hoping you nail them mate & make it count. Somehow, somebody has got to expose every lowlife step they took to tidy-up the evidence they destroyed.

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      Bella, I posted below your Post “Pell, having gone as far as the High Court of Australia and being acquitted 7-0 one would think we could ask no more of the Australian Legal System.” Thats 7 High Court Judges out of 7 Bella in Pells favour. Cheers

    • Boa says:

      It seems to be the opinion that the prosecution stuffed up their case, Bella.

    • John L says:

      Bella
      He was found innocent of this particular allegation.
      The legal system has spoken and that is that.
      Whether or not other criminal charges are laid or the civil proceedings are successful remains to be seen,
      Much, if not all, of the Catholic Church and some of its lay organization world wide has been involved in the cover up of child abuse. In many countries it was endemic which leads me to believe it is rotten from the top to the core with a few good people trying to remedy it.
      Wherever one gets a group who is answerable to nobody sitting in a position of power in a powerful organization without the cleansing mechanism of free and open elections this happens.
      Just watch the Chinese Communist Party – it is a perfect example of this in real time..

      • Bella says:

        Yes, that is that, I agree with you there John L.
        Until recently I also trusted the days of “free and open elections” in our country, until we discovered, after the last one, the hidden LNP agenda of the sports rorts for votes scandal.
        Seems those days are over now.

        • Dismayed says:

          Hear Hear Bella, Hear Hear. JTI’s old mate Michael West has done a great job investigating and in fact there are at least half a dozen funding programs the coalition has rorted

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    I have never had to face a Court on any matter, Mr insider, but can imagine if you did you would want nothing but a fair hearing and if Guilty a Merciful Sentence, depending of course on what one is charged with, Horrific crimes do not fall into this category.

    I see some are now saying Pell’s case should have been heard by a Judge alone due to the complexities of it. I note the current case in WA of Bradley Robert Edwards re the Claremont killings is a Judge only trial, possibly due to the Technical complexities?

    Pell, having gone as far as the High Court of Australia and being acquitted 7-0 one would think we could ask no more of the Australian Legal System.

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