Cardinal George Pell has been sentenced to a maximum of six years imprisonment. He will be eligible for parole after serving three years and eight months.
Pell will appeal his conviction. The Court of Appeal has set two days aside in June to consider the Cardinal’s application to appeal his conviction.
The Vatican will wait for the appeals process to conclude before considering Pell’s titles and status within the Church. Similarly, the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse will not release its findings into the conduct of the Cardinal until the appeals process has concluded.
For now, Australia’s most senior Catholic cleric and one of the most powerful men in the Vatican is behind bars, a convicted child sex offender.
Justice Peter Kidd denounced George Pell. Kidd spoke of trust broken and power abused. It is the implicit nature of all child sex offences, the perverse exercise of authority over the vulnerable.
In his sentencing remarks, Justice Kidd referred to “the deluge of publicity” associated with Pell’s conviction.
It is that publicity that bothers me. It is as if all the guilt and shame from institutional child sexual abuse can be conveniently parcelled and packed away with one man.
The grave fear is that we will focus on this story and miss the totality of what has occurred in this country. The fact that the most senior man of one institution has been convicted of child sex offending should not detract from the guilt of other parties or other institutions.
What happened in Australia after World War II was an epidemic of child sex abuse, a crime against our society that is virtually beyond measure. In the wake of the abuse, senior people within institutions — state, religious, secular — committed crimes to cover up the abuse, perversions of the course of justice routinely occurred, culprits were moved on, incriminating documents were destroyed.
Forget the dismal what-aboutery arguments about child sex offending being more prevalent in the home.
While familial child sex abuse occurs in the shadows and reporting is fraught, what we do know is the number and frequency of criminal prosecutions of sexual abuse of children by persons entrusted with their care in institutional settings have no parallel. None.
The nature of the institution may have varied but the behaviour has always been the same.
Victims must be listened to
Principals within institutions reacted instinctively, rushing to protect the reputation of the institution with victims’ rights to justice ignored and with it, their pain amplified.
Victims must be listened to. They must be believed. They must be given the opportunity to attend a police station to make a complaint and know that complaint is subject to investigative rigour by law enforcement.
The Royal Commission examined the story of VicPol detective Denis Ryan who was cast out of the force for attempting to prosecute a paedophile priest in 1972. The Victoria Police Force accepted its corrupt protection of the priest in 2015. Disappointingly, the Commission did not extend its investigations further.
I have reported on credible accounts of corrupt interference in investigations of clerical paedophiles in Victoria up to 1985. Beyond that, retired police officers charged with investigating child sex offences claim they were unsupported by the upper echelons of the Victoria Police Force. Requests to establish strike forces to deal with the burgeoning number of complaints were ignored as late as the mid-1990s.
Victims’ allegations were kicked down the road.
In New South Wales, the Wood Royal Commission found evidence of members of the police force in that state receiving bribes from active paedophiles so they could commit offences against children without consequence. The Child Protection Unit was referred to derisorily by NSW coppers as the ‘Nappy Squad’, its members transferred to it as a form of punishment.
Slow to act
I am certain law enforcement has improved since those unhappy days but is it properly resourced, properly staffed with skilled investigators who will act without fear or favour?
State governments for the most part have been slow to act on the Royal Commission’s recommendations for law reform. The failure to report a child sex offence in most states remains an offence without any serious penalty. In Victoria and Queensland custodial sentences sit on the books but not once has a jail term been handed down. In other jurisdictions those who are convicted of failing to report a child sex offence face only a fine. In New South Wales, it remains an offence but there is no penalty, not even a monetary one.
If we don’t learn from this appalling episode in our social history, we simply cannot ensure that it won’t happen again.
Mumbled expressions of regret uttered in the Royal Commission have been replaced with sanguine, confident voices now that scrutiny has passed.
Just last week, the Catholic Bishop of Armidale, Michael Kennedy instructed Catholic school principals within the diocese not to ask priests for Working With Children Checks. Kennedy has since come forward to clarify his instructions, saying that all priests in the diocese have their WWCCs. But the politics of it were dreadful, not least of all because the Armidale Diocese has a wretched history perhaps as bad as anywhere with the exception of the dioceses of Ballarat and Maitland-Newcastle.
Meanwhile other guilty institutions drag their feet in signing up to the National Redress Scheme.
Less than 100 victims compensated
The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse believes there may be as many as 60,000 claimants.
To date, some 3000 applications have been made seeking redress since the body was created in July 2018. Less than a hundred victims have been compensated with the average payment being around $85,000. There is a cap of compensation with a maximum payout of $150,000.
The application form from the National Redress Scheme is a voluminous rat’s maze of psycho-nonsense that has the effect of retraumatising people. It is too long, and asks pointless, intrusive questions. It needs to be dramatically simplified so that the victim is limited to detailing the abuse, when it occurred and where and under which institution or institutions it occurred.
Institutions have been given until 2020 to sign on. People seeking what is at best modest compensation will die waiting for these institutions to sign on. Some already have.
While some institutions have indicated they will sign on, as yet many have failed to do so. These include numerous Catholic orders, a dozen or more Anglican dioceses, the Assemblies of God, Swimming Australia, the Presbyterian Church, The Uniting Church, Jehovah’s Witnesses and the Scouts in four states. The list is shamefully long.
If we cannot get these things right after all that we know now, all the sorrow and pain that has been pushed to the surface, then we will all stand condemned. Worse, we will have ignored the potential risk that this terrible business will happen once again.
This epidemic of child sex abuse cannot be neatly tucked away with the conviction of one man. Pell’s sentencing today is just one step in a much larger process.
This column was first published in The Australian 14 March 2018.
Jacinda Ardern doing a very good job at a difficult time. Hard to believe that a person could legally purchase a relative arsenal/cache of weapons. It’s impossible to rid the world of malevolent extremists like the bloke who is charged but they shouldn’t be able to legally purchase weapons that assist them causing damage on this scale. Certainly dangerous idiots can resort to other methods, including home made bombs, but any avenue that can be cut off should be.
Meanwhile, the victims are reduced to a number and this pinheads history and ”manifesto” dominate the media.
Amazingly, Mr. Insider we see that NZ PM Jacinda Aedern said that none of the shooters in the Christchurch massacre were on any NZ or Australian “Watchlists”.
Makes one wonder how many more are out there going about preparing their evil intent totally undetected.
https://tinyurl.com/yxzl6bl4
I’m sorry to say this but I have been writing for some time that neo Nazis and white supremacists in this country pose a significant threat. Instead, we were became embroiled in pointless and unedifying arguments over whether Nazis were left or right wing. Our law enforcement need to be better equipped and trained to deal with this growing phenomenon, to identify and report on hate crimes generally. The FBI prepares a report annually on hate crimes in the US. At very least we need to do the same.
Oh and i think it would be proper to pay the Dry Cleaning bill for Juncker, Verstoffen and Tusk, hefty though it may be.
just thinking about Brexit and talking to some Brits
How can you keep getting humiliated by a bunch of pussies? Taking lessons from them about democracy, they know nothing about it, Portugal, Spain, Greece, Malta, etc were all totalitarian until I was at uni, etc, Germany until 1949 if we are kind and 1992 if we are truthful. The current French Republic is younger than Ms Bardot etc.
It’s fun, but really what are you thinking, personally I think you should run a flight of F-16s, sorry Eurofighters, about fifteen feet above the Brandenburg Gate, trailing red, white and blue smoke, do the same above whatever apartment blocks Junger and Tusk live in, every hour for a day, easy to do, the Americans and the French Military will enjoy it, the Italians and Spanish will be flying Union Jacks before the day is over, as will the Dutch, probably none of the Seven German planes will be available to do anything about it and then, and only then say,
we are gentleman, we do not believe in personal and national humiliation, but if you do, then needs must.
and then tell the Irish, we will guarantee you get the North back in six months, they will complain about that, as it’s the last thing they want, so tell them if they whinge and complain, they will get Scotland maybe Wales thrown in.
I suspect there would be an amicable deal in no time.
why, because the above reflects the economic, strategic, and military reality, what has been going on doesn’t.
At 1:55AM Walter Mitty staggers to his typewriter ………………. “Hell General give me a company of Marines , I’l l handpick them mahself, a couple of Shermans , a couple .50 cals and bazookas a truckload of grenades and me and my boys will kick ass clear across France and The Fatherland and give that uppity Kraut such a kickin’ Old Glory will be flyin” high and proud atop the Reichstag , Sunday next the latest.
JtI – Jack, under normal circumstances perhaps one may have expected you to have disallowed “Action” Jackson’s sleasy comment at 8.49am, 15 March. However, as the topic du jour is the subject of heinous and abhorrent acts, you have obviously considered Jackson’s contribution a worthy one and par for the course.
No, that was a mistake. It has been removed now.
What can one say at times like this Mr. Insider we weep for Christchurch and all the dead, some 49 at time of typing this according to Police. May the dead RIP.
https://tinyurl.com/y6x6f5op
That is inappropriate. Subject aside, but on that theme of yours I met a bloke who had spent half his life in gaol and when I pointed out to him by his lifestyle he was likely to end up back in there, he smiled and said “Well I do miss the sex.” Your schadenfreude in so far as that goes could be unwarranted Action.
As tragic as the New Zealand attacks are New Zealand’s misery will be like manna from heaven for
Dutton and Morrison. They will milk this as much as they can for political gain.
Last week it was Sudanese gangs. Now this.
Expect the scare levers to be turned full on. A few more prayers and
the boats will start up.
One of your most idiotic comments yet Bassman.
Billy Connelly ‘unleashed’ on religion!
WARNING Strong Language..😨
https://www.facebook.com/100003843602523/posts/1322828951188546/
gotta say billy has a point…..anyway here’s dawkins
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_zncB6hngZg&feature=youtu.be
Concealing a crime of that nature is the same as committing the crime and should thus be seen to be in law. It may even be worse than the crime because it is an implied immunity for further crimes committed.
Well said Mr. Baptiste you have nailed it all very concisely. Cheers