| Roman Catholic Church Abuse Files Released in Unprecedented Move
CBS Los Angeles
May 23, 2012
http://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2012/05/23/roman-catholic-church-abuse-files-released-in-unprecedented-move/
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(clockwise left to right) Robert Van Handel, Berard Connolly, Gus Krumm, Samuel Cabot, Martin McKeon, David Carriere, Mario Cimmarrusti, and David Johnson
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[with audio]
SANTA BARBARA (CBS) — Thousands of confidential religious files documenting sexual abuse among clergy members in the Roman Catholic church were made made public on Wednesday.
KNX 1070′s Margret Carrero reports the move marks the largest release of religious order documents in the history of the sexual abuse crisis.
The 8,500-page documents posted on BishopAccountability.org includes personnel files of nine Franciscan brothers and priests accused of abusing dozens of children over several decades at St. Anthony's and the Old Mission in Santa Barbara.
An attorney for the Franciscans said the order was proactive in investigating abuse claims and that the files now made public were divulged to the plaintiffs much earlier.
The files were released in response to a May 25, 2006, settlement obtained by survivors of sexual abuse committed by members of the order, including Bob Eckert, who was only 10 years old when his abuse began at St. Anthony's.
"I just hope that people look into some of these files and maybe they can find things that may pertain to them or somebody that they entrusted their children with and maybe it will open their eyes," said Eckert.
The archive names Mario Cimmarrusti, Robert Van Handel, David Johnson, Gus Krumm, Samuel Cabot, David Carriere, Berard Connolly, Martin McKeon, and Gary Pacheco in connection with a wide range of abuse allegations along with personal statements from some members of the order themselves.
A mother's emotional letter from November 27, 1992, about the life-altering trauma cause by Cimmarrusti's abuse of her son in which she angrily condemns church officials for their lack of oversight was among other supplemental documents released.
"What is more despicable than one who hides behind the 'cloth' to do the devil's work?" wrote the unidentified mother. "What organization, claiming to do the work of Jesus Christ, shuns and rejects those whom it has hurt, again and again?"
Tim Hale, who represented several victims, said the reason for the delay was a court decision that forced them to redact names and certain other documents, but that their release is a step in the right direction.
But for victims like Eckert, the expansive project may only scratch the surface of what many critics allege is an institutionalized pattern among the Roman Catholic clergy.
"Just having blind faith isn't going to be able to happen anymore in the church," said Eckert. "It just shows how deep-rooted this problem is."
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