U.S. cardinal steps down amid widening
sex abuse scandal
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[July 30, 2018]
By Philip Pullella
VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - Pope Francis on
Saturday accepted the resignation of Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, one of
the U.S. Catholic Church's most prominent figures, who has been at the
center of a widening sexual abuse scandal.
McCarrick, 88, the former archbishop of Washington, D.C., is the first
cardinal in living memory to lose his red hat and title. Other cardinals
who have been disciplined in sexual abuse scandals kept their membership
in the College of Cardinals and their honorific "your eminence".
The allegations against McCarrick, which first surfaced publicly last
month, came with Francis facing an image crisis on a second front, in
Chile, where a growing abuse scandal has enveloped the Church.
A Vatican statement said the pope, acting only hours after McCarrick
offered his resignation on Friday night, ordered his suspension from the
exercise of any public ministry. This means he remains a priest but will
be allowed to say Mass only in private.
Francis also ordered McCarrick to go into seclusion "for a life of
prayer and penance until the accusations made against him are examined
in a regular canonical trial".
The Vatican said the pope wanted to send a strong message that high rank
would no longer be a shield.
"The important point is that McCarrick is no longer a cardinal. What
this means is that, no matter how important your position, no matter how
prestigious, when it comes to sex abuse you're going to be held
accountable. That is the message being sent today," spokesman Greg Burke
told Reuters Television.
McCarrick's sudden fall from grace stunned the American Church because
he was a widely respected leader for decades and a confidant of popes
and presidents.
Last month, American Church officials said allegations that he sexually
abused a 16-year-old boy almost 50 years ago were credible and
substantiated..
Since then, another minor has come forward with allegations that
McCarrick abused him when he was 11 years old, and several men have come
forward to allege that McCarrick forced them to sleep with him at a
beach house in New Jersey when they were adult seminarians studying for
the priesthood.
NO RECOLLECTION
McCarrick has said that he had "absolutely no recollection" of the
alleged abuse of the teenager 50 years ago but has not commented on the
other allegations.
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Cardinal Theodore Edgar McCarrick smiles during an interview with
Reuters at the North American College at the Vatican February 14,
2013. REUTERS/Alessandro Bianchi/File Photo
The New York Times reported last week that two dioceses in New
Jersey, where McCarrick served as bishop before being promoted to
Washington in 2000, had reached financial settlements in 2005 and
2007 with men who said they were abused by McCarrick as adults
decades ago.
Some U.S. Catholics have said the Vatican should send an inspector
to the United States to determine who in the U.S. Church hierarchy
knew of the alleged incidents and why McCarrick's rise was not
impeded.
"The Vatican must investigate and publish its conclusions regarding
McCarrick's advancement and very successful career," said Terence
McKiernan, president of BishopAccountability.org, a U.S.-based group
that tracks abuse cases.
"The officials responsible must be identified and disciplined, and
the investigative file must be made public," McKiernan said in a
statement.
In 2013, Cardinal Keith O'Brien of Scotland recused himself from
participating in the conclave that elected Francis after he was
caught up in a sexual abuse scandal involving seminarians. He later
renounced rights and privileges of being a cardinal but kept his red
hat and title until his death earlier this year.
The last person to resign from the College of Cardinals is believed
to be French theologian Louis Billot, who left over a disagreement
with Pope Pius XI in 1927, according to the U.S. newspaper, National
Catholic Reporter.
(Reporting by Philip Pullella; Editing by Andrew Bolton and Kevin
Liffey)
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