Pope meets with child protection advisory board as survivors call for
zero tolerance of abuse
[June 06, 2025]
By NICOLE WINFIELD
VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Leo XIV met with members of the Vatican’s child
protection advisory commission on Thursday for the first time amid
questions about his past handling of clergy sex abuse cases and demands
from survivors that he enact a true policy of zero tolerance for abuse
across the Catholic Church.
The Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, which is made up
of religious and lay experts in fighting abuse as well as survivors,
called the hourlong audience a “significant moment of reflection,
dialogue, and renewal of the church’s unwavering commitment to the
safeguarding of children and vulnerable people.” The group said it
updated history's first American pope on its activities, including an
initiative to help church communities in poorer parts of the world
prevent abuse and care for victims.
The Vatican did not provide the text of Leo's remarks or make the audio
of the audience available to reporters.
Pope Francis created the commission early on in his pontificate to
advise the church on best practices and placed a trusted official,
Boston’s then-archbishop, Cardinal Sean O’Malley, in charge.

But as the abuse scandal spread globally during Francis' 12-year
pontificate, the commission lost its influence its crowning
recommendation — the creation of a tribunal to judge bishops who covered
up for predator priests — went nowhere. After many years of reform and
new members, it has become a place where victims can go to be heard and
bishops can get advice on crafting guidelines to fight abuse.
O’Malley turned 80 last year and retired as archbishop of Boston, but he
remains president of the commission and headed the delegation meeting
with Leo in the Apostolic Palace.
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Pope Leo XIV leaves after his weekly general audience in St. Peter's
Square at The Vatican, Wednesday, June 4, 2025. (AP Photo/Gregorio
Borgia)

It has often fallen to O’Malley to speak out on egregious cases that
have arrived at the Vatican, including one that remains on Leo’s desk:
The fate of the ex-Jesuit artist, the Rev. Marko Rupnik, who has been
accused by two dozen women of sexual, psychological and spiritual abuse
over decades.
After coming under criticism that a fellow Jesuit had apparently
received preferential treatment, Francis in 2023 ordered the Vatican to
waive the statute of limitations on the case and prosecute him
canonically. But as recently as March, the Vatican still hadn’t found
judges to open the trial. Meanwhile, the victims are still waiting for
justice and Rupnik continues to minister, with his supporters defending
him and denouncing a “media lynching” campaign against him.
Leo, the Chicago-born former Cardinal Robert Prevost, has been credited
by victims of helping to dismantle an abusive Catholic movement in Peru,
where he served as bishop for many years. But other survivors have asked
him to account for other cases while he was a superior in the
Augustinian religious order, bishop in Peru and head of the Vatican's
bishops' office.
The main U.S. survivor group, SNAP, has also called for Leo to adopt the
U.S. policy calling for any priest who has been credibly accused of
abuse to be permanently removed from ministry.
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