Posts Tagged ‘ Pope Benedict XVI ’

Sue the Pope, US attorney tells abuse survivors

Clerical immunity must be ended and victims of abuse should sue the Holy See for true justice to be done, an American attorney said in an address to the Humbert Summer School last Friday 20th August. Patrick J. Wall, senior consultant at Manly & Stewart, a Californian firm specialising in sexual abuse litigation, was speaking at the John Healy luncheon debate attended by abuse survivors Marie Collins, Andrew Madden, Michael O’Brien and others.

A former Benedictine monk and priest, Mr Wall is a world-renowned canon lawyer who left the priesthood  to work directly on behalf of abuse victims as a civil attorney. He represented victims of the notorious paedophile priest Oliver O’Grady and was highly critical of the Church hierarchy’s reticent and obfuscating approach to the survivors’ claims. He concluded that the Catholic Church is a “monarchical system which cannot police itself”, and that liability for the cover-up of abusing priests ran all the way to the Vatican.

“Child protection is the most important civil rights issue of our time”, Mr Wall remarked, before outlining the four steps he sees as representing a route to pursuing the Holy See. “First of all, we must end clerical immunity. The Irish Constitution removed the special position of the Church in 1972 and yet still not one single Bishop has gone to jail for covering up the abuse of children.

Patrick J. Wall, attorney

If a Bishop does jail time, things will start to change very quickly”.

Wall recommended the enforcement of the offence of misprision of felony, a common law provision which essentially makes it an offence not to report a crime of which one has knowledge – although this has generally been considered to be inoperative since the Criminal Justice Act, 1997 abolished the distinction between felonies and misdemeanours. Continue reading

Faith, Football and Funny Stuff

San Giovanni

San Giovanni

John Delaney’s achievement in landing Giovanni Trapattoni as Republic of Ireland manager was big, but even bigger when you see who he was up against. Jostling for the former Juventus and Italy manager’s services was one Pope Benedict XVI: successor to St Peter, leader of over a billion Catholics and close friend of Trapattoni, to whom he has dedicated several of his books. With the Vatican having stepped up their efforts to have a team (composed mainly of Swiss Guards and seminarians) given FIFA approval, Benedict nominated Trap as his preferred choice to be their first manager.The Pope’s decision, it must be said, was not informed by purely footballing matters. Trapattoni is a devout Catholic and a longstanding member of Opus Dei (as is Fabio Capello), while his sister is a nun who accompanied the Italian squad to the 2002 World Cup, her role ostensibly to sprinkle holy water on the pitch before each of their games. Indeed, in an interview with The Irish Catholic a few months back, Trap went so far as to emphasise the importance of a spiritual element to successful coaching: “you need to be a father-figure, a psychiatrist – sometimes even a priest“. A consummate football man, Trap visibly did not wish to dwell on religious matters for too long – though he did make reference to the fact that ‘while it was not a deciding factor in taking the Irish job, I am of course happy to be with a country which shares my Catholic faith’. The rehabilitation of Damien Duff, who carries Padre Pio devotional medals in his socks while playing, will have to be one of Trap’s first miracles if this Irish team is to reach the promised land in 2010. Continue reading