http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/25/world/europe/25church.html?src=me
Abuse Scandal’s Ripples Spread Across Europe
By KATRIN 
BENNHOLD<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/b/katrin_bennhold/index.html?inline=nyt-per>,
NICHOLAS 
KULISH<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/k/nicholas_kulish/index.html?inline=nyt-per>and
RACHEL DONADIO Published:
March 24, 2010

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MUNICH — The fallout from the sexual abuse scandal in the Roman Catholic
Church<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/r/roman_catholic_church/index.html?inline=nyt-org>settled
across Europe on Wednesday, as prosecutors said they were weighing
criminal charges against a priest suspected of molesting children in
Germany<http://www.nytimes.com/info/germany?inline=nyt-geo>,
and Pope Benedict
XVI<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/b/benedict_xvi/index.html?inline=nyt-per>accepted
the resignation of a bishop accused of mishandling allegations of
abuse in Ireland.
  Enlarge This 
Image<javascript:pop_me_up2('http://www.nytimes.com/imagepages/2010/03/25/world/25church_CA0.html','25church_CA0_html','width=720,height=519,scrollbars=yes,toolbars=no,resizable=yes')>
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Tony Gentile/Reuters

On Wednesday, Pope Benedict XVI, above in St. Peter's Square, accepted a
bishop's resignation.
 Related

   - Times Topic: Roman Catholic
Church<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/r/roman_catholic_church/index.html>

 The possibility of criminal charges emerged from new accusations against a
priest at the center of the child-molesting scandal rocking the church in
Germany. On Wednesday, church officials in Munich said the priest, the
Rev. Peter
Hullermann<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/h/peter_hullermann/index.html?inline=nyt-per>—
whose transfer in 1980 to an archdiocese led at the time by Benedict,
then
Archbishop Joseph Ratzinger, has drawn the pope himself into the nation’s
child abuse controversy — had been accused of molesting a minor as recently
as 1998.

The latest revelation comes as church officials in northern Germany say they
have “credible evidence” of at least two other cases of sexual abuse
committed by Father Hullermann in the 1970s, adding to a trail of
accusations that suggest a pattern of abuse over two decades. During that
time, church officials repeatedly transferred Father Hullermann to new
parishes and allowed him to work with children, even after a 1986 conviction
for sexually abusing boys.

Father Hullermann has not returned repeated calls and hung up without
comment when reached briefly on Wednesday.

In Ireland, Bishop John Magee, whose resignation was accepted by the pope on
Wednesday, issued a statement of apology. In 2008, an investigation by a
church panel into allegations in Cloyne found that Bishop Magee had failed
to respond to accusations of abuse and that policies to protect children
were severely lacking, setting off calls for his resignation.

“As I depart, I want to offer once again my sincere apologies,” said Bishop
Magee, who had served as private secretary to three popes. He added, “To
those whom I have failed in any way, or through any omission of mine have
made suffer, I beg forgiveness and pardon.”

Bishop Magee’s was the first resignation the pope accepted since issuing a
long-awaited letter to Irish Catholics last weekend apologizing to victims
of sexual abuse and expressing “shame and remorse.”

Yet Benedict’s letter did not call for any church leaders to be disciplined,
feeding a growing sense of anger in Ireland. Many Catholics there are
demanding that the leader of the Irish church, Cardinal Sean
Brady<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/b/sean_baptist_brady/index.html?inline=nyt-per>,
resign over his role as a young priest in the 1970s in urging two children
to sign secrecy agreements and not to report abuse.

Benedict’s letter followed two scathing Irish government reports last year
revealing decades of sexual abuse of tens of thousands of children and a
widespread cover-up. The findings have shaken the Irish church to its core;
some fear it has lost a generation to the crisis.

Bishop Magee’s resignation accompanied a steady drumbeat for more church
leaders to step down. Beyond Bishop Magee, four other Irish bishops
implicated in the government reports for failing to protect children have
offered to resign, but Benedict has accepted only one’s offer.

Nor has Benedict addressed the German scandal directly. So far, no cases
have emerged from the two-year period when Father Hullermann worked at St.
John the Baptist Church in Munich and Benedict was archbishop. But
accusations have now surfaced at every other stop between Father
Hullermann’s ordination in 1973 and his criminal conviction in 1986, and
during a later assignment in 1998.

In a statement on Wednesday, the Munich archdiocese said the most recent
potential victim had contacted the church. “The likely victim was a minor at
the time,” the statement said, noting that the case had been referred to the
prosecutor’s office.

“We are currently investigating the circumstances of the case,” said Eduard
Mayer, the head of the prosecutor’s office handling the matter.

Church authorities have also been alerted to two previously unknown
potential victims in the northern town of Bottrop. “We have two tip-offs
that are so conclusive that we must proceed under the assumption that these
incidents took place,” said Ulrich Lota, spokesman for the diocese in Essen,
where Father Hullermann was ordained, confirming that in both cases the
victims were boys.

Father Hullermann was abruptly transferred from Bottrop to Essen in 1977,
but, according to Mr. Lota, there are no references in his file to abuse
from that time.

Two years later, three sets of parents told the priest in charge of Father
Hullermann’s new church that he had abused their children, prompting his
transfer to Munich for therapy, where he was returned to parish duties.

After just over two years in Munich he was transferred once again, this time
to the nearby town of Grafing. There, he abused several boys, leading to his
conviction in 1986, which resulted in a suspended sentence of five years’
probation and a fine.

He then spent one year working in a nursing home before he was sent to a
parish in Garching.

On Tuesday, Cardinal Friedrich Wetter, the archbishop at the time of Father
Hullermann’s transfer to Garching, asked victims and their families to
forgive him for allowing the priest to transfer to there during his tenure.
“I am now painfully aware that I should have made a different decision at
the time,” said Cardinal Wetter, who stepped down as archbishop in 2007.

Wolfgang Reichenwallner, the mayor of Garching, where Father Hullermann
worked for 21 years after his 1986 conviction, said that the apology had
come “awfully late” and that town officials had not been informed about the
priest’s repeated transgressions.

Cardinal Wetter said he had “overestimated a person’s ability to change and
underestimated the difficulties of therapeutic treatment for people with
pedophile tendencies.”

The Munich archdiocese, in its initial statement on Father Hullermann’s case
this month, said “the statements of the treating psychologist” were decisive
in his return to parish duties.

But Dr. Werner Huth, the psychiatrist who treated Father Hullermann from
1980 to 1992, said last week that from the very outset he had repeatedly
warned church 
officials<http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/19/world/europe/19church.html>not
to allow the priest to work with children ever again.

Katrin Bennhold and Nicholas Kulish reported from Munich, and Rachel Donadio
from Rome. Eamon Quinn contributed reporting from Dublin.

An earlier version of this article misstated the scale of the abuse scandal
within the Irish church as described in Irish government reports last year.
The reports revealed the abuse of tens of thousands of children, not
hundreds of thousands of children.

   A version of this article appeared in print on March 25, 2010, on page
A12 of the New York edition.

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 Past Coverage

   - Warned About Abuse, Vatican Failed to Defrock
Priest<http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/25/world/europe/25vatican.html?fta=y>
(March
   24, 2010)
   - NATIONAL BRIEFING | RELIGION; Catholic Abuse Accusations Declined in
   2009<http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/24/us/24brfs-ABUSEACCUSAT_BRF.html?fta=y>
(March
   23, 2010)
   - Church Adds More Abuse Cases to Its Inquiry in
Germany<http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/23/world/europe/23germany.html?fta=y>
(March
   22, 2010)
   - Pope's Letter Does Little to Assuage
Anger<http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/22/world/europe/22ireland.html?fta=y>
(March
   21, 2010)

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