A lawyer
representing a victim of priest abuse in a lawsuit against the Roman
Catholic church said on Monday Vatican documents show the church
hierarchy and the pope were ultimately responsible.
A lawyer for the church
disagreed, saying the newly released documents show the Holy See was not
involved in the offending priest's transfer from Ireland to Chicago and then to Portland, Oregon, where the victim was a minor in the 1960s.
In
April, U.S. District Judge Michael Mosman in Oregon ordered the Vatican
to produce documents in the case that alleged a cover-up of priest sex
abuse.
At the time, the judge's
order was termed a "historic step" by attorney Jeffrey Anderson, who
sued the Holy See in Rome and U.S. archdioceses and church officials on
behalf of an unnamed man in Oregon.
Anderson
said on Monday an analysis of the 1,856 documents written in Latin,
Italian and English showed the Vatican had direct control over the
placement and laicization of Rev. Andrew Ronan, who left the priesthood
in 1966 and died in 1992.
"At all
times, Father Andrew Ronan's life from profession to dismissal was under
the control of the Holy See," a report released by Anderson said.
One
document from early 1966 showed that Ronan had asked the Holy See to
remove him as a priest. The request was granted that year.
Also among the documents was a letter from a Provincial Minister to the Prior General in Italy
in 1966 that said "we believe it will be possible, if the Holy Father
will grant Father Ronan's request, for him to leave quietly and without
any open scandal."
When confronted,
Ronan admitted the abuse to his superiors at Our Lady of Benburb,
Ireland, according to the documents, but was transferred to a Chicago
high school anyway.
He abused children there, the documents show, then
was transferred to St. Albert's Church in Portland.
On
Monday, Anderson said the documents showed authority stems from "the
top of the hierarchy, and that is to the papacy."
He said he would ask
for additional documents.
"This is a
selective, deceptive, incomplete production at best and in my view
typical of the Vatican's view that they are above the law," Anderson
said.
Jeffrey Lena, a lawyer for
the Roman Catholic church in the United States, said the accusations of
Vatican involvement in Ronan's transfers were groundless.
The Vatican
has long held that its priests are under the local control of bishops.
"Like
the documents previously released -- and contrary to the plaintiff's
lawyers' long-standing accusations -- the written responses confirm that
the Holy See was not involved in Ronan's transfers and had no prior
knowledge that Ronan posed a danger to minors.
"The
responses also show that there is no support for the plaintiff's
lawyers' spurious theory that Ronan was ever the Holy See's employee,"
Lena said.
The case is John V. Doe v Holy See et al, 3:02cv00430MO.