The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles will soon reveal 30,000
pages of confidential personnel files without blacking out the names of
the church leaders who knew about sexual abuse by priests and made key
decisions on how to handle it, an archdiocese attorney said Wednesday.
The names of any bishops, vicars for clergy and supervisory parish
priests will be included in all the documents and they will be turned
over to lawyers for abuse victims soon, said archdiocese attorney
Michael Hennigan.
Vicars for clergy are responsible for priestly
discipline and often made significant decisions about how to handle
problem priests with input from the bishop or archbishop.
"We have chosen to remove redactions of those key
individuals on every document," Hennigan said in an email. "There will
be no ambiguity."
The commitment to release the documents without significant
redactions comes after a five-year legal battle over the priests'
privacy rights and a more recent dispute in court with The Associated
Press and the Los Angeles Times, along with victims, over identifying
those in positions of responsibility within the archdiocese.
A first round of 14 priest files made public in Los Angeles nearly
two weeks ago showed that recently retired Cardinal Roger Mahony and
other top officials maneuvered behind the scenes to shield molester
priests, provide damage control for the church and keep parishioners in
the dark about sexual abuse in their parishes.
Those documents, released
as part of an unrelated civil lawsuit, were not redacted and provided a
glimpse of what could be contained in the larger release expected no
later than Feb. 22.
Rochelle Wilcox, the attorney representing the AP and the Los Angeles
Times, said the church's promise was a victory for the public's right
to know how church leaders handled molesting priests.
The media organizations filed an objection Wednesday to a proposed
order by the archdiocese that would have allowed it to release the files
with the names blacked out, but with a cover sheet on the top of each
priest's file listing the names of top church leaders who handled the
case.
Hennigan, in an email Wednesday, maintained that the proposed order
gave the church the option of removing the redactions or providing a
cover sheet for each file. The church chose to remove the redactions
because it was too confusing to prepare cover sheets, Hennigan said.
A record-breaking $660 million settlement in 2007 set the stage for
the release of the personnel files, which contain letters among top
church officials, accused priests and archdiocese attorneys, complaints
from parents, medical and psychological records and – in some cases –
correspondence with the Vatican.
A
judge's order in 2011 said the church could redact the names of the
church hierarchy, but the LA Times and AP intervened earlier this month
and another judge ordered the archdiocese to provide more transparency.
The confidential files could be turned over to more than 500 alleged
victims as early as next week, said Ray Boucher, the lead attorney for
plaintiffs. What's contained in the files is "chilling," Boucher said.
"Every bishop and every vicar of clergy has been so indoctrinated
with the view of protecting the church from scandal that they allowed
heinous crimes to be committed," he said.
"That's the irony in all of this. In their vain attempts to protect
the image of the church, they've tarnished it beyond repair."