Within the 6,000-plus pages of documents released by the
Catholic Archdiocese of Milwaukee is evidence that Archbishop Timothy
Dolan moved money that may have gone to victims of childhood sexual
abuse into a fund for cemetery care.
Dolan calls the charges "old and
discredited attacks."
Among the information in new documents released by the
Milwaukee Archdiocese is evidence that Timothy Dolan, the archbishop of
New York, put $57 million in a trust fund for cemeteries out of concern
it could be awarded to victims of sexual abuse by Catholic priests.
Dolan, the current archbishop of New York and the president of the
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, was considered a contender
for the recent papal vacancy eventually filled by Jorge Mario Bergoglio
of Argentina.
Dolan has long been regarded as one of the "good guys" of
the Catholic Church for being an outspoken supporter of the victims of
clergy sexual abuse scandals.
"When you think of what happened, both that a man who proposes to act
in the name of God would have abused an innocent young person and that
some bishops would have, in a way, countenanced that by reassigning
abusers — that's nothing less than hideous," Dolan said on a 60 Minutes
interview in 2011. "That's nothing less than nauseating,"
Within the more than 6,000 pages of documents is evidence that Dolan
tried to prevent some church assets from going to the abused, and that
he used financial payments to try and encourage abusive priests to leave
the church voluntarily — rather than wait out what could be a lengthy
Vatican process.
“I welcome today’s voluntary release of documents by the Archdiocese
of Milwaukee that contain information and details related to sexual
abuse by clergy, and how the Archdiocese of Milwaukee responded to it,"
Dolan said in a statement
Monday.
"Unfortunately, we have already seen how the release of these
documents will cause some to raise old and discredited attacks."
Dolan was ordained archbishop of Milwaukee in 2002 by Pope John Paul II a position he held until moving to New York in 2009.
In a 2007 letter to the Vatican, Dolan requested authority to
transfer $57 million in church assets into a trust fund in an attempt
to, as he put it, "protect the funds from any legal claim and
liability."
The documents were released as a concession to the 575 men and women
filing claims of alleged sexual abuse by Catholic priests and church
employees.
In a move they considered best for repaying the victims, the
Milwaukee Archdiocese filed for bankruptcy in 2011.
Negotiations over
payments have since deteriorated and the victims are accusing the church
of shielding the money.
Milwaukee Archbishop Jerome Listecki said the assets Dolan placed in trust were always earmarked for cemetery care.
"The cemetery funds have always been seen as an asset in trust, and
Cardinal Dolan perpetuated that," he said in an interview with WTMJ-AM
on Tuesday.
The victims will try to bring the trust funds into play in the
bankruptcy proceedings, said Laurie Goodstein, national religion
correspondent for the New York Times.
"The lawyers for the victims are insisting that those should be a
part of the assets that are available to the creditors and most of the
creditors are the abuse victims," she said.
A bankruptcy judge has yet to rule on that claim. Meanwhile, the
church has been reluctant to settle its claims, arguing about 400 of the
575 cases are invalid.
Cases included within the documents span up to eighty years, and more than half of the 45 priests named in the documents have died.
"We may never have the complete picture because the records are not
always clear and there is no way to delve more deeply because many of
the people involved are dead or have had memories fade as 20, 30 or 40
years or more have passed," Listecki said in a statement.
"The documents present one part of the history of what happened and
demonstrate how people tried to do their best with what they knew at the
time."