NEW YORK (AP) — An independent monitor will oversee the Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn’s handling of sexual abuse allegations under a settlement between the diocese and New York Attorney General Letitia James. The agreement announced Tuesday will address “years of mismanaging clergy sexual abuse cases,” James said. Investigators with the attorney general’s office found that officials with the diocese failed to comply with their own sex abuse policies put in place after the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops adopted the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People in 2002. In one case, the attorney general said, a priest who admitted that he had repeatedly sexually abused minors was defrocked in 2007 but requested confidentiality. The diocese kept the abuse secret until 2017 when it announced for the first time that this priest had been credibly accused of and admitted to abusing children. The priest worked as a professor at two universities in the intervening decade. |
Cops charge 'ringleader' of brutal illegal dogPolice seeking arrest of Pennsylvania Rep. Kevin BoyleHow the disappearance of two Kansas moms led to 4 arrests in OklahomaJennifer PanDortmund digs deep to beat Atlético 4Clint Eastwood, 93, reveals the TRUTH about his 'colorNPR suspends editor who criticized his employer for what he calls an unquestioned liberal worldviewQueen Letizia of Spain is elegant in an offCountdown clock for Paris Olympics hits 100Trump to meet with Polish president Duda as NATO leaders call for additional support for Ukraine