Salesians
dispute report that they moved suspects in abuse
Order's leaders
don't address specifics; News stands by story
By BRENDAN M. CASE / The Dallas Morning News
Salesians of Don Bosco leaders have
disputed a report by The Dallas Morning News that they have moved
priests accused of child sexual abuse from country to country, away from
law enforcement and victims.
In Rome, the Salesians' worldwide
headquarters said it "categorically denies such behavior and condemns
every kind of abuse of minors," according to a written statement posted
on its Web site.
The statement did not address several
specific cases that were the focus of the report in The News' Sunday editions – including that of the Rev. Frank Klep, who was moved
to the Pacific island of Samoa in 1998 while he was under criminal
investigation in Australia.
Father Klep has remained in Samoa
since being charged with five counts of indecent assault a few months
after his relocation. He had been convicted in a separate abuse case in
1994 and sentenced to nine months of community service.
Robert W. Mong, president and editor
of The News, said: "Our team spent months interviewing and
gathering documents for our stories on the Salesians, which documented
several instances in which the order had moved accused priests across
international borders. We attempted to interview international and
regional leaders of the order, but they declined. We remain confident of
our reporting."
The Salesians' worldwide leader in
Rome is the Rev. Pascual Chávez, who in the 1990s kept an admitted
molester in ministry in Mexico, The News reported Sunday.
Father Chávez did not respond to The News' previous requests for comment or to detailed written
questions sent by fax. The Salesian headquarters in Rome said regional
order leaders were responsible for handling individual sexual abuse
cases.
In Australia, Father Klep's regional
superiors said "that not all of the facts contained in ... [the] article
are correct." But they declined to provide specifics.
The Rev. Ian Murdoch declined an
interview request before the report was published, as did the order
leader whom Father Klep said suggested his transfer to Samoa.
Father Murdoch also said in his
statement that the Salesians "have cooperated, and will certainly
continue to cooperate, with any law enforcement agency."
He maintained that Father Klep's work
was only with adults. The News published a front-page photograph
of Father Klep handing candy to children. It also interviewed teenage
boys who said that they regularly visited the priest and that he gave
them odd jobs and spending money. One 14-year-old also said Father Klep
regularly helped him with his schoolwork alone in the priest's bedroom.
In the United States, the country's
top two Salesians issued a joint statement on Sunday denying that
numerous Salesian priests accused of sexually abusing minors have been
transferred from country to country.
"While one can find a few instances of
failure in this regard among a Congregation numbering over 16,000
members, such a general characterization of the Salesians of Don Bosco
is patently false and misleading," said the statement, which was signed
by the Rev. James Heuser and the Rev. David Purdy.
Father Heuser declined to share the
Salesians' policy on sexual abuse cases when The News called him
several weeks ago
The Dallas Morning News, 23 de
junio de 2004, p. 13 A
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