Gordon,
“I realize that this happens in every denomination, including some dreadful cases within Sydney Anglicanism. But this response, concerning sexual abuse in the Roman Catholic church here in Sydney, seems to be too little, too late.”
The devil is in the reporting. You picked a bad example. I was following the story on the ABC which was driving it. The article you picked is particularly misleading. Pell wrote 3 relevant letters. There is the 2003 letter to the homosexual abuse victim which Pell is apologizing for. (The victim was 29 when the actual alleged assault occurred) There is a letter to a paedophile victim the same day. There is a letter a few months later to the homosexual abuse victim in which Pell apologized to him.
When the article you cited states:
“In February 2003, Cardinal Pell wrote to Mr Jones saying his complaint of sexual assault could not be substantiated because an investigator had found no other victims had come forward and that the priest, Father Terence Goodall, had denied the claims.”
The comment summarizes an aspect of the ABC report in a way in which the meaning is lost. It is essentially reporting the ABC’s innuendo/opinion as fact to Pell’s detriment.
On the ABC it was reported that Pell used the term “sexual assault” to refer to rape. The priest had not been accused of raping previously. The ABC and the victim opined that Pell couldn’t have meant to refer to rape when he used the term “sexual assault”. From memory they had a law professor comment that sexual assault isn’t necessarily so specific. Pell observed in his letter that the priest had never been accused of sexual assault before. Accordingly, the ABC opined or implied that Pell was denying in his letter that there were any other victims of any sexual indiscretion whatsoever.
I personally don’t share the ABC viewpoint as I have always understood “sexual assault” to refer to rape and am open to the possibility that Pell didn’t chat with that law professor whilst drafting his letter.
The ABC’s innuendo was that Pell was attempting to cover up the gay sexual assault and that they had caught him out. Personally I find that ludicrous considering the other letter from the same day included an apology and frank admission that the same priest had engaged in criminally inappropriate behaviour toward a child. If ABC is correct and Pell’s terminology explanation is of no substance then Pell was covering up to protect a priest from allegations of a homosexual assault while openly admitting the same priest engaged in paedophilia to the paedophilia victim. Does that make sense to you?
However Pell clearly didn’t use terminology suitable for uneducated people and journalists. He sees the error of his ways and has now apologized. In Pell’s defence though he was dealing with a paedophile matter the same day he wrote the letter to the homosexual assault victim so he had grounds to be upset and any poor choice of wording would be understandable.
“The specific matter that George Pell is now apologizing for happened in February 2003, and has still not been resolved, despite the high profile of similar issues and the recent papal apology for clerical sexual abuse.”
As I’ve explained above Pell apologized in 2003 when he became aware of the actual incident. He is now apologizing for the misunderstanding resulting from his poor drafting. Two different things.
The issue is unresolved in the sense that Pell has commenced a reinvestigation in response to becoming aware that the priest admitted that the act wasn’t consensual to the complainant. However the following article provides a rather compelling reason why Pell’s reinstating an investigation may be unnecessary because the admission may need to be contextualized.
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,24040493-7583,00.html
Again, I think your general issue is discussion worthy but you picked a poor example.