Crime & Safety

VA, DC Catholic Clergy Accused Of Sexual Abuse: Full List

ProPublica has compiled and put in one place various lists of "credibly accused" Catholic clergy from around the U.S.

WASHINGTON, DC — The journalism site ProPublica, a Patch Partner, has compiled the most comprehensive list so far of Catholic clergy “credibly accused” of sexual abuse. The list includes many abusers from Virginia and DC.

Virginia's two dioceses, the Diocese of Arlington and Diocese of Richmond, released their lists of priests credibly accused of sexual abuse against minors in early 2019. The Arlington Diocese list accounts for Richmond Diocese priests that joined when the Arlington Diocese was founded in 1974. The Arlington list was updated in October 2019 when the diocese dismissed a Fairfax County priest who admitted to sexual contact with a minor once between 1992 and 1995. The Archdiocese of Washington published its own list in October 2018.

ProPublica published the database of credibly accused Catholic clergy along with the challenges of identifying offenders long after such widespread abuse became known.

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From ProPublica:

Over the last year and a half, the majority of U.S. dioceses, as well as nearly two dozen religious orders, have released lists of abusers currently or formerly in their ranks.

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The revelations were no coincidence: They were spurred by a 2018 Pennsylvania grand jury report, which named hundreds of priests as part of a statewide clergy abuse investigation.

Nationwide, the names of more than 5,800 clergy members have been released so far, representing the most comprehensive step toward transparency yet by a Catholic Church dogged by its long history of denying and burying abuse by priests.

Here are the databases for the two Virginia dioceses and the Washington, DC archdiocese:

But even as bishops have dedicated these lists to abuse victims and depicted the disclosures as a public acknowledgment of victims’ suffering, it has become clear that numerous alleged abusers have been omitted and that there is no standard for determining who each diocese considers credibly accused.

ProPublica has collected the 178 lists released by U.S. dioceses and religious orders as of Jan. 20 and created a searchable database that allows users to look up clergy members by name, diocese or parish. This represents the first comprehensive picture of the information released publicly by bishops around the country. Some names appear multiple times. In many cases, that accounts for priests who were accused in more than one location. In other instances, dioceses have acknowledged when priests who served in their jurisdiction have been reported for abuse elsewhere.

Kathleen McChesney, a former FBI official who helped establish a new set of child protection protocols within the USCCB [U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops] in the early 2000s, has urged bishops and religious orders for nearly two decades to create a comprehensive list of accused clergy. She said our database will allow the public to better track dioceses’ disclosures, rather than seeing each list in isolation.

“People don’t know where to look,” McChesney said. “The contribution of the one list will help a lot of people to perhaps identify someone that they believe abused them.”

Still, much crucial information remains missing. Despite the recent surge of releases, 41 dioceses and dozens more religious orders have yet to publish lists, including five of seven dioceses in Florida, home to more than 2 million Catholics. The Archdiocese of the Military Services, District of Columbia, which has around 1.8 million Catholic members, has not released a list of credibly accused clergy members.

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