The Catholic Church has been dealing with its sex-abuse problems for decades. In that span, thousands of lawsuits have been filed, and millions upon millions have been paid out to victims.
But lawsuits filed against the Vatican have been few and far between. The vast majority of the litigation has been aimed at individual priests, bishops and dioceses.
With that as a backdrop, let’s give you the news: The Vatican itself is soon due to defend itself in U.S. court, after failing to thwart a lawsuit claiming it ordered American bishops to cover up evidence of child sex abuse. In court filings expected next week, the Vatican likely will provide the most comprehensive look yet at how it plans to defend itself against the accusations. Click here for our story in Friday’s WSJ.
The original accusations against the Vatican stem from a 2004 suit in Louisville, Ky., on behalf of three men who said they were sexually abused by Catholic priests in Kentucky when they were children.
The suit claims the Vatican instructed bishops in the U.S. to keep quiet when confronted with evidence or allegations that priests had abused children. That policy, the suit claims, helped foster a culture in which sex abuse was tolerated.
Jeffrey Lena, the lawyer for the Holy See, said, he would offer expert testimony that a pivotal 1962 Vatican document, called Crimen Sollicitationis, never barred reporting sexual abuse to civil authorities. The plaintiffs have alleged that the document instructed bishops to keep quiet when told of alleged sex abuse.
via Vatican Set to Roll Out Defenses in Sex-Abuse Case – Law Blog – WSJ.







