Cardinal Barbarin . . . Acquitted By Appeal Court Of Failing To Report Abuse

 

LYON, France (CNA) — Philippe Cardinal Barbarin has been acquitted by a French appeals court of failing to report sexual abuse by a diocesan priest. The archbishop of Lyon was convicted in March 2019, of “of non-denunciation of ill-treatment” of a minor and given a six-month suspended prison sentence.

The decision January 30 by the appeals court in Lyon was reached after prosecutors in the case sought the cardinal’s vindication. The cardinal’s lawyer called the result “logical,” saying that Barbarin had been the subject of “calumny” over the course of the trial.

At the time of his conviction in March last year, five other archdiocesan officials on trial with Barbarin were acquitted. Barbarin’s acquittal was widely expected on appeal after the prosecutor in the case argued there was no proof of the cardinal’s legal wrongdoing and therefore no grounds for conviction.

Barbarin was accused of not reporting instances of abuse to judicial authorities between July 2014 and June 2015, in a case involving Fr. Bernard Preynat, who has been accused of abusing dozens of minors in the 1980s and early 1990s.

In 2017, the cardinal told Le Monde that he did not conceal allegations against Preynat, but said that his response to the allegations had been “inadequate.” He said he opened an investigation against Preynat after becoming aware of the allegations against him and removed from ministry in 2015.

Barbarin’s trial also made headlines when, in October 2018, the French court issued a summons to Luis Francisco Cardinal Ladaria Ferrer, prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, to testify in the case. The Vatican invoked diplomatic immunity, saying that as a minister of Vatican City State, Ladaria is protected under international law.

The court summons had involved a letter Ladaria sent to Barbarin, advising him to take disciplinary action against Preynat, “while avoiding public scandal.”

The plaintiffs’ lawyers wanted Ladaria to testify as to whether the direction to prevent scandal was intended as an injunction to avoid going to court, in which case, they said, the CDF prefect would have been complicit in failing to report the allegedly abusive priest to authorities.

Allegations against Preynat became public in 2015. Prosecutors dropped the case the following year after an initial investigation, but a victims’ group with more than 80 members who say they were abused by Preynat led to a reopening of the case. He now faces up to ten years in prison in a trial which is still ongoing.

At the time of his conviction, cardinal said that “after the decision of the court, regardless of my personal fate, I want to reiterate first of all compassion for the victims and the whole place that they and their families have in my prayers.”

Shortly after his conviction last year, Barbarin met with Pope Francis to submit his resignation, but the Pope refused to accept it while his appeal was pending.

Instead, Barbarin elected to step back from the day-to-day governance of the Archdiocese of Lyon, leaving its management to the vicar general.

(According to a report from Vatican News, the director of the Vatican Press Office released a statement the evening of January 30, saying “The Holy See has learnt of the decision of Lyon’s Appeals Court regarding Cardinal Philippe Barbarin.”

(In the statement, Matteo Bruni also said that Barbarin has once again put his ecclesial mandate back into the hands of Pope Francis “who continues to follow closely the unfolding of these painful events, and will communicate his decision in due time.”

(Bruni concluded by noting that “together with the French Bishops’ Conference, the Holy See reaffirms its closeness to all the victims of abuse, in their suffering, and to their families and communities, and sustains the Church of Lyon, which is sorely tried.”)

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