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August 9, 2019

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Guam abuse victims sue church

Long after clergy sex abuse erupted into the scandal in the United States, it remained a secret on the American island of Guam, spanning generations and reaching to the very top of the Catholic hierarchy.

For decades, abusers held the power in a culture of impunity led by an archbishop who was among those accused. Anthony Sablan Apuron, the former archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese, was convicted in a secret Vatican trial and suspended in 2016, after which restrictions he supported on the reporting of abuse were eased.

Over 220 former altar boys, students and Boy Scouts are now suing the US territory’s Catholic archdiocese over sexual assaults by 35 clergy, teachers and scoutmasters, hoping to see justice. The archdiocese filed for bankruptcy protection earlier this year, estimating at least US$45 million in liabilities and survivors have until next Thursday to file for a financial settlement.

Thousands of pages of court documents and extensive interviews tell a story of systemic abuse going back to the 1950s and of repeated collusion by predator priests. Seven men have publicly accused Apuron of sexual assaults they endured as children, including his nephew.

The archbishop, now 73, denies the allegations but in April the Vatican revealed that Pope Francis had upheld the findings of a secret church trial that he was guilty of sex crimes against children.

“He believed he was untouchable, more powerful than the governor,” said Water Denton, a former US Army sergeant who alleges he was raped by Apuron 40 years ago as an altar boy.

Although Apuron has been removed from public ministry and effectively exiled from Guam, he remains a bishop and receives a monthly US$1,500 stipend from the church. The Guam archdiocese said it did not know where Apuron is and his lawyer declined repeated requests for comment.

No member of the Catholic clergy on Guam has ever been prosecuted for a sex crime. Secret church files that could have helped provide evidence are alleged to have been burned.

Despite church law that requires bishops and archbishops maintain records on sex abuse allegations, the new archbishop Michael Jude Byrnes said his predecessor left him nothing. He couldn’t explain why but said he had heard rumors of “a big bonfire” outside the chancery before Apuron left.

“It’s horrific,” Byrnes said. “The sins of the fathers are left to the children ... It’s important for the church of Guam to confront, in a good way, the evil that we found, and to acknowledge it and to own it.”




 

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