An Australian inquiry yesterday heard of a gun-toting pedophile priest who made children kneel between his legs during confession as Vatican finance head Cardinal George Pell admitted a time of “crimes and cover-ups” within the Catholic Church.
The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in Sydney heard evidence from Pell via videolink from Rome for a third day, with the senior Australian prelate again facing intense questioning about what he knew.
The inquiry is currently focused on the town of Ballarat and Melbourne in the state of Victoria, where Pell grew up and worked, and how the church dealt with complaints, many dating back to the 1970s, against the Catholic clergy.
Gail Furness, the lead counsel assisting the commission, yesterday focused on Doveton parish priest Peter Searson, who Pell called “one of the most unpleasant” men he had ever met.
The church failed to act in the 1980s despite mounting evidence of his bizarre behavior.
The commission heard that one complainant had said that Searson brandished a gun and made children kneel between his legs when they went to confession, during which he had a tape recorder.
Pell said Searson’s behavior was “abhorrent,” but denied knowing about it at the time, and suggested that Melbourne Archbishop Frank Little, now deceased, should have done more.
“Archbishop Little for some reason seemed incapable or unable to deal with Father Searson, or even to provide any adequate level of information about the situation,” Pell said.
The inquiry heard Searson, who died in 2009, was also accused of sexual assault, swinging a cat by its tail over a fence, killing it, showing children a dead body in a coffin and holding a knife to the chest of a young girl.
Furness suggested Pell’s evidence was designed to deflect blame from him for doing nothing about the priest, to which he replied: “That is not accurate.”
Furness also questioned Pell on Brother Edward Dowlan, who was based in Ballarat and Melbourne, and was jailed for abusing boys.
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