Chilean court orders Church to pay millions to abuse survivors

Chilean court orders Church to pay millions to abuse survivors Chilean priest Fernando Karadima

A Chilean appeals court has ruled in favour of three survivors of abuse by former priest Fernando Karadima and ordered the Catholic Church to pay damages.

In a decision announced yesterday, the court ordered the Church to pay 100 million pesos (€4,594,271) for “moral damages” to each of the survivors: Juan Carlos Cruz, Jose Andres Murillo and James Hamilton.

According the ruling, the appeals court said that “the omissions and the errors of the leadership of the Catholic Church” in Chile proved the Church had been “negligent in its conduct in terms that can be qualified as a cover-up that gave way to the configuration of a civil offense”.

Known as an influential and charismatic priest, then-Fr Karadima founded a Catholic Action group in a wealthy Santiago parish and drew hundreds of young men to the priesthood.

However, several former seminarians from the parish revealed in 2010 that the former Chilean priest sexually abused them and other members of the parish community for years. One year later, Karadima was sentenced by the Vatican to a life of prayer and penance after he was found guilty of sexual abuse.

Pope Francis expelled Karadima from the priesthood in late September.

The court pointed to documents that confirmed that both former archbishops of Santiago, Cardinals Francisco Javier Errazuriz and Ricardo Ezzati, were aware of and did not properly investigate the allegations against Karadima.

Citing the definition of the word “cover-up” as being “responsible for concealing a crime”, the court ruled that the definition applies to “the behaviour of Cardinals Errazuriz and Ezzatti and other ecclesiastical authorities”.

Cardinal Errazuriz, who until last year served on Pope Francis’ Council of Cardinals, led the archdiocese from 1998 to 2010. Pope Benedict XVI appointed then-Archbishop Ezzati to succeed Cardinal Errazuriz, who was made a cardinal by Pope Francis in 2014.

Pope Francis accepted Cardinal Ezzati’s resignation March 23. The Vatican did not give a reason for the cardinal stepping down. All bishops are required to offer their resignations when they turn 75; Cardinal Ezzati is 77.

Nevertheless, the cardinal’s resignation occurred just over a week after a Chilean news outlet published a 2015 criminal complaint made against Cardinal Ezzati and the Archdiocese of Santiago over another case of sexual abuse and its subsequent cover-up.

Catholic News Service