Kansas City-St. Joseph Catholic Diocese  Bishop Robert Finn, the first U.S. bishop criminally charged with  sheltering an abusive clergyman, pleaded not guilty to one misdemeanor  count of failing to report suspected child abuse.
Jackson County Prosecutor Jean Peters Baker  said Finn and his diocese, which also was charged with one count, had  "reasonable cause" to suspect a child had been abused after learning of  the images.
"Now that the grand  jury investigation has resulted in this indictment, my office will  pursue this case vigorously because it is about protecting children,"  Baker said. "I want to ensure there are no future failures to report  resulting in other unsuspecting victims."
Finn  has acknowledged that he and other diocese officials knew for months  about hundreds of "disturbing" images of children that were discovered  on a priest's computer but did not report the matter to authorities or  turn over the computer.
In a  statement issued through the diocese, Finn denied any wrongdoing and  said he had begun work to overhaul the diocese's reporting policies and  act on key findings of a diocese-commissioned investigation into its  handling of Ratigan's case.
"Today,  the Jackson County Prosecutor issued these charges against me  personally and against the Diocese of Kansas City-St Joseph," said Finn,  who officials said was not under arrest. "For our part, we will meet  these announcements with a steady resolve and a vigorous defense."After  the Catholic sex abuse scandal erupted in 2002, grand juries in several  regions reviewed how bishops handled claims against priests. However,  most of the allegations were decades old and far beyond the statute of  limitations. Until Finn was indicted Friday, no U.S. Catholic bishop had  been criminally charged over how he responded to abuse claims, although  some bishops had struck deals with local authorities to avoid  prosecution against their dioceses.
Terry  McKiernan of BishopAccountability.org, which manages a public database  of records on clergy abuse cases, called Friday's indictment especially  important because it involved a recent case. He said the charge being a  misdemeanor makes it no less significant.
"The taboo against acknowledging that bishops are responsible in these matters has been challenged," McKiernan said.Finn acknowledged earlier this year that St. Patrick's School Principal Julie Hess had more than a year ago raised concerns that a priest was behaving inappropriately around children, but that he didn't read her written report until after the Rev. Shawn Ratigan was charged with child pornography counts this spring. Ratigan has pleaded not guilty.
In  a memo dated May 19, 2010, Hess wrote that several people had  complained Ratigan was taking compromising pictures of young children  and that he allowed them to sit on his lap and reach into his pocket for  candy.
Hess at the time gave  the report to Monsignor Robert Murphy, the diocese's vicar general, who  spoke with Ratigan about setting boundaries with children and then gave  Finn a verbal summary of the letter and his meeting with the priest.
Seven months later, a computer technician  working on Ratigan's laptop found hundreds of what he called  "disturbing" images of children, most of them fully clothed with the  focus on their crotch areas, and a series of pictures of a 2- to  3-year-old girl with her genitals exposed.
The  computer was turned over to the diocese, where officials examined the  photos and reported them to Murphy. Instead of reporting them to  authorities, as required by(...)More.

 
 
 
 
 
 10/14/2011 02:21:00 PM
10/14/2011 02:21:00 PM
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