Vatican official George Pell 'corrects record' after abuse victim's bribery claim
Version 0 of 1. Senior Vatican official Cardinal George Pell, who is also Australia’s highest ranking cleric, has moved to “correct the record” after being accused of bribing a victim of paedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale to keep quiet. The royal commission into institutional responses to child sex abuse, sitting in Ballarat, Victoria, this week, also heard claims that Pell had dismissed another abuse victim’s complaint as “ridiculous” and was complicit in moving Ridsdale to another parish. Related: Senior Vatican official offered bribe to child sex abuse victim, inquiry hears The Vatican’s finance chief on Wednesday denied all the accusations. The former Sydney archbishop has been mentioned at the commission by several witnesses who say he knew – or suggest he might have known – about the widespread abuse in Ballarat while he was a senior priest there in the 1970s. The cardinal will have to answer to the commission after David Ridsdale, the nephew of Australia’s worst paedophile priest, said he told Pell in 1993 about the abuse at the hands of his uncle. David Ridsdale told the commission that Pell, a family friend, asked him: “I want to know what it will take to keep you quiet.” Ridsdale said Pell had started talking about Ridsdale’s growing family and said that he may soon have to buy a car or house. “I have never stated that Pell offered me anything specific or tangible in our conversation, only that his attempts to direct the conversation down a particular path made me extremely suspicious of his motivations and what he was insinuating,” Ridsdale said. In a statement on Wednesday the cardinal said he had been “horrified” by survivors’ accounts to the commission of the abuse they suffered, and that the suicide of so many victims in Ballarat was “an enormous tragedy”. “The crimes committed against them by priests and brothers are profoundly evil and completely repugnant to me,” the statement said. Pell said he stood accused of bribery, being complicit in the moving of a known paedophile and of ignoring a victim’s complaint. “It is important to correct the record, particularly given the false and misleading headlines,” he said in the statement. The cardinal said he never moved Ridsdale out of Mortlake parish. “I never moved him anywhere. I would never have condoned or participated in a decision to transfer Ridsdale in the knowledge that he had abused children, and I did not do so.” Pell said he continued to regret the misunderstanding between himself and David Ridsdale and he stood by his previous sworn denial of Ridsdale’s allegations. “At no time did I attempt to bribe David Ridsdale or his family or offer any financial inducements for him to be silent.” Pell also responded to allegations made by Timothy Green at the commission that when he was 12 or 13 in late 1974, he told Pell that Brother Edward Vernon Dowlan was abusing boys at Ballarat’s St Patrick’s College. “I said ‘Brother Dowlan is touching little boys’,” said Green, who said he was also a victim of Dowlan. “Father Pell said ‘don’t be ridiculous’ and walked out,” said Green. But Pell said on Wednesday “to the best of my belief, this conversation did not happen”. Commission chair Justice Peter McClellan says Pell will be required to answer the allegations in a statement. |