George Pell’s counsel withdrew his bail application today. Pell will be remanded in custody awaiting a sentence that almost certainly will include a long term of imprisonment.
This is one of the most significant moments in Australian criminal history, the conviction of a Roman Catholic cardinal for child sex offending. It has not happened anywhere on the planet.
Amid the shock and the superlatives, I fear this episode will place the real story in the shadow. What we have learned from the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses of Child Sex Abuse will be overwhelmed by the magnitude of Pell’s conviction. Victims will continue to be left as line items on a profit and loss statement. Those seeking compensation under the National Redress Scheme will continue to be put on hold.
Other guilty institutions will skate away.
The history is clear. In Victoria and as far as I can tell anywhere in Australia, no Catholic priest was charged let alone convicted of a child sex offence until 1979. That in itself is a damning statistic given what we know of the rampant pedophilia of outrageously prolific offenders like Monsignor John Day, Father Ronald Pickering and Gerard Ridsdale.
But it also speaks of failures elsewhere. Simply put, that level of offending could not occur without failures within law enforcement and more broadly across the criminal justice system.
What is known is that elements within the Victoria Police Force up to and including the Chief Commissioner at the time, Reg Jackson, conspired to prevent the criminal prosecution of Monsignor Day in Mildura in 1972.
Father Ronald Pickering fled the country. When his whereabouts became known, the process of his arrest in Great Britain and subsequent extradition back to Victoria was considered too costly. The man police darkly referred to as a “two (victims) a day man” was left to his own devices. Pickering remained in the UK in full view but somehow beyond the reach of the law until his death in 2009.
Many of Ridsdale’s crimes against children were not subject to any acceptable form of investigative rigour. In the 1980s, victims’ statements alleging Ridsdale committed the worst of his crimes were lost by police. Meanwhile other statements alleging offences of lesser gravity became the basis of his first prosecution (Ridsdale was the second priest to be charged with child sex offences in Victoria in 1989).
Whether it was a matter of ineptitude or something much worse is a matter that requires further investigation. If history tells us anything, it is that the Victoria Police Force is not especially curious about examining its historical failings.
What we do know is that where police won’t act, offending will escalate. It is a one-way ticket to a crime spree.
It is not difficult to understand. Convince an armed robber that he can commit his crimes without consequence, and he will not only continue to commit armed robberies, he will continue to commit more of them.
What happened in Mildura in 1972 told the clergy within the Ballarat diocese and elsewhere in Victoria that they were practically above the law. The clerics who preyed upon children would not be pursued. The clerics who were complicit or who chose to look the other way would not be held to account.
In this context, the number of victims grew from one to ten to a hundred and finally to the point where not even the authority and weight of a royal commission could keep count.
The Mildura conspiracy effectively created an inducement to offend, a standing offer of immunity, extended to some of the worst child sex offenders this country has ever seen.
The protection of pedophile priests and complicit clerics undermines public trust and confidence in police in ways that more orthodox forms of police corruption do not. While morally indefensible, we can at least understand how police might be bribed to look the other way in the lucrative drug trade. How it was that police were protecting child sex offenders defies comprehension. And without public confidence, police cannot operate.
Unsurprisingly, the Victoria Police Force is yet to issue an apology for its role in this epidemic of child sex offending. It has barely acknowledged its culpability and quietly waits for all the fuss to die down.
The Royal Commission found that child sex offending was rife in all manner of institutions: religious and secular, government and non-government.
The Catholic Church was a principal offender but pound for pound no institution was worse than the Salvation Army. The principals of the dismal cult of the Jehovah’s Witnesses when presented with the sordid details of child sex abuse on their watch, found it beneath themselves to offer even an apology.
We need to look beyond the headlines. The real story here is not that one of the Vatican’s most senior men is set to go behind bars.
The real story is that the nation’s children, our most precious asset, were not valued. They were not protected.
The real story is, as it was before Pell’s conviction, that children were not believed. They were not believed by law enforcement, they were not believed in the courts, they were often not believed by their own parents.
Those who defend Pell today are acting in precisely the same way as the Catholic Church and every other offending institution has done in the past.
They are telling Pell’s victims (one who is deceased) “We do not believe you.”
After a three-year royal commission and a national outpouring of grief and sorrow, we have learned everything and nothing.
This column first appeared in The Australian 27 February 2018.
https://www.footytips.com.au/comps/TheIn7&p=532111
password is the 532111 part
Thank you Gryzly, I’m in.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-03-04/george-pell-abuse-victims-family-police-speak-to-4-corners/10856998
.
Then there was the vile response from ‘the church’ now Pell is appealing, ‘not to jump to conclusions or judgements’.
Like the hellish creature is innocent?
.
When are they just gong to stop lying? …………….. No, you know, on second thoughts, its good. The lies, the smearing victims, all of it, because it is the Catholic mind set in all its glory. Let us see it for what it is. I can tell you a truth now, snakes will wriggle and squirm and strike out at you right up until you cut off their heads. I know, Ive done it.
.
I just dont know how anyone with any self respect, not even a grain of humanity, could say they are a Catholic, and hold their heads up. There is no, ‘oh but there are good people in this Church’, and ‘we do so much charity’. They are lying evil of the worse kind and any association is condoning and accepting the rape of children as part of who you are.
Because good Catholics get on their knees, then they had their children over to priests to be defiled forever.
And, NO, and Im NOT going to apologise to anyone anymore. If you send your kids to a Catholic institution, after all this, you should be punched in the face repeatedly until you wise up. Or,… your kids should be taken away from you on the grounds of child abuse, because you are willingly putting them into the hands of pedophiles.
The truth, lets have some fresh air and people who arent scared of god or corrupt police, or sleazy priests of any kind. Lets put the lot in prison and turn the page.
so environmentalists need not apply….greens will be placed firmly last on every ballot for the foreseeable.. they are frauds
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2018/dec/20/nsw-mp-jeremy-buckingham-quits-greens-and-will-run-as-an-independent-at-election
“The MTM, which uses a range of fixed-line architectures and technologies including fibre-to-the-node, fibre-to-the-curb and Hybrid Fibre Coaxial (HFC), will end up costing Australian taxpayers billions of dollars more than if the original deep-fibre NBN had been allowed to continue. It will also result in a network that is considerably less capable of meeting the nation’s future broadband needs.” No Surprises.
Sorry for wandering OT on this important thread but I can’t find Gryzly’s recent post with the tipping comp password. Does anyone know it? Any thoughts or comments on Blues 2019 line-up Jack?
Jon Ralph in the HUN puts them in the bottom three. I’d like to think they’ll do a bit better than that.
Can anyone help Wiss with tipping?
https://www.footytips.com.au/comps/TheIn7&p=532111
PW 532111
Thanks, Gryzly.
Take three.
https://www.footytips.com.au/comps/TheIn7&p=532111
The password is the final section of the url, 532111
Cheers
https://www.footytips.com.au/comps/TheIn7
P/W532111
Thanks Tracy. Frankie update??
Very lively the last few days, back legs have gone back a bit as we have had to stop the meds that help.
Weight seems to be stable so the combination of heart/kidney and diuretic meds are doing their job for the time being. He’s off to the vet for a check up on Friday, he seems a happy little chap and I hope I’m doing right by him
The Royal Commission uncovered grave crimes against children in many institutions; the Salvo’s tortured many at Bexley, Jewish schools have protected many paedophiles and facilitated the escape to Israel of at least one teacher in a Melbourne girls school and another in a boys school. Scouts harbored many, and one prominent swimming coach in Australia is currently before the Courts. Churches, schools, sporting clubs, anywhere really. Children are at risk everywhere, often even in their own homes.
Pell is a high profile collar, the Pope’s right hand man (bad pun intentional). Sadly the dust will settle and nothing will change, it will just make the next generation of kiddy fiddlers more cautious and harder to unmask. Regrettably there’s no pH test for a paedopHile.
Home from China early with severe giardiasis. Crook as a chook. The Yangtse River is so choked with plastic people use the drifting rafts of crap as fishing platforms. I won’t be buying Chinese goods in future.
Good luck with that
LOL – I hear you.
Hey Wissendorf sorry to hear you are unwell.
Do you have any idea what triggered this? Google tells me the source is mainly water consumption but it’s quite confusing as to whether it’s even safe to drink boiled water over there.
I’m travelling to China in early April through to May & will spend a week in Chengdu then Emei Shan so I’d be grateful if you could pass on any tips. Never been to Asia, take it or leave it I’ve always said, then my friend wins the lotto a few months ago & before you know it I’m in Cathay Pacific first class to Beijing. The bed will be nice!
Typhoid & HepA aside, is the food/water seriously dodgy in China?
Thanks, Bella
You won’t go to Japan because they kill whales yet you will travel to China Bella. They have an appalling animal rights record and just about eat everything that moves, have a shocking human rights record and are responsible for the construction of most of the new coal fired power stations you hate. A very strange position but I suppose it’s cheap.
Long ago l vowed to NEVER go to Japan because they brutally murder intelligent sentient beings like whales and butcher entire pods of dolphins in Taiji & discard the calves to die a painfully slow death like so much rubbish & none of it is for the sustenance of their citizens.
It’s very personal Razor but you know that.
Not a red cent of my hard-earned will ever support such a compassionless nation.
As for China’s record, thanks for nothing.
I was looking forward to a COMPLETELY FREE month of new discoveries of western China in first-class with my very generous friend, but if they harpoon everything that moves & not give a FF that it takes up to 2 hours for that pregnant creature to die in agony or die when they’re sliced open on the deck of a meat-packing factory ship, then I’ll rethink my options.
BTW, Australia also has an appalling human rights record globally thanks to our cold-blooded politicians & as for new coal, at least they’re making an effort to transition.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-03-25/china-pledges-to-drastically-cut-fossil-fuels/9500228 🤐
Oh FFS! Razor. You could harp for Australia.
I was in Jixi when I caught it, a city of almost 2M people. It can be passed from personal contact, water, food or contact with a contaminated surface, so it could have come from anywhere really. I can rule out water as I only drink soft drink when I travel; I don’t even trust bottled water or tea. It’s a microscopic parasite, usually easily treated but there are strains that have become resistant. Someone on the blog had it after a trip to Morocco (think it might have been Lou O’Todd about 2 years ago) and had some serious trouble getting rid of it. Haven’t seen Lou on for a while – hope he’s OK now. I was well out in the boonies this trip and probably more at risk. That said, only once before have I become seriously ill while travelling, and that was after taking a tramp steamer across the Malacca Straits from Medan to Penang (the MV Gadis Lanka Suka) a terrible rusting old tub that I hope has now sunk.. The water aboard as undrinkable but I accidently brushed my teeth with it and that was enough. I’ve had a touch of bellyitis in India but everyone does, even when staying in big hotels. The change of diet might cause a few rumblings so don’t jump for the doctor at first fart. I’d recommend jabs for typhoid and cholera, a tetanus booster and an anti-malarial. That’s the full suite of prevention I take every trip to anywhere. Your GP might recommend a small first aid kit of treatments and preventatives, but you probably won’t need them. A simple avoidance measure is carrying your own eating irons or chopsticks, and a cup. you’ll be OK I’m sure.
I’m not a tour guide and can’t guess what your interests might be but here’s a recommendation; if you visit the Terra Cotta army (in Xi An, about a 1 hr flight from Beijing) add a side trip to the Qian Ling Mausoleum complex. It’s about 80km away. Investigate Wu Zetian, China’s only Empress. One heck of a lady! Enjoy your trip.
Thanks for your reply Wiss.
I appreciate your warnings & I’ll be in Xi An for two nights before Chengdu so we’ll look into the Empress. I’m being treated to a Private full day basically volunteering behind the scenes at the Chengdu Dujiangyan Panda Base Conservation Centre where I’ll get to hand-feed those beautiful animals so that’ll be fantastic for me.
I’ll pack cutlery but this could well be my big chance to ‘fast’ & go from a size12 to a size8!! Cheers..😷
Bella
https://www.rome2rio.com/s/Xi-an/Qianling-Mausoleum
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wu_Zetian
cons con goes on and on.
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/mar/03/coalition-rabble-rousing-on-refugees-or-franking-credits-is-beneath-contempt
You have to look at the source of your info dear Dismayed and it’s the Left Wing “The Guardian” who of course would pound the Coalition. No Surprises. Cheers in enjoyment
You may have to look at your source of info dear Henry & it’s the Right Wing Oz & CMail who would of course pound Labor. No Surprises.
Sitting at Brisbane airport yesterday wincing through someone’s discarded CM & the obvious, glaring bias had me hooked. I’ve kept it for the laughs.
The complaints that fly on here about The Guardian & ABC bias have nothing on these pages!
One of the best, headed “Climate idealism comes at a price”
“Adani does not plan to dig up coal to sell. It wants to dig up coal for itself, so it can give billions of people electricity.” hahahaha LOL What a steaming pile of bullshit.
Then “Unethical antics of anti-coal activists”
“Activists are anti-democratic and in telling other countries how to run their economies, neo-colonial.”
(This part is serious scientific stuff)
“CO2 also brings environmental benefits. Additional warmth allows more land to be cultivated and additional CO2 increases plant growth. This is a good thing. People need to be fed.”
Get real Henry. Please. For your own sake.
What bit was bullshit Bella and why?
Adani has a long history of not giving a shit about the poor in their own country Razor so please don’t tell me they would suddenly give over their tax haven billions to put the lights on for nothing in return.
Some stories don’t seem to grab the attention of MrM’s journalists but just about everyone knows why.
Please read this link & try to take it in. Seriously mate.
https://www.northqueenslandregister.com.au/story/4602139/my-adani-fact-finding-mission/
Adani’s MO is to promise jobs, fail to deliver, destroy the environment no matter what protections are in place, then run because history proves they have zero business ethics.
CO2 in the atmosphere is dissolved in rain and lands on the ground as weak carbonic acid H2 CO3. If it lands on silicate bearing rocks (sandstone and limestone), the hydrogen is ionised and it then it dissolves calcium which reaches the sea as calcium carbonate Ca CO3, pH5.6. This is the only source of calcium available for the critters in the sea that depend on calcium to form their shell – oysters, mussels, giant clams, deep sea fronds, other bivalves (and maybe Trivalves!) and all the coral polyps that form the Barrier Reef. No calcium carbonate, no reef. There is no other source.
Its your gullibility that is “beneath contempt” Dismayed, if you believe an additional 300 refugees can suddenly be magically medivaced to Aus at the drop of a GP’s Skype assessment and not impact the pressure already placed on the over-burdened hospital waiting times. Some folk are already waiting up to 80 days for head and neck surgery, while other various elective surgery can extend up to 270 days.
Get real mate.
sigh. cotc. were you born an all day sucker or did you just decide to swallow everything your cons tell you. No cuts to health no cuts, no changes NO surprises. When the feds cut health investment the nation suffers. cotc wake up.
Thats a serious condemnation of the government you have made right there COTC.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-01-21/australias-rich-keep-getting-richer/10731700
I believe it is perfectly possible to have concerns about a particular investigation, trial and verdict but to respect the rule of law.
Nor is being critical of police behaviour and procedure inconsistent with the rule of law, indeed, calling out police or lawyers for going about it the wrong way is part of how the rule of law works.
Julia Baird in the NYT a while ago quoted a figure of 76% of the Aus public believing that Lindy Chamberlain was guilty, and yet some folks thought otherwise. I am certainly glad John Bryson wrote his excellent book skewering the police investigation and the trial.
Some folks are again troubled by the police investigation and the publicity attached to the trial, and that will play out over time and the appeals process. Meanwhile, the sentence is being opposed and the rule of law accepted, which would still be the case off he were released on bail pending appeal.
But what are we to do about the victims, not of this particular crime but those who were abused in unrelated crimes. Richard Glover for instance. Are we meant to require every one to believe every accuser, at least publicly, less we cause harm to Richard and others.
that looks dangerous to me.
Slightly different but all this kerfuffle about the jury etc had me thinking of the Constutions of Clarendon (1164) and Henry II’s attempt to curb criminous clerks.
Pissed off Thomas a’ Beckett no end who like Pell felt the church should deal with its own and we all know how that ended.
“…all this kerfuffle…thinking of the Constutions of Clarendon (1164) and Henry II’s attempt to curb criminous clerks.”
That’s easy for you to say, Trakey!
Read this……weep, cry or rage-how the Liberals destroyed the internet.
https://www.themonthly.com.au/issue/2019/march/1551445200/michael-quigley/what-happened-broadband-australia