Fr Jim Fletcher - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Wed, 22 Aug 2018 02:25:22 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg Fr Jim Fletcher - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Archbishop Philip Wilson of Adelaide found guilty https://cathnews.co.nz/2018/05/24/archbishop-wilson-guilty/ Thu, 24 May 2018 08:09:05 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=107489

Archbishop Philip Wilson of Adelaide has been found guilty of covering up child sexual abuse. He is the most senior Catholic official in the world to be charged and convicted of this offence. The 67-year old faces a possible two-year prison sentence. Wilson will be sentenced next week. He has announced he will stand down from Read more

Archbishop Philip Wilson of Adelaide found guilty... Read more]]>
Archbishop Philip Wilson of Adelaide has been found guilty of covering up child sexual abuse.

He is the most senior Catholic official in the world to be charged and convicted of this offence.

The 67-year old faces a possible two-year prison sentence.

Wilson will be sentenced next week.

He has announced he will stand down from his duties while he considers his legal options.

He says he may formally resign as archbishop if it becomes necessary.

Frank Brennan, an Australian Jesuit priest, human rights lawyer and academic, said Wilson had to stand aside as archbishop of the South Australian state capital.

"I would think that the mind of Pope Francis at this stage would be that if there be a conviction of a bishop in relation to a failure to disclose abuse in circumstances where the state thought that was criminal activity, then I would think the mind of the pope would be that that doesn't measure up in church terms either and that therefore it would be impossible for someone to remain in the job as a bishop," Brennan said.

Brennan said Wilson had complied with the nondisclosure culture of the church in the 1970s.

"There's no doubt that Archbishop Wilson in recent years … has been one of the good guys. He has been one of the bishops in the Catholic Church who have been trying to clean things up," Brennan said.

"But this relates to when he was a young priest. Even someone like him who later got it back in those years was so confined by our culture that it would seem there was no disclosure," he added.

The abuse Wilson concealed was committed by Fr Jim Fletcher in the 1970s.

The prosecutor, Gareth Harrison, told the court Wilson must be jailed to deter others from trying to protect the Catholic church from abuse allegations.

Wilson claimed no-one had ever come forward to tell him of allegations of child sex abuse during his 40 years as a clergyman.

The magistrate cast that claim aside.

Speaking outside court, abuse survivor Peter Gogarty said the verdict was "one of the most significant days in criminal law in Australian history."

"I think this will now open the doors for other jurisdictions to start looking at trying to prosecute people who deliberately looked after their institution and, literally, threw children to the wolves," he said.

"On behalf of all of the victims — who have been abused in this country and elsewhere — I just want to say what an enormous relief it is that the people who let this happen are finally being brought to account."

Wilson also made a statement, saying he would consider the reasons for the magistrate's ruling.

"I am obviously disappointed at the decision published today," he said.

"I will now have to consider the reasons and consult closely with my lawyers to determine the next steps."

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Adelaide's Archbishop misses court https://cathnews.co.nz/2017/11/30/adelaides-archbishop-court-alzheimers/ Thu, 30 Nov 2017 07:07:34 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=102777

Adelaide's Archbishop, Philip Wilson, has been unable to appear in court in a trial about his alleged covering up of child sexual abuse. Wilson's lawyers say he is medically unfit to give evidence because of physical and mental health issues. In 2015 he was charged with covering up a Hunter Valley priest's abuse, which took Read more

Adelaide's Archbishop misses court... Read more]]>
Adelaide's Archbishop, Philip Wilson, has been unable to appear in court in a trial about his alleged covering up of child sexual abuse.

Wilson's lawyers say he is medically unfit to give evidence because of physical and mental health issues.

In 2015 he was charged with covering up a Hunter Valley priest's abuse, which took place in the 1970s.

The priest, Jim Fletcher, has since died.

Adelaide neurologist Associate Professor Andrew Lee told the Court an examination of the 67-year old archbishop after a severe fall earlier this year brought to light a diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease.

He has also recently had a pacemaker installed.

The prosecutor asked Lee if Wilson could have been malingering during these tests.

Lee agreed it was possible, and said the archbishop must be assessed further by a neuro-psychologist to determine if he is fit to stand trial.

He said in his opinion Wilson was a genuine person and wasn't trying to put something over him during the tests.

In a statement, Wilson says many people's initial reaction to an Alzheimer's diagnosis is to think life is all but over.

His statement goes on to say a person with such a diagnosis "cannot continue to live a productive life and contribute to society.

"I am fully aware that some people will now judge me in this light. But I hope to prove them wrong.

"I have been prescribed medication that may assist me greatly in slowing the progress of this disease and indeed improve my present condition."

The Newcastle Local Court has heard that the medication could take six months to work, but it is successful for only one in three sufferers.

Some abuse survivors say Wilson should step down because of his Alzheimer's diagnosis.

Wilson isn't keen to retire yet, however.

"If a point comes in the next eight years before my mandatory retirement, and I am advised by my doctors that the effects of Alzheimer's disease might be beginning to impair my ability to function properly as Archbishop, I will offer my resignation," he said.

Wilson says he has informed the Apostolic Nuncio in Australia of his condition and will provide him with the medical reports.

"I will update him regularly with the results of tests and consultations with my neurologist during the years ahead.

"I am in God's hands and I trust in the love and care of the Lord on the journey of life I have before me."

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