Search
This area does not yet contain any content.
Justinian News

Judicial shockers ... Latest from the trouble prone Queensland branch of the Federales ... Administrative law upsets ... Sandy Street overturned ... On the level in Canberra ... Missing aged care accountant ... Law shop managing director skewered ... Ginger Snatch reports from courtrooms around the nation ... Read more >> 

Politics Media Law Society


A Christmas card from 500 Words ... It's Christmas – time to consider Trump, Lehrmann, and Dutton's connections to the word "rape" … It's not Christmas without Lady Mary Fairfax … US Ambassador to Australia – looking for someone from the "diplomatic clown car" ... Read on ... 

Free Newsletter
Justinian Columnists

It's Hitlerish ... Reelection of a charlatan ... Republicans take popular vote for the first time in 20 years ... Amnesia ... Trashing a democracy ... Trump and his team of troubled men ... Mainstream media wilts in the eye of the storm ... Depravity, greed and revenge are the new normal ... Roger Fitch files from Washington ... Read more >> 

Blow the whistle

 

News snips ...


This area does not yet contain any content.
Justinian's Bloggers

Shmagatha Shmistie 2.0 ... Another round with Vardy and Rooney ... Remote evidence from a witness - on the bus ... Brazilian magistrate looses his shirt ... CV qualifications propped up by pork pies ... Fast justice by Scissors & Paste ... Floyd Alexander-Hunt in London with the latest regrettable court-related conduct ... Read more >> 

"Today is about Dad's wishes and confirming all of our support for him and for his wishes. It shouldn't be difficult or controversial. Love you, Lachlan."   

Lachlan Murdoch's text message to his sister Elisabeth on the eve of a special meeting to discuss altering the family trust so that Lachlan would run and control News Corp and Fox News ... Quoted in the opinion of the Nevada Probate Commissioner who ruled against changing the terms of the trust ... The New York Times, December 9, 2024 ... Read more flatulence ... 


Justinian Featurettes

The great interceptor ... Rugby League ... Dennis Tutty and the try he shouldn't have scored ... Case that changed the face of professional sport ... Growth of the player associations, courtesy of the Barwick High Court ... Free kick ... Restraint of trade ... Braham Dabscheck comments ... Read more ... 


Justinian's archive

Litigation's artful delays ... From Justinian's archive ... April 22, 2014 ... Lawyers and the complexity of litigation ... Delay as a defence tactic ... Access to justice includes preventing access to justice ... Reprising the Flower & Hart saga with starring role by Ian Callinan QC ... Abuse of process ... Queensland CJ declined to intervene ... Tulkinghorn on the case  ... Read more ... 


 

 

« How much is at stake? | Main | Gummow on circuit »
Monday
Nov052012

Deny, dispute, defend

Catholic Church's long history of abuse by priests ... Cover-up ... Parliamentary investigation ... The Three Ds ... Running the rabbit ... The whitewash of "independent" investigations ... Vic Police uncover "shocking" figures ... Barry Lane files 

Numerous old lawyers calling the shots

FIRST we had Rupert and co on phone hacking; then Abbott and his claquer, Alan Jones, on misogyny directed at the PM; and now it's the Catholic Church (Victorian chapter) with decades of child abuse by priests and other worthy clerical types.

The Age reported Police Deputy Commissioner Graham Ashton's evidence to the Victorian parliamentary committee inquiring into hundreds of allegations of abuse: 

"Police had statistics for sexual offences by clergy and church workers since January 1956, uncovering 'shocking' figures: 2110 offences against 519 victims, overwhelmingly perpetrated by Catholic priests and mostly against boys aged 11 or 12. But in all that time the church had not reported a single crime to police.

Savaging the church's Melbourne Response protocol for dealing with complaints, Mr Ashton said: 'If a stranger were to enter a church and rape a child it would be immediately reported to police. But if the stranger were a member of the clergy, their special process would be wrapped around him. What is different about the clergy? It is the reputation of the church that creates the difference'."

He said the Melbourne Response was ''based on a flawed notion of independence'', with independent commissioner Peter O'Callaghan QC appointed and paid for by the church.

In another article, Ashton is reported to have told the committee: 

"The Catholic Church systematically hindered police, alerting offenders that they were being investigated, destroying evidence, hiding documents from police with search warrants, seeking injunctions against police, moving offenders, discouraging victims."  

The church's response, no doubt crafted by its lawyers Stonewall, Obfuscate & Delay, was delivered by its local mouthpiece, Archbishop Denis Hart who came to O'Callaghan's defence, saying that for the past 16 years the church had been ''honest and open'' in co-operating with police.

''Any suggestion of a lack of independence of the independent commissioners is a very serious attack on the professional integrity and competence of senior members of the Victorian bar. I reject any such suggestion.'' 

And it's not the first time that O'Callaghan QC in his role as "independent commissioner" investigating complaints of sexual abuse on behalf of the Catholic Church has come in for criticism in handling complaints.

It was reported in August and December 2009 that O'Callaghan had, to use the expression familiar to most lawyers, "run the rabbit" to priests he was investigating when he became aware that police had opened investigations into those priests, but had yet to interview them. 

It's been apparent to your correspondent for some time that one of the problems with the church's "Melbourne Response", and any other whitewash called in aid, is that it has had far too many old-time lawyers both within and outside the organisation calling the shots. 

In such pressing circumstances, all those litigators can do for a client is rely on one or all of the 3Ds: deny the undeniable, dispute the indisputable and defend the indefensible and, as a last resort, if all else fails, try offering a few bob to complainants accompanied by a deed of release to buy their silence.

If the Church still wants to rely on a legal strategy for dealing with complaints of sexual abuse may I suggest that they retain new lawyers called Confess & Avoid, ditch the "Melbourne Response" and sign-up to the model litigant guidelines. 

If senior clerical members of the church continue with the current strategy they might find themselves on the receiving end of a conviction and jail time - viz. Monsignor William Lynn of the Philadelphia Diocese in US

I don't know about charges of child endangerment here, but I can imagine that misconduct by members of the Salesians of Don Bosco, including the order's Australian head at the time, Father Julian Fox, investigated by Sydney University law prof Patrick Parkinson, might give rise to a charge of attempting to pervert the course of justice. 

Reader Comments

There are no comments for this journal entry. To create a new comment, use the form below.
Editor Permission Required
You must have editing permission for this entry in order to post comments.