False Churches, False Brethren, False Gospels
Court rules to allow Belgian clergy abuse inquires
The Associated Press
Friday, August 13, 2010; 10:24 AM
BRUSSELS -- A Brussels appeals court ruled Friday to allow an
investigating magistrate to continue looking into alleged sexual abuse
by Roman Catholic clergy, in cases that came to light after police
seized documents, computers and data discs from the Belgian
archbishop's residence in June.
The court dismissed a church complaint claiming the police raid had
been excessive. During the June 24 raid, police detained a dozen
Belgian bishops and the Vatican's envoy to Belgium for eight hours in
the residence in Mechlin, north of Brussels, while demanding they
surrender their cell phones.
Investigators also seized 500 case files from a church-created panel
looking into charges of sexual abuse by clergy and used power tools to
open a prelate's crypt in Mechlin's St. Rombout Cathedral.
"The investigating magistrate can continue with his investigation,"
said Estelle Arpigny, a spokeswoman for the Brussels prosecutor's
office.
Under Belgian law, the appeals court does not have to publish its
findings about ongoing investigations. It investigating magistrate Wim
DeTroy continue his work on the alleged clergy abuse cases.
The June 24 raids, code-named Operation Chalice, provoked a fierce
Vatican reaction but no public outcry in a country where abuse charges
have implicated senior church officials.
On April 24, Belgium's longest-serving bishop, Roger Vangheluwe,
resigned, admitting to having sexually abused a nephew when he was a
priest and archbishop.
His case has cast a cloud over the conduct of former Archbishop
Godfried Danneels, who retired in January.