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Chile court orders Catholic Church to compensate victims

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ASSOCIATED PRESS / 2015

In this photo, Rev. Fernando Karadima sits in court before testifying in a case that three of his victims brought against the country’s Catholic Church in Santiago, Chile. A court in Chile ruled today, that the Roman Catholic Church must pay compensation to Juan Carlos Cruz, Jose Andres Murillo and James Hamilton, three victims of Karadima, the country’s most notorious pedophile priest.

SANTIAGO, Chile >> An appeals court in Chile ruled today that the Roman Catholic Church must pay compensation to three victims of the Rev. Fernando Karadima, the country’s most notorious pedophile priest.

The court in the Chilean capital said that the church must pay about $150,000 each to Juan Carlos Cruz, Jose Andres Murillo and James Hamilton for “moral damage.” It also overturned a lower-court ruling that found no proof of a church cover-up.

The ruling could prompt hundreds of other people who have reported clerical sexual abuses or cover-ups by the Chilean Catholic church to seek compensation.

“Today, the Chilean state puts on the record that all institutions are guarantors and should protect the rights of its citizens. And that no one, however powerful they might be, can abuse and cover-up sexual abuses with impunity,” Hamilton told reporters reading from a joint statement by the three victims.

He said the ruling is important, “not only for us in particular, but for the hundreds or thousands of victims of abuse committed by priests and religious members who have suffered the lack of justice, re-victimization, abandonment, complete loneliness, and betrayal to their original commitment of care and accompaniment.”

The office of the Santiago Archbishopric said in a statement that it would not appeal the ruling and that it was in “consent” with the court’s decision, hoping it “will contribute to the process of reparation of the pain suffered by Fernando Karadima’s victims.”

The ruling said that church officials had harmed victims by dismissing their complaints of abuse rather than investigating them.

The Vatican in 2011 sentenced Karadima, a powerful preacher close to Chile’s elite, to a lifetime of penance and prayer for his sex crimes, and Pope Francis defrocked him last year.

During a 2018 trip to Chile, the pope initially dismissed allegations that a bishop had covered up Karadima’s crimes, but he later acknowledged “grave errors in judgment” and asked all active Chilean bishops to offer their resignations.

Chilean abuse survivors had long accused Cardinal Ricardo Ezzati and his predecessor in the Chilean capital, Cardinal Javier Errazuriz, of protecting predator priests and discrediting victims.

The ruling today named them both. The pope removed Errazuriz last year from his informal cabinet and he replaced Ezzati on Saturday.

“This helps all of us who have lived through this horror, and that’s why we’re happy,” Cruz said about the ruling on Twitter.

Part of the evidence that led to the ruling included a 2009 letter from Errazuriz to the apostolic nunciature that showed that he was aware of the abuse.

The scandal first erupted in 2009 when victims publicly accused Karadima of molesting them for years. Errazuriz initially shelved an investigation.

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