Rome, April 27: The bishop responsible for a politically connected priest accused of molesting seven boys has admitted in court papers obtained by The Associated Press that he knew of the allegations for two years but didn’t remove the priest from working with children.
The case of Rev. Ruggero Conti, who once advised Rome’s mayor on family policy issues, resumes in court on Tuesday after a several-week break as attention increasingly turns to clerical sex abuse in the Vatican’s backyard.
A week after Pope Benedict XVI wept with victims of clerical sex abuse in Malta and promised everything in the church’s power to protect children and bring abusers to justice, Italian victims are now seeking a papal audience.
And Benedict on Sunday indirectly acknowledged that Italy has had its fair share of cases by praising the work of an Italian anti-pedophilia group headed by a Sicilian priest, Don Fortunato di Noto. The pope said he wanted to “encourage all those who are dedicated to prevention and education.”
But casting a harsher spotlight on abusive priests in Italy is the court date Tuesday for Conti, who is on trial in Rome for allegedly molesting seven young boys at the Nativita’ di Santa Maria Santissima parish in a working class neighborhood of the capital.
Conti has denied in court that he abused any of the boys. But he has admitted that he was fond of them, saying that he would cuddle or pat them — using the Italian word “coccole,” which implies paternal affection.
“I can only think that these boys had a distorted interpretation, that their stories have crossed,” Conti said during a 2008 hearing.
In police interrogations, the boys — some as young as 13 at the time of the alleged abuse — said that Conti would masturbate them and force them to perform oral sex on him in his home where he frequently invited them to eat dinner and watch movies.
Conti’s bishop, Monsignor Gino Reali, admitted in a prosecutors’ interrogation obtained by the media that he knew of vague accusations two years before Conti was arrested by police, yet didn’t remove him from pastoral work or otherwise report him to authorities.
Conti was arrested June 30, 2008 — as he prepared to travel with youths from his parish to World Youth Day in Sydney, Australia — and is on trial on charges of sexual violence and prostitution.
The Conti trial is being closely watched as the clerical abuse scandal swirls around the Vatican since it involves a priest who was so well regarded that he served as a family policy adviser to Rome Mayor Gianni Alemanno during his 2008 mayoral election campaign.
–Agencies