EXCLUSIVE: 89% of Rhode Islanders Believe AG Should Investigate Diocese Over Sexual Abuse

GoLocalProv News Team

EXCLUSIVE: 89% of Rhode Islanders Believe AG Should Investigate Diocese Over Sexual Abuse

Bishop Thomas Tobin
Attorney Generals around the country are launching investigations into the role of the Catholic Church as it relates to sexual abuse. So far, thirteen states have announced investigations — Rhode Island is not one of them.

An exclusive poll commissioned by GoLocal and conducted Harvard’s John Della Volpe found that 89 percent of Rhode Islanders believe the Rhode Island’s Attorney General should open an investigation. Just 7 percent oppose an investigation.

The question asks:

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Attorney generals in several states have begun investigating sexual abuse by Roman Catholic clergy, opening investigations and issuing subpoenas for documents.

Do you favor or oppose the Rhode Island Attorney General opening an investigation into the Archdiocese of Providence on issues related to possible sexual abuse of children?

Net: Support    89%

Strongly Support    61%

Somewhat Support    27%

Net: Oppose    7%

Somewhat Oppose    5%

Strongly Oppose    3%

Don't Know    4%

 

Requests for comment from Diocese of Providence were not responded to by the Diocese's press relations office.

Similarly, Democratic candidate for Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha said, “I have no comment on the poll results.” 

Democratic AG candidate Peter Neronha
Neronha did say that, “If elected as Attorney General, I expect that the allegations of sexual abuse by clergy that have been publicly reported (and perhaps others) are something that I would be asked by victims to review, to the extent they are not already under review by the current Attorney General, which may or may not be the case.”

 

New York, Florida and 11 other States Have Launched Investigations

In September, the New York Attorney General Barbara D. Underwood announced a clergy abuse hotline and online complaint form through which victims and anyone with information can provide information – part of the Attorney General’s ongoing investigation into sexual abuse of children within the New York dioceses of the Catholic Church.

“I continue to encourage District Attorneys in all counties to work with the Attorney General’s Office to investigate allegations of sexual abuse in the Catholic Diocese. Past victims and current victims deserve to have their complaints aggressively investigated and those who have committed these horrific crimes must be held accountable,” said District Attorneys Association of New York President, Albany County District Attorney David Soares. “DAASNY is ready to collaborate with the Attorney General’s office to investigate complaints from victims and witnesses.”

In Florida, the Attorney General announced a statewide investigation. “Any priest that would exploit a position of power and trust to abuse a child is a disgrace to the church and a threat to society,” said Attorney General Pam Bondi. SEE ANNOUNCEMENT HERE

“I am calling on victims and anyone with information about potential abuse to please report it to my office. Victim information will be kept confidential in accordance with state law.”   

Bondi stressed that the tip line and website are for reporting past abuse only, not current cases. The site is also not limited to the Catholic church. 

“FDLE will work with the Office of Statewide Prosecution and State Attorneys to independently review records of the Catholic Church to ensure any allegations have been reported and investigated,” said Florida Department of Law Enforcement Commissioner Rick Swearingen during the press announcement. “I thank Attorney General Bondi for her commitment in keeping Florida families safe.”

 

L to R: Tobin, Wuerl, and Pope
Bishop Tobin's Mentor - Cardinal Wuerl Forced to Resign for Ties to Sexual Abuse

On Friday morning it was announced that Bishop Thomas Tobin of the Diocese of Providence’s mentor — Cardinal Donald Wuerl — had resigned in a letter to Pope Francis.

“Cardinal Donald Wuerl, who in a matter of months went from a trusted papal ally who had largely managed to avoid controversy over a long career to a prominent symbol of what many Catholics have come to regard as an infuriatingly weak and defensive response by their church to clerical sex abuse,” reported the Washington Post.

In August, GoLocal reported the connections between Wuerl who once served as the Bishop of the Pittsburgh Diocese and Tobin who served as his Auxiliary Bishop — during a time in which massive sexual abuse was being committed by priests of the Diocese according to a Pennsylvania Grand Jury report.

In Pennsylvania, more than 1,000 were sexually abused by a reported 300 priests.  According to the grand jury report, 99 priests served the Diocese of Pittsburgh. Significant portions of the abuse took place under Wuerl’s and Tobin’s leadership.

"One thing bears repeating, in the interest of making my position abundantly clear and not subject to misinterpretation: in Pennsylvania, a grand jury report statute was essential in reaching the level of transparency achieved there, notwithstanding that few indictments were returned. Rhode Island law does not allow a grand jury to issue a similar report. I believe it should," said Neronha.

 

Harvard's John Della Volpe
The poll 

Sample: N=502 Rhode Island General Election Voters

Interviewing Period: October 5 – October 9, 2018

Directed by: John Della Volpe, Harvard University, SocialSphere, Inc.

SocialSphere -- founded by John Della Volpe, the Director of Polling at Harvard Kennedy School’s Institute of Politics. He is one of America's leading pollsters and appears on "Morning Joe" and "The Daily Show" with Trevor Noah to name a few. 


GoLocal Statewide Poll - FULL RESULTS, Conducted by Harvard's Della Volpe Oct. 2018

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