Los Angeles Cardinal Roger Mahony certainly deserves his rightful
share of criticism and rebuke for his handling of the church abuse
scandal. However, a front-page headline in today's Los Angeles Times
(Saturday, December 2, 2006) delivers an unfair and misleading
impression over supposed "inaction" by the Cardinal.
Yesterday the Los Angeles Archdiocese announced it will pay a $60
million settlement to 45 people who say they were abused by Catholic
priests. Today's Times reported the news with five articles and 5078
words. (Two articles are on the front page: one is the major headline at
the top of the page, and another is at the fold. The five articles I've
counted also include a 'Q&A' piece and a Church-bashing commentary by
staffer Steve Lopez.)
One of the front-page articles is,
"She can't forgive Mahony's inaction," by Times staffer John Spano.
It is the sad and horrific story of 67-year-old Mary Dispenza Esfahan,
who was raped at age 7 by her priest, George Neville Rucker. ("Rucker,
now 86, was criminally charged in 2002 with 29 counts of molesting seven
girls in Los Angeles during the 1970s.")
But what is "Mahony's inaction" that is spoken of in the headline? Is
the Cardinal accused of covering up for Rucker's crimes? Is he accused
of shuffling the criminal priest to other parishes where he abused other
minors? Did Mahony ignore allegations that Rucker had molested kids? The
article says none of this.
After a lengthy and heart-wrenching account of Ms. Esfahan's
decades-long story, we don't learn of "Mahony's inaction" blared in the
headline until the fourth-to-last paragraph of the article.
She [Esfahan] says she's forgiven Rucker — "He's sick, he's a
pedophile" — and "I can forgive the church." But she can't forgive
Cardinal Roger M. Mahony.
She said she wrote to Mahony two years ago and has yet to receive
a response. "I'd like to tell him what this meant for me. I'd
like to tell him how he's hurting the church," she said.
Dispenza has retired and is living in Seattle. She said there are
long periods of her life of which she has no recollection.
It turns out that "Mahony's inaction" blared in a headline on the
front page of the newspaper is the allegation that the Cardinal
has not responded to a letter. Did Spano question the Cardinal or
the archdiocese about the letter? Do we know if the Cardinal actually
received and read the letter? The article doesn't say.
Again - Cardinal Mahony has a lot to answer to regarding the
church abuse scandal. However, a front-page article trumpeting "Mahony's
inaction" alongside major front-page news of a multi-million
dollar settlement in the church abuse scandal gives a misleading
impression. The headline would certainly give the casual reader the
impression of a much more serious criminal "inaction" than not
responding to a letter. According to the Times' own article, up until
two years ago, Cardinal Mahony played almost no role at all in
the decades-long story of the woman (Ms. Esfahan) whose picture graces
the front page.
As sad and tragic as Ms. Esfehan's story is, the episode of "Mahony's
inaction" - not answering a letter, apparently uninvestigated by the
Times - is unworthy of its prominent front-page headline. It appears the
Times' desire to attach a well-known name to a sad story outweighed
their better judgment.