The accepted norm in the Irish Church was that its priesthood was celibate and
chaste, and homosexuality was both a sin and a crime. The Church forbade its members (the "
faithful") to use artificial
contraception, campaigned strongly against laws allowing abortion and divorce, and publicly disapproved of unmarried
cohabiting couples and
illegitimacy. Therefore, it came as a considerable surprise when the Irish media started to report allegations of lapses in these aspects of the priesthood itself. The Church's high stated standards had also led on in part to the
Ann Lovett tragedy and the
Kerry Babies case in 1984. A series of television documentaries in the 1990s and 2000s, such as "Suffer the children" (
UTV, 1994),
Suing the Pope or
The Magdalene Sisters, led on to the need for a series of government-sponsored reports and new guidelines within the Church and society to better protect children. In 1995–2002 the emergence of the same problem in the USA led to the view that the Church had attempted to
cover up abuse and misconduct, and was not limited to sexual abuse (see
Catholic sex abuse cases in the United States). By the late 2000s the misconduct was recognised as a
worldwide scandal.
Micheál Ledwith In 1984, a group of seminarians in the 'senior division' of
St Patrick's Seminary, Maynooth, expressed their concerns to the senior dean regarding the inappropriate behaviour of Micheál Ledwith, then vice-president of the college, towards younger students. Ledwith was promoted to President of St Patrick's Seminary despite the allegations. He subsequently resigned as president in 1994 when allegations of
sexual abuse resurfaced. In June 2002, the bishops commissioned
Denis McCullough to investigate allegations reported in
The Irish Times that the bishops had not responded adequately to complaints of
sexual harassment of seminarians at Maynooth College in the early 1980s. McCullough's report, published on 16 June 2005, found that, while the seminarians had not complained directly to the bishops regarding Ledwith's alleged sexual abuse, "concerns of apparent propensities rather than accusations of actual crime or specific offences" had been communicated to the bishops by the senior dean of the college. McCullough concluded "that to have rejected the senior dean's concerns so completely and so abruptly without any adequate investigation may have been too precipitate, although, of course, to investigate, in any very full or substantial manner, a generic complaint regarding a person's apparent propensities would have been difficult".
Brendan Smyth One of the most widely known cases of sexual abuse in Ireland involved
Brendan Smyth, who, between 1945 and 1989, sexually abused and
assaulted 20 children in parishes in
Belfast, Dublin and the United States. The investigation of the Smyth case was allegedly
obstructed by the
Norbertine Order. He was arrested in 1995; however, Ireland's Attorney General did not immediately comply with a request from the
Royal Ulster Constabulary for Smyth's
extradition. The ensuing controversy over the delay led to the collapse of the
Fianna Fáil/Labour coalition government. As of early May 2012
Cardinal Seán Brady was under pressure to resign because as a part of a church investigation into Smyth he only reported the information he gleaned to church authorities and not to the police. The church's subsequent failure to deal with Smyth gave him the opportunity to abuse more children. Brady only resigned when required to do so by canon law upon turning 75 in September 2014. ==Abuse in the state childcare system==