On 22 June 2017,
Victoria Police announced Pell's arrest charges of historical sexual assault. Pell was accused of sexually assaulting two 13-year-old
choirboys after mass at St. Patrick's Cathedral in East
Melbourne, shortly after his appointment as Archbishop of Melbourne in 1996. The alleged victims, known as victims 'A' and 'B', remain unnamed. B died before A's allegation was reported to police. Pell was tried twice in the County Court of Victoria and convicted on the second trial. His appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal was rejected by that court.
County Court trials Two trials were conducted at the
County Court of Victoria, where Pell pleaded not guilty to all charges. The initial trial ended in September 2018 with a
hung jury, as they were unable to reach a unanimous verdict. A second was held in December 2018. The
prosecution alleged that Pell encountered boys A and B drinking wine in the church
sacristy. Pell was said to have forced B's head towards his genitalia, and then forced A to
fellate him. Pell was then said to have fondled A's genitals while masturbating for five to six minutes. A claimed that about one month later, Pell pushed himself against him and touched A's genitals through his choir robes. B was deceased, and had stated to his mother before his death that he had never been sexually abused while a choirboy, so "the prosecution case was wholly dependent upon the truthfulness and reliability of A's evidence." The key issue argued by the prosecution at the lower trials had been whether A's evidence was reliable or credible; the High Court issue was whether A's evidence should be determinative in the face of unchallenged alibi witnesses. In both County Court trials, the juries considered several other factors. After mass, boys A and B were part of a strict procession, and Pell's defence team argued it would be impossible for either to leave this procession without being noticed. A witness testified that he introduced Pell to his mother on the steps of the church, which the prosecution conceded if true, meant Pell would not have had the opportunity to commit the sexual abuse of A and B in the first instance. The prosecution though, argued Pell may have been left alone for a short period while church aides tended to other duties. Pell was represented by
Robert Richter, who claimed "only a madman" would sexually assault children in the sacristy after mass given the number of people coming and going from the room. The defence team also argued that the church robe worn by Pell, by nature of its design, would have made it impossible for Pell to expose himself. Questions were also raised as to why the choirboys never informed anyone of what happened until A contacted police in 2015.
Judge Kidd informed the juries that many sexual abuse victims do not immediately report the abuse, if ever. The defence team argued Pell could not have conducted the second alleged act of abuse, submitting that someone would have noticed Pell pushing a small child into a wall. The second jury found Pell guilty of all charges. Subsequent higher courts noted that the prosecutor had acknowledged to the jury "that there were a number of seemingly irreconcilable differences between A's account and the evidence to be given by other prosecution witnesses" and summarized "the prosecution case was that the evidence of the witnesses apart from A left open a
realistic possibility that the offending that he described had occurred."
Supreme Court appeal Pell appealed to the
Victorian Supreme Court of Appeal, that the conviction was unreasonable and that the court should overturn it and find him
not guilty of all charges. The appeal was dismissed, with a majority of the court, consisting of
Chief Justice Ferguson and
Justice Maxwell, finding it was open for the jury to be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt on the evidence presented that Pell was guilty. The minority
dissenting opinion, by
Justice Weinberg, a criminal law specialist and former
Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions, concluded that the jury ought to have had a reasonable doubt about Pell’s guilt. == High Court appeal ==