Americas America In
Costa Rica, several priests have faced criminal and canonical proceedings. High-profile cases include Mauricio Víquez, laicized in 2019 and later sentenced to twenty years in prison for abusing a minor, and Manual Guevera who was arrested following complaints in the same year. Additional cases have involved clergy detained at borders, convicted of sexual offenses, or investigated for misconduct. In the
Dominican Republic,
Józef Wesołowski, former
apostolic nuncio, was laicized in 2014 after allegations of abusing minors. He died in 2015 before a Vatican criminal trial could proceed. In
El Salvador, multiple priests, including Jesús Delgado, Francisco Gálvez and Antonio Molina, were laicized after canonical findings of abuse committed between 1980 and 2002. Additional cases have resulted in suspensions, public apologies, and Vatican-imposed sentences. In
Honduras, Pope Francis accepted the 2018 resignation of Auxiliary Bishop Juan José Pineda following allegations of sexual misconduct involving seminarians' concerns about financial irregularities.
Canada, Mexico, and the United States One of the most significant Canadian cases involved the
Mount Cashel Orphanage in St. John's,
Newfoundland, where more than 300 former residents reported abuse by members of the
Christian Brothers. The order later filed for bankruptcy in response to extensive civil litigation. Other major cases include convictions of priests such as Charles Henry Sylvstre and Williamson Hodgson Marshall, both found guilty of abusing minors over several decades. Abuse has also been documented in Catholic run
residential schools attended by thousands of
First Nations children, as Manitoba leader Phil Fontaine described his own experiences of abuse, and author
Michael D. O'Brien revealed that abuse was an epidemic in "residential schools and orphanages." In Mexico, the most widely known case involved
Marcial Maciel, founder of the Legion of Christ, who was accused of abusing numerous minors and fathering children. After years of denial by the order, the allegations were acknowledged in 1998, and Maciel was removed from ministry in 2006. The United States has seen extensive litigation, investigations, and reforms related to clerical abuse. BishopAccountability.org has documented more than 3,000 civil lawsuits, with settlements exceeding 3 billion dollars since 1950. Numerous dioceses, including those in Los Angeles,
Portland,
Seattle,
Denver,
Louisville,
Boston, and
Dallas, have reached major settlements or filed for bankruptcy in response to large numbers of claims. Public awareness increased in the 1980s following cases such as that of
Louisiana priest Gilbert Gauthe, who pleaded guilty in 1985 to multiple counts of child molestation. National attention intensified in 2002 with
The Boston Globe's reporting, which revealed widespread abuse and prompted additional lawsuits, criminal cases, and policy reforms. Subsequent high-profile cases included the conviction of
Minnesota priest Curtis Wehmeyer in 2011, the 2018 resignation of Cardinal
Theodore McCarrick following allegations of abuse, In 2017, the release of
The Keepers renewed allegations that the
Archdiocese of Baltimore had concealed abuse by Rev. A. Joseph Maskell; a 2023 report from Maryland Attorney General later identified more than 600 victims of clergy abuse over the past 80 years, with the archdiocese stating that it was "firmly committed to holding suspected abusers accountable". That same year, the archdiocese filed for
Chapter 11 bankruptcy, a step that paused ongoing lawsuits and moved all claims into the bankruptcy process. In 2019, Archbishop Anthony Apuron of
Guam was removed from office after being found guilty in a canonical trial of abusing minors in the 1970s. Additional cases have continued to emerge, including a 2023 lawsuit in
Colorado alleged more than one hundred instances of abuse at a single parish.
South America In
Argentina, priest
Julio César Grassi was sentenced in 2009 to fifteen years in prison for abusing minors. In 2019, Bishop Sergio Buenanueva publicly acknowledged the Church's history of abuse, while former priest Carlos Eduardo José was cleared of charges that year due to the statute of limitations, despite multiple complaints In
Bolivia, renewed scrutiny followed the 2023 disclosure that former priest Alfonso Pedrajas had written in his diary about abusing dozens of children in the 1970s and 1980s. Pope Francis subsequently sent Monsignor Jordi Bertomeu to investigate. Earlier cases included the 2013 arrest of a priest accused of assaulting seminary students. In Chile, allegations involving
Fernado Karadima and concerns about a cover-up by Bishop Juan Barros led to a major Vatican investigation in 2018. After receiving Archbishop
Charles Scicluna's report, Pope Francis acknowledged errors in assessing the situation Numerous bishops offered their resignations, several were accepted, and Karadima and other senior clerics were laicized. Additional inquiries were later opened, including one involving Archbishop Bernardino Piñera. In
Colombia, investigations in 2021 and 2022 identified numerous priests accused of abuse in Medellín and Villavicencio, though relatively few cases resulted in criminal convictions. In 2020, the Constitutional Court ordered the Church to release internal complaint files, but full compliance has not yet been achieved.
Asia In
East Timor, former priest
Richard Daschbach was convicted in 2021 of sexually abusing girls over several decades. In 2022, allegations of sexual abuse against
Bishop Ximenes Belo were reported in
De Groene Amsterdammer. In India, scholars have noted that many allegations remained unreported or do not progress to formal charges. Additional controversies have arisen over the reassignment of clergy previously convicted or investigated for abuse. In Singapore, author Jane Leigh alleged in a 2013 autobiography that she had been abused by priests as a teenager, prompting a Church inquiry. In 2022, a member of a Catholic order was sentenced to five years in prison for sexually abusing two boys, and his superior received a police advisory for failing to report the offenses.
Europe In
Austria, a 2010 report documented physical, sexual, and emotional abuse by 422 alleged perpetrators, most of whom were priests. In 1995, Austrian
Cardinal Hans Hermann Groër resigned as
Archbishop of Vienna following allegations of abuse. In
Belgium, police raided Church offices in 2010 due to an investigation into abuse allegations following Bishop
Roger Vangheluwe's resignation, as he admitted to molestation. The Vatican protested the raids, and a court later ruled them illegal. In
Croatia, three priests were convicted in separate cases in the Archdioceses of Zagreb, Rijeka, and Zadar between 2000 and 2012. In France, Archbishop
Philippe Barbarin was convicted in 2019 for failing to report abuse by priest
Bernard Preynat, although the conviction was later overturned; Pope Francis accepted his resignation in 2020. Preynat was laicized and later sentenced to five years in prison. An independent commission reported in 2021 that an estimated 3,000 clergy and religious personnel had abused approximately 216,000 children since 1950, with the total rising to about 330,000 when including lay Church employees. Former nuncio
Luigi Ventura also received a suspended sentence in 2020 for sexual harassment. In Germany, a 2018 Church-commissioned study found that 3,677 minors had been abused by clergy between 1964 and 2014, and a 2020 report identified more than 1,400 additional accusations involving members of religious orders. In 2021, Cardinal
Reinhard Marx offered his resignation, citing institutional failures, though Pope Francis declined to accept it. In Italy, the justice system handled about 300 cases of clergy abuse with around 150 to 170 convictions. In
Norway, after revelations by Norwegian newspaper
Adresseavisen, the Norwegian Church and the Vatican acknowledged bishop
Georg Müller resigned in 2009 due to discoveries about his abuse of an altar boy two decades earlier; they were made aware of the incident, but did not alert the authorities, and the law did not allow criminal prosecution. In
Portugal, priest
Frederico Cunha was convicted for the murder of 15-year-old Luís Correia, and four witnesses told the court that they were sexually abused by the priest. Bishop
Teodoro de Faria protested the detention, described Cunha as "innocent like Jesus Christ." Cunha also said that he was a victim of injustice. In April 1988, Cunha escaped to Rio de Janeiro, and the sentence expired on 8 April 2018.
Ireland Beginning in the 1990s, a series of criminal cases and state inquires in Ireland documented widespread abuse over several decades. State investigations found that tens of thousands of children suffered abuse in Church-run institutions from the 1940s to the 1990s. Reports also concluded that senior clergy had, in many instances, reassigned accused priests to new parishes rather than removing them from ministry. Several high-profile cases drew national attention.
Micheál Ledwith resigned as President of
St Patrick's College, Maynooth in 1994 following allegations of misconduct, and the 2005 McCullough Report criticized the inadequate response of Church authorities.
Brendan Smyth was found to have abused children in Ireland and the United States between 1945 and 1989, and controversy over the priest's extradition contributed to the collapse of the Irish government in 1994. In 2010, Dublin priest
Tony Walsh received a lengthy sentence for multiple offenses committed in the 1970s and 1980s. By 2011, six priests had been convicted in cases reviewed by the
National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church. A 2018 list reported more than 1,300 clergy accused of abuse, with 82 convictions. In 2020, an independent review found that the
Catholic Boy Scouts of Ireland and the
Scout Association had, over several decades, failed to act on allegations involving 275 known or suspected abusers. In
Northern Ireland, the Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry, which began in 2014, examined sexual and physical abuse of children in various institutions between 1922 and 1995, including both Catholic and non-Catholic homes. The De La Salle Brothers and the Sisters of Nazareth admitted to physical and sexual abuse in institutions they operated and issued apologies to victims. A 2017 report found that local police, who had also inadequately investigated abuse at the non-Catholic Kincora Boys' Home, had helped Catholic officials conceal reported abuse in four-Catholic run boys' homes in Belfast, which recorded the highest levels of abuse among the 22 institutions investigated.
Poland In
Poland, the public became concerned about reports of child sex abuse scandals and the poor response to it by the Polish Catholic Church. The Polish Church resisted paying compensation to victims and refused to publish sexual abuse data. Bishop
Antoni Dydycz said priests should not rush to report abuse due to the
seal of confession barring revealing confessions. In September 2018, Bishop
Romuald Kamiński apologized to victims, and said leaders were working on a document addressing abuse, the scale of it, and prevention. In early 2019, the document was still not public. In April 2019, the
Episcopal Conference of Poland released data from 10,000 local parishes, finding abuse reports on 382 priests and 625 children sexually abused. Some commentors said that it could be an undercount of the actual numbers. With pressures from the Vatican, the Polish Church apologized and accepted the need to report abuses. In earlier cases, clergy were not required to notify the police, but only investigate themselves, and if necessary, inform the Vatican about the sexual abuse of minors. By May 2019, Polak issued an apology as the documentary
Tell No One, which presented multiple accounts of clerical abuse, drew millions of viewers online. The film highlighted cases such as Father Jan A., who admitted to abusing minors, and raised concerns about priests continuing to work with young people despite prior convictions. In June 2020, Pope Francis removed Bishop Edward Janiak from oversight of the Diocese of Kalisz while he was under investigation for protecting abusive priests, later accepting his resignation. Allegations also emerged involving Franciszek Cybula, former chaplain to Lech Wałęsa. In August 2020, Pope Francis removed Archbishop Sławoj Leszek Głódź, who had been accused of mishandling abuse cases linked to both priests. In November 2020, the Vatican sanctioned Cardinal
Henryk Gulbinowicz after an investigation into abuse allegations, barring him from public ministry and denying him cathedral burial rites. He died shortly afterward.
United Kingdom In the United Kingdom, Cardinal
Keith O'Brien resigned in 2013 due to allegations of inappropriate and predatory sexual conduct with priests and seminarians. In 2020, the
Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse released a report stating that the England and Wales churches covered up allegations, as there was "no acknowledgement of any personality responsibility" by
Vincent Nichols, a cardinal and the senior cleric in England and Wales since 2014. The report said he lacked compassion and cared more about the Church's reputation than the victims.
Oceania The
Catholic Church in Australia has faced extensive criticism for its handling of child sexual abuse cases. By 2011, more than one hundred priests had been charged, and by 2017 the Church had paid the equivalent of 276 million dollars in compensation to thousands of victims. Inquiries found that some Church officials, including Cardinal
George Pell, had been aware of abuse for decades and failed to act appropriately. Popes John Paul II and Benedict XVI issued apologies for the abuse in Australia. The
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse reported that seven percent of Catholic priests in Australia were "alleged perpetrators", and that nearly half of Catholic institutions examined had recorded cases of abuse. The commission documented 4,756 allegations from 4,444 victims involving 1,800 accused individuals, most of whom were priests or religious brothers. Survivors, including Amber Louise, criticized the Church's internal "Towards Healing" process for delaying or mishandling complaints. In 2019, the Church adopted National Catholic Safeguarding Standards aligned with the commission's recommendations. In 2019, former priest
Vincent Ryan received an additional prison sentence for offenses committed against altar boys. In 2020,
Queensland enacted legislation requiring clergy to report child sexual abuse disclosed in confession, with deep penalties for noncompliance. That same year, the Royal Commission found that the Church had failed to act on earlier complaints against Marist Brother Thomas Butler, prompting an apology from the order's leadership. ==Comparison and causes==