The most senior Vatican official ever charged in the Catholic Church sex abuse crisis made his first court appearance in Australia today in a scandal that has stunned the Holy See and threatened to tarnish the pope's image as a crusader against abusive clergy.
Cardinal George Pell, Australia's highest-ranking Catholic and Pope Francis' top financial adviser, has maintained his innocence since he was charged last month with sexually abusing multiple people years ago in his Australian home state of Victoria.
The details of the allegations against the 76-year-old cardinal have yet to be released to the public, though police have described the charges as "historical" sexual assault offenses meaning crimes that occurred years ago.
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He has not yet entered a plea. Today his lawyer Robert Richter told the court Pell planned to plead not guilty at a future court date.
The cardinal's court appearance lasted just minutes and was remarkably routine.
Yet the image of one of the most powerful men in the Catholic Church standing before a cramped courtroom overflowing with journalists and spectators was anything but. The pedestrian setting of the Melbourne Magistrates' Court could scarcely have been further in both geography and atmosphere from the hallowed halls of the Vatican, which has been rocked by the charges against Pell.
Though many clerics have faced allegations of sex abuse in recent years, Pell is by far the highest-ranking church official ever charged.
He entered the courthouse flanked by security guards, and received a smattering of applause from several members of a local parish who attended the hearing to support the cardinal.
To them, the cardinal has been preemptively and unfairly condemned before the facts of the case are known.
"We're coming here open-minded, we'd like to hear the facts," said Trevor Atkinson, who has met Pell previously. "It's really a matter of giving him a fair go."
To others, the appearance in court of one of the church's most esteemed officials was a long overdue acknowledgement of the suffering felt by so many victims of clergy abuse.
Julie Cameron of Melbourne stood outside the courthouse holding a painting of Mary cradling an infant Jesus, an image she said was symbolic of the church's duty to protect children.
"This is where the actual Catholic Church has to go through renewal," Cameron said. "It has to acknowledge the crimes that were committed on children."
The case places both the cardinal and the pope in potentially perilous territory. For Pell, the charges are a threat to his freedom, his reputation and his career. For Francis, they are a threat to his credibility, given he famously promised a "zero tolerance" policy for sex abuse in the church.
Advocates for abuse victims have long railed against Francis' decision to appoint Pell to the high-ranking position in the first place; at the time of his promotion in 2014, Pell was already facing allegations that he had mishandled cases of clergy abuse during his time as archbishop of Melbourne and, later, Sydney.
In 2014, Francis created a commission of outside experts to advise him and the broader church about the best ways to fight abuse and protect children. But the commission suffered a credibility setback when two members who were abuse survivors left in frustration.
And the commission's signature proposal, a tribunal to hear cases of bishops who covered up for abuse, was scrapped by the pope himself after Vatican officials objected.
So far, Francis has withheld judgment of Pell, saying he wants to wait for Australian justice to run its course. And he did not force the cardinal to resign, though Pell took an immediate leave of absence so he could return to Australia to fight the charges.
Pell said he intends to continue his work as a prefect of the church's economy ministry once the case is resolved.
In recent years, Pell's actions as archbishop came under particular scrutiny by a government-authorized investigation into how the Catholic Church and other institutions have responded to the sexual abuse of children.
Australia's Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse - the nation's highest form of inquiry revealed earlier this year that 7 percent of Catholic priests were accused of sexually abusing children in Australia over the past several decades.
In testimony to the commission last year, Pell conceded that he had made mistakes by often believing priests over those who said they had been abused.
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