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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 24, 2018)
Page 4 Street Roots • Aug. 24-30, 2018 News / r - _ £ , - f ' BY A D A M SENN O TT C O N T R IB U T IN G W R IT E R hen a Pennsylvania grand jury recently released its findings on child sex abuse in the Catholic Church, the conclusions - and the numbers - were staggering: more than 1,000 identified children abused at the hands of that the ' more than 300 “predator priests,” occurring first wave of victims over decades under a systemic cover-up by the church. usually empowers the The report, released Aug. 15, suggests, second wave of victims, that the real number of victims is much higher, with some records lost to time and which continues for many people too scared to come forward. years." While the report is unprecedented in its MITCHELL GARABEDIA scope, attorney Mitchell Garabedian A T T O R N E Y R E P R E S E N T IN G V IC T II O F C H IL O S E X A B U S E B Y PRIES believes it’s just “the tip of the iceberg.” “There’s many more victims in Pennsylvania, and many more abusing priests,” Garabedian said. “And many more light on decades of abuse in the Boston supervisors who allowed the sexual abuse to archdiocese. The investigation was depicted occur. in the Academy Award-winning movie “It’s been my experience over the “Spothght” decades that the first wave of victims The Globe won a Pulitzer Prize for its usually empowers the second wave of reporting, which led to a flood of thousands victims, which continues for years.” of sexual abuse allegations against clergy Garabedian has represented thousands of members from around the world, including victims who were sexually abused by priests in Canada, Australia, Ireland, Belgium and in the Catholic Church over the past two France, according to the newspaper. decades. In 2002, he helped reporters in Garabedian said he’s been contacted by the Boston Globe’s Spotlight team shed victims as far away as Haiti, Germany and ■ • IS T O C K / G E T T V England. “You name it,” Garabedian said. “It’s unfortunate.” Garabedian said that when he began working with victims who had been abused in 1994, not many people believed him. “People were highly skeptical of me,” he said. “And of the victims.” It all started when a single mother living in Boston’s housing projects came to him worried about changes in the behavior of her three children, Garabedian said. “One was washing his hands every day until they bled,” Garabedian said. “Another one was taking two-hour showers, and another was being violent towards his brothers, which was not characteristic of any of them.” Garabedian said he started investigating the children’s odd behavior and discovered a common thread. “I came to find out, after investigating, that Father John J. Geoghan had been putting them to bed every night, and had been sexually molesting them,” Garabedian said. Other mothers in the housing project started sharing similar stories, Garabedian said. He soon uncovered 86 children who had been abused by Geoghan. After the number of victims reached See G A RABED IA N , page 5