ROME (AP) — A retired Canadian judge said Tuesday he couldn’t find any reliable evidence of sexual misconduct by the archbishop of Quebec, after the purported victim refused to cooperate with his investigation and the cardinal strongly denied the claim. Pope Francis had tasked André Denis, a retired judge of the Superior Court of Québec, to conduct a preliminary investigation for the Catholic Church into claims against Archbishop Gérald Lacroix that surfaced in January. The allegations were contained in an amended class-action lawsuit filed in Canadian court against 100 current and former church personnel of the archdiocese. Denis’ investigation has no bearing on that lawsuit and concerns only the church’s handling of the allegations, since the Vatican has its own procedures to deal with misconduct claims against clergy. The Vatican said Tuesday that based on Denis’ report, it planned no canonical trial against Lacroix, 66. |
Taiwan eyes first virus case in two monthsChina and India hold talks over Ladakh border standoff$18m boost for New Zealanders needing to travel for health treatmentEaster weather: Chilly Good Friday forecast as southerly winds sweep New ZealandUS warns China will use Olympics to gloss over abusesTesla, Volvo Car pause output as Red Sea shipping crisis deepensWaymo's robotaxi service expands into Los Angeles, starting free rides in parts of the cityArrests made after Lower Hutt siblings hospitalised with severe injuriesChina's population drops for 2nd year, with record low birth rateOne in critical condition after e