God knows there are few people of less widespread sympathy than Cardinal George Pell, found guilty of child sex abuse late last year.
The man who was once named as an outside bet for Pope has been a hate object for secularists for decades and not without reason. He has waged religious and cultural war in Australia and the world to prevent any deviation from the Catholic church’s arcane and convoluted position on homosexuality, contraception and much more.
He’s happily jumped into standard right-wing myths, such as climate change denialism. He’s done it all as he rose through the Vatican hierarchy, becoming a NSW right-style numbers man for ecclesiastical conservatives. His defence of the church — as the scale of its systematised child abuse, which can only be described as satanic, became clear — was arrogant, high-handed and graceless throughout. One can understand why progressives would be so quick to jump on a guilty verdict, which establishes, in the eyes of the law, that he sexually assaulted two choirboys in the 1990s.
The verdict has prompted an outpouring of triumphalism and scorn, much of which Pell’s equally arrogant and dismissive supporters richly deserve.
Nevertheless, people who call themselves progressive, secular, radical or the like, should take pause and step back from this sort of raw political barracking. One doesn’t have to relitigate the trial — as commentators like Andrew Bolt are doing, without the burden of actually sitting through the weeks of evidence — to have some wariness about identifying the process of the justice system with the establishment of truth and falsehood.
Pell’s adversaries are now enjoying themselves being able to say, without fear of defamation proceedings, that Pell is a child sexual abuser, a rapist etc, and attaching that to his decades-long resistance to any real contrition by the Catholic church in Australia. But to do so is to put faith in the essentially occult process of justice. The somewhat magical process by which someone is innocent up to the point of the jury’s verdict, and then suddenly and wholly guilty, does not of itself establish what actually happened in this or any other case. It simply establishes what was found to be “beyond reasonable doubt” by the current standards of what constitutes reasonable doubt.
There are more grounds than in many cases to separate what has been legally proven and judged from what is certain as a historical event. Unlike Pell’s right-wing barrackers I’m not going to pretend to be able to judge the evidence based on summarised reports of it. But what is not in dispute is that one of the hitherto alleged, now non-alleged, victims is dead, and that the evidence of the other was the sole account of the crimes for which Pell has been found guilty; that the events occurred twenty years ago; and that one jury could not come to a verdict in a previous trial.
Even if you don’t go into all that tendentious psychologising of the right — would an ambitious man risk his whole career/would he commit such crimes after a solemn service etc etc — it’s reasonable to pay attention to the particular character of the case against Pell.
We’ve decided, in our era, that someone can be tried for alleged events that occurred twenty years ago, and with a single witness, who is also the alleged victim. At an earlier time, the notion that a verdict beyond reasonable doubt could be established from that would have been dismissed out of hand. Which legal regime is right? The answer is that it’s undecidable. The decision to try or not to try someone in such circumstances works off entirely different ideas of priority and right.
To thus conclude that, by finding someone guilty, the system has established the truth is simply absurd. What if the conviction is reversed on appeal? Does Pell become automatically innocent in anything other than a legal sense? Do events now regarded as having occurred, simply be un-occurred?
There’s a real danger for progressives in conceding the idea that an arm of the state — which the court system is — establishes what did and didn’t actually happen. There are quite a few Indigenous and African-Australian adults and children in jail and detention on the evidence of a single cop, or two cops whose evidence sounds suspiciously complementary. The pro-Pell right doesn’t give a damn about them, and its discovery of the rights of the accused is predictably selective.
But just because they don’t have values other than the political doesn’t mean we shouldn’t. Pell has been convicted of child sexual assault. That may be overturned on appeal. Neither result will change my opinion that he’s the sort of Catholic focused on worldly power, Church authority, unreasoned reactionary values and lacking, publicly at least, in the values of love and humility presented in the Gospels.
But equally, such an opinion of him does not for me guarantee that he is a child sex abuser, or that I should regard a legal judgement on him, or anyone, as establishing, incontrovertibly, the facts of the matter.
I agree, Guy. Outrage is such a comforting, cathartic emotion. It feels good to be able to finally let all that anger out. It seems to be part of the human condition that as soon as we think can justify it, we grab it with both hands. However; both media and politicians seem to have tumbled to this and in a world where it’s increasingly difficult to grab audience attention from all the competing noise, triggering outrage is an easy way to go. We can see it in Trump’s appeal to the masses, but we can see it #metoo as well.
For me, Pell represents all of what I most dislike about not only Catholicism but religion in general. It’s easy and very tempting to pile on in with the rest of the crowd but, may non-God help me, there’s a little voice inside my head suggesting that perhaps I should hold back on doing that.
Well said.
Guy, a very forthright piece, which is definitely pissijg against the progressive wind. As much as I also loathe Pell, the questions you raise here should give us all pause.
There definitely has been a lowering of the evidentiary bar over the past decade when prosecutors are determining what cases to take to court.
You’re right to raise concerns about whether this will always result in the delivery of genuine justice.
However, given how difficult it has been in the past to secure convictions for sex crimes – when it often comes down to one person’s word against another’s – there is a case to say that a complainant should be allowed to have their testimony tested in court even if there is no other corroborating evidence.
We should also remember that the defence did not challenge the members of the selected jury: if they had done so, another panel would have been produced for selection to take place.n This means that the defence accepted that the jury would be fair to their client.
Nah, sorry – even his conviction is overturned I still think he is a horrible man with empathy for nothing other than the church’s money and power.
He richly deserves all the opprobrium he is getting and more.
I think you may have hit the nail on the head, he has been retributed
Ill-considered.
That is Solomon like, thank you Guy.
There’s always doubt about any conviction. Was Pell guilty? I don’t know (although I admit to not a little Schadenfreude, since it couldn’t have happened to a nicer fellow).
It’s been suggested that Pell’s chance of having the verdict overturned on appeal aren’t good. Apparently, it’s not considered a good tactic to decline to give testimony (and be subject to cross examination). It’s virtually conceding only one account of events.
Pell had the best defence that money can buy. He took his time consenting to appear. He waited until it suited him to face his accusers. He was treated with the utmost respect throughout. Nobody would have shouted at him in court. His movement to and from the court building was protected by grovelling minions and a multitude of police, probably at taxpayer expense, nobody threw eggs nor tomatoes. From start to finish Pell was treated as if he were innocent of child abuse. The jury listened to the evidence and found him guilty.. The world is shocked by the realisation that this man who for so long and so strongly dictated other peoples’ sexual behaviour was himself a contemptible abuser of children. We cannot justify claiming “He doesn’t look like a child molester, I do not accept the verdict.” The jury is satisfied, so am I.
“It’s virtually conceding only one account of events.” Now we see that this might be basis for challenge. ???????
There are a few key differences between Pell & the African-Australians you mention, such as:
1. Pell had the best defence lawyers money could buy, the latter usually can only “afford” court appointed counsel.
2. There was a media blackout for the bulk of Pell’s trial, whereas African-Australians are subjected to “trial by media”.
3. Regardless of what is decided on appeal, Pell is already guilty of shielding pedophiles from justice, whilst allowing them to continue their crimes in new parishes. That is as vile a crime as pedophilia in my eyes. The worst most African-Australians can be accused of, in most cases, is relatively low level property crime and/or minor physical assault.
Point 3, times 10. I have always wondered why clergy who shield paedophiles from the law aren’t also guilty of a crime when any other profession is obliged to report.
I admit to not understanding our system of justice and always backed Evan Whittons view that we should move to the French legal system. This can’t be the best we can do.
‘…we should move to the French legal system.’
Hopefully not the same one which convicted Dreyfus.
Careful what you wish for. A north European advocat’s training is similar to an accountants. One follows points of law as written down, its not adversarial or a debate. On that basis Pell’s outcome might be quite different.
Of course it’s not adversarial or a debate. That’s why the system is better. it is not a contest to determine who is the best debater. It is a system designed to establish the truth. European systems don’t all have the same training systems. Which is this mysterious ‘North European’ country you refer to?
I’m no expert. A dutch friend of mine once complained bitterly at their system of justice, where lawyers more or less learned the processes and laws as they are written, similar to how accountants are trained in the art of accounting. A very black and white system with little room for nuance. I believe other European countries have a similar systems.
Well Bref, our lawyers have to learn both precedent (Comman-law) and statutory laws as they are written too. Nothing exceptional there. Maybe your Dutch friend needs to be careful about what he wishes too. As for black and white, our justice system needs to be black and white.
A decision has to be made whether a person is guilty or not guilty. No need or use for nuance there. The big flaw in our system is that it’s not just that a panel of 12 jurors need to make their decision, beyond a reasonable doubt, that decision has to be unanimous, otherwise it’s a hung jury and a mistrial.
I hope you are not comparing France’s legal system to that during Dreyfus’s trial in the late 19th century. You do realise we are currently in the 21st century!
Ah, Dreyfus. The first great victory for what we now call “public relations”. What a campaign that was…
So try him for those things…
I’m with you, I think he’s entitled, loathsome and a fraud, guilty of perverting justice in hiding pedophile priests; but that’s not what he was on trial for…
I have no difficulty imagining such a man perpetrating such sins as he’s been convicted of, it’s the ‘beyond reasonable doubt’ that’s at issue for me.
I find it interesting that so many people are referring to Pell’s council as ‘the best money can buy’. He seems to me to have been remarkably similar to Pell himself. And his comments about the implausibility of neither of the two young boys running for help (clearly he’s never been victimised) and ‘vanilla’ sex are revolting and completely lacking in either empathy or imagination.
Which ‘Pell’s council’?
he was complicit in covering up evil child sexual assaults spanning decades if regular people are charged with aiding and abetting or guilty by association then it is good enough for this monster too