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. |
Chinese premier chairs State Council executive meetingOrganizers start ticket refund process for Messi's noNative Youth Olympics: Alaska’s Indigenous teens emulate ancestors’ Arctic survival skillsInstagram, Facebook. Which rivals would benefit if TikTok is banned?Organizers start ticket refund process for Messi's noInside the lives of the Grand National WAGs: Horse racing's starChinese tourist arrivals to Cambodia's Angkor up significantlyInt'l travel expo kicks off in MacaoUniversal Beijing Resort temporarily closes amid Beijing's increasing COVIDRobin Goodfellow's racing tips: Best bets for Friday, April 26