A report said it was believed paedophile priest Roy Cotton had at least 10 victims More evidence of the Church of England’s failure to support sex abuse victims has emerged in a report that was published online and then removed.
Letters in 1966 between the Archbishop of Canterbury and a bishop show Lambeth Palace agreed that convicted paedophile Roy Cotton should be ordained.
In one letter, Lambeth Palace suggested that Cotton should be placed in a “carefully selected parish”.
Lambeth Palace said robust safeguarding policies had been in place since 1995.
The Meekings Report was published online on Wednesday and then taken down. At the same time, another report was released by Baroness Elizabeth Butler-Sloss.
A spokeswoman for the Diocese of Chichester told the BBC the Meekings Report was removed because the document had accidentally included some confidential information.
Both studies looked into the behaviour of Cotton and another paedophile priest, Colin Pritchard.
In a letter to the then Archbishop of Canterbury Michael Ramsey dated 13 May 1966, the Bishop of Portsmouth outlined Cotton’s history, including a criminal offence in 1954, and his repeated requests to be considered for ordination.
“You would do right to consider ordaining him to a title in the carefully selected parish”
Response from archbishop’s secretary, 17 May 1966
It said: “At the time he protested his innocence, and he has done ever since, and in fact from that time has been teaching.”
The letter continued: “I am not sure whether having been convicted there would need to be a dispensation from you and I would be most grateful for your guidance in this matter.
“Cotton is a man of considerable ability… and I cannot think that having been so free of any trouble for 12 years that there is a a likelihood of there being any problem in the future.”
A response from the archbishop’s secretary dated 17 May 1966, said the archbishop was “reassured by what you have said and thinks you would do right to consider ordaining him to a title in the carefully selected parish which you mention”.
On Wednesday, the Church-commissioned report by Baroness Butler-Sloss criticised both senior clergy and Sussex Police over how they dealt with historical claims of abuse by Cotton and Pritchard.
Baroness Elizabeth Butler-Sloss was appointed by the Diocese of Chichester to carry out the review In the report, she said across the diocese “and probably in many other dioceses” there had been “a lack of understanding of the seriousness of historic child abuse”.
She said the victims’ claims were not taken seriously.
The Bishop of Chichester later apologised, while Sussex Police issued a statement saying the force had always taken claims of sexual abuse very seriously.
The retired senior judge also said she believed Roy Cotton had at least 10 victims.
Pritchard served as the vicar of St Barnabas, Bexhill, until 2007 after being arrested over sex abuse claims. In 2008 he pleaded guilty to sexually abusing two boys in the 70s and 80s and was jailed for five years.
“Any case of harm that occurs is a source of deep regret and pain”
Lambeth Palace
The offences took place while he was parish priest at St Andrew’s Church in Wellingborough, Northamptonshire.
The court heard that Cotton had been involved in the offences but died in 2006, two weeks before Pritchard was arrested. Cotton worked as a priest in Brede, near Rye, in the 1990s.
A statement from Lambeth Palace in response to the Meekings Report said: “We would never comment on details of individual cases but always take the line that one safeguarding case in the Church of England is one too many and since 1995 have robust safeguarding policies in place.
“The Church of England takes all safeguarding issues and allegations very seriously and the Butler-Sloss review for Chichester Diocese is an example of this.
“We continue to stress that anyone who has any information or concerns about the suitability of anyone working with children today within a Church setting should share those concerns with the relevant diocesan child protection adviser, or the police or social services.
“The safeguarding of children and vulnerable adults in our care is central to all our activities and any case of harm that occurs is a source of deep regret and pain.”
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