It takes me back a few weeks when my Antipodean regular reader
and correspondent Dr Wellington asked me whether I’d come across the older scandal in the Diocese of London, where the one-time diocesan ‘fixer’ and Head
of Operations Martin Sargeant had been convicted of fraud. Yes I had, I
replied, and my interest was more than it might usually have been because when
the miscreant’s name was first reported I’d realised I’d been to school with him.
Within the outline of the middle-aged bloke in the pictures I could just about
glimpse the teenage boy I remembered from Bournemouth: you didn't believe
much of what he told you even then.
Part of Mr Sargeant’s story involved a now-infamous
debrief with the Archdeacon of London when the former left his diocesan post in which he
delivered what was described as a ‘brain-dump’ of what he claimed to know about
London’s clergy. We now know that this was a compendium of gossip and personal
bile with very little truth to it, but the Diocese treated it as positive allegations of abusive behaviour that had to be followed up. The typical Church of
England habits of secrecy and inefficiency kicked into motion and one result was the suicide of Fr Alan Griffin who spent a year being investigated
for crimes that were never made known to him, and which, the coroner who
examined his death decided, ‘were supported by no complainant, no witness, and
no accuser’.
It struck me that given our current, and completely
understandable, safeguarding culture, it’s hard to stop this happening. We are
all taught that any allegation must be reported and followed up: it rests with others
to decide what is to be done next. What if, as seems to have happened in London,
everyone in the chain feels they dare not be the one who says, ‘this is just poisonous
gossip and we will take it no further’?
The integrity of the local safeguarding team is
presumably crucial. I have had a case which ours regarded as less serious than
I did, and it turned out they were right. On the other hand, I know someone against
whom an allegation was made many years ago, then withdrawn (in neither case by the supposed
victim, who maintained nothing had happened) and, when the priest demanded in a
meeting with the bishop and the Diocesan Safeguarding Adviser the right to
begin the long, difficult process of having the matter expunged from his
record, was told by the DSA that as far as she was concerned he was guilty no
matter what anyone said, and implied that him being ‘obviously a homosexual’ was
proof of paedophilia. The bishop, my informant said, ‘went white’ and insisted
on dissociating himself from the remark (I can mention this as all concerned
are long gone).
At theological college I once found myself marvelling
at the ability of the kitchen to both overcook and undercook rice at the same
time, and the CofE’s safeguarding practice seems caught in the same place, at
once hopelessly lax and unacceptably hypervigilant. The answer, as so many
voices say, is simply to bring the police in whenever any allegation is
made, like every other organisation. Why, yet again, should we imagine we’re so
special?
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