A Spanish judge on Wednesday filed preliminary charges of
sexual abuse against three Catholic priests and a religious teacher.
Investigating magistrate Antonio Moreno, in the southern
city of Granada, ordered the suspected ringleader, a priest, to post a $12,500
bond in order to leave jail, according to a court statement and spokeswoman.
The suspect posted the bond, and Moreno released the others from custody
without bond, the statement said.
The four must report regularly to authorities and can't have
any contact or communication with two alleged male victims, the court statement
said.
The judge's decision came two days after the four were
arrested, and just a day after Pope Francis told reporters that he called an
alleged victim in August and urged him to come forward to authorities in Spain.
"The truth is the truth, and we must not hide it,"
Pope Francis said aboard the papal plane, CNN Vatican contributor John Allen
reported in a story for the Boston Globe.
The Pope confirmed that he received a letter from a young
man describing his plight.
"I received it and I read it," Pope Francis said
of the letter. "I called the person and said, 'Tomorrow go to your
bishop.' I wrote to the bishop so he could start his work, do the investigation
and go ahead," the Pope said, Allen reported for the Globe.
Spanish media have credited the young man's letter to the
Vatican -- alleging the abuse when he was a teenaged altar boy -- and then the
surprise phone call from the Pope as big steps toward preventing the events
from remaining a dark secret.
Attorney Javier Muriel, representing all four defendants,
told CNN that they deny the charges, while acknowledging they know the man who
brought the complaint.
The court investigation is under seal, and since it began, a
second man has come forward to allege similar abuses.
The Andalusia regional government's education department in
Granada is moving to terminate the contract for the high school religion
teacher who's facing the preliminary charges. He's been teaching for seven
years, up until Friday, but authorities do not want him back in the classroom,
a department spokeswoman told CNN.
On Sunday, the Archbishop of Granada and other clerics took
the unusual step of prostrating themselves in the cathedral during Mass,
"asking forgiveness for the sins of Church, for all of the scandals that
have, or might have, occurred among us," the Granada Archdiocese website
reported.
The archbishop usually does that once a year, on Good
Friday, but he lay on the floor of the cathedral Sunday because of the
seriousness of the allegations, a Granada Archdiocese spokeswoman said. The
archbishop earlier had removed an unspecified number of priests from their
duties pending an investigation, she said.
The arrests of three priests in a single day over sexual
abuse allegations is the biggest case of its kind in Spain, said a spokesman in
Madrid for the Spanish church leadership, known as the Episcopal Conference.
Since 1997, 10 priests have been convicted of sexual abuse,
in individual cases, most recently in 2010, the spokesman said.
The Pope has called for "zero tolerance" of sexual
abuse by clerics and has said Catholic bishops "will be held
accountable" for failing to protect children from such abuse.
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