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Home News Australia

Three Victorian Court of Appeal judges retire to decide Cardinal George Pell’s fate after hearing

byMark Bowling
6 June 2019 - Updated on 25 March 2021
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Waiting: Cardinal George Pell.

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Waiting: Cardinal George Pell.

A PANEL of three judges has retired to consider whether there are grounds to quash a sexual assault conviction against Cardinal George Pell. 

During a two-day hearing in Victoria’s Court of Appeal, prosecutors maintained a guilty verdict should stand against 77-year-old Cardinal Pell, who is three months into a six-year gaol term for assaulting two choirboys, in 1996 and 1997, in St Patrick’s Cathedral, Melbourne.

The prosecution, led by Christopher Boyce, QC, told the hearing the complainant – one of the choirboys, now in his thirties – was a credible, compelling witness who should be believed. 

“He was clearly not a liar, he was not a fantasist, he was a witness of truth,” Mr Boyce said.

The complainant had told a jury during Cardinal Pell’s trial that he and a fellow choirboy were 13 when, in December 1996, Cardinal Pell attacked them in the priests’ sacristy, in St Patrick’s, after a Sunday Mass. 

In 1996, Cardinal Pell was the newly-appointed Archbishop of Melbourne. 

He went on to become Australia’s highest-ranking Catholic.

For a second day Cardinal Pell was delivered to court in a prison van, wearing a black suit and clerical collar, which he did not wear when he was sentenced.

Mr Boyce told the appeal judges the prosecution case against Cardinal Pell was based on the complainant’s evidence, and that the complainant had withstood ‘‘searing’’ cross-examination for up to nine hours of evidence at trial.

He said the complainant’s evidence was not only compelling, it was supported by a knowledge of the layout of the sacristy, where the complainant said sexual assault took place.

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‘‘He said he had never been in that room before (the assault),’’ Mr Boyce said.

Yesterday, Cardinal Pell’s barrister Bret Walker SC told the hearing that it was “impossible” for him to have abused the choirboys inside the Melbourne cathedral.

He said the jury’s verdicts were “unsafe and unsatisfactory” based on three grounds, including unchallenged exculpatory evidence from 20 witnesses.

Mr Walker also referred to the complainant’s account that Cardinal Pell was in full ceremonial robes, which he pulled aside to expose himself.

“Incidental to that proposition are matters of physical improbability to the point of impossibility of the simple pulling aside of those robes in order to commit the alleged atrocious acts,” Mr Walker said.

The Cardinal’s legal team also submitted that the judge who presided over the trial should have allowed the jury to view a 19-minute video animation that showed the location of witnesses in the cathedral when the offences were said to have taken place.

They claim Cardinal Pell was greeting the congregation after Mass at the Cathedral’s front door, distant from the sacristy, and this was his alibi, given as evidence at the trial by then-master of ceremonies Monsignor Charles Portelli.

Mr Boyce contended Monsignor Portelli’s evidence was not “a cast-iron” alibi.

The Court of Appeal judges — Chief Justice Anne Ferguson, Justice Chris Maxwell and Justice Mark Weinberg — have reserved their judgement for a future date.

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Mark Bowling

Mark is the joint winner of the Australian Variety Club 2000 Heart Award for his radio news reporting in East Timor, and has also won a Walkley award, Australia’s most-respected journalism award. Mark is the author of ‘Running Amok’ that chronicles his time as a foreign correspondent juggling news deadlines and the demands of being a husband and father. Mark is married with four children.

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