Australian court to rule on Wednesday on appeal by Vatican’s former treasurer

11 November, 2019 | Australia News
Australian Cardinal George Pell speaks to journalists at the end of a meeting with the sex abuse victims at the Quirinale hotel in Rome, Italy, March 3, 2016. (Photo: Reuters/ File Photo)

MELBOURNE – Australia’s High Court will rule on Wednesday whether to allow a final bid by Vatican former treasurer George Pell to overturn his convictions for sexually abusing two 13-year-old choirboys in the late 1990s.

Pell, the highest ranking Catholic worldwide to be convicted of child sex offences, was jailed in March for six years, and would become eligible for parole in October 2022, aged 81.

In September, Pell sought leave to appeal against a ruling by the appeal court in the southeastern state of Victoria that upheld his conviction on five charges of abusing the boys at St Patrick’s Cathedral when he was archbishop of Melbourne.

The High Court will hand down its decision at 9:30 am, the court’s spokesman said. If it grants leave to appeal, the case will be heard in 2020.

Pell’s lawyers appealed against the 2-1 decision by the Court of Appeal, saying the majority were wrong in concluding that the verdicts were not unreasonable.

They were also wrong in shifting to the defence the burden of proving it would have been impossible for Pell to have committed the offences, the lawyers said.

 

Reuters