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DENVER — Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser released a long-awaited report on Wednesday detailing child sex abuse by Catholic priests in the state.
According to the document, 166 children were victimized by 43 Catholic priests in Colorado over the past 70 years.
On average, it took 19 1/2 years to remove a priest accused of abuse, according to the report.
The findings do not reveal any new abuse by priests, with the most recent in Colorado taking place in 1998.
Weiser is not recommending any new cases be taken up by district attorneys. The report also does not find any active abusers in ministry.
The report highlights 2019 is seeing a higher rate of reporting past abuse than in recent years.
It blasts the Catholic Church for poor record-keeping over the years and for practices that potentially harmed victims.
It accuses the current Crisis Response Team of being biased toward the church, blasting the team for making alleged victims come to the Archdiocese of Denver’s main office and sit in a room with religious symbols and crucifixes that might be trigger images for victims.
Archbishop Samuel Aquila refused to take questions from reporters.
He did, however, promise to implement the recommendations made in the report — including having an outside independent team investigate abuse going forward.
In a recorded video message, Aquila said the report is difficult to read.
“I am truly sorry for the hurt that this abuse has caused,” he said.
Survivors of childhood sexual abuse who have not already reported it can do so through the attorney general’s website.
RELATED: Victims of priest abuse in Colorado are eligible, until the end of November, to file for reparations.
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