Also this week, by court order, Church personnel records and correspondence were made public, containing what victims and their lawyers say is evidence that Church officials knew more than they had acknowledged about abusive priests and did not immediately remove them from ministry.
Michael Paulson is religion writer forthe BOSTON GLOBE. Michael, welcome. Let's begin with the debate about the bankruptcy possibility. What are the major arguments, for and against?
MICHAEL PAULSON: Well, the major argument in favor of bankruptcy is that it would allow the Church to bring some kind of organization to what's been an extraordinarily chaotic legal and financial situation for them with more than 450 victims pressing lawsuits, with revelations coming out steadily as files on priests are released. The arguments against are coming from many quarters. There are victims who are upset, who believe that the threat of bankruptcy is just that, a threat, and an effort to get them to settle. There are priests who don't like the symbolic import of the word "bankruptcy." They think it suggests a kind of moral and spiritual bankruptcy as well as financial bankruptcy. And for the archdiocese itself, bankruptcy would require turning over control of financial assets and of documents to a federal judge, which is something that no diocese in the country has ever allowed.ABERNETHY: And what was most important about the documents that were released this week?
PAULSON: The documents this week were really extraordinary. We've had a lot of extraordinary cases of revelations about abuse by priests in Boston this year. But this week for the first time we saw allegations that a priest had physically beaten his housekeeper, that a priest had traded drugs for sex with a minor, and that a priest had stood idly by as his lover and the mother of his two children died of an overdose. Those kinds of allegations, in addition to the numerous allegations that priests had sexually abused minors over a number of decades, have really infuriated Catholics here in Boston.



ABERNETHY: And beyond the status of Cardinal Law, quickly, what else do people want?