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McCoy Report

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Report of an inquiry in Ireland

TheMcCoy Report is an eight-year (1999–2007) inquiry by Elizabeth Healy and Kevin McCoy into theBrothers of Charity Order's "Holy Family School" inGalway, Ireland, and two other locations. The Report was published by theHealth Service Executive in December 2007.[1]

Abuse of disabled children over an extended period

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Main articles:Sexual abuse of people with developmental disabilities andAbuse by members of Roman Catholic orders

The report, which was begun in 1999 and made public in December 2007, found that eleven brothers and seven other staff members were alleged to have abused 21intellectually disabled children in residential care in the period 1965–1998. By 2007, two members of staff were convicted of abuse, eight had died and the rest had retired. It emerged that the Order had attempted to transfer at least one accused brother to another place.

Vulnerable people let down by society

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Jimmy Devins, a junior government minister, regretted that "some of the most vulnerable people in society were let down in the past". Brother Noel Corcoran, head of the Order's services in Ireland, apologized. However the McCoy Report was criticized by Dr Margaret Kennedy for not naming the sex offenders who were convicted or dead, and for interviewing just 21 out of 135 complainants.[2]

Special government committee

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In 2010, Kennedy has also criticised theIrish parliament's special committee to enquire into the McCoy Report for not challenging the Brothers who arranged the movements of abusers between Galway, Lota (nearCork city) andLiverpool. Police collusion is suspected and "it seems no one was called to account".[3]

See also

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References

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  1. ^Dr Kevin McCoy (November 2007)."Western Health Board Inquiry into Brothers of Charity Services in Galway"(PDF). Retrieved16 June 2018.
  2. ^"'Vulnerable people' let down, says Minister".The Irish Times. 12 December 2007. p. 6. Retrieved8 April 2009.
  3. ^Irish Times 4 January 2010, p.13.
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