Updated at 3:11 p.m.
The Springfield, Massachusetts, Catholic Diocese has a new protocol for notifying district attorneys of clergy sexual abuse complaints. The change comes after a copy of a report could not be found at a DA's office.
In January, Rebecca Koske went to the Northwestern District Attorney's office looking for a report of sexual assault that took place in a church rectory in Northampton. Her father was the victim and had ed the complaint with the diocese years before.
Koske said an assistant DA told her the office had no record of it.
Hampden County DA Anthony Gulluni said on Tuesday that his office also had not received the Koske abuse report at the time Rebecca Koske requested it in January.
At a news conference Tuesday, Gulluni announced his office is launching a “clergy sex abuse hotline.” He said the hotline is for sexual abuse victims and their families who may want to report the abuse directly to law enforcement.
Gulluni said the Springfield Diocese recently reported that it fielded 15 reports of clergy sexual abuse in 2018.
“Following a period of appropriate due diligence by my office in reviewing its files, we have not received referrals of any kind from the dioceses that comport with its own public statements,” Gulluni said. “We believe there are at least discrepancies, I think, to put it mildly.”
In Northampton, First Assistant DA Steven Gagne said in a statement that after a thorough review of its files, the office has no record of receiving the Koske report from the diocese.
But the Diocese insists it let both district attorneys know about the allegations in 2011.