Jailed Australian Cardinal's fate to be decided next week

By IANS | Published: August 15, 2019 09:26 AM2019-08-15T09:26:05+5:302019-08-15T09:35:10+5:30

An Australian court on Thursday announced that it would hand down its judgment on Cardinal George Pell, who has been convicted to six years in prison for abusing two boys in the 1990s, next week.

Jailed Australian Cardinal's fate to be decided next week | Jailed Australian Cardinal's fate to be decided next week

Jailed Australian Cardinal's fate to be decided next week

The Supreme Court of Victoria here said that the judgment on 78-year-old Pell's appeal, presented in early July, will be handed down on August 21, Efe news reported.

Chief Justice Anne Ferguson, who will decide the outcome along with two other judges, is scheduled to read out the conclusions of the ruling in a session that will be livestreamed, according to judicial sources.

The judges can uphold the conviction, order a retrial or acquit Pell, which means that the cardinal - the Catholic Church's most senior official to be convicted of child sexual abuse - could be released immediately.

The former third-ranking Vatican official and finance minister was convicted in December 2018 after a jury found him guilty on five counts of child sexual abuse against two choir boys at St Patrick's Cathedral in Melbourne between 1996-97.

The verdict was not reported until this February due to a suppression order.

The decision was reached unanimously in a second trial, after the first had resulted in a hung jury.

Pell's defence has presented three arguments in the appeal. One underlines that the jury could not have found him guilty "beyond all reasonable doubt" based on evidence presented at the trial.

The other two arguments, more technical in nature, denounce that the defence was not allowed to present a 19-minute animated video reconstructing the incidents that allegedly showed how Pell could not have committed the abuses, and that Pell was not arraigned - or asked to plead guilty or not guilty - in front of the jury as required.

The Cardinal has been in jail since February and will remain behind bars until the court delivers its verdict.

( With inputs from IANS )

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