Sky News host Chris Kenny says the whole Cardinal Pell “saga” was “nurtured, encouraged and vindictively promoted by the national broadcaster”.
On Tuesday, Cardinal Pell had his sexual abuse conviction overturned by Australia’s highest court, in a unanimous decision, after having spent 405 days in jail following an initial ruling which had found him guilty in 2018. “The fall-out from the Pell case will go on for a long while yet,” Mr Kenny said. He said the Cardinal “was wrongly convicted, wrongly imprisoned and a grave injustice was done”.
“Clearly, many who are understandably sickened by the sins of some within the Catholic church, wanted to make an example of George Pell”. Mr Kenny said the ABC has “attacked” those who claimed Pell’s innocence and continues to play “media games”. He said work must be done to ensure “we can have faith in the police and law enforcement authorities, and in the justice system”.
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FIRST SIGHT OF PELL: Watch the moment George Pell is released from prison | Sky News AustraliaGeorge Pell has left Victoria's Barwon Prison after his sexual abuse conviction was overturned unanimously in the High Court.\n\nMr Pell spent 405 days in jail after an initial ruling found him guilty in 2018.\n\nCardinal Pell said he held “no ill will toward my accuser” adding “I don’t want my acquittal to add to the hurt and bitterness so many feel; there is certainly hurt and bitterness enough”. \n\nImage: Supplied\n\n
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George Pell High Court decision LIVE: Cardinal to be freed from prison after conviction overturnedThe High Court has granted Pell leave to appeal his convictions, and allowed that appeal. Read the full summary judgment in our live blog
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George Pell High Court decision LIVE: Cardinal to be freed from prison after conviction overturnedCardinal George Pell has left prison. Footage taken from the Nine News helicopter, showed a convoy of fours cars, led by a white Mercedes, leaving Barwon prison at 12.30pm
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To some Cardinal George Pell 'will always be guilty' | Sky News AustraliaSky News host Peta Credlin says the High Court's decision to unanimously quash the conviction of George Pell is not the end of the controversy because 'so many have invested so much in their campaign against him' for crimes others have committed.\n\nOn Tuesday, Carinal Pell had his sexual abuse conviction overturned by Australia's highest court after having spent 405 days in jail following an initial ruling which had found him guilty in 2018.\n\nMs Credlin said 'it was always going to be hard to find an unbiased jury' given the 'real failings of the church in coming to grips with the sexual abuse epidemic' and Cardinal Pell's 'seeming lack of empathy' when it comes to the plight of victims.\n\n'To some, Pell will always be guilty, regardless of the High Court's judgment, because all priests are suspect, and every complainant is to be believed,' she said.\n\nMs Credlin said following the initial guilty verdict in 2018 her faith in the two institutions which had 'done so much to shape my life' - the Catholic Church, and the law - had been seriously challenged.\n\n'After today's judgment, for me at least, the High Court has pretty much restored my faith in our legal system'.\n\nMs Credlin said as difficult, 'dispiriting and gut-wrenching' as the historical sexual abuse crimes which have been committed across the world including Australia may be, it 'cannot justify in the words of the High Court today 'a significant possibility that an innocent person has been convicted because the evidence did not establish guilt to the requisite standard of proof''.\n\nImage: AP
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Cardinal Pell 'became the scapegoat for his church': Andrew Bolt | Sky News AustraliaCardinal George Pell “should never have been convicted” with his persecution representing “one of this nation’s greatest miscarriages of justice,” according to Sky News host Andrew Bolt. \n\nMr Bolt said a “witch hunt” has permeated facets of society against the Cardinal, which has subsequently “ruined his reputation, destroyed his brilliant career” and “robbed him” of his freedom. \n\nOn Tuesday, Cardinal Pell had his sexual abuse conviction overturned by Australia’s highest court, in a unanimous decision, after having spent 405 days in jail following an initial ruling which had found him guilty in 2018.\n\nCardinal Pell had come out and said he holds “no ill will toward my accuser” adding “I don’t want my acquittal to add to the hurt and bitterness so many feel; there is certainly hurt and bitterness enough”.\n\nMr Bolt said shame should fall upon the “state institutions which tried so destroy a man loathed by the Left as a conservative and chosen by the mob to be the scapegoat for his church.”\n\n“Shame also on the ABC, our national broadcaster, for hysterically promoting damaging claims against Pell that all turned out to be too absurd to lead to charges, or too flimsy to go to trial, or now, too weak to survive an appeal”. \n\nMr Bolt also showed a recreation of the alleged timeline of events which were levelled against Cardinal Pell saying, “neither Pell, the supposed criminal, nor his victims could have been at the scene of the crime at the only time the crime was possible”. \n\n“It seems the High Court agreed”.\n\nImage: AP
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George Pell appeal: Cardinal to keep church titles, OAMCardinal George Pell is widely expected to keep his various titles following his successful High Court appeal against child sexual abuse convictions.
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