Timeline of Cardinal Pell child sex abuse case

Cardinal George Pell walks from a car in Melbourne on February 14, 2019. PHOTO | WILLIAM WEST | AFP

What you need to know:

  • His star rose fast, and in 2003 he was named to the Vatican's powerful College of Cardinals — a position that allowed him to vote in the conclaves that elect popes.

  • As details of decades of sexual abuse by priests in Australia were uncovered, the spotlight turned to Pell and his role in the scandals.

MELBOURNE,

Cardinal George Pell grew up in rural Australia and, inspired by his devout Catholic mother, chose a career in the church.

His star rose fast, and in 2003 he was named to the Vatican's powerful College of Cardinals — a position that allowed him to vote in the conclaves that elect popes.

At home he was considered a conservative, and former prime minister Tony Abbott described him as "one of the greatest churchmen that Australia has seen".

But as details of decades of sexual abuse by priests in Australia were uncovered, and the church defended allegations it mounted a cover-up, the spotlight turned to Pell and his role in the scandals.

Following is a timeline of events leading to his conviction for historical child sexual offences:

March: Police set up a secret taskforce to investigate allegations concerning Pell. The probe is only revealed during court hearings in 2018.

February: Pell handpicked by Pope Francis as prefect of the Secretariat for the Economy, widely viewed as the third-most powerful position in the Vatican.

March and August: Pell gives evidence on two occasions to an Australian Royal Commission into institutional responses to child sex abuse allegations against the Catholic Church.

December: Police appeal for information on alleged child sex abuse in Melbourne between 1996-2001 -- the period when Pell served as Archbishop.

February: Local media report Pell investigated by police over sex abuse allegations. Pell denies the allegations.

February to March: Pell's third Royal Commission appearance, via videolink.

July: National broadcaster ABC airs sex abuse allegations against Pell. Pell denies the allegations and suggests there is a conspiracy against him.

August: Pope Francis says "we must avoid a media verdict, a verdict based on gossip" when asked about the allegations against Pell.

October: Pell interviewed by Victoria State police in Rome over sex abuse claims.

May: ABC journalist publishes book detailing sex abuse allegations against Pell. Pell denies the allegations.

June 29: Pell charged with multiple, historical child sexual offences.

July: Court suppresses details of the charges except that there are "multiple complainants" and "multiple charges" for "historical sexual offences".

March: Committal hearing involving witness statements and cross-examinations in Melbourne for magistrate to decide if Pell case should go to trial.

May: Pell returns to court, where it is decided two trials involving separate allegations and locations will be held. The suppression order is expanded to reporting of court proceedings and the first trial in Australia, including online, to protect against jury bias in the second trial.

August 15: Opening of first trial involving five alleged offences including sexual penetration and indecent acts with a child aged below 16 at St Patrick's Cathedral in Melbourne in the late 1990s.

September 20: Jury discharged without verdict in the first trial. A retrial is ordered.

November 7: Retrial of the first case starts.

December 11: Pell found guilty on all five charges: one of sexual penetration of a child under 16 years and four of indecent acts with a child under 16.

December 12: Pell is removed from the Vatican's so-called C9 Council of Cardinals, an international advisory body set up by Pope Francis.

February 26: Prosecutors decide not to proceed with the second trial, involving alleged sexual offences at a swimming pool in the 1970s, allowing the reporting of the first trial and verdict.