Former Catholic Bishop of Dunedin John Kavanagh failed to act on a complaint of abuse against one priest, but did take
action appropriate for the time after a complaint against another priest, an inquiry process has found.
Cardinal John Dew, Metropolitan Archbishop of Aotearoa-New Zealand, requested an inquiry in 2020 after a number of
victims of abuse in the Dunedin diocese complained that Bishop Kavanagh – who died in 1985 – had not properly dealt with
their complaints of sexual abuse by priests.
At the cardinal’s request, the Church’s complaints body – the National Office for Professional Standards (NOPS) –
engaged independent Christchurch senior investigator Micky Earl of the firm Corporate Risks to conduct an investigation
into abuse complaints in the Dunedin diocese while Bishop Kavanagh was in office from 1957 to 1985.
Mr Earl’s report has been considered by the NOPS Complaints Assessment Committee under the Church’s A Parth to Healing process, and then by Cardinal Dew as the final arbiter.
“The records showed that seven priests, two brothers and one lay teacher sexually abused children and in one case an
adult during Bishop Kavanagh’s time as Bishop of Dunedin,” says Cardinal Dew.
“The investigation found that Bishop Kavanagh knew of complaints related to two priests: Father Freek Schokker in about
1963; and Magnus Murray in about 1972. He did not know of the other cases, because complaints were not made until some
years after Bishop Kavanagh had died.
“In the case of Murray, the Complaints Assessment Committee found that Murray admitted abuse to Bishop Kavanagh and was
sent to Australia for treatment,” said Cardinal Dew. “Because of that admission, and by sending Murray for treatment,
Bishop Kavanagh did what he was required to under the Church canon law at the time.
“In the case of Father Schokker, Bishop Kavanagh should have investigated the complaint, but failed to do so,” Cardinal
Dew added.
Freek Schokker was a priest from the Netherlands working in the diocese at the time of the complaint. He was accused of
abusing two young people. He left New Zealand at some stage after the complaint. He died in the Netherlands in 1993, age
81.
Magnus Murray became a priest in the Auckland Diocese in 1979 after returning to New Zealand. He was jailed for five
years in 2003 after admitting 10 offences against four Dunedin boys from 1958 to1972. Murray was laicised – removed from
the priesthood – in 2019, and lives in a rest home.
Cardinal Dew has formally written to the Bishop of Dunedin, Michael Dooley, telling him of the findings.
“There has been considerable public interest in this inquiry,” said Cardinal Dew. “Survivors of abuse committed in the
Dunedin diocese have called for Kavanagh College in Dunedin to be renamed, based on their belief that Bishop Kavanagh
did not act properly on complaints of abuse. The outcome of the inquiry is that Bishop Kavanagh failed to act as
required at the time on one of the two complaints he knew of. It is now for Bishop Dooley to decide the future of the
name of the college.
“I accept that some survivors may not be happy with the decision that Bishop Kavanagh acted properly in respect to
Magnus Murray. But that was in the context of canon law of the time. We take immediate action on complaints of abuse
today. We are committed to a safe environment for all within the Church community.
Any form of abuse, misconduct or inappropriate behaviour is not acceptable,” said Cardinal Dew.
Cardinal Dew urges anyone who has any concerns regarding inappropriate behaviour or abuse in a Church setting to contact
NOPS or the police: “NOPS operates independently of diocesan and Congregation structures. As in the Bishop Kavanagh
inquiry, NOPS contracts professional, experienced and independent third-party investigators to conduct investigations on
its behalf.”
NOPS can be contacted by free phone on 0800 114 622, or by email at prof.standards@nzcbc.org.nz The NOPS website, which includes the latest edition of A Path to Healing, is https://safeguarding.catholic.org.nz/