Vatican Cleric, Guilty Of Sexually Abusing Boys, Removed From Top Post

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
"monster" Wednesday as he arrived in court, possibly for the last time as a free man, in a last-ditch push for bail while he appeals his
historic conviction for child sex crimes.Once one of Pope Francis' closest advisors, Pell is facing up to 25 years in prison for five
charges of sexual and indecent assault on two choirboys in 1996-97, and is expected to be remanded in custody after the pre-sentencing
submissions in court.His lawyer plans to apply for bail later in the day before the Court of Appeal.A large crowd greeted the cleric outside
the County Court of Victoria in Melbourne, with supporters of other abuse survivors jostling the 77-year-old and yelling: "You're a maggot,
Pell, you rot in hell.""You're the devil
You're evil You're a paedophile
You're a criminal
You're a monster
May you rot in hell," one protester shouted.Shortly before Wednesday's hearing, Vatican spokesman Alessandro Gisotti announced on Twitter
that Pell had been removed from his position as chief of Vatican finances, the third-most powerful position in the Church.Pell was convicted
in December of assaulting the two choirboys in the sacristy of Melbourne's Saint Patrick's Cathedral, but the verdict was only revealed
Tuesday after a second trial against him was abandoned by prosecutors, allowing a gag order to be lifted.Pell has already appealed the
verdict
He is expected to be sentenced in the next two weeks.The Court of Appeal process, which could last up to a year, will see a bench usually
made up of three judges review the same evidence that the jurors were presented with in the earlier trial.Criminal law expert Jeremy Gans of
the University of Melbourne told AFP the judges could question the jury's conclusions based on the fact that the case was based on only one
person's -- the surviving victim's -- testimony.The other choirboy, who died of a drug overdose in 2014, had never told his parents he was
abused.The Catholic Church meanwhile could face a civil suit from the father of the deceased victim, who said via his lawyer Tuesday that
the cleric had "blood on his hands".He said his son, who cannot be named for legal reasons, turned to drugs as a teenager to cope with the
trauma and also suffered from PTSD."We are looking at what knowledge the Church might have had in relation to what was happening," the
lawyer, Leanne McDonald, told AFP.(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by TheIndianSubcontinent staff and is published
from a syndicated feed.)