Montreal

Lawyer appointed to investigate abuse complaints at Montreal archdiocese

Montreal lawyer Marie Christine Kirouack has been named the church's first ombudsperson. The post was one of the key recommendations in a report tabled last November on improving accountability in the diocese.

Christine Kirouack mandated to handle all allegations as new Church's new ombudsperson

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Montreal's archdiocese has appointed an ombudsperson to handle complaints of abuse, following a damning report last year into ex-priest Brian Boucher. (Charles Contant/CBC)

The Montreal archdiocese has named its first ombudsperson to handle complaints regarding abuse and other inappropriate behaviour connected to the church.

Montreal lawyer Marie Christine Kirouack has been named to the newly created post, which is one of the key recommendations in a report tabled last November on improving accountability in the diocese.

Kirouack, who is not affiliated with the church, is mandated to receive all allegations of abuse and other inappropriate behaviour and to ensure those complaints are followed up.

Complaints will be referred to a new advisory committee composed of five lay members — four experts in various fields and one survivor of abuse — who will determine next steps.

Last November, former Superior Court justice Pepita G. Capriolo issued a report harshly criticizing how the archdiocese handled the case of ex-priest Brian Boucher, sentenced to eight years in prison in 2019 for sexually assaulting two minors.

Archbishop Christian Lepine told reporters today more than half of the report's 31 recommendations have been implemented, adding that the rest are expected to be put into force by the end of 2021.