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The stories about our failure to protect our nation’s most vulnerable people are hard to hear, but worthy of your time.
By ABC
A Salvation Army commissioner failed to report to authorities for more than a year an allegation that one of its officers had sexually abused an eight-year-old girl, the child sex abuse royal commission has found.
Captain Colin Haggar admitted to sexually abusing the girl in the state’s central-west in 1989.
After initially being dismissed, he was later given a position with managerial responsibility for children within the Salvation Army.
Top Comments
This man is no better than the one that actually abused the child.
Until these people are charged for "facilitating" or "covering up" or "not reporting" or "being an accessory after the fact" then people like this dirt bag will see nothing wrong with not fulfilling his obligations and reporting child abuse, sweeping it under the carpet.
Just like the TV execs in the Robert hughes case - it was testified that they had been told on numerous occasions that he was touching girls inappropriately - they should also be charged and sent to gaol for covering it up.
There needs to be a very firm line drawn in the sand so that ANY suspected abuse of a child should be reported. In other words ALL adults (regardless of profession) should be "mandatory reporters".