Grand Jury Secrecy Shields Apostates in the Conciliar Sect’s Abuse Scandals
The National Catholic Register reports that the Maryland Supreme Court ruled on April 27, 2026, that prosecutors may not reveal the names of individuals who allegedly concealed or failed to report sexual abuse within the Archdiocese of Baltimore. The state’s highest court reversed lower court decisions that had permitted the release of grand jury materials identifying uncharged persons, holding that grand jury secrecy exists precisely to protect such individuals from what the court itself called the “court of public opinion.” The ruling arrives amid the archdiocese’s bankruptcy proceedings and a wave of abuse claims under the Maryland Child Victims Act. This decision, while dressed in the language of procedural justice, is yet another manifestation of the systemic protection of corrupt structures within the post-conciliar sect — structures that have, for decades, facilitated the destruction of souls while shielding their own from accountability.
