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No charges in Swiss Catholic abuse investigation

GenevaTimes by GenevaTimes
January 22, 2026
in Switzerland
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No charges in Swiss Catholic abuse investigation
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Statute of limitations prevented some abuse cases being investigated

The statute of limitations prevented some abuse cases being investigated


Keystone / Christian Beutler





Generated with artificial intelligence.

Prosecutors in the Swiss city of St Gallen have ended an investigation into five complaints of sexual abuse against the Catholic Church without filing any charges.


This content was published on


January 21, 2026 – 15:36

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The complaints were received after the publication of the abuse report in September 2023.

One of the five complaints was filed by the Diocese of Chur regarding an alleged assault from the 1970s and another from a private individual.

+ What next for Swiss Catholic Church after abuse allegation?

A total of five priests were accused, and ten people were identified as potential victims. The investigations were “time-consuming and complex,” prosecutor spokesperson Leo-Philippe Menzel told Swiss public broadcaster SRF.

The length of time since the alleged assaults further complicated the investigations. The statute of limitations was cited as one of the key reasons that some other cases could not be investigated.

In two cases, the indictment chamber of the canton of St Gallen refused authorisation to open criminal proceedings, due to lack of jurisdiction or because an accused priest was permanently unfit to stand trial. That priest has since died.

+ Study finds 1,000 cases of sexual abuse in Swiss Catholic Church since 1950

Statute of limitations

In four cases where the statute of limitations had not yet expired, the public prosecutor’s office conducted extensive investigations. However, the allegations could not be substantiated.

This was because the accused denied the allegations and the victims, due to the considerable time that had elapsed, were either unable to provide sufficiently precise statements or did not wish to revisit the matter. Therefore, no charges were filed in any of the cases.

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a confessional door in a church is lit up by sun light. The door is open and the confessional box is dark.

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Demographics

Over one hundred new alleged victims of Catholic Church abuse




This content was published on


Mar 6, 2024



Six months after the publication of a study on abuse in the Catholic Church in Switzerland, more than 160 further alleged victims have come forward.



Read more: Over one hundred new alleged victims of Catholic Church abuse


The Diocese of St Gallen confirmed that one of the complaints originated from the diocesan bishop. The reported incident involved a member of a religious order and is alleged to have occurred in the early 1970s.

Canon law proceedings

In this case as well, the court of appeals refused authorization to prosecute as the Church member is now very elderly.

Both dioceses emphasised that they will continue to forward any information about possible criminal offenses to the authorities and will consistently implement measures under canon law.

The Diocese of St Gallen announced that the findings from the public prosecutor’s investigations will be incorporated into two ongoing canon law investigations. Unlike civil law, the Church can waive statutes of limitations.

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Ein Gläubiger hat die Hände zum Gebet gefaltet

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Is the Catholic Church really going to investigate cases of sexual abuse?




This content was published on


Sep 21, 2023



Read selected articles and join the discussion on “dialogue”.



Read more: Is the Catholic Church really going to investigate cases of sexual abuse?


Translated from German by AI/mga

We select the most relevant news for an international audience and use automatic translation tools to translate them into English. A journalist then reviews the translation for clarity and accuracy before publication.  

Providing you with automatically translated news gives us the time to write more in-depth articles. The news stories we select have been written and carefully fact-checked by an external editorial team from news agencies such as Bloomberg or Keystone.

If you have any questions about how we work, write to us at english@swissinfo.ch

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