Casa Pia child sexual abuse scandal

Casa Pia child sexual abuse scandal
Native name Processo Casa Pia
DateNovember 23, 2002
Duration1960s-2000s
LocationCasa Pia, Lisbon, Portugal
TypeChild sexual abuse scandal
CauseAlleged long-term sexual abuse of children at Casa Pia institutions
TargetChildren at Casa Pia orphanages
PerpetratorCarlos Silvino, Carlos Cruz, Hugo Marçal, Manuel Abrantes, Ferreira Diniz, Jorge Ritto
First reporterFelícia Cabrita (Expresso)
Participants32 alleged victims, over 800 witnesses and experts
OutcomeConvictions of six individuals on 3 September 2010
InquiriesPortuguese Judiciary Police investigation
SuspectsPaulo Pedroso (case dropped), others
ConvictedCarlos Silvino, Carlos Cruz, Hugo Marçal, Manuel Abrantes, Ferreira Diniz, Jorge Ritto
ChargesPaedophilia and related sexual abuse crimes
Trial2004–2010
VerdictGuilty (3 September 2010)
ConvictionsCarlos Silvino (18 years), Carlos Cruz (7 years), Hugo Marçal (6 years, 2 months), Manuel Abrantes (5 years, 9 months), Ferreira Diniz (7 years), Jorge Ritto (6 years, 8 months)
SentenceUp to 18 years in prison
LitigationPaulo Pedroso awarded €100,000 for wrongful detention
First institutional child sex abuse case taken to court in Portugal

The Casa Pia child sexual abuse scandal was a case of child sexual abuses involving a number of children and employees at Casa Pia, a Portuguese state-run institution for the education and support of poor children and under-age orphans. One employee of the institution, which at the time comprised 10 orphanages and schools caring for 4,600 children, ran a male child prostitution network involving 100 boys. The scandal involved several prominent men, including TV presenter Carlos Cruz, former Casa Pia governor Manuel Abrantes, and former UNESCO ambassador Jorge Ritto. The trial was one of the longest running in Portuguese history, lasting more than five years, with testimony from 32 alleged victims, out of a total of over 800 witnesses and experts.

On 3 September 2010, Carlos Cruz, Carlos Silvino, Hugo Marçal, Manuel Abrantes, Ferreira Diniz and Jorge Ritto were convicted and sentenced to up to eighteen years in prison due to crimes occurring in the late 1990s and early 2000s. This was the first time an institutional sex abuse scandal had been taken to court in Portugal.