The draft version of the body’s constitution is expected to specify cases when audits are allowed to be kept secret, namely reports containing information on children or vulnerable adults’ so-called "church contacts," inaccurate reports and those threatening public safety will fall into the category of those audits that can be withheld from public, the commission learned at the hearing, according to the Guardian newspaper.
The chair of the church’s Truth, Justice and Healing Council, Neville Owen, said "the teeth in this system is public reporting," and the CPS had never planned to resist publishing the audits, the newspaper added.
The Catholic Church has been subject to accusations of child sexual abuse for decades. Earlier in February, Pope Francis called sexual abuse a disease of the Catholic Church.
The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse was established in 2013 after a scandal surrounding cases of child sexual abuse in the religious institutions of Australia erupted in the previous year.