Woman who accused Quebec cardinal of misconduct did not defame the cleric: lawyer
MONTREAL — The woman who accused Cardinal Marc Ouellet of sexual misconduct did not defame the cleric, her lawyer said Tuesday at the Montreal courthouse, adding that any distortion of the case in the media wasn’t the accuser’s fault.
Paméla Groleau’s allegations are true, Justin Wee said in his closing statements at the defamation trial launched by Ouellet in Superior Court. She never sought out journalists and had no control over what they reported, Wee said.
Ouellet filed a $100,000 defamation lawsuit against Groleau after she named him in a 2022 class-action involving her and other complainants alleging sexual misconduct by members of the Quebec City diocese. Groleau alleged Ouellet touched her without consent three times between 2008 and 2010 — including one time when he allegedly he ran his hand down her back to the top of her buttocks — while she trained or worked as a lay pastoral agent for the Catholic Church.
The cardinal denies the allegations and has never been charged with a crime in connection with anything in the class action, which included 101 alleged victims who accused about 88 priests or diocesan staff of various types of misconduct.

