Prosecutors in Munich on Friday said they are examining 42 cases of potential misconduct by clergymen in connection with a damning new report on child sex abuse in the Catholic Church.
The report published Thursday by law firm Westpfahl Spilker Wastl (WSW) was commissioned by the archdiocese of Munich and Freising to examine how abuse cases were dealt with between 1945 and 2019.
It found indications of sexually abusive behaviour in 235 people it investigated, including 173 priests, and accused former pope Benedict of failing to take action against offenders.
The law firm has passed on details of 42 cases in which "misconduct on the part of church leaders is deemed to have occurred", Anne Leiding, a spokeswoman for the Munich public prosecutor's office, told AFP.
"These cases... exclusively concern church leaders who are still alive," Leiding said.
If the law appears to have been broken, prosecutors will ask the firm to pass on further relevant documents for investigation, she added.
Christiane Hoffmann, a German government spokeswoman, said it had been "stunned" by "the extent of abuse and subsequent handling of these acts" laid bare by the report.
"Full clarification and reappraisal are now all the more urgent," she said.
Germany's Catholic Church has been rocked by a string of reports in recent years that have exposed widespread abuse of children by clergymen.
A study commissioned by the German Bishops' Conference in 2018 concluded that 1,670 clergymen in the country had committed some form of sexual attack against 3,677 minors between 1946 and 2014.
However, the real number of victims is thought to be much higher.
Another report published last year exposed the scope of abuse committed by priests in Germany's top diocese of Cologne.
The WSW report accused ex-pope Benedict - who was the archbishop of Munich from 1977 to 1982 - of failing to take action in four cases where priests had been accused of child sex abuse.
Cardinal Reinhard Marx, the current archbishop of Munich and Freising, was also accused of failing to take action in two suspected cases.