One of the nation's most senior Anglicans, the Archbishop of Perth, Roger Herft, received complaints about a priest involved in a paedophile ring but allegedly failed to formally report him to police, according to an Anglican Church insider.

Key points: Confidential note shows Roger Herft knew of complaint about paedophile Peter Rushton

Confidential note shows Roger Herft knew of complaint about paedophile Peter Rushton Herft allegedly did not report Rushton to police

Herft allegedly did not report Rushton to police Victims of Rushton tell of horrific abuse

7.30 has obtained a confidential note showing Archbishop Herft received a complaint about Father Peter Rushton's abuse when they both worked in the Hunter region of New South Wales in 2002.

Archbishop Herft wrote that the complaint "left me in an unenviable position" because "Father Peter had my licence [to be a priest] and if he reoffended I would be held liable as I now had prior knowledge of his alleged behaviour".

Director of professional standards for the Newcastle diocese, Michael Elliott, said there was no record of Archbishop Herft contacting police about allegations regarding Rushton.

Warning: This story contains graphic details.

Archbishop Herft has said it was inappropriate for him to respond to 7.30 because of the royal commission hearings in Newcastle.

In 2010 the Anglican Church revealed that Rushton was a notorious paedophile.

Victims have come forward to tell 7.30 how they were raped and sexually assaulted by him and other abusers.

Abuse survivor Paul Gray was taken to St Albans Boys Home in Aberdare.

One victim, Paul Gray, said Rushton was the "kingpin" in two paedophile rings.

Mr Gray, now in his 60s, was taken to St Albans Boys Home in Aberdare.

"The worst part with all the abuse that Father Peter did with me, he took me to the boys home in Aberdare away from where I lived and he left me with three men," Mr Gray said.

"And I remember calling out to him to not leave me there and he did, and I was taken there many times.

"The man who ran it I used to call the gatekeeper.

"He used to lock you in the room and other people would come in and out of that room but sometimes he would come in that room as well."

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'Haunts your mind for the rest of your life'

Phil D'Ammond lived as a foster child with paedophile Anglican priest Peter Rushton.

Rushton and his lover Brother Jim Brown infiltrated St Albans Boys Home in the Hunter Valley, becoming board members and taking boys home for weekends.

They also fostered orphans, including Phil D'Ammond, who saw many other boys at Jim Brown's home.

"There was never someone not there and they were always young guys. Like, between 12 and 14, 15," Mr D'Ammond said.

"We were all drunk and we were all smoking hash and dropping acid and yeah, it was sick."

Another survivor, Mick Brown, was part of the Church of England Boys Society camps in the 1970s.

He was brutally raped by numerous youth workers there who took them "spotlighting" at night, looking for animals.

"Instead of looking at the trees we were more or less made to do sexual acts," Mr Brown said.

Mick Brown was abused on the Church of England Boys Society camps.

"One of the worst things that happened at Yondaiya, I had my backside split open.

"It was one of those youth workers — my clothes were taken from me, they were burnt."

At the heart of the camps were Anglican priest Rushton and Brother Jim Brown.

Paul Gray was also a member of the Church of England Boys Society and was taken camping by Rushton, where he was stalked by other paedophiles through the bush in a terrifying game of hide and seek.

"[Rushton] took me to Yondaiyo. There was another boy there, I could hear the other boy and they just let you go and run to try to get away," Mr Gray said.

"When you're a little kid and you've got a choice of either jumping over a cliff or people abusing you — that haunts your mind for the rest of your life because you feel you should have jumped."

'Many of them were involved in abuse'

Father Peter Rushton died in 2007 without ever being convicted.

Rushton trained at Morpeth College along with other paedophiles.

"When abusers are identified and criminally convicted they can be tracked back to having trained at Morpeth at Saint John's Theological College," Michael Elliott said.

"So there was obviously some failing there and around recruitment and screening."

In 2009 the church's own research revealed the college could be the origin of "some kind of network" for paedophiles.

7.30 understands the figures showed one quarter of convicted paedophile priests graduated from Morpeth.

The research was for a national report on sex abuse in the church but the "Morpeth issue" never made it into the final document.

'He appeared to be appalled'

Jim Brown was jailed in 2012 for the abuse of 20 boys.

Alfred Holland was the Bishop of Newcastle during most of Rushton's time.

In the 1980s, five people told the bishop that Rushton had abused the five-year-old son of another priest.

7.30 has been told that Bishop Holland refused to believe them without photographic evidence.

"People who complained were dismissed and sent away and not believed," Mr Elliott said.

Church volunteer Susan Aslin was another who complained to Bishop Holland about Rushton and Brother Brown and their involvement in St Albans Boys Home.

"I found that there was a young boy of 16 [who] was about to leave St Albans Boys Home. He was going to move in with Jim Brown," she said.

Ms Aslin got a message to Bishop Holland who rang her at home.

"He appeared to be appalled that this was happening and he also said he would look in to it and take steps," Ms Aslin said.

It was three decades before Jim Brown was brought to justice — he was jailed in 2012 for abuse against 20 boys, including Mr D'Ammond.

Ms Aslin said police told her that when they interviewed Bishop Holland about Brother Brown, he denied ever speaking to Ms Aslin.

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