The article is typical WTS-defender bullshit.
The author acknowledges knowing that critics state that the Society often speaks out of both sides of its mouth on the issue of child molestation. This is demonstrably true, but the author dismisses it without any evidence at all. What he does is to quote official policy -- completely ignoring the fact that written policy is often ignored when the Service Department gives oral instructions to elders. Indeed, the basic instruction to elders is this: "Don't handle abuse cases on your own! Refer all cases to the Service Department." Why is this so? So that the Society can directly control what happens with the case, without leaving a paper trail.
At the 2001 Kingdom Ministry Schools for elders, a new policy was announced: elders should never suggest to an abuse victim or her family that they should not go to the police. This was followed up a few months later (February 2002, I believe) with a letter to Bodies of Elders stating the same policy. Now think about this: if there never was a policy, unofficial or otherwise, to suggest that victims not report abuse to the proper authorities, then why was it necessary for the Society to state it?
An excellent illustration of the Society's doublespeak is the case of one Daniel Fitzwater from Nevada. He molested a lot of girls in the 1980s. On the verge of being exposed by victims, he moved to Florida until the statute of limitations ran out. Then he moved back to Nevada and started molesting JW girls again. By the late 1990s, many girls had complained, and the elders and even a Circuit Overseer reported this to the Society, which did nothing. Eventually four girls filed a criminal case, the guy was convicted and spent about seven years in jail. He was released in 2005, I believe. All of the girls who brought the charges were harassed by the Society and are no longer JWs. Nothing was ever done about the many other girls who were molested. While the perpetrator was never disfellowshipped, his daughter-in-law was threatened with disfellowshipping for talking about the case to other JWs. While in prison, the perp carried on "Bible studies" with other prisoners and was regularly visited by local elders. Last I heard, he's still a JW in good standing in Nevada.
A lot more could be said to debunk that JW defender's bullshit, but I'll leave it at that.
AlanF