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Convicted of sexually abusing boys, ex-priest granted parole: The Wolf in Priest’s clothing followup

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Don Grecco free after serving less than half of an 18-month sentence

St. Catharines Standard

17 April 2018  05:56 PM

by Grant LaFleche

SCS20171024JJ348

Donald Grecco arrives at the St. Catharines courthouse for his sentencing on Tuesday, Oct. 24, 2017. – Julie Jocsak , The St. Catharines Standard

William O’Sullivan arrived at Penetanguishene, Ont, Friday expecting the worst but hoping he was wrong.

He wasn’t.

Donald Grecco, the former Catholic priest convicted of sexually abusing O’Sullivan as a boy, will soon be a free man.

After deliberating for more than four hours Friday, Ontario parole board members at the Central North Correctional Centre voted to grant Grecco’s request for early release after serving six months of an 18-month sentence.

The 77-year-old was sentenced in October for sexually abusing O’Sullivan and two others from 1975 to 1982. It was Grecco’s second conviction for sexually abusing children while he was a Niagara priest. His total number of known victims is six.

On Monday he will leave prison on parole.

“I’m still angry. The feeling inside me every time I think about it just makes me want to scream. I just want to scream,” O’Sullivan said in an interview. “This is just really unbelievable.”

The reasons for Grecco’s release were not immediately available Tuesday, but a government spokesperson said they should be available this week. The Standard will publish the reasons when the documents are made available.

While the priest at St. Kevin’s Roman Catholic church in Welland, Grecco abused O’Sullivan from the ages of nine to 12.

O’Sullivan said after the abuse he started acting out, eventually landing in trouble with the law.

At 16, he was sentenced for petty crimes to 18 months at the infamous St. John’s Training School for Boys in Uxbridge — the location of one of the worst sexual abuse scandals in Canadian history.

He was sexually abused repeatedly by one of the Christian Brothers running the school.

O’Sullivan, who suppressed the memories of his abuse, spent years in and out of jail. While in Niagara Detention Centre in 2010, he read an article in The Standard about Grecco being sentenced to 18 months in prison for sexually abusing three boys, and remembered what happened to him.

He reported the crimes to Niagara Regional Police, who eventually laid charges against Grecco. The former priest pleaded guilty to three counts of gross indecency for the sexual abuse last May.

In the October sentencing hearing, Grecco waived his right to early parole but made an application for release last month.

O’Sullivan attended Grecco’s hearing and said the ex-priest talked about the hardships he suffered due to the news coverage of the case.

“He said he couldn’t eat because I had made things so difficult for him in the news coverage,” O’Sullivan said. “Can you believe that? He said I was making things hard for him.”

O’Sullivan said he did not stay to hear the board’s reasons after it announced Grecco was being granted parole.

As Grecco becomes a free man, O’Sullivan is planning to go to Queen’s Park Monday to ask government ministers why a twice-convicted sex-offender should get early release.

Grant.LaFleche@niagaradailies.com

905-225-1627 | @GrantRants

Grant.LaFleche@niagaradailies.com


Catholic priests take a vow of celibacy when they’re ordained. But when they break that vow, their children are left to live a lie

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Canadian children of priests have struggled with guilt and suffered from being forsaken by their fathers. Pressure is mounting for the church to hold priests accountable as parents.

The Toronto Star

Tues., April 17, 2018

From left: Susan Zopf, Michelle Raftis and Janusz Kowalski are all children of Catholic priests who broke their vow of celibacy. Each of them struggled with the guilt of a suffocating secret, as well as the financial and emotional strains of being forsaken by their biological father.
From left: Susan Zopf, Michelle Raftis and Janusz Kowalski are all children of Catholic priests who broke their vow of celibacy. Each of them struggled with the guilt of a suffocating secret, as well as the financial and emotional strains of being forsaken by their biological father.  (Toronto Star photo illustration)

On a winter afternoon in 2016, Michelle Raftis’s long search brought her to the steps of St. Michael’s Cathedral, the seat of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Toronto. She was nervous, and had carefully prepared what she would say to Cardinal Tom Collins.

She was done with secrets and lies.

Raftis is the daughter of a Catholic priest, a truth the 55-year-old had to hide most of her life. She wanted to know why the church she was raised in allowed a priest to abandon his child.

“I wanted a written apology from the church,” Raftis says.

In Canada and around the world, children of priests have emerged from the shadows to press the Vatican — and their local dioceses — to recognize they exist.

The Vatican appears to have no data on the number of clergy who break their vows of celibacy and father children. But with more than 400,000 Roman Catholic priests ministering to 1.1 billion Catholics, offspring are likely to be found across the globe, says Bill Kilgallon, who recently finished a three-year term as a leading member of Pope Francis’s Commission for the Protection of Minors.

In Canada alone, about 20 sons and daughters of priests have personally contacted Coping International, a recently formed online support group out of Ireland that is pushing the Roman Catholic Church and its priests to acknowledge parental responsibilities.

The Star spoke to four of these now adult children, and to a Quebec woman who sued a diocese over the priest who fathered her son.

The children all struggled with the guilt of a suffocating secret, the financial and emotional strains of being forsaken by their biological father, and the silence of priests focused on avoiding scandal.

The truth was further buried by mothers who didn’t tell their dioceses that a priest had fathered their child. During the 1960s and ’70s when these children were born, such an admission would have deeply shamed the women.

Raftis learned at 13 that her biological father was Rev. Charles Van Item, a family friend who died in 2015. Her mother warned her to never tell anyone.

“When he was alive, I didn’t want to embarrass him, which is funny to say because he walked away from his (parental) duties,” says Raftis, a Catholic grade school teacher who lives in Barrie, north of Toronto. “I didn’t want to embarrass my mother, either.”

Raftis bottled it up, and while still in her teens developed “a major ulcer.” Later, she would struggle with her mental health.

She confided in her future husband when they were dating, and he was supportive. But her attempt to tell her father-in-law reinforced the indictment she long expected from God-fearing society.

“What would you call the child of a priest?” she tentatively asked him. “The devil’s child,” he replied.

“That clamped me up, big time,” Raftis says.

Michelle Raftis, a 55-year-old schoolteacher, and the family dog, Leia. Rafts is a child of a Roman Catholic priest, Charles Van Item, and didn't reconnect with him until her first child was born.
Michelle Raftis, a 55-year-old schoolteacher, and the family dog, Leia. Rafts is a child of a Roman Catholic priest, Charles Van Item, and didn’t reconnect with him until her first child was born.  (Rick Madonik/Toronto Star)

On the March day Raftis walked into Collins’s basilica office for that scheduled meeting in 2016, the cardinal greeted her and her husband Ed warmly. They sat in high-backed chairs, a round coffee table separating Raftis and her husband from the cardinal and another priest.

She asked for written acknowledgement that Van Item was her father and an apology from the church for what she considers a breach of trust. Collins didn’t dispute Van Item’s paternity but declined her requests. He offered instead to pay for counselling.

In an interview, Collins said he first became aware of Raftis’s case when Coping International contacted him in August 2015, almost four months after Van Item died. He adds it’s the only case of a priest fathering a child he’s come across during 21 years as a bishop.

If a similar case comes up on his watch, Collins says his message to the priest would be unequivocal: “I would tell him: ‘leave the priesthood and become responsible for your child.’

“When you are the co-creator of another human person, who is a child of God, you have very strong and weighty responsibilities,” he adds.

Collins insists that the actions of priests like Van Item shouldn’t raise doubts about the vow of celibacy. “It says nothing about celibacy, any more than adultery says anything about marriage. What it says in both cases is about the frailty of the human person, and their need to repent and do what is right.”

He sees celibacy as a tradition that dates back to Jesus and St. Paul, one that “ennobles” those who commit to it. “Our sacred commitments, whatever they may be, make us more profoundly what God wants us to be, and they focus life in a glorious way,” he adds.

April 2018:  Cardinal Archbishop Collins Statement regarding priests who father children

Catholic priests could happily marry until the 12th century, when ecumenical meetings known as the Lateran councils banned them from doing so. According to the Vatican’s secretary of state, Archbishop Pietro Parolin, the ban wasn’t strictly enforced until the Council of Trent in the 16th century.

Eastern rites within the Roman Catholic Church, such as the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, allow married men to become priests. And married Anglican priests who convert and become Roman Catholic priests can remain married. But celibacy remains a mandatory vow for seminarians entering the Roman Catholic priesthood, and a topic of heated debate as the number of priests declines worldwide.

Pope Francis’s predecessor, the now retired Benedict XVI, called celibacy for priests “a sign of full devotion” to the Lord and repeatedly insisted it was here to stay. Francis has been less categorical. He has raised the possibility of ordaining married men as priests. And before becoming pope, he described celibacy as a matter of tradition, rather than dogma. “It can change,” he added.

In the meantime, the Vatican has failed to recognize the children of priests, despite striking modern examples.

In 2012, Los Angeles Bishop Gabino Zavala resigned after acknowledging he was the father of two teenage children. In 2006, a Vatican investigation revealed that Mexican priest Marcial Maciel Degollado, founder of the Legionaires of Christ order, had fathered several children with two women and sexually abused seminarians. In 2001, the National Catholic Reporter published the contents of several reports by women’s religious orders, describing the sexual abuse of nuns by priests in some two dozen countries.

Pressure is mounting for the church to hold such priests accountable as parents.

In France, Anne-Marie Mariani founded in 2012 an organization called the Children of Silence, which supports the sons and daughter of priests. Her parents fell in love in Algeria in the 1950s, when her father was a priest and her mother a nun. She’s written three letters to Pope Francis calling on him to ease the emotional burden of children like her with a gesture of recognition.

“Children of priests are everywhere on Earth and there’s not one word for them from the Vatican,” says Mariani, 67, by phone from Paris. “We’re a reality that isn’t talked about. What are they afraid of?”

The efforts of these children are bearing fruit.

On Aug. 31 last year, the Irish Catholic Bishops’ Conference blazed a trail by issuing “principles of responsibility regarding priests who father children while in ministry.”

“The wellbeing of his child should be his first consideration,” the bishops state. “At a minimum, no priest should walk away from his responsibilities.”

The statement was a direct response to the efforts of Coping International, a self-help mental health resource founded by Irish psychotherapist Vincent Doyle, himself the child of an Irish priest. “If a priest can take care of his flock, he can take care of his child,” Doyle says. He adds that dioceses shouldn’t make that more difficult by forcing these fathers to quit the priesthood, thereby leaving them unemployed.

Psychotherapist Vincent Doyle sits down in his cottage on Galway Bay, Ireland. Doyle, the son of an Irish priest, is the founder of Coping International, a self-help mental health resource for the children of priests.
Psychotherapist Vincent Doyle sits down in his cottage on Galway Bay, Ireland. Doyle, the son of an Irish priest, is the founder of Coping International, a self-help mental health resource for the children of priests.  (Suzanne Kreiter/Boston Globe via Getty Images)

The Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops seems unwilling to follow Ireland’s lead. It told the Star it is “very concerned” about priests who break their vow of celibacy. But the consequences of sexually active priests are strictly matters for local diocese and religious orders, according to the conference’s media relations official, Deacon René Laprise.

The Vatican may decide the matter for them.

Last September, after lobbying by Doyle and an article on the issue in the Boston Globe, Vatican officials asked the Commission for the Protection of Minors to expand its mandate and develop church guidelines for the children of priests. Kilgallon personally informed Pope Francis in a subsequent meeting that the task had been given to a commission working group.

Kilgallon hopes the Vatican guidelines force a sharp change in the approach of local churches, which he describes as mirroring the way they historically dealt with priests who sexually abused children.

“The reluctance has been the feeling that if you admit things openly it can damage the reputation of the church, it can damage people’s faith in the church,” says Kilgallon, who until February was also director of the National Office for Professional Standards of the Catholic Church of New Zealand.

“What the (sex) abuse issue has shown is that the best way to protect the church is to protect the children, not the other way around,” he adds in a phone interview from his Auckland home.

In 2012, when Pope Francis was Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio of Buenos Aires, he was quoted in an interview as saying that a priest who fathers a child “has to leave the ministry and should take care of that child, even if he chooses not to marry that woman. For just as that child has the right to have a mother, he has a right to the face of a father.”

_______________________________________________


For as long as she can remember, Chiara Villar was told to live a lie.

Her biological father is Rev. Anthony Inneo, a Roman Catholic priest who is now 85. She grew up calling him “Popi”; he lovingly called her “bella.”

He would visit Villar and her mother regularly in their small Niagara Falls apartment. Her earliest memories are of his smell — Brut cologne mixed with cigarette smoke — his shiny black shoes and his white collar, which she would playfully pull out every chance she got.

In private, Inneo was a doting father; in public, a stranger. Villar was repeatedly told to keep his identity secret, but never told why.

“My mother and father never sat down with me and said, ‘This is why we have to lie — priests have to remain celibate. He broke a rule but we love you still,’” says Villar, now a 37-year-old mother of twins living in Burlington.

It made for an emotionally trying childhood. In junior kindergarten she stood frozen with fear in a circle as the teacher asked each child what their parents did for a living. She doesn’t remember her answer, just the pain of lying.

When asked to draw family trees, she’d leave one side blank. On Father’s Day, she’d dutifully make a card in class and give it to Inneo the first chance she got. If he took her to the park, or showed up at her birthday party, Villar was told to say he was her uncle or a family friend. In later years she’d sometimes say she was a love child.

“There was never a consistent story,” she says. “It was so confusing.” The questions raised in a young girl were profound: “Who is this man? Who am I?”

Villar says her mother, Maria Mercedes Douglas, provided few answers. Douglas only recently told her about the night in the early 1970s when she met a handsome Inneo in a Buffalo bar. He wasn’t wearing his collar and introduced himself as a social worker. They kept in touch and eventually became intimately involved.

Rev. Anthony Inneo

Learning Inneo was a priest came as a shock to Douglas. But the single mother of a daughter from a previous relationship agreed to move into his Welland rectory. She kept house and played the piano during special church services.

By the late 1970s, Inneo had moved with Douglas and her daughter to a home he built in Acapulco, Mexico. In 1981, the family moved back north — Douglas to Buffalo, where she gave birth to Villar, and Inneo to a parish close by in the Diocese of St. Catharines. He was 47.

He soon set Douglas and her daughters up in the Niagara Falls apartment. Then, when Villar was 9, he moved the family to a large, isolated house he built on a 35-acre property surrounded by farmland. Inneo lived in the rectory of St. Ann’s church in Niagara Falls. Villar and her mother moved out of the house two years later, when Douglas met the man she would marry.

Every Friday, until Villar was 16, her mother dropped her off for supper with her dad. Villar would race through the front doors and glimpse her dad at the stove, usually making pasta with a cigarette in his mouth. She’d continue through dark corridors to the empty church, gazing with fascination and some fear at the statue of Jesus Christ on the cross.

“Hanging out at a rectory as a little girl is eerie,” she says.

She’d make her way upstairs to her father’s bedroom and bathroom, looking for clues about her mysterious Popi, whose parents and siblings she never got to meet. In a box in his closet she once found pictures — one of her mother and father in swimsuits, another of her dad with his brother and likely his parents at a 50th wedding anniversary. She took both.

“I was hoarding stuff about him to make sense of our relationship,” Villar says.

She didn’t become fully conscious about her dad being a priest, and his role in the church, until she was about 12, when priests began teaching religion classes at her Catholic school. The vow of celibacy she learned from boys laughing at how priests aren’t supposed to have sex.

She began to wonder if people knew her secret, if they whispered it behind her back. If she didn’t get a part in a school play, was it because the drama teacher knew?

“It destroyed my confidence,” she says.

Questions to her father became more pointed and visits to the rectory more tense. After one bad visit she went home, smashed a glass on the floor and used the pieces to cut herself. She was 13.

She did well in school, and even became prom queen. But emotional blows came frequently. In Grade 9, as hundreds of high school students gathered in the gym for mass, Villar looked up to the altar and realized, “Oh my God, my dad’s giving mass.” She sat mortified as boys made fun of her father’s Italian accent.

She rebelled. During visits she called her father a hypocrite, lied about being pregnant and planning an abortion, or blurted the most blasphemous thought that came to mind. One day she cracked open a box of communion wafers and began “munching on them as if they were chips.”

In January 2000, Douglas sued Inneo for money she claimed he owed her from their time in Acapulco. Superior Court in Welland denied her claim but sparked an agreement that resulted in Inneo paying his daughter $500 a month during her time in university, according to court documents examined by the Star.

Villar and her father stopped seeing each other for a couple of years, before resuming contact via hundreds of emails and, again, with visits.

“Especially in my 20s, my project was for him to turn (away) from the church and just be my dad,” Villar says. “There were pleas, there was crying.”

Inneo would say he couldn’t bear the damage it would do to his “reputation.” During one visit, Villar implored her father to introduce her to the Inneo side of her family. He wouldn’t hear of it.

“I am a public person with mission to accomplish,” Inneo told Villar in a 2010 email. “My reputation is extremely important and cannot be compromised. Please, I beg you, understand my position.

“You and (your husband) Jason are always welcome to my house. My house is your house. Chiara you know that popi loves you and nobody or anything will take you out of my heart.” Inneo signed it, “Love. Popi.”

Villar and her husband, Jason Mitrow, would eventually spend every Sunday having breakfast with Inneo at the rural home he built. She would often find him watching hours of video he shot of her as an infant.

“I’m seeing this video footage of this man who seems like a really amazing dad to this baby,” Villar says of the first time she saw the films. “What happened?”

She surreptitiously digitized one of the films and keeps it as a prized possession.

A warm relationship developed during the Sunday visits, but the pain of not being acknowledged openly by her father didn’t subside. And by 2012, Inneo was experiencing memory loss.

“By his bedside he always had a big picture of me,” Villar says. “Our last visit I said to him, ‘Hey Popi, who’s that pretty girl there?’ He said to me, ‘Oh, she’s really special to me. Her name is Chiara and her mom wanted to abort her. And I told her mom not to and she’s been close to me ever since.’ ”

The last time she saw him, in November 2015, Inneo was in a nursing home. She showed him pictures of his two granddaughters and told him she loved him. “He did not recognize me one bit,” she says.

“I love this man, yet I am so deeply hurt by the secrecy that comes with growing up as a daughter of a Roman Catholic priest,” Villar says.

Margaret Jong, vice-chancellor of the Diocese of St. Catharines, said the diocese is “not aware of any priests in ministry at present who have children.” Referring specifically to Inneo and Villar, Jong added: “Due to the historic nature of the troubling case … there is no additional credible information that we can provide relating to that specific case.”

20 March 2018:  Diocese St Catharines responds to Mary Ormsby re priests who father a child

Writing on behalf of Bishop Gerard Paul Bergie, Jong said the diocese does not have a policy about priests who father children.

“If the bishop learned that a priest had fathered a child, he would want to ensure that the priest take responsibility for his child,” Jong said. “Of course, parental obligations would take precedence over responsibilities to the church. In most cases, if a priest wanted to pursue a relationship and have a family, he would voluntarily leave ministry, rather than leaving it to his bishop to make the decision to remove him from ministry.”

_______________________________________________


Janusz Kowalski poses for a photograph at the vacation rental property he runs with his partner on B.C.’s Galiano Island. Kowalski's father was a Polish Catholic priest who pressured his mother — who wanted to be a nun — not to disclose the relationship to the church. Though his mother remained a devout Catholic until her death, “I’m about as far from religion as anyone can be,” Kowalski says.
Janusz Kowalski poses for a photograph at the vacation rental property he runs with his partner on B.C.’s Galiano Island. Kowalski’s father was a Polish Catholic priest who pressured his mother — who wanted to be a nun — not to disclose the relationship to the church. Though his mother remained a devout Catholic until her death, “I’m about as far from religion as anyone can be,” Kowalski says.  (Jesse Winter/Toronto Star)

A Polish bishop, acting on an anonymous villager’s letter, sent investigators to Regina Kowalska’s home. The bishop’s inquisitors confronted the frightened woman: was the local Roman Catholic priest the father of her two young sons?

Kowalska placed her right hand on a crucifix. She swore he was not.

She lied to protect the priest who begged her not to tell the truth.

“My mum was so conflicted,” says her younger son, Janusz Kowalski, now 54 and living in Vancouver.

“I couldn’t imagine that moment . . . In her mind, the church was her life and here she is, lying on the cross.”

She did that, says her son, because the priest she loved promised to take care of her and their children. That pledge, like his mother’s heart, would be broken.

Regina Kowalska was the youngest of 12 siblings in Samborowo, a farming community in northern Poland. She’d dreamed of becoming a nun and often volunteered at the church. There, the teenager caught the eye of Rev. Boleslaw Petlicki, more than 20 years her senior.

Their illicit romance required subterfuge. Petlicki would sneak from the rectory, quietly put a ladder to the girl’s second-floor window to steal a kiss — or more. The villagers clued in when the teen’s belly grew.

“The whole village turned against her because (they thought) how dare this young ‘bitch’ seduce our priest?” says Kowalski, noting his mother was only 19 when she gave birth.

This 1961 photo is of a church trip to the Wieliczka salt mine in Poland. Seated in the front row: Regina Kowalska, left, holding the hat of the priest sitting next to her, Rev. Boleslaw Petlicki. Kowalski was 19 years old when she had her first son with the priest and 20 when she had her second. She raised the boys alone.
This 1961 photo is of a church trip to the Wieliczka salt mine in Poland. Seated in the front row: Regina Kowalska, left, holding the hat of the priest sitting next to her, Rev. Boleslaw Petlicki. Kowalski was 19 years old when she had her first son with the priest and 20 when she had her second. She raised the boys alone.  (Janusz Kowalski)

Jozef Kowalski was born first in October of 1962. Janusz, also fathered by Petlicki, arrived 14 months later. (The boys’ surnames are the masculine version of their mother’s — Kowalski.)

Janusz Kowalski says it’s difficult for Canadians to imagine the shame and humiliation his mother endured.

Regina’s own family was angry with her. When she was pregnant with Janusz, her mother pressured her to abort her grandchild.

“Imagine abortion in Catholic Poland in the ’60s. This is a big no-no,” says Kowalski.

“But the reason was ‘it looks bad on the priest.’ This resonates in my mum’s life (where) the church was more important than family.”

Kowalska provided for her boys — she was a professional cook — but she also spun lies to safeguard Petlicki’s reputation. In their early years, she told her sons their fictitious father died in a bus crash and that Petlicki was their uncle.

Boleslaw Petlicki

When Kowalski was 6, the priest bought his mother a two-bedroom home far from their village. Petlicki told Regina that he’d ask for a transfer to work closer to the family. It never happened. He’d visit every few months, with most stays ending in arguments. There were rumours of another woman and another child. The priest came less often over the years, and the pair broke up.

Kowalski was disappointed to learn at 13 that Petlicki was his biological father. He wasn’t fond of the man who “destroyed my mum’s life” and “abused his post” by having an affair. Still, he has come to better understand his mother’s devotion to Petlicki, who died in 2006, as “having that religious experience of being close to a priest.”

“In Poland, in that time and it still continues, having a priest in the family is like a huge blessing,” he says.

A second priest came into Regina’s life, one closer to her age. He’d visit, enjoy her superb cooking and spend time with her sons. It made her happy.

But the priest’s frequent calls were actually to see Kowalski, who is gay. Kowalski said one day he had a “blow-up” with his mother and told her of their close relationship. He was about 17 and expected his mother to explode. Instead, she asked that nothing “physical” occur with the priest because “we have to save him for the church.” Kowalski did not inform his mother that he and the priest were intimate.

When Kowalski later ended things, his mother was upset because the priest stopped visiting.

“Again, church was more important for her than family itself,” Kowalski says. He adds her piety came at a personal cost.

“I would see some of those very soft moments when she would completely burst into tears to a Polish song when the words would go, ‘I know very well what being lonely means,’ ” he says.

“She did suffer from not having support, not having a loving person beside her, not having a ‘normal’ life.”

Regina Kowalska

At 53, Regina Kowalska married for the first time after reconnecting with an old friend. Janusz, who’d immigrated to Canada in 1989, was her best man. In a decision that surprised her son, she and her husband moved back to Samborowo.

Kowalska died in January, at 74. Janusz Kowalski flew to the community that once shunned his mother. On short notice, about 100 mourners attended her funeral, which he says would have pleased her.

The Kowalski brothers sorted through their mother’s belongings and came across a trove of faded letters between her and Petlicki. They were sent when their parents still lived in the village, when a future together seemed possible.

_______________________________________________


Susan Zopf, pictured in Camrose Alta., is the daughter of Father Albert Andreatta, who never had a part in her life. She describes "having a father, then not having a father, then finding out he wasn't my father, then finding out all the lies from the moment I was born."
Susan Zopf, pictured in Camrose Alta., is the daughter of Father Albert Andreatta, who never had a part in her life. She describes “having a father, then not having a father, then finding out he wasn’t my father, then finding out all the lies from the moment I was born.”  (JASON FRANSON FOR THE TORONTO STAR)

The world as Susan Zopf knew it began collapsing one day after school in Edmonton, when her older sister taunted the 12-year-old:

“Guess what? Your father’s a priest.”

Zopf’s mother confirmed it. She had an affair with the family’s parish priest, Rev. Albert Andreatta, while he counselled her and husband Alfred through a troubled patch in their marriage.

The young girl absorbed the news: Alfred Zopf, whom she thought was her dad, died when she was 8. Now Zopf had a new dad. A secret one. She was shattered.

“This is my experience of having a father, then not having a father, then finding out he wasn’t my father, then finding out all the lies from the moment I was born,” says Zopf, now 43 and a single mother of three young children living in Camrose, Alta.

Andreatta’s paternity was safeguarded by her mother, who feared being shunned by their close, pious Catholic community.

Zopf says she’s telling her story now because she’s tired of the lies spread to protect others, including the church — without recognition of the crushing impact on her.

“This is about me and my relationship with my spirituality, the church, the spiritual abuse and all the other abuse that comes from it,” she says, noting she no longer attends mass.

Zopf met Andreatta once at her mother’s insistence, shortly after she learned the truth. She, her mother and a trusted school friend drove to Surrey, B.C., where Andreatta was pastor at a local parish. Zopf recalls she was “mortified” at having to sit in a restaurant beside the old priest who’d been in his 50s — her mother, about 28 — when Zopf was conceived.

Rev. Albert Andreatta (SURREY LEADER)

She doesn’t remember much of the conversation, other than he shared medical history details, but was certain “he knew that he was my father.” The two never connected again.

Zopf’s mother declined to be interviewed for this story. Her daughter asked that her mother’s first name not be used.

The Andreatta revelation sparked Zopf’s anger during her teenaged years. She felt like an “unwanted child.”

She learned that Alfred Zopf had a vasectomy years before her 1975 birth; he knew Andreatta fathered the baby girl. (The Zopfs divorced two years before Alfred’s death.) Susan says Alfred was “not a mean-spirited man” but he didn’t bond with her because “I was just that constant reminder” of betrayal.

After Alfred Zopf died, Andreatta never offered the family support. Not a single Christmas card was sent, recalls Susan.

“As a human being, he should have stepped up,” she says of the priest. “As a man of God, he should have stepped up. Shame on him. Shame on the church.”

Andreatta, an American who died in 1989, belonged to the Salesians of Don Bosco, a religious order with a chapter in San Francisco. In May 2016, Coping International, through its founder Doyle, contacted the Salesians on Zopf’s behalf to discover more about Andreatta. In response, the order’s “health adviser” phoned Zopf to discuss her case — then referred her back to the Salesians. Zopf was not contacted by the chapter’s superior, Rev. Ted Montemayor, until this March.

In a phone interview, Montemayor says there’s no record of Andreatta reporting he had a child. However, he says he’s sympathetic to Zopf’s situation.

“The minute you’re a priest and you’re in a position of counselling or spiritual direction or whatever it is, obviously there is some power involved,” says Montemayor.

“So to that extent, if there’s hurt — and obviously the daughter is going through a lot or has gone through a lot — then for that hurt, for that wound, we are sorry that that has happened.”

Montemayor says Zopf’s experience has prompted his order to establish guidelines about parental responsibilities for priests. Zopf says Catholic dioceses and religious orders need to go beyond offering apologies and free counselling and take strong action to provide for mothers and their children. She wants priests who become fathers to be made to fulfil their parental responsibilities, whether they remain priests or not.

“This is a major human rights violation,” says Zopf. “Women are just left and abandoned with a baby.”

_______________________________________________


In 1966, France Bédard gave birth to a son fathered by the local parish priest. She was 18, and reluctantly gave him up for adoption.

She had started working a year earlier as a live-in maid in the presbytery of a parish in St-Marc-des-Carrières, a village 50 kilometres west of Quebec City. One night, Rev. Armand Therrien pulled her into his room.

“I said, ‘No, no, no,’ ” Bédard, 70, says in a phone interview from her home in Longueuil, near Montreal.

France Bédard (Erick Labbe/Le Soleil)

“He put his hand over my mouth so I couldn’t scream. He said if you scream the (other) priest will hear. I immediately felt guilty. I told him, ‘I’m a virgin, I’ve never known a man.’ He said, ‘Tonight you’ll find out what a man is.’ ”

Traumatized and ashamed, Bédard knew she’d get no comfort from what she describes as an abusive, dysfunctional and church-fearing family. The Quiet Revolution that would shake off the dominance of the Catholic Church in Quebec society had yet to leave its mark. She kept her sexual assault a secret and continued working at the presbytery.

Bédard says Therrien, who died in 2008, preyed on her vulnerability and lack of family support to eventually seduce her into an intimate relationship. She became pregnant, and rejected Therrien’s suggestion of an abortion.

She would see her son again 30 years after the adoption, after a determined search. His life had been difficult, troubled by alcohol and drug abuse.

By then Bédard was married with three children. In 2005, she approached the Archdiocese of Quebec and requested damages. When it refused, she went to police, and Therrien was charged with rape and gross indecency. A court-ordered DNA test proved he was the father of Bédard’s son.

Therrien died days before his trial. Bédard then sued the archdiocese and Therrien’s estate for $200,000 in damages. In the widely publicized Quebec City trial, the archdiocese’s lawyer accused Bédard of lying about the rape, insisting the child was the result of a consensual love affair.

In 2012, Quebec Superior Court Justice Édouard Martin noted in his ruling that “no one can remain insensitive to the distress (Bédard) lived through. The moral wound remains painful.

“The reverend Therrien seduced the claimant. The pregnancy, the birth of the baby and the forced consent to adoption followed. The claimant suffered a grave injustice, regardless of how the first sexual relation occurred. She had a clear right to reparation of the damage.”

Rev. Armand Therrien preyed on the vulnerability of France Bédard, who gave birth to his son.
Rev. Armand Therrien preyed on the vulnerability of France Bédard, who gave birth to his son.  (Le Journal de Québec)

Yet Martin ruled against Bédard, saying the three-year statute of limitations for civil suits in such cases had expired. The Court of Appeal arrived at the same decision in 2014.

Bédard doesn’t see the rulings as a defeat. Her case encouraged others who were sexually abused by priests to come forward. In 2008, she co-founded what is now called the Committee for Victims of Priests.

Partly due to her case, Quebec changed the statute of limitations for civil suits in sexual assaults to 30 years. Quebec’s Liberal government is now under pressure to remove all time limits in such cases.

“In my heart, I won,” she says.

_______________________________________________


The pipe-smoking priest with the heavy Dutch accent stood at the hospital window, cradling his newborn daughter, Michelle, in his arms.

Rev. Charles Van Item struggled with a decision. Joanne Johnston, his lover — and the wife of Van Item’s good friend — made it for him.

“My mum said he offered to leave the priesthood, take her, me, my two older sisters, and run away,” says Michelle Raftis, Van Item’s daughter. “My mother turned him down. She knew he wasn’t in love with her.

“I think he was very happy my mother said no,” the Barrie schoolteacher continued. “I think that was the last thing he wanted.”

Joanne’s husband, Gerard, knew of the affair. He also knew the baby wasn’t his but stayed in the rocky marriage. He allowed Van Item to continue his regular visits to the Johnston’s rambling Pickering home after the baby was born.

Charles Van Item

“He came for dinners and everything, he continued to do that,” says Raftis, who recalls Van Item’s presence and that Gerard Johnston didn’t balk. “How awkward would that have been? It went on for years until I found out.”

Gerard had met Van Item when both were students at a seminary in Toronto. Joanne was training to become a nun. Gerard and Joanne met at a social event, fell in love and walked away from their religious studies to get married.

Raftis, at 13, discovered the truth about her biological father from a family friend who blurted it out at a restaurant dinner with a small group. By then, the Johnstons had separated. (Both are now deceased).

She vividly remembers her mother’s warning to protect the priest: “You can’t tell anyone. You can never have a father-daughter relationship with him. You just have to go on your merry old way.”

“And I was like, ‘Holy s–t,’ ” Raftis says. “And I didn’t tell anybody.”

Van Item stopped visiting when he learned Raftis knew he was her father. She kept his secret and would think of him “at the weirdest times.”

“I’d be standing in the schoolyard looking around, saying ‘I wonder what they would think if they knew who my father was?’ ” she says. “That popped into my mind a lot. Still does, today.”

Raftis didn’t reconnect with Van Item until the first of her three children was born. She and Ed Raftis, her husband of 35 years, recall getting a large gift basket sent to her hospital room in Edmonton. Raftis didn’t realize at first it was from Van Item.

Raftis phoned the priest. She needed his medical history and realized she knew little about him: that he had been a Second World War PoW held in his native Holland, where he was tortured, for years. When in Canada, Van Item received regular shock therapy treatments, which Raftis believes were to relieve wartime trauma symptoms.

Van Item and Raftis began calling each other more often. But they weren’t always warm chats.

“One of the first conversations was (him saying) ‘I told my bishop,’ ” Raftis says, referring to Van Item telling her that he’d reported her birth to the Archdiocese of Toronto. She says it felt like a pre-emptive strike in case she asked him for money.

“It was almost like: don’t try to get anything out of me. My bishop knows,” she continues, adding “I didn’t ask him that, I wasn’t threatening him.”

The Raftis family moved back to Ontario in 1998, later settling in Barrie.

Van Item, by then, had built a home near Orangeville, where he was a pastor at St. Timothy’s Parish. He’d also worked at St. Clement’s in Toronto. Raftis visited him a few times in Orangeville. Once, she asked for money when Ed was self-employed and she was out of work: $250 a month for two years to cover benefit payments. Van Item obliged.

Raftis’s roiling feelings about her father persisted — guilt, frustration, anger, regret. At her husband’s urging, she wrote to the then head of the Archdiocese of Toronto, Cardinal Aloysius Ambrozic, in early 2002. She wanted help in improving their father-daughter relationship.

The cardinal did not respond, but Rev. Brian Clough, of the archdiocese’s marriage tribunal office, travelled to Barrie to meet her and her husband, according to correspondence examined by the Star.

After an investigation, Clough made clear to Raftis in a letter seen by the Star that Van Item was indeed her father. He added that Cardinal Ambrozic had “no objection” to Raftis’s desire for a closer “father/daughter relationship” with Van Item.

Still, Raftis’s visits to Orangeville were often strained. She says Van Item was “cold,” even around his grandchildren.

One visit made her realize a deeper relationship with her father was impossible. He told her, without being asked: “I’m not a family man, never have been, don’t want to be.”

“That really just shut me down,” says Raftis.

Curious to find others like her, she began searching online, typing the words “children of priests” with little success. That changed in 2015 when the website “Coping International” popped up. Raftis connected with founder Vincent Doyle.

Doyle encouraged her to seek a formal apology from the Archdiocese of Toronto. Cardinal Collins granted her a meeting, but the apology never came.

Raftis says the church should develop policies that ensure priests who father children live up to their financial and emotional responsibilities. She believes the church should also rethink the mandatory vow of celibacy.

“Is the vow that strong? Obviously not,” Raftis says. “So stop saying you gotta take this vow when it’s not actually happening … They’re breaking it because they’re human.”

As for her own father, a final slap. Van Item died without anyone informing Raftis. She’d understood the priest had a close friend who was supposed to alert the Raftis family if he was seriously ill or had died. A lifelong pipe smoker, he’d developed emphysema.

Raftis learned of his death when she saw Van Item’s obituary online.

“Yes, it upset me. It pissed me off,” she says.

“There was no closure but there was no beginning, either.”

To reach the reporters, contact mormsby@thestar.ca or scontenta@thestar.ca.This article has been updated to clarify the rules of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church regarding married priests.

Feature writers Mary Ormsby and Sandro Contenta talk about the struggles of doing justice to the deeply personal stories of the secret Canadian children of Catholic priests who suffered from being forsaken by their fathers.

More betrayals

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Previously convicted molester Father Barry McGrory has a court date tomorrow morning in Ottawa:

  20  April 2018:  09:00 am,  courtroom #10, “to be spoken to”, Ottawa court-house, (161 Elgin St.)

Tomorrow the judge MAY rule that the preliminary hearing is to continue at a future date with the calling of a complainant  who was unable to testify previously, or the judge MAY rule that Father Barry McGrory is stand trial on some or all of the charges , or the judge MAY rule that there is insufficient evidence to proceed to trial.

I urge those who are able to do so to attend.

Please keep the complainants and victims in your prayers.

*****

The following three articles were posted without comment.  Here they are with brief comment:

(1)  18 April 2018:  “Buffalo bishop to sell mansion to compensate clergy sex abuse victims” & related articles

Another bishop’s palace on the chopping block.  Another residence for retired priests on the chopping block.

So sad.  It really is so sad.  As I so often say, if our bishops spent half as much time listening to God as they have to their lawyers they and we wouldn’t be in this awful mess.

Millstones.

What is it about those Biblical millstones the bishops have consistently failed to understand?

(2)  18 April 2018: “Bishops try to clarify Pope Francis’ decision not to apologize for residential schools” & related article

I don’t understand what is happening here.  It’s turning into a bit of mess.

If you scroll down to the last article “Pope apologizes for abuse at native schools” you will see that it is dated  29 April 2009.  There are other articles online regarding that meeting in Rome between Pope Benedict and representatives of the native Canadians.  Also present at the meeting was a representative from the CCCB.

Read what’s written.  Google for other coverage.

Was that not an apology?

(3)  17 April 2018:  Catholic priests take a vow of celibacy when they’re ordained. But when they break that vow, their children are left to live a lie

Sad stories of the life of children fathered by priests.   More betrayals.

Enough for now.

Sylvia

On and on and on it goes….

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On and on and on it goes….

The court-date of Father Barry McGrory has been adjourned to 31 May 2018.   It seems the  Crown and defence wish to continue discussions they were having previously.  What those discussions entailed I have no idea.  Plea bargaining a guilty plea?  All things, I suppose, are possible.  Whatever it is, it is being done behind closed doors.

No matter.  For today, in the twinkle of an eye it was all over.  McGrory has waived his 11b rights to trial within a reasonable time frame and will be back in court on the 30th  of May, again at 9 am, and again  “to be spoken to.’   It’s all the same on the 31st  as it was for today, with the possibility that the judge will decide to continue the preliminary hearing by calling the complainant who has not testified to testify, and  the possibility that the judge will commit McGrory to stand trial, and of course  the possibility that the judge will rule that he deems there is insufficient evidence for McGrory to stand trial.   And, yes, there is indeed the possibility that the Crown and/or defence will ask for more time and another adjournment 🙂

Father McGrory was there, accompanied by two women and a man.  The only others in the courtroom were my husband and I.

There’s really not much more to say aside the fact that Justice Berg reminded us all that he is new to the bench, and he cracked a few jokes, and Father McGrory laughed.

That was it.

Please keep the complainants and all the McGrory victims in your prayers.

Enough for now,

Sylvia

$2.6 million awarded to man abused by former principal of St. Mary’s College (8 photos)

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Largest award ever of punitive damages against the Catholic Church in Canada. Father Hod Marshall was known as ‘Happy Hands’ ostensibly because of his love for basketball

Soo Today

01 May 2018

In a landmark civil judgment against the Catholic Church, a 68-year-old man has been awarded $2.6 million for sexual abuse suffered a half-century ago at the hands of a former principal of Sault Ste. Marie’s St. Mary’s College.

Rod MacLeod was a student at Sudbury’s St. Charles College from 1963 to 1967 when he was abused by Father Hodgson ‘Hod’ Marshall, known to students by the nickname ‘Happy Hands’ because of his regular attendance at basketball games.

The judgment awarded Friday to MacLeod by a Toronto jury included $500,000 in punitive damages against the Basilian Fathers of Toronto, who ran both the Sudbury and Sault Catholic high schools.

“This represents the largest award of punitive damages against the Catholic Church in Canada and is the first time that a jury of average citizens has judged the church’s handling of sexual abusive priests,” said London, Ont.-based Beckett Personal Injury Lawyers, which represented MacLeod.

“Punitive damages are a rare and exceptional device only used by the courts to note reprehensible conduct which offends society’s sense of decency. The goal of punitive damages is to punish, denounce and deter,” the law firm said in a written statement.

The award to MacLeod “marks a turning point for the church in Canada, who to date have only been required to pay for the damage they caused victims but have never been fined or punished for their institutional conduct and complicity,” Beckett said.

The jury hearing the civil case was sharply critical of the Basilians for responding to accusations against Father Marshall by repeatedly transferring him to sidestep scandal.

“The jury heard evidence that Father Marshall who served in Rochester, Toronto, Windsor, Sudbury, and Sault Ste. Marie was reported a total of six times over his career but was allowed to continue in his role as a priest and teacher,” Beckett Personal Injury Lawyers said.

“The reports of sexual abuse of boys started in 1947, occurred twice in the 1950s, twice in the 1970s and again in 1989 around the time of his retirement from teaching. A further report in 1996 was the most disturbing. Father Marshall, then ministering on the Caribbean island of St. Lucia, ultimately admitted to his Basilian superiors that he had abused upwards of almost 90 boys over his career.”

“The Basilian response was limited with no effort at outreach to the boys, no involvement of police and no publication of the fact that one of their own had left such a wake of devastation across the land,” the law firm said.

Despite repeated allegations about Father Marshall’s relationships with young boys, the priest was quietly shuffled to St. Mary’s College in 1978.

Marshall remained there as principal until 1985, when he was replaced by Father Lee Campbell, another Basilian who was himself later accused of sexual assaults in a million-dollar civil suit launched after Campbell died in 2008.

Father Marshall died in 2014.

“The Basilian pattern of response to such complaints appeared to simply be to transfer Marshall,” Beckett said.

“Obviously there was not an iota of concern for the fate of those unfortunate boys,” said Sylvia MacEachern, who blogs exhaustively about convicted and accused pedophile priests at theinquiry.ca, also offering comfort to their victims.

“I really and truly do not understand the minds of Roman Catholic priests who constantly recycled Hod Marshall from school to school,” MacEachern wrote, responding to the latest jury judgment.

In notes attached to its judgment, the jury said the Basilians needed punishment because of:

  • concealment: silent shuffle undertaken to divert, in conjunction with complaints, avoiding scandal
  • neglect to document offences
  • putting children in harm’s way  grossly negligent
  • no reconciliation with victims – did not follow their own policy from 1991
  • betrayal of trust within the community

Notwithstanding his $2.6 million judgment, Rod MacLeod is hoping change will now occur within the Catholic church.

“I hope this outcome will cause the Basilians to rethink their position on how they treat sex abuse victims; stop listening to their legal experts and listen to their hearts and the teachings of Jesus Christ,” MacLeod said.

EDITOR’S NOTE: SooToday does not permit comments on court stories

“Changes to the Diocese of Alexandria-Cornwall”& related article

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[Alexandria-Cornwall Diocese website]

May 2, 2018

On April 27, 2018, it was announced that Pope Francis has united the Diocese of Alexandria-Cornwall to the Archdiocese of Ottawa “in the person of the bishop”. Archbishop Prendergast is no longer the Apostolic Administrator of the Diocese of Alexandria-Cornwall but now its Bishop. Moreover, an Auxiliary Bishop will be appointed at a later date to assist Archbishop Prendergast specifically for the territory of Alexandria-Cornwall.

In light of this decision, Archbishop Prendergast thanked Pope Francis for affirming the wide-ranging consultation and the decision taken. “I am grateful to Pope Francis for addressing the challenges we face and affirming the importance of the presence of a bishop in Alexandria-Cornwall. I look forward to taking part in working with the clergy, religious and faithful of Cornwall in mapping out our future together.  For my part, I pledge respect and my whole-hearted commitment to our future together.”

“I recognize that this decision will not satisfy everyone and that some people may be upset,” stated Archbishop Prendergast. “However, it is my hope that this decision will ultimately contribute to the creation of vibrant faith communities in Alexandria-Cornwall, which will be evangelizing presences in our midst.”

The Diocese of Alexandria (Cornwall was not added to the name until 1976) was created by the Vatican on January 23, 1890, and Father Alexander Macdonell of Lochiel was named her first bishop. The Diocese is made up of the counties of Glengarry and Stormont and includes more than 56,000 Catholics, 26 parishes and 29 priests.

On January 13, 2016, Archbishop Terrence Prendergast was appointed Apostolic Administrator of the Diocese of Alexandria-Cornwall, following the reassignment of Bishop Marcel Damphousse. The archbishop’s main task was to make a recommendation to the Vatican as to whether the Diocese of Alexandria-Cornwall should be unified with neighbouring Ottawa or whether a new bishop should be appointed to oversee the Diocese.

After many conversations and consultations with the affected parties, including clergy, religious and parishioners, a report was sent to the Vatican at the end of June 2017. Further consultations with the Assembly of Catholic Bishops of Ontario and the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops extended the period of deliberation until March 2018.

As the unification of dioceses is extremely rare, the transition period will take some time as plans are elaborated to effect the change.

_____________________________________

Diocese of Alexandria-Cornwall united to Archdiocese of Ottawa “in persona episcopi” – appointment of Most Rev. Terrence Prendergast as Bishop of Alexandria-Cornwall

CCCB website

prendergast

According to the CCCB 2018 Directory, the Diocese of Alexandria-Cornwall has 27 parishes and missions, with a Catholic population of 60,000 served by 29 diocesan priests, two priests who are members of institutes of consecrated life, 18 permanent deacons and 22 religious Sisters who are members of religious institutes. The Archdiocese of Ottawa has 107 parishes and missions, with a Catholic population of 394,515 served by 155 diocesan priests, 111 priests who are members of institutes of consecrated life, 91 permanent deacons, 447 religious Sisters and 13 religious Brothers who are members of religious institutes, as well as 13 lay pastoral workers.

Diocese of Alexandria-Cornwall about to be swallowed up by the Archdiocese of Ottawa

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Well, as anticipated by many, the Diocese of Alexandria-Cornwall is about to be swallowed up by the Archdiocese of Ottawa:

02 May 2018:  “Changes to the Diocese of Alexandria-Cornwall” & related article

Good or bad?  Time alone will tell.

As you see, there is to be another Auxiliary Bishop appointed to assist Archbishop Terrence Prendergast.  Will the new auxiliary be a priest from the Cornwall area?  someone to placate those Catholics who want no part of this ‘merger’ ?  If yes, who?

As I say, time will tell how this merger plays out for the scandal plagued Diocese of Alexandria-Cornwall.

My prayers are with the many victims in the Cornwall area who have yet to see justice done.

*****

Remember?  this is the Benedictine priest who was recently convicted in Scotland:

04 May 2018:  “Disgraced priest appeals sex abuse conviction and jail term” & related articles

So, Father Moore is appealing.  Moore, you might recall,  is  from the same order as Father Robert MacKenzie, a former Benedictine priest now incardinated in and living in the Archdiocese of Regina Saskatchewan.

Extradition proceedings are said to be under way to have MacKenzie returned to Scotland to face sex abuse charges.  Sad to say no one, it seems, is insisting that MacKenzie, a Roman Catholic priest,  do the right and proper thing and just return to Scotland.

*****

Sacrilege.  And, priest or no as party to it,  sacrilege I would say was the intent of the participating parties:

04 May 2018:  “Catholic Church urge gardai to investigate ‘shocking sex act on an Irish church altar’” & related article

And, yes. I do believe the church should and must be reconsecrated.

*****

I have a series of articles regarding clerical sexual abuse in Canada which ran in the Toronto Star in 1990.  Amazing to read now!  A great job by Kevin Donovan. More dots to connect 🙂  The first in the series is, believe it or not” How Catholic church turned blind eye to child sex abuse by priests?”

I have permission to post, and am anxious to do so – unfortunately will probably not get to it until tomorrow afternoon.  As soon as they are posted I will let you know

Enough for now,

Sylvia

 

 

Trail of abuse stretched across country

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[Click here to read Part One “How Catholic Church turned blind eye…”)

Toronto Star

Sunday 02 November 1990
Day:Sunday Date:2/11/1990

Dateline:MARSDEN, SASK.

by Kevin Donovan Toronto Star

MARSDEN, Sask. – The suicide note is four pages long, printed, single-spaced. It ends: “I don’t need prayers. I don’t believe in God, it’s a farce. Everybody is scared of it. My brother and I were both molested by a Catholic priest when I was seven and he was 14.

“Father (Luke) Meunier is b . . .s. . . . As long as people believe, you’re living in a false world. I have to go prepare now, good-bye cruel world. (signed) One of your temporary victims, (the author’s name).”

Shortly after that day in 1988, the 32-year-old man drove his car into a concrete bridge abutment at more than 160 kilometres (100 miles) an hour, killing himself.

The events his note referred to happened in the early 1960s, when Rev. Luke Meunier was parish priest at St. Charles Church in Marsden.

Meunier, 74, died of a heart attack in a Florida jail cell three weeks ago, shortly after a U.S. court ordered him extradited to Canada for trial. He had been arrested in December.

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police estimate his individual assaults number “into the thousands” and stretch from New Liskeard in Ontario to Marsden, Sask., to New Denver, Kaslo and Prince Rupert in British Columbia and then to several cities in Arizona.

At least twice, senior Catholic church officials heard allegations of child abuse and moved him out of their diocese. In one case, another priest complained about Meunier to police, but the family refused to talk to the investigators.

Boy abused

The known trail begins in 1951. Meunier, a priest ordained in Giselle, Que., in 1939, was posted to the Northern Ontario town of New Liskeard. A former altar boy told police last year Meunier sexually abused him between 1951 and 1955.

Shortly after that time, Meunier was transferred out of the diocese to Saskatchewan.

Desperate for parish priests, Prince Albert Bishop Laurent Morin posted Meunier to St. Charles parish in Marsden, church officials in Saskatchewan say.

Royal Canadian Mounted Police Corporal Russ Arnold says Meunier’s arrival in a new parish followed a pattern.

Meunier would befriend altar boys and get to know their families. One of the ways he assaulted them was to lock up the church after mass, stand on a chair and sing religious songs. Then he would have the altar boys masturbate him.

According to the suicide note left by the 32-year-old man, both he and his older brother were sexually assaulted by Meunier in Marsden in 1963. They did not file a complaint.

But in March, 1965, Morin received a letter from the parents of an 11-year-old girl in the parish.

The letter reads: “About three years ago, our daughter, then 8 years old, came home and told us that Father Meunier had touched her indecently. We, however, told our girl not to worry about it as he is also a weak human being and can make mistakes.”

Quick action

But it happened again. Their daughter said Meunier was touching her “indecently” forcing her to masturbate him.

“A priest like this is detrimental for the salvation of souls of our family and all of us find it absolutely impossible to face him as our priest,” the parents wrote.

“We therefore request that Father Meunier be removed immediately from Marsden. We are willing to do anything to prevent a scandal but we cannot tolerate any delay. We wish your excellency to advise us as to your immediate action in this case.”

Morin’s action was quick, suspending Meunier and removing him, says Bishop Blaise Morand, the current bishop for the area (Morin suffers from Alzheimer’s and could not be interviewed).

But the suspension Meunier was given likely only applied to the Prince Albert diocese, Morand said.

Somehow, Meunier convinced local church authorities to hold a farewell party honoring him. Then he paid his own way to Rome to take part in the last year of the Second Vatican Council, which began in 1962.

Although Meunier never attended, he referred to himself as a “special observer” to the council on his return to B.C. He used this status, complete with slide shows of Rome, to seek out more friendly families and more young boys.

Police station

By 1967, Meunier had settled at a New Denver parish. Retired RCMP Staff Sergeant Jim Aird recalls getting a telephone call from Rev. George Hart, a Redemptorist priest who had recently moved to another parish, leaving Meunier in charge.

“He called me and said there had been a problem with Father Meunier,” said Aird, now living in Kamloops.

The priest gave Aird the name of a young altar boy who, it was alleged, Meunier had sexually abused. Aird contacted the boy’s parents, who agreed to come down to the police station.

“But when they showed up, Meunier showed up with them,” Aird said. “Meunier kept saying to (the boy’s father), ‘What are you doing, my son, you don’t want to involve the police’.”

The boy’s father refused to let Aird question his son.

In a recent statement to the police, the father said he had agreed not to press charges because Bishop Wilfred Emmett Doyle in Nelson was going to get Meunier “a place away with older people.”

Aird wasn’t satisfied with this non-action. He went to his superiors, who contacted Doyle in Nelson. A few days later, Doyle sent Monsignor John Monaghan up to New Denver to remove Meunier.

Monsignor convicted

“He actually physically threw him out,” Aird said. (The same Monsignor Monaghan in that case was recently convicted of sexually abusing young girls from 1959 to 1987).

“But it didn’t solve the problem,” Aird said. “It just moved it somewhere else.”

Aird said Doyle promised the Mounties Meunier would never be a priest in Canada again. However, Meunier showed up seven days later in Kaslo, on the other side of the mountain from New Denver.

After Aird informed the RCMP there of the New Denver incident, Meunier was asked by police to move on, and eventually did.

Doyle confirmed Meunier was ordered to leave New Denver but would not elaborate on the reasons.

“(Meunier) presented no references from any place in which he had served. Evidently, he made no mention of Marsden, Sask., so that no inquiries would be made,” Doyle told The Star.

After the New Denver incident, Doyle said he “was told that there were problems but not informed of what nature they were. Because (Meunier) brought no references I felt something was wrong and he was asked to leave.”

Nelson Crown Attorney Dana Urban said the Meunier case is a “prime example of where the church moved in and put a lid on” a complaint.

Made a deal

From New Denver, Meunier went south to Trail and then northwest to Prince Rupert. Police in those areas allege he also abused children.

Eventually, he went south into the United States.

Court records in Pima County, Ariz., show that police in Tucson arrested Meunier in 1972 and charged him with molesting children. He was released on a $50,000 appearance bond, which was waived when the church and victims made a deal and dropped the charges.

In 1975 Meunier was arrested again, this time while working at another Arizona parish. He was charged with three counts of child molestation and three counts of lewd and lascivious actions.

In February, 1976, Meunier was convicted of two of those charges, sentenced to one to three years in jail, and served two years.

Upon release, Meunier moved to Trinidad, Colo., and then to Mexico, to West Palm Beach, Fla., and then to St. Foy, Que.

When the RCMP, investigating a B.C. complaint from the past, tracked him down, Meunier was living in Florida. There had been no complaints about Meunier’s activity after 1975.

……………………..

[Next article in this series:  “Conviction didn’t end career“]


Sexual assaults by priest cost church $150,000

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[Read previous article in this series: “Conviction didn’t end career”

Toronto Star
Monday 02 December 1990

Dateline:OTTAWA

By Kevin Donovan Toronto Star

OTTAWA – Rev. Dale Crampton‘s sexual assaults of young boys cost the Roman Catholic church $150,000.

That was the Ottawa archdiocese’s financial penance for failing to act on a previous complaint against Crampton, and for not counselling his victims.

The settlement is believed to be the first of its kind in Canada and could set a precedent for future actions against the church, similar to those in the United States since the early 1980s.

Minnesota lawyer Jeff Anderson estimates the Roman Catholic Church in the United States has paid out as much as $90 million to victims of priests.

Anderson, of St. Paul, Minn., has handled numerous cases himself and regularly keeps in touch with more than 100 lawyers acting on other cases against the church “in virtually every state.”

He said many of the U.S. cases have been decided on the basis of whether senior church officials were warned of abuse in the past.

Catholic church officials, on discovery of child abuse complaints, have “historically” kept the priests in the clergy, Anderson said.

“Instead of reporting them to the police or booting them out of there like most any other institution, they have, out of loyalty to their own, just moved them around secretly,” he said in an interview.

Among the financial settlements in the United States: * $15 million to 16 families in the case of a Lafayette, La., priest. * An estimated $2.5 million to three victims and their families in Orlando, Fla. * $375,000 to three boys abused by a priest in Springfield, Ill.

Canadian church officials interviewed by The Star say they hope parents and victims in this country will not follow the U.S. lead.

Valleyfield Bishop Robert Lebel, president of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops, said the danger that the church will be sued is lessened if church officials report the complaints.

“If we follow the law there will not be lawsuits. (The priest) may be sued himself, but not the bishop,” Lebel said.

The three Catholic families in the Ottawa area who shared the $150,000 payout in the Crampton case did not make lightly the decision to sue their church, lawyer Bruce Carr-Harris said in a recent interview.

Placed on probation

“From the families’ perspective, they felt driven to seek a civil remedy because, having gone to the church for help after the assaults, they were shut out by officials, including the archbishop,” Carr-Harris said.

Crampton pleaded guilty in 1986 to seven counts of sexual assault involving altar boys aged 11 to 13 over a 10-year period dating back to 1973.

Diagnosed a homosexual pedophile, the 50-year-old Crampton was first placed on probation and ordered to continue treatment he’d started earlier that year. A crown appeal the next year increased his sentence to eight months in jail.

In the 1970s and early 1980s, Crampton was a respected man in the community, as priest, school board trustee and as honorary chaplain for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.

So it was not unusual that parents allowed their sons to stay overnight at the rectories of his Golbourn Township or Nepean churches, or to spend the weekend at his Horseshoe Bay cottage.

Once there, Crampton would make advances, hug and French kiss the boys, then take them to bed and fondle their genitals, court transcripts show.

One boy’s victim impact statement to the courts said he did not yet know the full effects of the assaults. “I’ll let you know when I have kids,” the boy wrote.

But some of the boys would never have been assaulted if church officials had paid heed to an earlier complaint, according to evidence from the civil action launched by the families of three victims.

‘Every measure’

According to court records, Crampton had invited a 13-year-old altar boy to his cottage for a day of snowmobiling in 1979. After drinking heavily, Crampton got into bed with the boy and fondled him.

The next morning, the boy went home and told his mother, who contacted a prominent Ottawa psychiatrist for help. The psychiatrist, a Catholic who had done work for the church’s marriage tribunal, took the complaint to Ottawa Bishop John Behan.

According to the psychiatrist’s account at the civil discovery proceeding, Behan said he would “look into it and take every measure, even the most drastic, to see it is taken care of.”

After waiting several weeks for Behan to call, the victim’s parents, guilt-ridden because they had entrusted their child to Crampton, called and made their own appointment.

The parents say they explained the assault to Behan at a Feb. 16, 1979, meeting and he promised to correct the situation. It is not known what, if any, action was taken by Behan, but no report of the incident was made to police or children’s aid at the time.

More assaults followed over the next three years, including abuse of the three victims whose families launched the civil suit.

In her victim impact statement at Crampton’s 1986 criminal hearing, the mother of the 1979 victim writes: “(Bishop Behan) assured us that the matter would be dealt with following an investigation. It upset me very much that in subsequent years Mr. Crampton continued to operate within the Catholic church, performing the duties of a priest.”

‘Momentary weakness’

And the boy’s father writes: “It was only last summer when there was an indication that Dale Crampton had been involved with other children that I realized that based on statements from the archbishop’s office that nothing had been done with our report and, in fact, that it might have been suppressed by church officials.”

During the discovery portion of the civil proceedings, Behan (who died two years ago) denied hearing anything of the 1979 complaint.

However, Behan said some boys had complained in the mid-1960s that Crampton had exposed himself to them. Crampton neither confirmed nor denied the incident and Behan attributed it to a “momentary weakness,” according to the civil examination evidence.

Despite knowing the church had prior warning, the three families might not have sued if the archdiocese, after Crampton was charged, had shown sympathy and provided counselling for the victims, lawyer Carr-Harris said.

“But it was my clients’ view the church was moving to protect its own and was indifferent to the concerns of the families,” he said.

The only attempt made at counselling was when church officials sent one family to a local priest who told the parents it was the boy’s fault and “he must have liked it,” Carr-Harris said.

Although the civil action began in late 1986, the trial was not set until last October. On Oct. 11, the night before the jury was to be picked, the archdiocese settled out of court, paying the full $150,000 requested by the families.

Final settlement in historical sex abuse case

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Final settlement in historical sex abuse case

CTV Newsworld   Northern Ontario

Published Thursday, May 10, 2018 5:19PM EDT
Last Updated Thursday, May 10, 2018 7:01PM EDT

Callam Rodya, Videojournalist, Sudbury

@@CallamRodyaCTV

 

A survivor sexually abused by a former Sudbury Catholic school priest was awarded a settlement after decades-long case. Callam Rodya reports.

A final settlement has been reached in a historical sexual abuse case involving a priest at a Sudbury Catholic school.

Father William Hodgson Marshall taught at St. Charles College in the 1960’s and 70s, where he molested at least seven young boys.

He was eventually convicted of sex crimes against 17 male victims.

One of Hodgson’s victims spoke about the impact the abuse had on him and finally having a resolution in a fight spanning over three decades.

In the mid-1980’s, Denis Beland started having health problems a man in his thirties shouldn’t have.

“These sudden and dramatic weight losses and pneumonias. The sorts of things that you wouldn’t expect in a healthy person.” said Beland.

At first, doctors were stumped, but eventually it became clear, it was all being triggered by memories of the sexual abuse he endured at St. Charles College, when he was 12-years-old.

Abuse suffered at the hands of a priest.

“This is a very ugly crime. And these are the sorts of things that people don’t want to talk about, and that people don’t want to hear about.” said Beland.

His case isn’t that unusual.

Childhood abuse victims often repress the trauma so deep down inside that it doesn’t resurface until well into adulthood.

For Beland, that trauma came back so violently, he was forced to go on permanent disability.

He’s now 61 and hasn’t worked in 25 years.

Beland was one of at least 17 known victims of Father William Marshall, who taught and even served as principal at St. Charles College during the 1960s and 70s.

When Beland tried to report Marshall’s crimes, he was expelled from the school.

“It was like hear no evil, see no evil, speak no evil, but they did. They did see that stuff and they did nothing about it.” said Beland.

After a conviction in 2011 sent Marshall to jail for 16 months, civil litigation was launched against the Basilian Fathers of Toronto, which ran St. Charles during Marshall’s time.

Beland’s lawyer was Robert Talach, who specializes in sexual abuse claims against the Catholic Church.

“These cases, though dealing with history, are important for shaping the future. How institutions view their responsibility, how the conduct themselves, when these issues arise.” said Talach.

In a settlement reached this week, Beland was awarded $950,000, an amount that pales in comparison to what his earnings would have been had he been able to keep working. He says the lawsuit was about more than just money.

“I believe that collectively we’ve made the world a better place. If something does happen to a kid, cause after all, that’s who we’re trying to protect, he should know that he can go to any of those responsibility figures, whoever they may be.” said Beland.

As for his faith, Beland remains a Catholic and even sent his children to St. Charles College, but he has some words for the church.

“I think the church has to look inward, look at itself, and you know they need to make changes. But, so far, the changes seem to come very, very slowly.” said Beland.

He now has some closure in his decades-long fight, along with a modest settlement, but he says he also has the greatest reward, the vindication that comes with telling his story and being believed.

Another guilty plea from former Cornwall Classical College prof?

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It sounds as though previously convicted Viatorian priest Father Ron Leger  has entered another guilty plea.  In March of this year we were anticipating a date being set for trial, but,  his next court date is for sentencing.  I checked to be certain.  Yes, it is for sentencing.

10 June 2018: 10 am, sentencing, Provincial Court of Queen’s Bench , Winnipeg Provincial courthouse (Main Floor, 408 York Ave.).

I don’t believe there has been a sentencing hearing so I’m thinking that this upcoming court date will be a sentencing hearing with ‘experts’ speculating as to his chance of re-offending, and both sides arguing if he should or should not be jailed, and if so, for how long,  and probably opportunity for victims to give their Victim Impact Statements?     The judge could then opt to pronounce sentencing later in the day, or set another date.

A reminder that Leger, a student at Cornwall Ontario’s now defunct Classical College, later taught at the college, and did so when the former long-time Chancellor of the Alexander-Cornwall Diocese and recently convicted sexual predator Father Denis Vaillancourt was a student .  A reminder too that while teaching at the college Leger was a good friend of Father Paul Lapierre.  Lapierre has since been charged and convicted for the sex abuse of Claude Marleau.

*****

Thanks to someone who sent me the link, there’s another article posted regarding the recent out of court William Hodgson Marshall settlement:

10 May 2018:  Final settlement in historical sex abuse case

Again, good for you Denis for hanging in there all of these years.  You did it!

*****

Here’s more disturbing news regarding the charges and allegations against Father David Paulson, a priest of the Diocese of Erie Pennsylvania:

12 May 2018:  “Trooper linked to case of priest in Erie diocese” & related article

Note that (1) Paulson purchased that property  in boonies in 2003 with  Mark Bettwye, a friend who was also a police sergeant, and, (2) Bettwye was aware that Paulson frequented the camp with young boys:

“During the week of March 12, 2018, the Grand Jury heard testimony from Bettwy who confirmed that he shared ownership of the property with Poulson. Bettwy stated that he was aware that Poulson frequented the camp with young boys.

And note that Poulson allegedly told his friend that if he, Poulson, was ever accused o molesting altar boys his portion of the property was to go to Bettwy family

“Bettwy then returned to the Grand Jury on April 16, 2018, and recounted a statement that Poulson had made when they purchased the property. Specifically, Poulson indicated his desire to see property ownership relinquished to the Bettwy family in the event that he (Poulson) was ever accused of molesting altar boys.”

Poulson has been removed from all his assignments which include serving as  Chaplain at the state prison in Cambridge Springs, bishop’s delegate for Mass in the Extraordinary Form (Latin Mass), diocesan liaison to the Catholic Charismatic Renewal, and diocesan chaplain for the World Apostolate of Fatima (The Blue Army of Our Lady of Fatima)

*****

Anther case of children being sexually abused during confession, this one at a school in Ireland:

12 May 2018:  “Northern Ireland Catholic Priest ‘Sexually Abused Boy In Confession Every Week For Three Years’” & related article

Now why pray tell were confessions being heard in a store room?

When, I wonder,  did clergy decide that there was no need to hear confessions in an actual confessional?

I believe there was and more than ever is merit to the use of a confessional booth where the priest can not tell who is confessing, and where he has no ability to have any form of physical contact with the penitent.  Yes, a priest could still misuse the confessional to try to groom a child penitent, but in an actual confessional he can not lay a hand, or even a finger, on the penitent.

I say we bring back the old-fashioned confessionals. If “Father” wants the children in a particular  school to go to confession, then round the children up and bus them to the nearest church which has real, honest to goodness old-fashioned confessionals.

*****

A few days ago I was pondering:  Where oh where is Father Adrian Cristobal?

Father Cristobal, you may recall, was recently here in Ottawa, Ontario studying Canon Law.  Yes, at  St. Paul’s University.  Still on staff  with the Faculty of Canon Law are Father John Renken and John Huels

Father Renken is  currently listed as Dean.

 

 

 

 

 

 

John Huels is shown as a full professor

 

 

 

 

 

 

*****

Meanwhile, over in the Vatican Pope Francis is meeting with the Bishops of Chile to discuss sexual abuse in the the Church in Chile:

15 May 2018:   “Chile archbishop defends himself as pope’s summit opens” & related articles

15 May 2018:  Chileans denounce suffering sex abuse by Marists, priests

I repeat her the comments I made earlier on the first:

Does the Pope believe that clerical sexual abuse, denials by molesters and their enablers and cover-ups are unique to Chile? I fear this has that feel.

Has he ever, I wonder, heard of Cornwall?

Has he ever, I wonder, heard of Perry Dunlop?

Has he ever, I wonder, heard of any of the countless priests in Canada who raped the souls and destroyed the faith of so many young Roman Catholics and their families?

Where have these people been for the past forty or fifty years?

Note Cardinal Javier Errazuriz’ justification for his failure to address the sex abuse allegations against Father Fernando Karadima: “They were accusing a priest with a great pastoral calling, whose preaching enriched more than 30 young people who were ordained priests and four priests who were consecrated bishops….They also accused a priest who inspired a youth association that propagated his fame.”

Is the Cardinal really that naive? is he that ignorant of the fact that molesters are among the greatest manipulators and liars on the face of the earth?

Is the Cardinal one of those people who thinks that molesters sport horns?

Let’s see where it goes. Will the bishops of Ireland will be called to meet in person with the Pope solely to address the magnitude of the clerical sexual scandal and cover-up in Ireland? Ditto the bishops of Canada. Ditto the USA. Ditto Scotland. Ditto England. And on and on and on…

*****

Finally, just in case you missed it.  The latest news on the circus surrounding the Cardinal George Pell sex abuse trial in Australia:

14 May 2018:   “Prosecutors Seek Complete Ban On Media Reporting Of Cardinal George Pell Trial” & related article

Due to the time change we should have an idea by evening how the judge rules.  Will I be allowed to say a word?  Will there be a ‘super injunction.’  We shall see…

Enough for now,

Sylvia

Sex abuser gets three years

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The Brockville Recorder

Monday, May 28, 2018 6:11:11 EDT PM

Wayne Lowrie  By Wayne Lowrie, Postmedia Network

A former church organist and youth leader, who used his position of authority in the Catholic Church to sexually abuse a 15-year-old boy, was sentenced to three years in prison on Monday.

Brian Joseph Lucy, 70, of Gananoque, started abusing the altar boy and member of the Junior Knights youth group while organist of St. John the Evangelist Roman Catholic Church and leader of the youth group, the court heard.

Starting in the early 1990s, the abuse, which included oral, anal and group sex, occurred more than 100 times before the victim turned 18, often two or three times a week and sometimes lasting four to five hours, according to a statement of facts read into the record by Crown Attorney Jacqueline Masse. The encounters continued until the victim was in his early 20s.

In an impact statement to the court, the victim, who can’t be identified because of a court order, called Lucy a “wolf in sheep’s clothing,” who used his friendship with his family and his position with the church to cause the boy to trust him. The youth, in Grade 9 when it started, was a troubled teen when Lucy began taking him to his house, plying him with alcohol and persuading him to engage in the sex acts, the victim said.

The victim said the encounters have emotionally scarred him for life and “hurt me more than anyone will ever know.”

He told the court that he has suffered years of depression, night sweats, anxiety attacks and panic that he now controls with medication – up to 10 pills a day.

The victim said he has trouble trusting people and that he never wanted to have children for fear that they might be abused, too. This caused him problems with relationships during his adult life, he said.

The victim’s aunt, who knew Lucy from Gananoque, called him a “sanctimonious predator,” who deserved to be locked away forever.

In her victim impact statement, the victim’s mother called Lucy “evil and sick,” accusing him of “hiding behind the Catholic church for years.”

Lucy apologized to the victim for his actions.

“I am truly sorry for what happened,” he said.

Lucy said that therapy and counselling in prison had led him to realize the damage that his actions had done to  the victims.

He is now in Joyceville Penitentiary serving a five-year sentence for similar crimes against two other Gananoque youths in the late 1970s and early 1980s. After reading news accounts of Lucy’s sentencing in 2015, the latest victim gathered the resolve to approach the Gananoque Police with his 27-year-old story.

Prosecutor Masse argued that Lucy deserved at least four years of additional time for the latest conviction, given the boy’s age at the time, the years of abuse, the seriousness of the sex acts and the impact that it had on the victim.

She noted that Lucy had pleaded guilty, sparing the victim the trauma of a trial, but she said the guilty plea had only come after a preliminary hearing at which the victim testified.

Defence lawyer Mark MacDonald urged a sentence of two and a half years, citing Lucy’s guilty plea, the fact that his client is 70 and that he has some health issues.

Justice John Johnston of the Ontario Superior Court said his three-year sentence reflects the seriousness of the crime and society’s revulsion at crimes against children.

“If we can’t protect children who can we protect?” he asked.

The judge said he also took into account the fact that Lucy was in a position of trust over the boy and the nature of the crimes.

However, Lucy’s willingness to plead guilty weighed in his favour, Johnston added.

Most go that route

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Previously convicted molester Father Barry McGrory has been committed to stand trial on the charges from all three complainants.  And, yes, that means that the charges include those related to the allegations of one complainant who did not testify at the preliminary hearing.

McGrory has opted for a trial by jury.   And, yes, most do go that route.

So, the next court date for father Barry McGrory is:

26 June 2018: 10:15 am, pre-trial discovery,  Ottawa courthouse (161 Elgin St.)

I will have to check but think that this may NOT be open to the public.  As soon  as I find out will let you know.

Don’t for a moment think that a trial date is now just around the corner.  It usually takes about a year to move from committal to stand trial to the actual trial.

On and on and on it goes 🙁

Meanwhile  Father McGrory is still foot loose and fancy free. And, yes, I do refer to him as Father, an oxymoron to put it bluntly, and stark reminder to us all that that, to my knowledge,  Church officials have failed to ensure that this wolf in sheep’s clothing is defrocked.  The process was supposedly started by the Ottawa Archdiocese  late in 2016.

How long does it take?

*****

Plans are being made to have our grandson transferred by helicopter to another hospital.  Things are apparently moving very quickly now.

Prayers. Prayers. Prayers.  Keep them going.

Enough for now,

Sylvia

Just not possible

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Previously convicted Archdiocese of Ottawa priest Father Barry McGrory has a court date in Ottawa this morning:

26 June 2018: 10:15 am, pre-trial discovery,  Ottawa courthouse (161 Elgin St.)

As much as I would love to be there it’s just not possible.

Please keep the victims and complainants in your prayers.

*****

Please keep the prayers for our 16-year-old grandson going.  Today he starts on a chemo-drug regime to prepare for his bone marrow transplant next Monday.  He is handling this crisis so well.  We are so very proud of him.

Thank you again to all who have offered prayers.  There are countless examples over the past weeks of prayers heard and answered.  Please don’t stop praying.  Those prayers are needed over the next few weeks more than ever.

Thank you.  From the bottom of my heart, thank you.

*****

There has been little opportunity to get much accomplished on Sylvia’s Site.  When I can I do post a few articles, often with a comment.  Check New to the site.  

I will post what and when I can.  Meanwhile, please  post links to articles which you believe would be of  interest to those who follow Sylvia’s Site.

Enough for now,

Sylvia

 

 

 

“Court document lists $15 million in quiet sex-abuse settlements by London diocese”& related article

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Toronto StarThu., June 28, 2018

A decade-long court battle between the Roman Catholic Diocese of London and its insurance company has disclosed $15 million in largely secret settlements to people who sued priests for sexual abuse.

The payments — listed in a document filed with London’s Superior Court — went to 50 people accusing 12 priests in the diocese of sexual abuse.

The single-page document provides a rare glimpse into how a Canadian diocese dealt with a string of accusers by charting the millions quietly paid to them.

Settlements like these are usually kept secret by non-disclosure agreements. This court document lifts the veil on that process with a detailed financial portrait of a troubled diocese handling sex abuse scandals that have rocked the Catholic church for years. When legal fees, mediation costs and the price of special reports are included, the total costs of the settlements for alleged abuses that occurred during an eight-year period jumps to $17.7 million.

The abuses that resulted in the settlements — committed against boys and girls as young as 6 — took place between 1963 and 1971, a period when the diocese’s insurance coverage is being disputed in court. The settlements were struck during the last 18 years.

The list includes notorious predators like Rev. Charles Henry Sylvestre, who pleaded guilty in 2006 to sexually assaulting 47 girls. Eleven of his victims – including a 14-year-old girl who became pregnant by Sylvestre and suffered a botched abortion the priest arranged — received settlements totalling $5.2 million.

Priests who have never been publicly named as alleged abusers also appear on the list, including the late Rev. Ulysse Lefaive, accused of raping a 10-year-old girl in a Sarnia-area rectory in 1966. The alleged victim settled for $62,500 in 2013.

The largest settlement on the list — almost $2.5 million in 2004 — was for the impact of abuse by Rev. Barry Donald Glendinning on a family, including the repeated sexual assault of three brothers beginning when they were 6, 8 and 10. He had the boys in his room up to 300 times.

The bill for the disputed eight-year period isn’t final. The court document notes that seven more sexual abuse cases against priests are pending.

The list of settled and pending cases brings the number of priests charged or sued for sexual abuse in the London diocese to at least 30, including 14 who have been written about in news reports but are not part of the 1963-1971 settlement list.

The London diocese refused to tell the Star how much it has paid, in total, for all priests accused of sexual abuse.

The insurance dispute is scheduled for a September trial in London.

The insurance court case, first revealed in the Star, was launched in 2008, after AXA Insurance refused to cover the diocese for two sexual abuse settlement claims totalling about $900,000. The diocese sued AXA for $2 million for breach of contract.

AXA, now owned by Intact Financial Corp., one of Canada’s largest liability insurance companies, then countersued. It’s demanding the return of $10 million it paid the diocese for the 1963-1971 settlements. AXA disputes that a policy existed during that period. And if it did, the company argues it was made void by the diocese’s failure to disclose abuse committed by its priests before the policy was issued and renewed.

AXA also accuses the diocese of hiding pedophile priests by moving them to different parishes or duties for decades, thereby misleading the insurance company and exposing it to greater financial risk.

The Star discovered the list of settlements in two large boxes stuffed with court documents about the case. The list shows widely different payments.

In a trial, awards in sexual abuse cases are partly based on the pain and suffering caused by the abuse. Pain and suffering awards have been capped by Supreme Court rulings at about $375,000, says Loretta Merritt, a Toronto lawyer who specializes in abuse cases.

“Generally speaking, the younger and more vulnerable the child, the higher the award,” Merritt adds. “The greater the number of the incidents, the more invasive the incidents, the more violent the incidents, the longer the duration over which the child endured the abuse — the higher the award.”

How close the relationship was between victim and abuser, and how great the breach of trust, are also considered, along with the long-term impact on the child.

If the abuse was particularly heinous, aggravated damages will be added. The court will also consider the cost of past or future health care, such as the need for therapy, and the income a victim may have lost because of the abuse. Statements of claim reviewed by the Star often describe abused children as eventually failing in school, abusing alcohol or drugs, suffering mental anguish and struggling to hold down jobs.

Finally, the court will consider punitive damages, meant to punish the abuser, and rarely awarded against institutions. Diocese or religious orders have sometimes been hit with such damages, when they shuffled abusive priests from one parish to another, for example.

In 2004, the Supreme Court ruled that dioceses are “vicariously” liable for abuses committed by their priests, given the control the diocese exercises over priests and the power conferred to priests by the diocese. What it means is that dioceses are also on the hook for damages awarded.

Settlements struck without going to trial are always a compromise, Merritt says, even though the same category of damages are considered.

“You may not have a slam-dunk case where the (abuser’s) been convicted,” Merritt says. “You might not be sure whether you’re going to win.

“There’s a significant cost to going to trial, in terms of the time it takes, in terms of the emotional investment, etc. So each person may not want to do it. It depends on the individual. Some people want their day in court and are excited to go to trial, other people would rather settle.”

________________________________________

This is how money was paid out in settlements involving the Roman Catholic Diocese of London, Ont.

The Toronto Star

Thu., June 28, 2018

Retired priest Father Charles Henry Sylvestre seen in 2005. Eleven of his abuse victims received a total of $5.2 million in settlements with the Roman Catholic Diocese of London.

Retired priest Father Charles Henry Sylvestre seen in 2005. Eleven of his abuse victims received a total of $5.2 million in settlements with the Roman Catholic Diocese of London.  (Diana Martin / The Canadian Press file photo)

Unable to open new pages where new ones needed

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Another one of those ‘read it and weep’ articles:  for so so many reasons.

28 June 2018:  Accused priests. Millions in quiet payouts. And it was all kept on a list

Time is scarce for me right now, so I am unable to open new pages where new pages need to be opened, and I am unable to spend the time I would like to spend finding out as much as I possible can about the the following priests  referenced in the article .  For now I will post a little on each with the hope that in the weeks to come there will be opportunity to get those pages put together and posted:

(1) Father Charbonneau

The Father Charbonneau mentioned  must be  one of the two Charbonneau brothers  I referenced a number of years ago in this blog .  Father Paul A. Charbonneau was ordained in 1948:  Father Robert A. Charbonneau was ordained in 1953.  The former was a co-owner of Bishop Euegen Larocque’s cottage, Quom Bonum

(2)   Father Francis Freiburger cr

 Father Francis Freiburger cr – also went by Father Frank Freiburger, was a Resurrectionist priest who was born near Formosa Ontario, ordained 1918 as a priest for an order known as the Congregation of the Resurrection.  He served in both the United States and Canada until his death in 1965 at which time he Rector at St. Louis Roman Catholic Church in Waterloo.    Over the years he served in various capacities and for various periods of time – some very brief –  in Ontario, specifically in Hamilton, Dundas, North Bay, Kitchener.

Scroll down to page 68 in the following document  for a good idea of where he was and when:

Reference Father Francis Friebburger cr

(3) Father Ulysse Achille Lefaive

Here is Father Lafaive’s obituary from the Windsor Star:

LEFAIVE, Rev. Ulysse Achille Passed away September 25, 2010, in his 86th year. Dear son of the late Achille and Aurore (nee Desmarais). Predeceased by siblings Antoinette (1996) & husband Leo Parent (1996), Jean Paul Lefaive (1979), Angeline (2008) & husband Doran McEachern (1986), Isabel (1998) & husband Vic Wyatt (1975), Fern Lefaive (1978), and Louis Lefaive (2002). Survived by sisters-in-law Jeanette Lefaive of Windsor and Winifrid Lefaive of Ottawa, and many nieces and nephews. Father Lefaive was ordained on June 11, 1949, in St. Peter’s Cathedral in London, ON. He joyfully served the people of God in parishes in Essex & Kent Counties as Pastor at St. Michael’s, Ridgetown (1968- 1979); St. Thomas the Apostle, Windsor (1979- 1988); and St. Alphonsus, Windsor (1988-1997), and many other parishes as an associate Pastor. Father Lefaive served on the Roman Catholic Cemetery Board, and the Windsor Coalition for Housing. He also served for 10 years as Chaplain and 3rd degree member of the Knights of Columbus Bishop John T. Kidd Council #4924 and as 4th degree member of the Assembly #1789 Right Rev-erend Wilfred J. Langlois Council in Windsor. Fr. Lefaive was also a celebrant of Latin Masses (Cursillo) for many years. If you so desire, donations to the St. Peter’s Seminary or to the Scarborough Missions would be appreciated by the family. Visitation Wednesday 2-4 pm & 6-9pm with Parish prayers at 7:30pm and Knights of Columbus prayers at 8 pm at FAMILIES FIRST 1065 LAUZON RD. East Windsor 519-969-5841 On Thursday, family and friends are invited to meet after 10am at St. Alphonsus Church (85 Park St E.), followed by Mass of Christian Burial at 11am. Bishop Fabbro to celebrate. Interment St. Alphonsus Cemetery. Share memories, photos or make a donation online at www.FamiliesFirst.ca .

(4)  Father Ron Reeves

Father Ronald W.  Reeves sfm was, like Rev. John Stock, a priest with an order known as the Scarborough Foreign Missions.  He was ordained 21 November 1935.  He served in China until 1950.  In 1960 he was serving   at the parish in Cowichan Lake, Vancouver Island

He served at Our Lady of Sorrows, Windsor, Ontario from 1969-1974.  In the mid 80s he had an address in Harrow Ontario

*****

Father Howard Chabot, a priest with the Diocese of Pembroke, Ontario died on Tuesday.  Here is his obituary:

Obituary for Rev. Howard Chabot

Reverend Howard Leo Chabot
1940 – 2018
Reverend Howard Leo Chabot, priest of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Pembroke, passed away on Tuesday, June 26, 2018 at the age of 77. Father Chabot was born in Arnprior, Ontario, on August 28, 1940. He attended elementary and high school in Arnprior, St. Mary’s Redemptorist College, Brockville, St. George’s Novitiate of the Redemptorist Fathers, St. Augustine’s Seminary and the Grand Seminary of Montreal. He recently celebrated the 50th anniversary of his ordination having been ordained to the priesthood on May 4, 1968 in his home parish of St. John Chrysostom, Arnprior, by Bishop William J. Smith. Shortly after ordination, Father Chabot attended the Divine Word International Centre in Scarborough. Father was Parochial Vicar in the parishes of Our Lady of Mercy, Bancroft, and St. Columbkille Cathedral, Pembroke, as well as serving at Our Lady of Sorrows, Petawawa. As parish priest, he served the parishes of St. Paul the Hermit, Sheenboro, Our Lady of Perpetual Help, Braeside, Most Holy Name of Jesus, Pembroke, Our Lady of Mount Carmel, LaPasse and Our Lady of Grace, Westmeath, and Our Lady of Lourdes, Pembroke. In addition to his parish work, Father Chabot served in the diocese as Director of Catholic Social Services, the Office of the Lay Apostolate, the Office of Religious Education, member of the Priestly Life Committee, Zone Chairman of the Pembroke Pastoral Zone and the Office of Vocations. He also exercised his many talents as chaplain of the Pembroke Police Services, as Probation/Aftercare Children’s Services Division of the Pembroke Community and Social Services as well as chaplain to the Sisters of St. Joseph, Pembroke. After such an extended and lengthy ministry, Father Chabot entered retirement on July 31, 2005. However, Father Chabot did not retire to sit quietly: even in retirement from full-time parish ministry, he led workshops and preached retreats and days of recollection in many parishes and smaller groups. Preceded in death by his parents George and Cecelia Chabot (nee Cleroux), by infant brother Joseph, by brother Dalt (Judy) Chabot, and by sisters Doris (Des) Herrick and Mildred (Wib) Clarke. Sadly missed by many nieces, nephews and Clergy Faithfull of the Diocese of Pembroke. All are invited to the Rite of Reception of the Body at St. Columbkille Cathedral, Pembroke, on Monday, July 2nd, at 2:00 p.m. Following the Rite of Reception, friends may pay their respects until 4 p.m. and from 7 to 9 p.m. Mass of Christian Burial, presided by His Excellency, Bishop Michael Mulhall, will be celebrated on Tuesday, July 3rd at 10:30 a.m. also at St. Columbkille Cathedral. Following the funeral liturgy, interment will take place in the Malloch Road Cemetery, Arnprior. As an expression of sympathy, donations to the Society of Saint Vincent de Paul would be appreciated. Honoring Father Chabot’s wishes, the Mission with John Pridmore being held at St. Columbkille’s Cathedral, Pembroke on October 1-3, 2018 will proceed. Arrangements are in the care of Neville Funeral Home, Pembroke.

******

I will try my very best to find out when the next court date for Fathers Barry McGrory and Ronald Leger are.

*****

The chemo and drug regime continues for our grand-son.  Yesterday was a a pretty rough day, but by day’s end he was feeling considerably better.

Please please keep the prayers going.

Enough for now,

Sylvia

“Father Joe, convicted of theft and fraud, returns to serve Catholic faithful in Ottawa”& related article

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Ottawa Citizen

Updated: September 19, 2018

APRIL 1, 2009 – Father Joe LeClair, photographed inside Blessed Sacrament Church in the Glebe. Wayne Cuddington / Ottawa Citizen

Rev. Joseph LeClair — Father Joe to his legion of supporters — has made his return to the Archdiocese of Ottawa four years after being convicted of stealing from the coffers of Blessed Sacrament Parish.

Archbishop Terrence Prendergast announced LeClair’s return to active ministry in a letter issued last week to priests in the diocese.

“As you can imagine,” Prendergast wrote in the letter, obtained by this newspaper, “this is a challenging transition and we would like to support his return to ministry here in Ottawa.

“His reintegration into active ministry may generate attention so I am writing to you to clarify his living arrangements and current ministry. We are working together to provide support and accountability in his reintegration.”

LeClair, 60, had been on assignment for the past two years to a parish in Guelph, On., in the Diocese of Hamilton, but has always remained a member of the Ottawa archdiocese.

In Ottawa, LeClair will be living at a central residence while remaining on call to fill in for priests to say mass, conduct funerals and visit the sick in local hospitals.

“He is eager to serve and wants to support the pastors in any way he can,” Prendergast said. “Father Joe has a long history of providing compassionate pastoral care to parishioners and I am confident that his skills and availability will be of great assistance.”

This Citizen asked for an interview with LeClair to discuss “how his past will inform his future ministry,” but a spokesman for the diocese declined the request. “Father LeClair is not available for interviews,” said Deacon Gilles Ouellette.

The P.E.I.-born LeClair worked as a teacher and social services worker before being ordained a priest more than 30 years ago. His empathy, humour, storytelling and spirituality made him an immensely popular priest, and after being appointed as pastor of a then struggling Blessed Sacrament Parish, he turned the Glebe church into a thriving religious community.

LeClair officiated at the wedding of then mayor Larry O’Brien, hosted a Sunday morning radio show on CFRA, and spoke publicly about dealing with depression and the pain of his father’s alcoholism.

Father Joe LeClair.

He was among the highest profile members of the Ottawa clergy when the Citizen published a story in April 2011 that exposed his casino gambling, large credit card debts, the complete lack of financial controls at Blessed Sacrament, and the existence of an internal audit that raised serious questions about how money was being handled at the church.

LeClair admitted to a gambling problem but steadfastly denied taking parishioners’ money. He blessed those who cancelled their Citizen; hundreds did.

Two weeks after the story’s publication, LeClair resigned as pastor under pressure from the diocese and underwent addictions treatment.

A subsequent audit by Deloitte and Touche revealed that $1.16 million moved through LeClair’s personal account between between January 2006 and December 2010. About $400,000 of that could not be tied to his salary ($22,000 a year), stipends, gifts or casino winnings, the auditors said.

The archdiocese recovered $379,000 in an insurance settlement, and introduced sweeping financial reforms at all of its churches.

In January 2014, LeClair pleaded guilty to theft and fraud. Court heard that he wrote cheques to himself from church accounts, overcharged for his personal expenses, dipped his hand into Sunday collections (stashed uncounted in his closet), and redirected fees for marriage preparation courses to his own account.

Most of the money he took from the church, a registered charity, went towards the repayment of his gambling debts, court heard.

His lawyer said LeClair turned to alcohol and gambling to relieve the stress and anxiety associated with ministering to his large parish.

LeClair was sentenced to a year in jail. He was released in November 2014 and spent time in a Moncton parish before being moved to Guelph, where he continued to struggle with addiction.

He pleaded guilty to impaired driving in August 2016, three months after being stopped with more than twice the legal limit of alcohol in his system.

In his recent letter to the clergy, Archbishop Prendergast said everyone in the diocese is aware of LeClair’s troubled past.

“It has been a difficult experience for not only Father Joe, but also for parishioners and many others in our archdiocese,” he said. “At this moment in time, together as a Christian community, we can model forgiveness and support a brother in his desire to be of priestly service to God’s people.”

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Father Joe LeClair returns to work in Ottawa

Priest was sentenced to a year in jail in 2014 for defrauding church

Father Joseph LeClair, centre, pleaded guilty in 2014 to defrauding Ottawa’s Blessed Sacrament Church of $130,000 over a five-year period. He has recently returned to work in the city as a priest. (CBC)

An Ottawa priest who was convicted and sent to jail for defrauding his church of $130,000 has returned to work in the city.

Archbishop Terrence Prendergast was unavailable for an interview Wednesday, but in a statement he confirmed Father Joe LeClair had returned to work.

“I have asked Father LeClair to be available to help with masses in parishes, to help with funerals … hospital on-call ministry in the evenings and weekends and other opportunities to provide ministerial assistance,” Prendergast said in the statement.

LeClair pleaded guilty in 2014 and was sentenced to a year in jail. After his release, he worked as an assistant priest in New Brunswick.

His lawyer told the court LeClair had a serious gambling problem and took the money from Blessed Sacrament Church over the course of five years.

Prendergast said LeClair is eager to serve the community and the diocese believes he will be helpful.

“Father LeClair has a long history of providing compassionate pastoral care to parishioners and I am confident that his skills and availability will be of great assistance. At the present time, this on-call availability will be his assigned ministry.”

Two sex abuse charges dropped against priest after complainant dies

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William Barry McGrory leaves the court house in Ottawa Friday Nov 25, 2016. Tony Caldwell / Postmedia Network

Two historic sex abuse charges have been dropped against an Ottawa priest after one of the complainants died last month from cancer.

Court heard Monday that charges of gross indecency and indecent assault were withdrawn against Rev. Barry McGrory. The complainant, who was in his 60s, was ill during the preliminary hearing and unable to testify; he died in mid-July.

McGrory, 83, still faces a handful of charges in connection with two other historic sex abuse complaints.

The Catholic priest will stand trial on April 10, 2019.

Two years ago, this newspaper reported that the Archdiocese of Ottawa had settled out of court with two women who said they were abused as adolescents by McGrory in the 1970s when he was pastor at Holy Cross Parish.

Rev. Barry McGrorycirca 1975 File photo / –

One of the victims was paid $300,000 in one of the largest settlements of its kind in the history of the Ottawa diocese.

In an interview published at the same time, McGrory said he was a sex addict, and suffered from a powerful attraction to adolescents, both male and female, as a young cleric.

He told then-archbishop Joseph-Aurèle Plourde about his sexual problems in the mid-1980s, McGrory said, and asked for treatment.

Instead of receiving help, McGrory said, he was transferred to a Toronto  organization dedicated to assisting remote Catholic missions.

Many of the missions were in Indigenous communities in Canada’s North.

Four years after leaving Ottawa, in 1991, McGrory was charged with sexually assaulting a 17-year-old Indigenous youth and later convicted of the crime. He was given a suspended sentence and three years’ probation.

After “surrendering” himself to God following the humiliation of his arrest in that case, McGrory said, he was healed of his sex addiction and his attraction to adolescents.

He now lives in Toronto, where he belongs to a group called Sex and Love Addicts Anonymous, which employs a 12-step program similar to that pioneered by Alcoholics Anonymous. It has helped him, McGrory said, to remain celibate for more than two decades.

Ottawa born and raised, McGrory holds a PhD in theology from Thomas Aquinas University in Rome. In 1974, he was named pastor of the Holy Cross Parish, where he became a high-profile peace and social justice activist. He remained at the church until 1986.

Diocesan officials in Ottawa have launched the administrative process required to officially remove him from the priesthood, but he has yet to be defrocked by the Vatican.

McGrory‘s right to conduct the essential duties of a priest was removed more than 20 years ago.

One posted – another to start

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The page for Father Roand Lanoie is posted.  If anyone can fill in any of the gaps in the timelines please do so.

Please, as always in situations such as this, keep the complainant in your prayers.

*****

I will begin putting together a page on Father Andy Dwyer, a priest with the Diocese of London Ontario who was removed from ministry last month.  Here is an article related to that suspension:

The Roman Catholic Diocese of London has removed a Windsor priest from his churches after receiving “credible allegations” of inappropriate conduct.

The Windsor Star

The Roman Catholic Diocese of London has removed a Windsor priest from his churches after receiving “credible allegations” of inappropriate conduct.

The allegations against Rev. Andy Dwyer, pastor of St. Vincent de Paul and St. Theresa’s parishes, “relate to actions of many years ago,” according to the diocese.

“There is no good time for such an announcement,” the diocese said in an emailed statement. “It is particularly hard to hear and deal with this news in light of the recent revelations in the United States. Even so, we remain vigilant and faithful during this trying time in order to ensure a safe environment in our parishes and institutions.”

Diocese spokesman Nelson Couto said he could not comment on the nature of the allegations. But “the recent revelations” in the U.S. mentioned by the diocese relates to sexual abuse. Couto confirmed the statement was in reference to a massive child sex abuse scandal in Pennsylvania.

The diocese also didn’t reveal if a parishioner made the allegations or how many potential victims, if any, could be involved.

A grand jury report last month revealed that Roman Catholic leaders in Pennsylvania covered up sexual abuse against children going as far back as the 1940s. The report identified 301 priests who abused more than 1,000 victims.

Windsor police wouldn’t reveal if they have launched a criminal investigation into the allegations against Dwyer.

“On a general case basis, we don’t comment on whether we are investigating or whether we are not investigating — to protect the privacy of everybody involved, from the complainants, victims, accused people — unless there’s a public safety issue,” said Const. Andrew Drouillard.

The Diocese of London said it is investigating the allegations against Dwyer. While the “actions” in question go back many years, the diocese said the allegations only surfaced recently.

The diocese said that under its “A Safe Environment Policy,” any priest, deacon or lay ecclesial minister facing “credible allegations” is removed from duty during the course of the investigation.

“This is our policy and this is clearly how the Diocese of London handles these matters now,” church officials wrote in the statement.

Earlier this month, Bishop Ronald Fabbro wrote “a letter to the faithful” touting the policy.

“It includes a number of sound procedures to prevent abuse from happening,” he wrote. “A priest who commits an offence against a minor or any other vulnerable person is removed from ministry. My goal is to protect people against abuse.”

Fabbro’s letter also made direct reference to the Pennsylvania scandal in his letter.

“It is devastating to read the accounts of profound evil that occurred in our Church,” Fabbro wrote. “Since I have been bishop, I have met with survivors of clergy sexual abuse and their families. It was heart-wrenching to listen to their stories of the pain and the sufferings they have endured throughout their entire lives — sometimes for 30, 40 or 50 years after the abuse occurred.”

He noted that the grand jury report details the “failures” of bishops who moved priests around to cover up the abuse.

“The cover-up was terribly wrong,” he wrote. “Catholics are rightly outraged that the bishops failed to put a stop to the abuse. How could they have failed so grievously in their calling to be shepherds of their people and in their responsibility to protect the most vulnerable among us?”

Fabbro didn’t mention the history of similar cover-ups in the London diocese, but he did acknowledge it has dealt with abuse cases of its own.

“The clergy abuse crisis has brought to light the brokenness in our Church,” Fabbro wrote. “For these wounds to heal, we must first acknowledge our brokenness before the Lord. We must do penance in reparation for the grave sins committed. And, we — bishops, priests and lay people — must be courageous in carrying out the reforms needed in our Church.”

twilhelm@postmedia.com

twitter.com/WinStarWilhelm

I’m having a time and a half trying to keep on top of things right now, but, I’ll keep picking away and do my very best to get things posted where they can be found

Enough for now,

Sylvia

Dwyer: Father Andrew A. Dwyer

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Father Andy Dwyer Chaplain St. Clair’s Catholic Board Trustees 2010. (Photo Director’s Annual Report 2010)

Andrew Dwyer

Andrew A. Dwyer

Father Andy Dwyer

Father Andrew Dwyer

Priest, Diocese of London, Ontario.  Ordained 1979.

– removed from duties September 2018 after diocese received “credible” allegations which date back many years.  Apparently an internal investigation is being conducted by the diocese.  It is unknown if the police have or have not been contacted

 

_____________________________________

Bishops of London Diocese from 1978:   Gerald Emmett Carter  (17 February 1964 – 29 April 1978 -Appointed, Archbishop of Toronto, Ontario)   John Michael Sherlock (07 July 1978 – 27 April 2002 ); Ronald Peter Fabbro, C.S.B. (27 April 2002 – – )

Auxiliary Bishops: John Michael Sherlock (25 June 1974 — Bishop: 07 July 1978); Marcel André J. Gervais (19 April 1980 – 03 May 1985); Frederick Bernard Henry (18 April 1986 – 24 March 1995);  Richard John Grecco (05 December 1997 – 27 April 2002); Robert Anthony Daniels ( 21 September 2004 to 01 March 2011); Józef Andrzej Dąbrowski, C.S.M.A. ( 31 January 2015 – )

_____________________________________

September 2018:   removed from duties at St. Vincent de Paul Roman Catholic Church and St. Theresa Roman Catholic Church, Windsor after diocese received “credible allegations” of inappropriate conduct.  The nature of the misconduct is unknown.

2018, 2016,2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2011:  Pastor, St. Theresa & Vincent de Paul Roman Catholic Church, Windsor, Ontario ( St Vincent de Paul October 2018) (CCCD)

2010:  Pastor, North American Martyrs, Thamesville, Ontario (CCCD) (It looks as though North American Martyrs was formerly St. Paul Roman Catholic Church in Thamesville?)

September  2010:  no longer serving as Chaplain to St. Clair Catholic District School Board Board of Trustees – assigned to serve as Pastor at Windsor church in June 2010.

2010: Chaplain,  St. Clair Catholic District School Board Board of Trustees (Page 1, St Clair Catholic District School Board Director’s Annual Report 2010 of Trustees 2010)

2004-2007:  Chaplain,  St. Clair Catholic District School Board Board of Trustees

2002:  St. Paul Roman Catholic Church, Thamesville, Ontario (CCCD)

1997-2000:  St. John the Divine Roman Catholic Church, London, Ontario

1998:  Pastor, St. John the Divine Roman Catholic Church, London, Ontario  (CCCD)

1997, 1996, 1995, 1994, 1993, 1992:  Pastor, Immaculate Conception Roman Catholic Church, Windsor,  Ontario (CCCD)

02 February 1996: Healing Mass  at Immaculate Conception.  Excerpt from Saturday 27 January 1996 Windsor Star:

Healing mass — Immaculate Conception Roman Catholic Church, 686 Marentette Ave., will hold a healing mass for cancer and associated ills Friday at 7:30 p.m. Rev. Andy Dwyer will be the celebrant. All are welcome.

1985-1986:  Assisting, Blessed Sacrament Roman Catholic Church, Chatham, Ontario, Ontario.  (Pastor Father J.J. Pedelt)   (CCCD)

1979:  ORDAINED

1968:  Graduated from Assumption College Catholic High School

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Diocese suspends Windsor priest after ‘credible allegations’ surface

The Roman Catholic Diocese of London has removed a Windsor priest from his churches after receiving “credible allegations” of inappropriate conduct.

The Windsor Star

Updated: September 27, 2018

The Roman Catholic Diocese of London has removed a Windsor priest from his churches after receiving “credible allegations” of inappropriate conduct.

The allegations against Rev. Andy Dwyer, pastor of St. Vincent de Paul and St. Theresa’s parishes, “relate to actions of many years ago,” according to the diocese.

“There is no good time for such an announcement,” the diocese said in an emailed statement. “It is particularly hard to hear and deal with this news in light of the recent revelations in the United States. Even so, we remain vigilant and faithful during this trying time in order to ensure a safe environment in our parishes and institutions.”

Diocese spokesman Nelson Couto said he could not comment on the nature of the allegations. But “the recent revelations” in the U.S. mentioned by the diocese relates to sexual abuse. Couto confirmed the statement was in reference to a massive child sex abuse scandal in Pennsylvania.

The diocese also didn’t reveal if a parishioner made the allegations or how many potential victims, if any, could be involved.

A grand jury report last month revealed that Roman Catholic leaders in Pennsylvania covered up sexual abuse against children going as far back as the 1940s. The report identified 301 priests who abused more than 1,000 victims.

Windsor police wouldn’t reveal if they have launched a criminal investigation into the allegations against Dwyer.

“On a general case basis, we don’t comment on whether we are investigating or whether we are not investigating — to protect the privacy of everybody involved, from the complainants, victims, accused people — unless there’s a public safety issue,” said Const. Andrew Drouillard.

The Diocese of London said it is investigating the allegations against Dwyer. While the “actions” in question go back many years, the diocese said the allegations only surfaced recently.

The diocese said that under its “A Safe Environment Policy,” any priest, deacon or lay ecclesial minister facing “credible allegations” is removed from duty during the course of the investigation.

“This is our policy and this is clearly how the Diocese of London handles these matters now,” church officials wrote in the statement.

Earlier this month, Bishop Ronald Fabbro wrote “a letter to the faithful” touting the policy.

“It includes a number of sound procedures to prevent abuse from happening,” he wrote. “A priest who commits an offence against a minor or any other vulnerable person is removed from ministry. My goal is to protect people against abuse.”

Fabbro’s letter also made direct reference to the Pennsylvania scandal in his letter.

“It is devastating to read the accounts of profound evil that occurred in our Church,” Fabbro wrote. “Since I have been bishop, I have met with survivors of clergy sexual abuse and their families. It was heart-wrenching to listen to their stories of the pain and the sufferings they have endured throughout their entire lives — sometimes for 30, 40 or 50 years after the abuse occurred.”

He noted that the grand jury report details the “failures” of bishops who moved priests around to cover up the abuse.

“The cover-up was terribly wrong,” he wrote. “Catholics are rightly outraged that the bishops failed to put a stop to the abuse. How could they have failed so grievously in their calling to be shepherds of their people and in their responsibility to protect the most vulnerable among us?”

Fabbro didn’t mention the history of similar cover-ups in the London diocese, but he did acknowledge it has dealt with abuse cases of its own.

“The clergy abuse crisis has brought to light the brokenness in our Church,” Fabbro wrote. “For these wounds to heal, we must first acknowledge our brokenness before the Lord. We must do penance in reparation for the grave sins committed. And, we — bishops, priests and lay people — must be courageous in carrying out the reforms needed in our Church.”

twilhelm@postmedia.com

twitter.com/WinStarWilhelm

______________________________________

Catholic priest removed from Windsor parishes for historic allegations

CTV News  Windsor

Published Wednesday, September 26, 2018 10:41PM EDT

The pastor of two Catholic parishes in Windsor has been removed from the ministry.

The Diocese of London confirms Father Andy Dwyer, who oversees St. Vincent de Paul and St. Theresa’s parishes, has been removed due to historic allegations against him.

In a statement to CTV News, communications officer Nelson Couto said “these allegations are being investigated and relate to actions of many years ago which have now surfaced.”

But Couto would not comment on the investigation and the specifics about the allegations.

Couto cited the Diocese of London’s Safe Environment Policy, which states “that whenever credible allegations are made against any priest, deacon or lay ecclesial minister, that person is removed for the period of the investigation. This is our policy and this is clearly how the Diocese of London handles these matters now.”

Couto’s statement said “There is no good time for such an announcement. It is particularly hard to hear and deal with this news in light of the recent revelations in the United States.  Even so, we remain vigilant and faithful during this trying time in order to ensure a safe environment in our parishes and institutions.”

Last month, a report to a U.S. grand jury found over 300 Roman Catholic priests in Pennsylvania molested more than 1,000 children since the 1940’s.

Earlier this month, Bishop Ronald Fabbro of the Diocese of London released a statement, saying the ‘extent of the abuse is shocking.’

The statement was read at Roman Catholic parishes across the region.

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Priest removed from his duties by Roman Catholic Diocese of London

Church officials say they’re following the Diocese of London’s ‘Safe Environment Policy’

The Roman Catholic Diocese of London has confirmed it has received allegations against Father Andy Dwyer, a long-serving priest in Windsor.

In a statement released to CBC News, officials with the diocese said Dwyer is being investigated for actions that allegedly occurred “many years ago.”

Fr. Dwyer was recently removed from his duties as pastor at St. Vincent de Paul and St. Theresa’s parishes in Windsor. The Diocese of London is responsible for the Windsor area.

The diocese would not disclose the nature of the allegations.

In its statement, the diocese noted it has a ‘Safe Environment Policy’ which states that “whenever credible allegations are made against any priest, deacon or lay ecclesial minister, that person is removed for the period of the investigation.”

News of the priest’s suspension evoked a mixed reaction from London lawyer, Rob Talach, who has been representing victims of clergy abuse for more than a decade.

Lawyer Rob Talach has been representing survivors of clergy sexual abuse for more than a decade. (Mary Sheppard/CBC)

“It’s encouraging and concerning all at the same time,” said Talach.

“The encouraging part is that there’s a removal in response to an allegation, but removal or suspension is not the complete duty the diocese has here.”

Talach said the lack of information about the allegations is among his concerns. He wants the public to be made aware if these allegations involve sexual misconduct.

“The Safe Environment Policy doesn’t deal with anything but misconduct of either a physical, a sexual, or a moral nature,” he said. “If you look at that policy, it’s about 95% focused on sexual misconduct… So if the removal is pursuant to the Safe Environment Policy, it’s a fair bet it’s got a sexual foundation.”

If that’s the case, Talach believes the public should be told if the allegations involve children or adults, and exactly how long the allegations date back.

CBC News did try to contact Fr. Dwyer. He did not respond.

No mention of police involvement

Talach is also troubled that the statement from the diocese makes no mention of whether police have been called to investigate.

“This has been another major flaw on the part of the diocese over the decades. Nowhere have we ever seen, in writing or in practice, a willingness to go to the experts, the police, if criminal conduct is in question and asked for their involvement or their help,” said Talach. “Look, if you’re going to write a homily I’d ask a priest. If I’m going to investigate sexual misconduct, that’s the last professional I’m going to get involved.”

Windsor police would not confirm to CBC News whether it’s been made aware of any allegations involving Fr. Dwyer.

Talach believes that, if the diocese wants to be fair to Fr. Dwyer, releasing more information would help alleviate speculation.

“Is this a single, one-off allegation? Is it an adult? Is it a child? Is it sexual? Is it not? The imagination can get away from us, and can do disservice if these [allegations] aren’t what we think they are,” said Talach. “Their present stance is not serving anyone but maybe themselves.”

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Diocese of London investigating allegations against Windsor priest

The Catholic Register

27 September 2018

By  Catholic Register Staff

A priest in Windsor, Ont., has been removed from his duties as the Diocese of London investigates  allegations of inappropriate conduct.

Fr. Andy Dwyer is the pastor of St. Vincent de Paul and St. Theresa’s parishes in Windsor.

The diocese would not comment on the nature of the allegations or who made them, only that they “relate to actions of many years ago” and are being investigated by the diocese. Police would not comment whether they are involved in the investigation.

“There is no good time for such an announcement,” the diocese said in an e-mailed statement to the Windsor Star Sept. 26. “It is particularly hard to hear and deal with this news in light of the recent revelations in the United States. Even so, we remain vigilant and faithful during this trying time in order to ensure a safe environment in our parishes and institutions.”

Nelson Couto, communications officer for the diocese, noted that the diocese is following its “Safe Environment Policy” designed to “protect people against abuse.”

The news comes on the heels of the revelations of sexual abuse and coverups over decades by Catholic leaders contend in a Pennsylvania grand jury report.

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