The fact is many years ago,probably 15 to 20 years past,Boulanger told his parishioners at St. Edwards that 40% to 70% of the priests in Phoenix were homosexual.He himself was BTW.
Supposedly,our x-bishop told him to get back out there and take the statement back.Boulanger,showing a kind of integrity,refused. The x-bishop told him he would suspend him if he did not and that is also a fact. Shortly thereafter his privileges were suspended and he got a job at the post-office or someplace else around town. He was not suspended for any other reason than that he had spilled the beans about the priesthood in the diocese and was disobedient to his majesty's orders.
I've known this for years but never realized he was on the rolls as a priest and on the payroll too. Go figure!!
Boulanger ... got a job at the post-officeHe went postal. It figures.
OBrien accused of cheating probation
By Gary Grado, TribuneThe judge who sentenced Bishop Thomas J. OBrien to 1,000 hours of community service told the probation department Tuesday not to investigate an allegation that the former Catholic leader is cheating on his hours.
A relative of a worker at Huger Mercy Living Center, 2345 W. Orangewood Ave. in Phoenix, phoned the allegation into the Maricopa County Attorneys Office, saying OBrien is logging six hours when he shows up there for only an hour. County Attorney Richard Romley announced the allegation Tuesday and complained about the lack of oversight of OBriens probation.
But no formal complaint has been submitted to the probation department, and any investigation now would be premature because OBriens logs are due quarterly, said J.W. Brown, a Maricopa County Superior Court spokeswoman.
"Theres nothing to investigate," Brown said.
Logs that OBrien has submitted so far show the most he has ever claimed at Huger Mercy Living Center was three hours, said Mike Goss, spokesman for the county Adult Probation Department.
Romley said he will pass on the allegations to probation.
"My point is, it is very difficult for the court to provide adequate oversight when you have the person doing the reporting, deciding where to go without probation really being in control of that process," Romley said. "Historically, probation always says you shall go to hospice, you shall go to Good Sam, you shall go to St. Josephs, and they check with them to see if they were there."
Judge Stephen Gerst set up OBriens probation differently from others in that the bishop keeps track of his own hours and chooses where he wants to serve, Goss said. Normally, probationers do their community service at agencies that contract with the county and the time is closely monitored.
But Gerst told the probation department not to strictly monitor OBrien, Goss said.
In a statement released Tuesday, OBrien said he has been in frequent contact with the probation offices, and they have been "cooperative."
"I firmly and categorically deny the county attorneys allegations, based on phone calls that I misreported my community service hours," he said. "I believe that the visits I have made have been satisfying to the sick and the elderly and to me."
A jury found OBrien guilty Feb. 17 of leaving the scene of a fatal accident. Gerst sentenced OBrien March 26 to three years probation in which he is required to perform 1,000 hours of community service tending to the sick, dying and disabled.