Posted on 01/18/2014 11:23:29 AM PST by Salvation
January 2, 2011 By TheMediaReport.com
In a stunning ten-page declaration recently submitted to the Los Angeles County Superior Court, veteran attorney Donald H. Steier stated that his investigations into claims of sexual abuse by Catholic priests have uncovered vast fraud and that his probes have revealed that many accusations are completely false.
Counselor Steier has played a role in over one hundred investigations involving Catholic clergy in Los Angeles. In his missive Mr. Steier relayed:
"One retired F.B.I. agent who worked with me to investigate many claims in the Clergy Cases told me, in his opinion, about ONE-HALF of the claims made in the Clergy Cases were either entirely false or so greatly exaggerated that the truth would not have supported a prosecutable claim for childhood sexual abuse."
(Capital letters are Steier's)
Mr. Steier also added, "In several cases my investigation has provided objective information that could not be reconciled with the truthfulness of the subjective allegations. In other words, in many cases objective facts showed that accusations were false."
Mr. Steier's declaration is a stunner. He is as experienced as anyone in studying the claims of abuse against Catholic clergy in the Los Angeles area. Also among Steier's eye-opening statements:
Steier signed and submitted the declaration "under penalty of perjury" November 30, 2010. Los Angeles County Superior Court officially filed it at 11 a.m. on December 15, 2010.
Steier also took aim at the outspoken advocacy group SNAP (Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests):
They maintain an interactive Internet website with a user 'Forum' and 'Message Board,' among other features, where people can share detailed information between alleged victims pertaining to identity of specific alleged perpetrators, their alleged 'modus operandi,' and other details of alleged molestation. In effect, a person who wanted to make a false claim of sexual abuse by a priest could go to that website and find a 'blueprint' of factual allegations to make that would coincide with allegations made by other people. Law enforcement also uses the S.N.A.P. website to attempt to locate new victims and allegations against Catholic priests.
Needless to say, SNAP had a fit at the sight of Steier's declaration. In a frantic press statement dated December 13, 2010, SNAP derided Steier's declaration as a "legal maneuver" that was "among the most outrageous and hurtful ever made by a church defense lawyer." In addition to claiming it will file a complaint with the California Bar Association, it demanded that Los Angeles Cardinal Roger Mahony "denounce Steier's claims and to disclose how much archdiocesan money has been paid to Steier." (Gee, the last time I checked, SNAP steadfastly refused to divulge how much of its income is derived from the number of lawyers with whom it closely collaborates!)
Yet there is a glaring absence from SNAP's statement. The organization does not refute nor deny any of the specific claims made by Steier. It simply labels them as "outrageous" and "hurtful." That is hardly a blow to the explosive declaration aired by the veteran attorney.
Yes, Catholic priests terribly abused minors, and bishops failed to stop the harm. That's an undeniable truth. There are few crimes that revolt more than sexual abuse. The abuse of minors is a dark episode that the Church will forever have to live with.
Yet major media outlets have largely ignored a major element to the entire Catholic abuse scandal narrative.
Here is Wall Street Journal writer Dorothy Rabinowitz:
"People have to come to understand that there is a large scam going on with personal injury attorneys, and what began as a serious effort has now expanded to become a huge money-making proposition."
Surprise: Ms. Rabinowitz made her remark in 2005. Since then, the Church has doled out an additional $1 billion in settlements.
Will 2011 be the year that the media finally begins to take a closer look at many of the claims being made? What about the suspicious relationships between SNAP, lawyers, and many in the media? (Vincent Carroll at the Denver Post is a rare voice of acknowledgement: "[F]raudulent or highly dubious accusations are more common than is acknowledged in coverage of the church scandals — although they should not be surprising, given the monumental settlements various dioceses have paid out over the years" (Oct. 10, 2010).)
Stay tuned.
I’m all for prosecuting the scum to the fullest extent of the law. Do you need further clarification?
redleghunter posted:
“I think the challenge involved turning in someone before an outside claim was made. We military types would call that the IG finding a problem before it becomes a problem. The Army does not move bad commanders and senior NCOs to another unit. They relieve them. If they break the law they prosecute them.”
But it wasn’t always that way. Particularly with senior officers, they were often reduced a grade or two and quietly retired. The IG finds a miniscule percentage of “problems before they become problems”.
Refer to the current Sexual Harassment/Sexual Assault issues. How many years did that go on, and how many cases were swept under the rug before it hit the headlines? It took the Sergeant Major of the Army getting busted for actions he had taken with recruits years before to bring it out and make it famous, and still it went on (and still does despite everything the military does). Even senior officers in the SHARP program development have recently been busted for it.
Before anyone flames me for equating soldiers and priests, I’m not. I am addressing the idea that an organization should be able to ferret out a crime before it happens.
We all agree that the Church handled it despicably. We should also take the time to look at what the Church has done to fix itself.
That is, unless one is more interested in the fight than a solution.
There is. It’s everywhere as we were warned by Christ there would be false teachers, wolves in sheep clothing. No one Christian denomination, assembly, church is immune to sin and to deceivers. My original point was, it is what we do when one is identified. Matthew 18 and 1 Corinthians 5 (et al scriptural sources) tell us what to do when confronted with these sins that affect the entire assembly. We don’t move an abuser from the church of Corinth to the church of Ephesus and hope things will get better.
Trust me you WILL find (simple google search) such cases in all denominations. The difference I have seen is the Prot pastors or ministers are pointed out, reported, prosecuted and doing time in the can.
No I agree. The Catholic church has a lot more mechanisms in place now, to include clearing house in the seminaries of sodomites, to deal with the repeat offenders. No mechanism in the world will prevent one time occurances, but the move around get along which opened the door for repeat offenders is unacceptable. Yes, the military had to learn those hard knocks too especially in those DoD child care facilities where they had, in some cases, a worse record than the civilian side.
What got my Irish ire up with this article was the blase way it communicated and then reinforced by some as “well it was not half bad” attitude. Believe me, I understand defending organizations from false or exaggerated claims as you do. We served in the same organization and we know some of the stuff said about the Army was bogus but deep down there was some truth along with the invective. It is a hard pill to swallow. When you start getting 15-6 and Art 32s to investigate you realize the awful side of the organization you love and respect, and respect it more for having such mechanisms in place.
Thanks for the dialogue.
I also appreciate the dialog. I especially enjoy being able to discuss it without attacks or enmity.
Ref the 15-6’s and Art 32’s, I know all too well about them (I’m the guy with the stripes sitting beside the BC (now BDE CDR) telling him “This really DOES need to be investigated”, and giving him my input during punishment phase. (still doing it, BTW)
I make no excuses for the process that shielded the perps from just prosecution. Thinking they could “solve” the problems, officials within the Church made foolish and criminal mistakes. The shame belongs on the individuals responsible, but not the community of Catholics.
Phil Robertson at 18 was involved with a 14 year old — something I find completely unacceptable; yet, a few here rationalized it as normal. I recall only one other poster being outraged by this unseemly tidbit, but I’m sure there were others. Nonetheless, rose colored optimism factored into the comments supporting Phil.
Rationalization can be complex and difficult to argue, but finding reliable statistics and news that shed better light on a dark subject is a good thing — for the stakeholders and others with objective intent.
Great, thanks for your service. Retiring late summer after 25 years.
God Bless ya!
Gene your comments have been measured, genuine and you made no excuses. I appreciate your candor on the matter AND your defense of the faithful in the Catholic church. Where I was a bit shocked that some of the faithful here, being faithful Catholics were not a bit more outraged. I guess it comes with years of eye poking, brunt of late night comedy jokes and a host of other stuff flung at the Catholic church which may make some very defensive. I can understand that.
On Phil? No I would not support an 18 year old man touching or dating a man’s 14 year old girl. Just wrong and the way I was raised. I think if you sent a note to Phil, he would readily admit he was wrong as well as his alcohol, drugs and other sinful living before he repented and put on Christ. What he did was wrong and I think he would even tell us so as well.
And you!
(and yes, I truly believe we pray to the same God)
Redleg,
ref the comment about not being more outraged -
With our mutual background, maybe it helps to frame it like this:
We in the Army know we had (and continue to have) a big problem with sexual harassment/assault. Our command structure covered up and moved offenders (particularly high-ranking ones) around, or retired them with a reduction and a slap. We know that, we hate it, we are doing everything we know to stop it. We have cracked down, trained and retrained our soldiers, prosecuted offenders, but it still happens. We are embarrassed because we are supposed to be better than that.
Seems every time we turn around, the Navy and the Air Force are busting our chops about it, calling us sexual abusers and attackers, giving no credit for the advancements or improvements even though they have their own problems (Lackland AFB, Colorado Springs, Annapolis).
After awhile it does get old, and people tend to want to point out that there is sin in all the houses, not just the Army.
All Catholics know it happened. We WERE outraged, ARE outraged, and continue to be outraged by what happened.
I know of none that are proud of it, and none that want to see one more person abused.
What I WOULD like is for people to do some research on what is now, what the church has done and continues to do to protect kids rather than reflexively attacking.
It’s like a soldier today being continually chastised about Sergeant Major McKinney’s behavior in the 80’s and 90’s.
Regards
A good frame of reference.
True; we just toss them OUT!
So did the Axis and the Allies...
Paul could NOT write this today; for the 'pagans' not only tolerate it, but REVEL in stuff like this!
Indeed. There is a lot of wisdom and direction in that passage. The more I re-read and study the epistles, the more I see the Holy Spirit’s Hand in communicating to future generations.
Apparently, you’re not familiar with how discussions work. You make a claim, you back it up.If you’re not prepared to back anything up, don’t go making outlandish claims.
I did. Now I’m just bored.
The more people like you continue to defend or minimize the indefensible, the less people are likely to believe anything has really changed.
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