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Lawsuit claims priest harassed parents of victim
Associated Press - direct feed | October 9, 2002

Posted on 10/09/2002 6:05:51 AM PDT by NYer

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) _ A retired priest accused of sexually abusing a boy faces a $450,000 lawsuit on behalf of the boy's parents who said the priest harassed them so they would retract complaints against him. ``I'm filing this lawsuit immediately to say to the diocese, 'You will not be allowed to intimidate victims,''' attorney John Aretakis said.

According to the suit filed in state Supreme Court Tuesday, the Rev. John Bertolucci, who was removed from public ministry in June, telephoned the victim's parents in September and spoke about how he had abused their son. The suit also alleged the Rev. Kenneth Doyle, chancellor of the Albany Roman Catholic Diocese, advised Bertolucci to call the victim's parents. The lawsuit claims negligence for the telephone call and also claims intentional infliction of emotional distress and civil harassment. ``The allegations which the lawsuit raises against me are based on pure fiction. I believe the court will deem them so, and I am looking into my own legal remedies in response,'' Doyle said in a statement.

The suit said Bertolucci called the victim's parents a day before a scheduled meeting at which time the victim was to make formal complaints against Bertolucci. The suit also said Doyle advised him to call the victim's parents to have the meeting canceled and the formal complaint rescinded.

The victim claimed Bertolucci abused him from 1976 to 1979. Bertolucci, 64, served as associate pastor at St. Ambrose in Latham until he moved to the St. Anthony of Padua Friary in Catskill in 2001.

AP-ES-10-09-02 0652EDT


TOPICS: Activism; Catholic; Current Events; General Discusssion; Moral Issues; Religion & Culture; Religion & Politics
KEYWORDS: albanydiocese; catholic; priest; sexabuse

Bertolucci, 64, served as associate pastor at St. Ambrose in Latham

St. Ambrose is just down the road from me. Our pastor was called in there earlier this year to do grief counseling when Bertolucci's name was announced.

1 posted on 10/09/2002 6:05:52 AM PDT by NYer
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To: Siobhan; american colleen; sinkspur; livius; Lady In Blue; Salvation; Polycarp; narses; ...
Here is the story that originally ran in the July 21 edition of the Sunday Times Union.

Albany-- Banished from ministry for sexual abuse, John Bertolucci prays his victims find healing

Twenty years ago, the Rev. John Patrick Bertolucci was a beloved author and televangelist preaching the power of a personal relationship with Jesus Christ on a nationally syndicated cable TV program.

And he harbored a secret: When he was a pastor in his thirties in the 1970s, he sexually abused teenagers. How many, he won't say.

Now at the age of 64, his crimes are widely known. He has been disgraced, told to stay at home, banned from serving as a priest in public and relegated to a life of "prayer and penance."

"I was deeply embarrassed," Bertolucci said in an interview from his home in Catskill. "And of course I was concerned about how people would react. ... I have a normal human pride, so the whole thing is disconcerting."

Bertolucci and five other priests from the Roman Catholic Diocese of Albany were named publicly and removed from active ministry last month because they had sexually abused minors in the past.

Across the country, hundreds of priests have been removed or resigned because of sexual abuse, but few had a ministry as far reaching as Bertolucci's. His books and broadcasts espousing the evangelical Catholic Charismatic Renewal movement resonated across the country and around the world.

"I am deeply loved by a lot of people," he said, mentioning the five or six letters and e-mails he gets each day from supporters, many of whom he has never met. As a result, he said, "my level of embarrassment and shame would be higher" than that of other parish priests.

Bertolucci, who was ordained in 1965, lives in the home left to him by his mother, who died this past November. Until several weeks ago, he regularly said Mass at St. Anthony's chapel in his hometown and mingled with local parishioners.

Now, he rarely leaves the house, praying and celebrating Mass alone and ministering to friends in private. "I am living almost as a quasi-monk. My house is my monastery," he said.

This spring, when he came to believe that a "zero tolerance" policy was inevitable, he requested an early retirement and received his first retirement check in June, he said.

On June 28, the day Bishop Howard J. Hubbard released the names of the six pedophile priests, Bertolucci retreated to a monastery in Massachusetts, staying in seclusion for eight days with only his pager and a stream of supportive voice mails linking him to the outside world.

While Bertolucci said he opted for a life of prayer and penance, the five other priests are considering whether to do the same or to voluntarily seek laicization, or formal removal from the priesthood, church officials said.

One priest, the Rev. James Rosch, who was removed from St. Joseph's in Fort Edward, has rented an apartment nearby and held an outdoor concert recently where he sang John Denver tunes to a crowd of his former parishioners.

Bertolucci said no one has criticized him to his face or singled him out for harassment since his history of sexual abuse was disclosed.

In his own words, Bertolucci is not, and never has been, a pedophile.

"My issue was with older persons, young adults. When you are dealing with children, with prepubescents, it's a whole other issue," Bertolucci said.

But one Albany County family, who asked that their names not be revealed, told the Times Union that Bertolucci abused their son when he was 12 years old, and he continues into his adulthood to blame his parents for allowing the abuse to happen.

"John Bertolucci didn't just hurt our son. He ripped apart our family," said the man's mother.

Bertolucci said he confessed his sexual abuse to other priests in the 1970s, but it remained confidential in accordance with church rules concerning confession.

"I would say in the 1970s, my struggle was -- and this I only became aware of later on -- my struggle was with what is called intimacy, the need to be close to somebody. It wasn't so much a sexual struggle as it was a struggle of how to keep appropriate friendships," he said.

Bertolucci said he has resolved his "struggle" and has not been sexually involved with a minor since then.

His abuse came to the attention of church officials in 1988, and he was sent to a residential treatment center for pedophiles in New Mexico, which he described as "a wonderful growth experience, psychologically and spiritually."

In the 1990s, he said he grew increasingly remorseful as scattered reports of sexual abuse by clergy began to appear in the press, and he decided to contact several of those whom he had abused decades earlier.

"I was moved on my own to reach out," he said. "With letters, phone calls and in two situations, a personal contact. It was embarrassing, but very healing."

Like many priests of his generation, Bertolucci was deeply influenced in his work by the pronouncements of the Second Vatican Council in 1965, which had a liberalizing effect on the church worldwide.

Bertolucci said clergy grew less "stand-offish" and priests came into much closer and more intimate contact with parishioners, through dinner-table discussions and salutary hugs and kisses that once had seemed inappropriate.

"One of the changes that occurred is that we could get closer to our people, and I would say in my case I wasn't prepared psychologically to watch out for the boundaries," Bertolucci said.

Bertolucci described his sexuality as "normal, but in the '70s, still developing with reference to friendship. I got too close to people inappropriately."

"My most profound concern is for anyone I have offended in any way, those who have been offended by this as well as those I offended in the '70s, my most profound concern is that they find healing," he said.

He closely followed televised coverage of the Conference of Catholic Bishops meeting in Dallas in June, where Hubbard spoke forcefully in favor of a more lenient policy than the zero-tolerance rule that was adopted.

"My preference would have been going in the direction of what was called the Hubbard amendment," Bertolucci said, "but when they didn't, I knew it was going to be a tough road ahead.

"I believe the bishops felt they had to take a most radical stand to bring back the credibility of the church, and for the common good I do accept that. What they did was acceptable because it is important that the church be respected, and I deeply regret having anything to do with that lack of credibility," he said.

In several cases elsewhere in the country, priests have committed suicide after disclosures about their sexual abuse, and Bertolucci has had to reassure some close friends not to worry about that in his case.

"I can almost feel when people are talking to me, they are thinking, 'You wouldn't do a crazy thing like that, would you?' " he said. "I have a deep spirituality and a wonderful bishop, and that has made it easier."

2 posted on 10/09/2002 6:10:20 AM PDT by NYer
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To: NYer
The article presents this guy as at least having a conscience. If that's the case, the mental anguish is a far worse punishment than anything man can dish out. I hope that's the case.
3 posted on 10/09/2002 7:25:46 AM PDT by Desdemona
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To: Desdemona
"I was deeply embarrassed," Bertolucci said in an interview from his home in Catskill. "And of course I was concerned about how people would react. ... I have a normal human pride, so the whole thing is disconcerting."

The article may present him as having a conscience, but that is not the way his own words sound.

Becky

4 posted on 10/09/2002 7:37:57 AM PDT by PayNoAttentionManBehindCurtain
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To: NYer
"I was deeply embarrassed," Bertolucci said in an interview from his home in Catskill. "And of course I was concerned about how people would react. ... I have a normal human pride, so the whole thing is disconcerting."

Right. Sexually molest a lot of boys, Bertolucci, and you're 'embarrassed' and 'disconcerted.' You don't get it, do you? But then again, neither have a whole lot of other homosexual molestor priests.

5 posted on 10/09/2002 7:47:36 AM PDT by yendu bwam
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To: NYer
But one Albany County family, who asked that their names not be revealed, told the Times Union that Bertolucci abused their son when he was 12 years old, and he continues into his adulthood to blame his parents for allowing the abuse to happen. "John Bertolucci didn't just hurt our son. He ripped apart our family," said the man's mother.

Our Church is replete with kid monsters.

6 posted on 10/09/2002 7:49:31 AM PDT by yendu bwam
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To: NYer
It wasn't so much a sexual struggle as it was a struggle of how to keep appropriate friendships," he said.

Right. The inability to keep friendships leads one to sexually molest teenage boys. Give us all a break. This is homosexuality, pure and simple. It IS about (homo)sex.

7 posted on 10/09/2002 7:51:10 AM PDT by yendu bwam
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To: NYer
He closely followed televised coverage of the Conference of Catholic Bishops meeting in Dallas in June, where Hubbard spoke forcefully in favor of a more lenient policy than the zero-tolerance rule that was adopted. "My preference would have been going in the direction of what was called the Hubbard amendment," Bertolucci said, "but when they didn't, I knew it was going to be a tough road ahead.

Sodomy first, kids last, in the Queerite Church.

8 posted on 10/09/2002 7:52:24 AM PDT by yendu bwam
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To: NYer
Bertolucci said he has resolved his "struggle" and has not been sexually involved with a minor since then.

Right. So after abusing kids, he became just another active homosexual in the Sodomite Church.

9 posted on 10/09/2002 7:54:04 AM PDT by yendu bwam
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To: PayNoAttentionManBehindCurtain; Desdemona
The article may present him as having a conscience, but that is not the way his own words sound.

You're right, PayNoAttention.

10 posted on 10/09/2002 7:55:04 AM PDT by yendu bwam
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To: NYer
Bertolucci described his sexuality as "normal, but in the '70s, still developing with reference to friendship.

Homosexuality is a serious psychological disorder. It is NOT appropriate to ordain homosexual men. Our sons and our Church have paid a heavy price for this policy.

11 posted on 10/09/2002 7:56:42 AM PDT by yendu bwam
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To: yendu bwam
I said I HOPE it's true, not I THINK.

Sorry, please excuse me for trying to think charitibly, as I was taught to do. It was kind of big in my house.

There aren't words to describe people like this other than hypocritical and criminal. But, still, mental anguish is far worse a punishment than anything we can actually do to him. If it's weighing on him, perhaps God is at work.
12 posted on 10/09/2002 7:59:29 AM PDT by Desdemona
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To: Desdemona
If it's weighing on him, perhaps God is at work.

Agreed, Desdemona!

13 posted on 10/09/2002 8:21:48 AM PDT by yendu bwam
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To: Desdemona; yendu bwam
Sorry, please excuse me for trying to think charitibly

Tragically, this priest, now removed from the priesthood has continued to contact the boy's family. From what I heard on the news last night, he intentionally chose to call them on September 11 at 3PM (the hour recognized by the church as the time of Christ's death).

the boy's parents who said the priest harassed them so they would retract complaints against him.

It's almost like rubbing salt into their wounds.

14 posted on 10/09/2002 8:30:50 AM PDT by NYer
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