Posted on 01/25/2002 8:45:30 PM PST by gcruse
January 25, 2002
Papers in Pedophile Case
Show Church Effort to Avert
Scandal
By PAM BELLUCK
OSTON, Jan. 24 The Roman Catholic
archdiocese here seemed more preoccupied
with avoiding a scandal involving a pedophile priest
than making sure the priest had no further contact
with children, documents released today suggest.
The documents depositions, letters and
memorandums from 84 civil lawsuits against the
priest and the archdiocese reveal in detail that
the church knew of the priest's pedophilia, but
moved him from one parish to another for 30
years.
The revelations prompted Boston's cardinal, Bernard F. Law, to apologize for the second time this month for
the archdiocese's handling of the priest, John J. Geoghan, 66, who was convicted last week of molesting a
boy in a youth club pool and faces two more criminal trials on similar charges.
More than 130 people in half a dozen parishes here said Mr. Geoghan, who was defrocked in 1998,
molested them as children in incidents that occurred from 1962 to 1995. The church has settled about 50
lawsuits for a total of more than $10 million.
"I made a mistake in assigning John Geoghan," Cardinal Law said. "I regret that assignment, and I have
attempted to learn from that mistake."
In a departure from longstanding church policy, the cardinal also announced that he would require clergymen
and officials of the archdiocese to report to the authorities past accusations of sexual abuse by priests.
"We will be going to public authorities with the names of all priests that we
are aware of that have abused minors," Cardinal Law said.
He also said he was convening a panel of medical experts to study ways to
prevent child abuse and deal with victims.
The 10,000 pages of new documents include depositions by bishops who
were aware of Mr. Geoghan's problem, notes from psychiatrists who
evaluated him, letters from parishioners complaining of church inaction and
letters from the two cardinals during Mr. Geoghan's tenure, the late Cardinal
Humberto Medeiros and Cardinal Law.
The Boston archdiocese has long tried to keep the documents sealed, and
they became public only after The Boston Globe filed a request to see them
and a judge ordered the records opened last year. The Globe published
excerpts and an analysis of the records today.
In one deposition, Bishop Thomas V. Daily, now leader of the Brooklyn
diocese, was asked if it were archdiocesan policy "to avoid scandal where
possible."
The bishop replied, "Yes."
"And were these events types of events that would cause scandal for the church?" Bishop Daily was asked.
"Yes," he replied.
In a 1982 letter, Margaret Gallant, a relative of seven boys molested by Mr. Geoghan, wrote to Cardinal
Medeiros complaining that Bishop Daily had "suggested that we keep silent." Her relatives, Mrs. Gallant
wrote, "never as much as received an apology from the church, much less any offer for counseling for the
boys."
In reply, Cardinal Medeiros wrote, "While I am and must be very sensitive to a very delicate situation and one
that has caused great scandal, I must at the same time invoke the mercy of God and share in that mercy in the
knowledge that God forgives sins and that sinners indeed can be forgiven."
In the documents, church officials, including Cardinal Law, often treated Mr. Geoghan as a sinner who had
repented and recovered.
"It is most heartening to know that things have gone well for you and that you are ready to resume your efforts
with a renewed zeal," Cardinal Law wrote to Mr. Geoghan in 1989, when the cardinal allowed the priest to
return to St. Julia Parish in suburban Weston after treatment.
The documents released today deepened the anger that Boston Catholics already felt over the church's
handling of the case.
"Even the ones who raised the red flag, they raised it as scandal, they said they didn't want scandal to come to
the church," said Thomas H. Groome, a professor of religious education at Boston College. "That the crime
had caused extraordinary damage to the parishioners and their children was not in their consciousness."
Some parishioners and a few priests have called on Cardinal Law to resign. But today the cardinal, who is
considered close to the pope and is one of the country's most influential Roman Catholic leaders, dismissed
that possibility.
"The solution to this problem as I see it does not include my resignation as archbishop," Cardinal Law said.
"You don't walk away when the problem is difficult."
Two weeks ago, in his first apology, the cardinal announced a policy of zero tolerance of future sexual abuse
of children by priests and required clergymen to report evidence of such abuse to the state authorities. This
followed a Vatican order requiring all archdioceses to report accusations of pedophilia to the Vatican.
But this week, the Senate in this heavily Roman Catholic state voted to go beyond Cardinal Law's actions,
passing an amendment that would require reporting of evidence of past sexual abuse.
"In a state like Massachusetts, in a city like Boston, I think that's a considerable turnaround," said Thomas H.
O'Connor, the university historian at Boston College. "The general perception was that the Legislature would
do pretty much what the cardinal said, but they can't afford to take that position any longer."
In response to the Legislature, the cardinal revised archdiocese policy to require reporting of past abuse as
well.
In his first apology, Cardinal Law said he relied on psychiatric evaluations that suggested Mr. Geoghan could
be safely reassigned to parishes. The newly disclosed documents contain a number of positive evaluations of
Mr. Geoghan. But they also include negative ones, including notes that Bishop Robert J. Banks took from a
conversation he had with one of Mr. Geoghan's psychiatrists in 1989, saying "you can't afford to have him in a
parish," and "you better clip his wings before there is an explosion."
Later that year, Mr. Geoghan was removed for treatment and then allowed to return to St. Julia Parish. Soon
after Mr. Geoghan's reinstatement, the documents show, Bishop Banks wrote to doctors at the treatment
center, who had written that Mr. Geoghan had "atypical pedophilia, in remission" and "mixed personality
disorder with obsessive-compulsive, histrionic and narcissistic features."
In his note, Bishop Banks said that he was disappointed by the evaluation and that he had been given oral
assurances by the center that "it would be all right to reassign Father Geoghan to pastoral ministry." The
bishop asked for a letter confirming that, and he received a note from the doctor saying it was "quite safe" to
reinstate Mr. Geoghan in the parish and "the probability that he would sexually act out again is quite low."
The documents make little mention of Mr. Geoghan's victims and give little indication that the church offered
the victims counseling or comfort.
Today, several people who say they were molested by Mr. Geoghan as boys said the documents destroyed
their trust and respect for the church.
"I believe in the Catholic religion, but I can't go to church," said Anthony Muzzi Jr., 47, who said he was
molested over two years, sometimes while Mr. Geoghan was "blessing us in the bedroom."
"I've lost my faith in the church," Mr. Muzzi said. "I have to say my prayers in my vehicle going to and from
work."
I visit some of them, the Never Ending Story thread, for instance. I never see fury directed toward protestants on threads started by by Catholics on this forum--heated dicussion yes---outright hate? No. We do not post endlessly about the sins of your churches. We are more concerned with ending abortion, and stem cells, athiesm, etc. Not so the fundamentalists. The anger that spews from their hateful mouths is pathetic. Surely you would defend your core beliefs if they were endlessly attacked as mine are. I'm for debate and criticism. After a thread gets hijacked and turned into a Catholic bashing session it only brings lurkers closer to the Catholic Church. For that I am glad.
Until the protestant churches address contraception then they are guilty of furthering the culture of death. This should be the number one thing on their agenda, but its not. I think the poster proud2bRC, summed it up best:
"The biggest challenge to christianity is championing the Culture of Life in a society and political climate in large part obsessed with the Culture of Death. If we lose the fight for the Culture of Life, the Republic is lost. Any other political debate is moot.
To understand the roots of the acceptance of many facets of the Culture of Death, one must grasp recent historical developments in Christianity.
As pointed out directly above, in 1930 mainstream "Bible only" protestantism fell away from the constant teaching of Christianity regarding contraception. Christianity always taught contraception was intrinsically evil. (This was ALL Christians, for ALL time, not just Catholics. The point isn't even debatable.)
This change in teaching on contraception is the very root cause of the eventual legalization of abortion.
Abortion follows the acceptance of contraceptive mentality as night follows day. In Planned Parenthood v. Casey, the US Supreme Court decision that confirmed Roe v. Wade [U.S. decision to permit abortions] stated "in some critical respects, abortion is of the same character as the decision to use contraception... for two decades of economic and social developments, people have organized intimate relationships and made choices that define their views of themselves and their places in society, in reliance on the availability of abortion in the event that contraception should fail." As Professor Janet Smith points out, "The Supreme Court decision has made completely unnecessary, any efforts to "expose" what is really behind the attachment of the modern age to abortion. As the Supreme Court candidly states, we need abortion so that we can continue our contraceptive lifestyles."
Furthermore, because mainstream protestantism and "Bible Christianity" in general condones non-procreative contraceptive sex, they have no moral authority upon which to preach against non-procreative homosexual sex, as homosexual "Christian" theologians are pointing out even today.
Thus the homosexual agenda juggernaut is also directly a result of the failure of "Bible Christianity" on the birth control issue, as well as the reluctance of the Catholic hierarchy and priesthood to promote Humanae Vitae and the Church's true teachings on sexuality in general. And if you can kill the innocent baby in the womb, why not granny in the nursing home? Euthanasia too is becoming widespread, as a result of the acceptance of abortion, which came from this change in moral teachings regarding, and acceptance of, the contraceptive mentality among Christian churches.
The widespread acceptance in American culture of the culture of death --abortion, contraception, homosexuality, euthanasia-- lies squarely on the backs of those who caved in on these life issues several decades ago.
Until Christianity turns back from this apostacy, respect for human life from conception til natural death, the hallmark of any true political conservatism, will continue to erode."
287 posted on 1/5/02 9:38 PM Pacific by proud2bRC [ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 267 | View Replies | Report Abuse ]
See post 82. =)
(What should I say if you unexpectedly sneeze online here? I need a quick primer on atheistic etiquette, I'd hate to offend you with the usual response...)
Galt bless you. :)
Papers in Pedophile Case Show Church Effort to Avert Scandal
Reply 83 to JMJ333 by Faith_j
11497269 posted on 1/27/02 8:57 PM pacific
Papers in Pedophile Case Show Church Effort to Avert Scandal
Reply 79 to Moosilauke by Faith_j
11496184 posted on 1/27/02 7:44 PM pacific
Papers in Pedophile Case Show Church Effort to Avert Scandal
Reply 78 to RaceBannon by Faith_j
11496130 posted on 1/27/02 7:40 PM pacific
Secret file full on Geoghan: Archdiocese told he was `real danger'
Reply 10 to boston_liberty by Faith_j
11493023 posted on 1/27/02 2:44 PM pacific
Priest Says He, Too, Molested Boys Reply 27 to Faith_j; teresat; grlfrnd by Faith_j 11481690 posted on 1/26/02 7:22 PM pacific Priest Says He, Too, Molested Boys
Reply 24 to teresat by Faith_j
11481495 posted on 1/26/02 7:07 PM pacific
Priest Says He, Too, Molested Boys
Reply 14 to Faith_j by Faith_j
11480007 posted on 1/26/02 5:23 PM pacific
Priest Says He, Too, Molested Boys
Reply 13 to grlfrnd by Faith_j
11479820 posted on 1/26/02 5:11 PM pacific
Priest Says He, Too, Molested Boys
Reply 11 to grlfrnd by Faith_j
11479530 posted on 1/26/02 4:49 PM pacific
Archdiocese seeks block on records
Reply 6 to Deep_6 by Faith_j
11478159 posted on 1/26/02 3:05 PM pacific
Priest Says He, Too, Molested Boys
Reply 10 to Artie_Kay by Faith_j
11478028 posted on 1/26/02 2:55 PM pacific
Sins of the fathers: Source: 50 former priests may have molested children
Reply 121 to Unbeliever; ikanakattara by Faith_j
11477920 posted on 1/26/02 2:47 PM pacific
Papers in Pedophile Case Show Church Effort to Avert Scandal
Reply 4 to gcruse by Faith_j
11468871 posted on 1/25/02 10:09 PM pacific
Sins of the fathers: Source: 50 former priests may have molested children
Reply 115 to boston_liberty by Faith_j
11468404 posted on 1/25/02 9:38 PM pacific
Boston Archdiocese Changes Course <> Reply 9 to Palladin by Faith_j
11468314 posted on 1/25/02 9:32 PM pacific
Boston Archdiocese Changes Course
Reply 8 to Palladin; George W. Bush by Faith_j
11468248 posted on 1/25/02 9:28 PM pacific
Sins of the fathers: Source: 50 former priests may have molested children
Reply 107 to boston_liberty by Faith_j
11463336 posted on 1/25/02 5:31 PM pacific
Here are the links that were indeed on your homepage:
I'd ask for an apology for you calling me a liar, but I won't hold my breath.
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