For the second time in five days, the Boston Archdiocese
late yesterday
announced it had discovered more allegations of sexual abuse
of children by
active clergymen, and removed six additional priests from
their assignments.
In addition to the six, the names of nine other
unidentified priests were
forwarded for possible prosecution to district
attorneys in Middlesex and
Norfolk counties yesterday. And the Norfolk
prosecutor's office asked the
archdiocese to hand over information on five
additional priests about whom
the office learned on its own.
What's more, at least two of the six priests removed
yesterday were living
in church rectories. In both cases, in Wellesley and
Dedham, the pastors
told the Globe last night that they had never been told
that the priests had
been accused of molesting children.
Donna M. Morrissey, speaking for the archdiocese, said the
priests publicly
removed from their posts yesterday were identified during an
ongoing review
of clergy personnel records dating back 40 years.
Last month, Cardinal Bernard Law twice assured the public
that the
archdiocese had removed all priests known to have sexually molested
minors
from any assignments.
Law previously had said that in 1993 the archdiocese
combed its personnel
records and removed those priests who presented a danger
to parishioners
because of past allegations of sexual
misconduct.
In addition, of the six priests ousted from their
positions yesterday, the
Globe has learned that at least four had previous
sexual abuse claims
against them settled by the archdiocese.
The six clergymen held a variety of posts in parishes and
administrative
offices throughout Greater Boston: Three performed the
traditional functions
of a priest, a fourth was a chaplain at Brockton
Hospital, a fifth worked as
a parish business manager, while a sixth was
posted in the development
office of the archdiocese.
Five of the priests had been accused of sexually molesting
minors once, and
one - the Rev. David C. Murphy, the Brockton Hospital
chaplain - had been
accused more than once, church officials
said.
Besides Murphy, the priests are:
The Rev. James F. Power, 71, assigned to St. James the
Great parish in
Wellesley.
The Rev. Robert A. Ward Jr., 55, an employee in the
development office of
the archdiocese for the last year, living at St. Mary's
in Dedham.
The Rev. Thomas P. Forry, 60, who filled in for other
clergymen in parishes
throughout the archdiocese.
The Rev. Gerald J. Hickey, 64, officially unassigned but
assisting at St.
Helen Church in Norwell.
The Rev. Richard A. Buntel, 56, a business manager at St.
Thomas of
Villanova Church in Wilmington.
The church has already settled sexual molestation claims
againt Power,
Hickey, Buntel, and Murphy, according to people involved in the
settlements.
On Saturday, officials abruptly ousted two pastors from
active ministry: the
Very Rev. Daniel M. Graham, 57, of St. Joseph Church in
Quincy, and the Rev.
Paul J. Finegan, also 57, of St. Bernadette Church in
Randolph.
Graham, before he was removed from his parish, was a
regional vicar with
oversight responsibility for 19 Catholic churches in
Braintree, Milton,
Quincy, and Randolph - including St. Bernadette, where
Finegan was pastor.
The action Saturday occurred only three days after church
officials had
provided the names of 38 priests accused of sexually molesting
children to
six district attorneys. The Globe Spotlight Team has reported
that church
officials settled child molestation claims against at least 70
priests in
the last decade.
''This represents the disorder that rises to the surface
when essentially
unhealthy procedures and patterns deeply in place for
centuries are
unearthed,'' said Padraic O'Hare, professor of religious
studies at
Merrimack College, a Catholic institution in North
Andover.
Carmen Durso, an attorney who has represented victims of
priests, said the
cardinal's assurances that all pedophiles had been removed
from active
service have now been so undermined that the archdiocese needs to
appoint
the equivalent of an independent counsel.
''The cardinal has made too many contradictory
statements,'' Durso said last
night. ''He needs to quickly find someone who
is independent and not
beholden to the archdiocese. And that person has to
make sure there is no
priest with a record of abuse who is anywhere near
children. That is the
only way to restore public confidence in the
church.''
Durso said the archdiocese is ''clearly overwhelmed'' by
the circumstances.
And he said he expects that many more victims are likely
to come forward now
that the issue has become so public.
In one sign that the archdiocese has compiled its lists of
accused clergymen
hastily, archdiocesan officials listed Buntel at a
Wilmington church where
the pastor said Buntel has never worked.
''He's not employed here, he's never been employed here,
and he has never
had anything to do with this church,'' said the Rev. Kevin
Horrigan, pastor
at St. Dorothy's parish. Church officials later said Buntel
was working at
St. Thomas of Villanova Church before he was
ousted.
And only yesterday morning, Ward, the accused priest
living at St. Mary's in
Dedham, received a telephone call from church
officials and was told to
leave the premises, according to St. Mary's pastor,
the Rev. John A. Dooher.
Morrissey would not say how long it would take the
archdiocese to complete
its review of personnel files.
David Traub, speaking for Norfolk District Attorney
William Keating, said
the archdiocese yesterday provided Keating with the
names of three priests
accused of sexually molesting minors, in addition to
the seven names they
gave the office last week.
Keating, in turn, has asked the archdiocese for
information about eight
additional priests about whom his office has learned
of on its own, Traub
said.
Anson Kaye, spokesman for Middlesex District Attorney
Martha Coakley, said
the archdiocese yesterday forwarded the names of 12
accused priests, in
addition to the 10 it provided last week.
But, as they did last week, officials working with the
district attorneys
said yesterday the new information handed over by the
archdiocese was
insufficient to prosecute any of the priets.
''Once again they have given us the names of priests but
not the other
relevant information we previously requested,'' Traub
said.
Law, after apologizing to victims of clergy sex abuse last
month, said
church officials would begin reporting the names of suspected
child abusers
among clergymen to civil authorities.
State law currently requires teachers, doctors, and other
professionals to
report the sexual abuse of children to the state Department
of Social
Services, which in turn may report the allegations to law
enforcement
authorities.
Priests are not covered by the mandatory reporting law,
although the church
says it is supporting proposed legislation that would
cover Catholic clergy.
Law's announcement that the church would comply with the
state's mandatory
reporting law followed a Globe Spotlight Team investigation
which found that
the cardinal and other church officials assigned former
priest John J.
Geoghan to parish work even though they had credible evidence
that Geoghan
had sexually molested several minors.
About 130 individuals say Geoghan molested them as
children while he was
serving in six parishes in Greater Boston from the late
1960s through the
late 1990s.
Last month, Geoghan was convicted of indecent assault of a
Waltham boy while
he was assigned to St Julia Church in Weston. He faces two
additional
criminal trials - one for allegedly raping a Jamaica Plain boy -
and about
90 civil lawsuits.
Law and five bishops are defendants in many of the suits,
which accuse the
cardinal and his top aides of negligence in supervising
Geoghan.
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