Pennsylvania Bishops Hid Abuse of Hundreds of Children: Grand Jury

The Bobster

Senior News Editor since 2004
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/politics/Altoona-Pennsylvania-Clergy-Abuse-370654141.html

Pennsylvania Bishops Hid Abuse of Hundreds of Children: Grand Jury
By Joe Mandak
Published 3 hours ago

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Brian Gergely, 33 (right), and Kevin Hoover, 30 (left), show old photographs of themselves during a news conference in Altoona, Pennsylvania, on Feb. 6, 2003. They said the pictures were taken during the time they allege a Roman Catholic priest sexually abused them while they were altar boys.


Two Roman Catholic bishops who led a central Pennsylvania diocese helped cover up the sexual abuse of hundreds of children by over 50 priests or religious leaders over a 40-year period, according to a grand jury report issued Tuesday.

The 147-page report on sexual abuse in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese was based partly on evidence from a secret diocesan archive uncovered through a search warrant executed in August, said Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane, who announced the findings.

"These predators desecrated a sacred trust and preyed upon their victims in the very places where they should have felt most safe," Kane said in a statement. "Just as troubling is the cover-up perpetrated by clergy leaders that allowed this abuse to continue for decades."

No criminal charges are being filed in the case because some abusers have died, the statute of limitations has expired and, in some cases, victims are too traumatized to testify, she said.

The report is especially critical of Bishops James Hogan and Joseph Adamec. Hogan, who headed the diocese from 1966 to 1986, died in 2005. Adamec, who succeeded him, retired in 2011.

Adamec cited possible self-incrimination in refusing to testify before the grand jury in November. But in a court filing, his attorney said the accusations against the retired 80-year-old bishop are unfounded.

Adamec required 14 priests accused under his watch to undergo psychiatric evaluation, the filing said. Nine of them were suspended or removed from ministry, and the five who were reinstated never re-offended, his attorney wrote.

"Bishop Adamec's handling of abuse allegations has no similarity to other clergy abuse scandals," his attorney wrote.

The current bishop, Mark Bartchak, is not accused of any wrongdoing. He recently suspended a handful of priests named as alleged abusers in the report, though the grand jury said it remains "concerned the purge of predators is taking too long."

The clergy sex abuse crisis erupted in 2002, when The Boston Globe persuaded a judge to unseal files from the Boston Archdiocese in the case of a pedophile priest who had been transferred by bishops from parish to parish without warning parents or civil authorities.

The scandal then spread nationwide and beyond, as Catholics and others demanded to know the full scope of wrongdoing by abusers and the bishops who kept them working with children.

Since then, dioceses across the country have been forced to release thousands of internal files on accused priests.

The Altoona-Johnstown report said Hogan covered up abuse allegations by transferring offending priests, including by sending one accused clergyman to a school for boys.

The church's own records show that priest "would have been prosecuted and convicted except that the bishop intervened and he was sent to Michigan for treatment and then placed in another parish upon his return," the grand jury found. :mad:

One diocesan official under Hogan, Monsignor Philip Saylor, told the grand jury that church officials held such sway in the eight-county diocese that "the police and civil authorities would often defer to the diocese" when priests were accused of abuse, the report said. Saylor told the grand jury that the mayors of Altoona and Johnstown even consulted him on their choices for police chief in the 1980s.

"Politicians of Blair County were afraid of Monsignor Saylor, and he apparently persuaded the mayor to appoint me as the chief of police," Altoona's former police chief Peter Starr testified.

The report contends Adamec or his staff threatened some alleged abuse victims with excommunication, and generally worked harder to hide or settle allegations of abuse than to sanction the priests accused of committing them.

The report said the bishop created a "pay-out chart" to help guide how much victims would receive from the church. Victims fondled over their clothes were to be paid $10,000 to $25,000; fondled under their clothes or subjected to masturbation, $15,000 to $40,000; subjected to forced oral sex, $25,000 to $75,000; subjected to forced sodomy or intercourse, $50,000 to $175,000.

The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops estimates that American dioceses have paid nearly $4 billion since 1950 to settle claims with victims.

The investigation began when Kane's office was asked to review the handling of abuse allegations at Bishop McCort Catholic High School against an athletic trainer, Franciscan Brother Stephen Baker, who worked there from 1992 to 2001. Baker killed himself in 2013 after abuse settlements with an Ohio diocese where he formerly worked were publicized. That investigation continues.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/politics/Altoona-Bishops-Clergy-Abuse-Sex-Abuse-371380481.html

Fallout of Report that Pennsylvania Diocese Covered Up Abuse by Dozens of Priest
Published at 8:45 AM EST on Mar 8, 2016

A grand jury report saying two former bishops helped cover up the sexual abuse of hundreds of victims by more than 50 priests is continuing to cause fallout in a central Pennsylvania diocese.

Members of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests plan a rally outside diocesan offices on Tuesday afternoon.

Meanwhile, Bishop Mark Bartchak has ordered banners of all former bishops removed from the diocese's Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament. Bishops James Hogan and Joseph Adamec, who headed the diocese from 1966 until 2011, were criticized by the report. Hogan died in 2005 but Adamec's attorney has denied he did anything wrong. :rolleyes:

Also Cambria County Judge Patrick Kiniry has resigned from the board of a Catholic high school. The report says Kiniry, a former prosecutor, and Hogan removed an accused molester from ministry rather than filing charges.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/20...tute-of-limitations-in-child-sex-abuse-cases/

PA Advocates Renew Push To Eliminate Statute Of Limitations In Child Sex Abuse Cases
March 14, 2016 5:12 PM By Tony Romeo

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Brenda Dick speaks at Capitol event. (credit: Tony Romeo)


HARRISBURG, Pa. (CBS) — Advocates say they believe the grand jury report about abuse by priests in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese is a tipping point in their effort to eliminate the statute of limitations in child sex abuse cases.

Advocates have been trying for more than a decade to enact legislation that would eliminate the statute of limitations for both criminal and civil cases of child sex abuse. At a state capitol event Monday, Attorney General Kathleen Kane was among those who argued for a change in the law.

“That those who prey on our children know that you’ll never get a free pass,” Kane said.

Brenda Dick, identified as a victim of the Altoona-Johnstown abuse, made a personal plea for action.

“It is a life sentence,” Dick said. “I’m not asking, I’m begging.”

Advocates pointed to broad media coverage of their Monday event as evidence that support for the statute of limitations change is surging. One state lawmaker threatened to bottle up legislation in the House Judiciary Committee until there is action on it.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news...Kathleen-Kane-Franciscan-Order-372094482.html

Charges Coming for Pennsylvanian Franciscan Order: Attorney General
Published 25 minutes ago

Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane says she'll announce criminal charges involving a Franciscan religious order based in central Pennsylvania.

Kane has a news conference scheduled for Tuesday morning. She's not saying who's being charged or what they're accused of doing. But she says the investigation centers on the Franciscan Friars, Third Order Regular, Province of the Immaculate Conception, based near Hollidaysburg.

A phone call to the monastery wasn't immediately returned early Tuesday.

Kane's office seized documents from the order last summer.

Brother Stephen Baker stabbed himself in the heart at the monastery in January 2013. That happened days after Youngstown, Ohio, church officials settled lawsuits filed by 11 students who claimed Baker molested them in the late 1980s. That prompted more than 90 former students at Bishop McCort High School in Johnstown to settle abuse claims against Baker for more than $8 million.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news...Kathleen-Kane-Franciscan-Order-372094482.html

3 Franciscan Leaders Face Abuse Charges at Pennsylvania School
Published at 8:39 AM EDT on Mar 15, 2016

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Giles Schinelli, Robert D'Aversa and Anthony Criscitelli stand accused of protecting a child predator.


Three ex-leaders of a Franciscan religious order were charged Tuesday with allowing a friar who was a known sexual predator to take on jobs, including a position as a high school athletic trainer, that enabled him to molest more than 100 children.

Giles Schinelli, 73; Robert D'Aversa, 69; and Anthony M. Criscitelli, 61, were successively the provincial ministers of a religious order of the Roman Catholic Church in western Pennsylvania from 1986 to 2010. In that role, each assigned and supervised the order's members.

Each was charged with conspiracy and child endangerment. Prosecutors said the three, each retired and living outside Pennsylvania, have been given until Friday to surrender. It's unclear where the three men reside and whether they have attorneys who could comment on the charges.

Brother Stephen Baker, the friar at the center of the abuse allegations, killed himself in 2013 — with two knives to the heart — after church officials in Youngstown, Ohio, announced they were settling lawsuits by 11 former students who said Baker abused them at schools in Ohio from 1986 to 1990.

More than 100 abuse claims were subsequently filed by former students of Bishop McCort High School in Johnstown, where Baker worked from 1992 to 2000. Millions in dollars in damages have been paid out.

The order issued a statement saying it cooperated with the investigation and was "deeply saddened" by the announcement. It also said it "extends its most sincere apologies to the victims and to the communities who have been harmed."

Attorney General Kathleen Kane, who announced the charges, said the men "were more concerned about protecting the image of the order, more concerned with being in touch with lawyers than in protecting the flock they served."

Though the grand jury probe focused on Baker, prosecutors said evidence was uncovered that in at least eight other instances, Franciscan friars had been transferred to other locations following abuse allegations.

"No reports were ever made to law enforcement," Kane said. "As the grand jury found, the ultimate priority was to avoid public scrutiny at all costs."

In the case of Baker, the grand jury said Schinelli, the earliest of the provincial ministers charged, assigned Baker to the high school despite a 1988 sexual abuse allegation and recommendations that he not be permitted to have one-on-one contact with children.

Baker was appointed as a religion teacher and assistant football coach, but worked his way into a position as athletic trainer even though he had no formal training, the grand jury said.

Many victims indicated they were abused by Baker when he treated them for sports injuries or was stretching them.

Baker was removed from the assignment at McCort in 2000 after what D'Aversa believed was a credible accusation of child sex abuse, though the allegation is not detailed in the grand jury report.

Neither D'Aversa nor Criscitelli notified school or law enforcement officials why Baker was removed, the report said.

Baker was given a new position as vocations director for the Franciscan Friars, Third Order Regulars, Province of the Immaculate Conception. Under that assignment, he led youth retreats in several states.

He was able to continue attending high school functions and had access to McCort facilities until 2010, the grand jury said.

In 2008, Baker was assigned as a volunteer trainer at Mt. Aloysius College, where the grand jury said he was able to molest three additional children.

The charges come two weeks after a grand jury report accused two former bishops of the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese of covering up or failing to act swiftly enough on abuse claims against more than 50 priests from 1966 until 2011. No charges were brought in that investigation because the statute of limitation had run its course, abusers had died and victims were too traumatized to testify, prosecutors said.

Although many Franciscans worked in the diocese, they were directly supervised by their order.

In the prosecution announced Tuesday, the grand jury found that the diocese did nothing criminal in its handling of abuse allegations against Baker, Kane said.

Officials at the diocese and Bishop McCort, which is no longer a diocesan school, did not know of the allegations against Baker until 2011, the grand jury found.

The child endangerment charge brought against the three Franciscan leaders is the same charge brought against Monsignor William Lynn, the former secretary for clergy in the Philadelphia Archdiocese. He recently had his 2012 trial conviction overturned for a second time when a court said jurors had heard from too many other church victims not directly involved in the case. Lynn remains in prison while prosecutors again appeal to the state Supreme Court.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news...eaders-Abuse-Charges-Surrender-372525322.html

Franciscan Friars to Surrender in Pennsylvania Child Endangerment Case
Published 6 hours ago

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Giles Schinelli, Robert D'Aversa and Anthony Criscitelli stand accused of protecting a child predator.


Three Franciscan friars charged with allowing a suspected sexual predator to hold jobs where he molested more than 100 children in Pennsylvania are set to surrender on child endangerment charges.

Robert D'Aversa, Anthony Criscitelli and Giles Schinelli have arraignments scheduled for 10 a.m. Friday.

State prosecutors say Schinelli assigned Brother Stephen Baker to Bishop McCort High School in Johnstown where he molested students from 1992 to 2000.

D'Aversa and Criscitelli, who also headed Baker's Franciscan order based near Hollidaysburg, are charged because they allegedly continued to allow Baker to teach or have access to the school and its students.

Baker killed himself in January 2013 when Ohio church officials announced he'd molested students there in the 1980s. That prompted the McCort victims to come forward.

The friars' attorneys haven't commented.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/Franciscan-Friars-Child-Sex-Abuse-Scandal-375665121.html

Pennsylvania Franciscan Friars Face Child Endangerment Hearing
Published 3 hours agol

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Giles Schinelli, Robert D'Aversa and Anthony Criscitelli stand accused of protecting a child predator.


Three Franciscan friars face a hearing on charges they allowed a suspected sexual predator to teach at a Pennsylvania high school and hold other jobs where he molested more than 100 children.

Thursday's hearing will determine whether Robert D'Aversa, Anthony Criscitelli, and Giles Schinelli stand trial on child endangerment and conspiracy charges.

The three successively headed a Franciscan order in Pennsylvania from 1986 to 2010. They assigned and supervised the order's members, including Brother Stephen Baker. Authorities say Baker molested scores of children, most at a high school. Baker killed himself in 2013.

At the time they were charged, Schinelli was a pastoral administrator in Winter Park, Florida; D'Aversa was a pastor in Mount Dora, Florida; and Criscitelli was a pastor in Minneapolis.

Schinelli's lawyer says he'll plead not guilty. Lawyers for the other two haven't commented.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news...Friars-Child-Endangerment-Case-377258601.html

Testimony in Pennsylvania Franciscan Friars' Child Endangerment Case
Published 17 minutes ago

Testimony has resumed in the case of three Franciscan friars charged with allowing a suspected sexual predator to teach at a Pennsylvania high school and hold other jobs where he molested more than 100 children.

Wednesday's preliminary hearing will determine whether Giles Schinelli, Robert D'Aversa and Anthony Criscitelli will stand trial on child endangerment and conspiracy charges.

Prosecutors say the three were aware of the allegations dating to 1977 against Brother Stephen Baker, who killed himself in 2013.

The friars successively headed a Franciscan order in Pennsylvania from 1986 to 2010 and supervised Baker.

Defense attorneys say the friars did the best they could.

When charged, Schinelli was a pastoral administrator in Winter Park, Florida; D'Aversa was a pastor in Mount Dora, Florida; and Criscitelli was a pastor in Minneapolis.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news...-Dismissal-of-Criminal-Charges-419980613.html

Pennsylvania Franciscan Friars Ask for Dismissal of Criminal Charges
Published 2 hours ago

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Giles Schinelli, Robert D'Aversa and Anthony Criscitelli


Three Franciscan friars have asked a judge to dismiss criminal charges that they didn't properly supervise a suspected sexual predator accused of molesting more than 100 children, most at a Pennsylvania high school.

Blair County Judge Jolene Kopriva has set an April 27 hearing on the defense motions filed by attorneys for Giles Schinelli, Robert D'Aversa and Anthony Criscitelli, the Altoona Mirror reported Thursday.

D'Aversa, 70, Cristcitelli, 62, and Schinelli, 73, were ordered to stand trial on child endangerment and conspiracy charges following a preliminary hearing last April.

State prosecutors contend the friars either assigned or supervised Brother Stephen Baker when he served at Bishop McCort Catholic High School in Johnstown in the 1990s.

Baker fatally stabbed himself in the heart at the Franciscan's St. Bernardine monastery near Hollidaysburg, which the defendants led from 1986 to 2010. Baker killed himself days after the Youngstown, Ohio, diocese announced in early 2013 that 11 students had settled claims they were molested by Baker while he worked at John F. Kennedy High School in Warren, Ohio, in the late 1980s.

News of the settlement and Baker's suicide prompted more than 90 former McCort students to come forward with molestation allegations, too. Their claims have settled out of court for more than $8 million. Several others have alleged Baker molested them as children, too.

Schinelli approved Baker's assignment at Bishop McCort in 1992 even after he had learned of an unspecified allegation of abuse against him, prosecutors said. Schinelli had written to an out-of-state diocese where the allegation originated and was told no more information was available on the accusation, which Schinelli termed "vague and unsubstantiated'' in his correspondence.

Porter argued that Schinelli nevertheless ordered Baker to be examined by a psychiatrist, who found in 1992 that Baker had "no deviate sexual disorder that puts minors at risk,'' according to a letter from the doctor.

"The fact that the doctor was ultimately wrong does not impact the knowledge that Schinelli had,'' defense attorney Charles Porter wrote in his motion to dismiss the charges.

D'Aversa's attorney, Robert Ridge, argued the friar didn't supervise Baker while he worked at McCort _ school officials did. Prosecutors contend D'Aversa had told Baker not to be alone with minors, but Ridge said that was "based on an allegation, not substantiated by evidence of wrongdoing by Baker.''

Criscitelli's attorney, James Kraus, argued that his client didn't have knowledge of the allegations against Baker, and so had no reason to act.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news...rges-of-Molesting-Pa-Students--428414523.html

3 Friars Ask Judge to Dismiss Charges of Failing to Supervise Suspected Sexual Predator
Blair County Judge Jolene Kopriva has set a hearing Wednesday on the defense motions filed by attorneys for Giles Schinelli, Robert D'Aversa and Anthony Criscitelli.
Published 5 hours ago

Three Franciscan friars are asking a judge to dismiss criminal charges that they didn't properly supervise a suspected sexual predator accused of molesting more than 100 children, most at a Pennsylvania high school.

Blair County Judge Jolene Kopriva has set a hearing Wednesday on the defense motions filed by attorneys for Giles Schinelli, Robert D'Aversa and Anthony Criscitelli.

State prosecutors say the friars assigned or supervised Brother Stephen Baker when he served at Bishop McCort Catholic High School in Johnstown in the 1990s. Baker killed himself in 2013, shortly after a settlement was announced that he had molested students at a school in Youngstown, Ohio. That settlement prompted more than 80 former McCort students to come forward with molestation allegations, that have resulted in more than $8 million in settlements.

The friars say they're not responsible for those incidents.
 
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news...-Against-Friar-for-Improperly--452816823.html

Judge Dismisses Charges Against Friar Accused of Sex Abuse Cover-UpThe judge found the statute of limitations expired before child endangerment and conspiracy charges were filed last year against 74-year-old Anthony "Giles" Schinelli.
Published at 12:33 AM EDT on Oct 25, 2017 | Updated at 12:38 AM EDT on Oct 25, 2017

A judge has dismissed charges against one of three Franciscan friars accused of improperly supervising a man accused of molesting more than 100 children, most at a Pennsylvania high school. :mad:

The judge found the statute of limitations expired before child endangerment and conspiracy charges were filed last year against 74-year-old Anthony "Giles" Schinelli.

Schinelli was the first of three friars who either supervised or assigned duties to Brother Stephen Baker when he served at Johnstown's Bishop McCort Catholic High School in the 1990s.

The Altoona Mirror reported that charges against two other friars who supervised Baker after Schinelli will stand because the ages of his alleged victim still falls within the time limits defined by the law.

Baker killed himself in 2013, before church officials paid more than $8 million to settle claims against him.
 





20-year church abuse probe ends with monsignor's quiet plea​


philadelphia
December 21, 2022 / 7:06 PM / AP


(AP) -- Twenty years after city prosecutors convened a grand jury to investigate the handling of priest-abuse complaints within the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Philadelphia, the tortuous legal case came to an end with a cleric's misdemeanor no contest plea in a near-empty City Hall courtroom.

Monsignor William Lynn, 71, had served nearly three years in state prison as appeals courts reviewed the fiery three-month trial that led to his felony child endangerment conviction in 2012. The verdict was twice overturned, leaving prosecutors pursuing the thinning case in recent years with a single alleged victim whose appearance in court was in doubt.

In the end, they said Lynn could end the two-decade ordeal by pleading no contest to a charge of failing to turn over records to the 2002 grand jury. A judge took the plea during a short break from her civil caseload last month, and imposed no further punishment.

"He lost 10 years of his life, 10 years of his priestly life," said defense lawyer Thomas Bergstrom, speaking of the decade since Lynn's conviction. "It's a travesty. It's an absolute travesty."

"You're fighting an uphill battle because the public at large misunderstood what he was convicted of. They thought he was an abuser," Bergstrom said.


Lynn was the first U.S. church official ever charged, convicted or imprisoned over their handling of priest-abuse complaints.

His trial attracted a packed courtroom full of press, priest-abuse victims and outraged Catholics, along with a few church loyalists. Lynn, the longtime secretary for clergy, was accused of sending a known predator — named on a list of problem priests he had prepared for Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua — to an accuser's northeast Philadelphia parish.

The trial judge allowed nearly two dozen other priest-abuse victims to testify about abuse they had suffered in the archdiocese over a half century. An appeals court later said their weeks of testimony over uncharged acts were unfair to Lynn — who some saw as a scapegoat for the church, given that the bishops and cardinals above him were never charged.

"This is one defendant, one count of endangering the welfare of children, with one group of children," Judge Gwendolyn Bright said before his retrial was set to start in March 2020. "We're not bringing in the so-called or alleged 'sins of the Catholic Church.'"


The pandemic closed the courthouse, and the case against Lynn stalled yet again until the recent plea offer.

A spokesperson for District Attorney Larry Krasner, who inherited the case from his predecessors, called Lynn's unannounced Nov. 2 plea "the appropriate path for bringing finality and closure to the victims, who have endured retraumatization throughout the legal process for years" and said they did not want to face another trial.

The archdiocese did not immediately return a message seeking comment.

Lynn, who remains a priest, has been saying Mass for retired nuns and hopes to assume more duties, according to Bergstrom, who declined to make his client available to the press on Wednesday.

At his trial, Lynn said he had made a list of 35 suspected predator priests so Bevilacqua would address the matter, only to have the list be destroyed.

"I did not intend any harm to come to (the victim). The fact is, my best was not good enough to stop that harm," Lynn testified.

In recent years, prosecutors were not sure they could get the trial accuser — a policeman's son who testified to his long struggle with addiction — back in court for the retrial, complicating their trial strategy. Assistant District Attorney Patrick Blessington, the lead trial prosecutor in 2012, had said he could try the case without a victim by arguing that Lynn had placed "a bomb" in the parish, whether or not it went off.


Blessington is now retired. And, ultimately, District Attornery Krasner decided not to try that strategy.

"The victims in this matter expressed to the commonwealth that proceeding (with another trial) ... would cause irreparable harm and further victimize them," his office said in its statement.

The trial accuser said that he had been abused by two priests and his Catholic school teacher. One of them, defrocked priest Edward Avery, took a plea offer days before trial. The Rev. Charles Engelhardt, who said he had never met the accuser, was convicted at a 2013 trial and died in prison. Teacher Bernard Shero was released in 2017 after his conviction was overturned and, like Lynn, pleaded no contest to lesser charges.

The priest-abuse scandal has cost the Roman Catholic church an estimated $3 billion or more, and plunged dioceses around the world into bankruptcy.
 

Lawsuit accuses Archdiocese of Philadelphia of moving sexually abusive priest​


philadelphia
By Joe Holden

April 19, 2023 / 10:30 PM / CBS Philadelphia





PHILADELPHIA (CBS) -- More than 20 years after the clergy sex abuse scandal erupted in the United States, a newly filed lawsuit reveals more allegations of a cover-up.

The Archdiocese of Philadelphia is accused in the suit of moving a priest with an alleged troubling track record.

The Archdiocese of Philadelphia faces renewed allegations Wednesday that church leaders quietly transferred a suspected sexually abusive priest from assignment to assignment between 2003 and 2020.

The church and the priest are named in a five-count lawsuit filed in the Court of Common Pleas on claims of negligence and recklessness based on the alleged failure to properly supervise priests, investigate allegations against them and protect its parishioners from them, often by simply moving the priests to other dioceses.

In the complaint Jane Doe, whose identity we are concealing, alleges she was sexually abused by 48-year-old Father Kevin McGoldrick after the Archdiocese, under the leadership of then-Archbishop Charles Chaput, transferred him to her college in Nashville, Tennessee.

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Archbishop Charles Chaput during service.
"I would say that my entire senior year was stolen from me," Jane Doe said. "I spent that year crippled with anxiety. I was in constant fear of someone finding out, someone finding out and blaming me."


Jane Doe has already settled a lawsuit with the Diocese of Nashville — but says late last year — she was shocked to learn McGoldrick was previously accused of abusing a woman in Philadelphia — years before he allegedly assaulted her, according to the lawsuit.

Attorney Stu Ryan, of the law firm Laffey, Bucci and Kent, represents Jane Doe.

"Ultimately it was only through public reporting that our client learned that in fact not only were there other victims, but that the Archdiocese knew about these other victims before this priest was ever sent to Nashville and she should have never been exposed to him in the first place," Ryan said.

McGoldrick still lives in Nashville, according to the suit.


Over the past 24 hours, CBS Philadelphia reached out to several email addresses believed to be his, but he has not responded.

The lawsuit accuses him of civil assault and battery.

He hasn't been charged in connection to those allegations, which have not yet been proven in court.

The Archdiocese hasn't responded to questions on what his official status is as a member of the clergy.

Joe Holden: "What should have happened to this priest in 2013 or 2007, or 8 or 9?"

Ryan: "Well, certainly action should have been taken long before he was sent to Nashville. He never should have been sent to Nashville. He should have never had a letter that is standard practice when someone is sent to a different diocese or archdiocese vouching for him as a safe person to be around."


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Attorney Stu Ryan, of the law firm Laffey, Bucci and Kent, represents Jane Doe.
Jane Doe says she was doing better until learning from news reports about other women the lawsuit claims came forward to report inappropriate conduct.


"The news that what happened to me could have so easily been avoided has put me back into a really difficult place," Jane Doe said.

Father McGoldrick had numerous assignments in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, according to the lawsuit, including South Philadelphia, Fishtown and at the Cathedral Basilica of Saints Peter and Paul when he was a minister at Roman Catholic High School.

As far as the suit, the Archdiocese says it does not comment on pending litigation.
 
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