Current:Home > StocksExpanding clergy sexual abuse probe targets New Orleans Catholic church leaders -SecureWealth Bridge
Expanding clergy sexual abuse probe targets New Orleans Catholic church leaders
View
Date:2025-04-17 05:00:41
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Authorities have expanded an investigation of clergy sexual abuse in the Roman Catholic Church in New Orleans to include senior church officials suspected of shielding predatory priests for decades and failing to report their crimes to law enforcement.
Louisiana State Police carried out a sweeping search warrant last week at the Archdiocese of New Orleans, seeking a long-secreted cache of church records and communications between local church leaders and the Vatican about the church’s handling of clergy sexual abuse.
The search signaled a new phase of the investigation that will seek to determine what particular church leaders, including current and former archbishops, knew about claims that the warrant describes as “ignored and in many cases covered up.”
The warrant contained several new details about the sex-trafficking investigation, including claims that some victims were sexually assaulted in a seminary swimming pool after being ordered to “skinny dip.” Separately, the warrant says, predatory priests developed a system of sharing victims by giving them “gifts” that they were instructed to pass on to clergymen at other schools or churches.
“It was said that the ‘gift’ was a form of signaling to another priest that the person was a target for sexual abuse,” state police investigator Scott Rodrigue wrote in an affidavit in support of the warrant.
The warrant sought an exhaustive range of personnel records, “files contained in any and all safes” and documents showing the extent to which the archdiocese continued supporting clergymen even after they were added to the so-called credibly accused list of suspected predators.
The warrant also confirmed a parallel FBI examination of clergy sexual abuse reported by The Associated Press nearly two years ago. That investigation has examined whether priests took children across state lines to molest them.
Archbishop Gregory Aymond did not respond to a request for comment and has rebuffed repeated calls by clergy abuse accusers to step down. The Vatican also did not respond to a request for comment.
“No one and no institution is above the law, especially when we are talking about protecting children from the horrors of child sexual abuse,” said Kathryn Robb, executive director of Child USAdvocacy, a nonprofit that advocates on behalf of child sexual abuse accusers. “This warrant is the necessary muscle of the criminal system to protect children.”
Many of the most explosive church records surfaced in a flood of sexual abuse lawsuits that drove the archdiocese to seek Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection four years ago. The documents chronicle years of abuse claims, interviews with accused clergy and a pattern of church leaders transferring problem priests, but they have been shielded under a sweeping confidentiality order in the bankruptcy case that has long hampered the state and federal investigations.
“We have been forced, against our own professional obligations, to keep them secret,” said attorneys Richard Trahant, Soren Gisleson and John Denenea, who represent the accusers.
The search could deepen the legal peril for church leaders, exposing them to potential state court prosecutions even as the U.S. Justice Department has struggled to identify federally prosecutable crimes related to clergy sexual abuse.
Last year, an Orleans Parish grand jury indicted Lawrence Hecker, a now-92-year-old disgraced priest, on charges accusing him of sexually assaulting a teenage boy in 1975 — an extraordinary prosecution that prompted the broader search of the archdiocese last week.
Hecker has pleaded not guilty to counts of rape, kidnapping, aggravated crime against nature and theft. He is accused of choking the teen unconscious under the guise of performing a wrestling move and sexually assaulting him.
The archdiocese failed to report Hecker’s admissions to law enforcement while permitting him to work around children until he quietly left the ministry in 2002. Church officials reassigned Hecker even after he was sent to a psychiatric facility in Pennsylvania and “diagnosed as a pedophile,” the warrant says.
“Hecker was not the only member of the archdiocese sent to receive psychiatric testing based on allegations of child sexual abuse,” Rodrigue wrote in the warrant.
The age of the Hecker case presents legal and evidentiary hurdles for prosecutors, who also face the political sensitivity of prosecuting a longtime clergyman in heavily Catholic New Orleans. Many predator priests have escaped criminal consequences in Louisiana for those reasons, making the scope of last week’s search even more notable.
One high-profile exception came in 2019 in the case of George F. Brignac, a longtime deacon and schoolteacher charged with sexually assaulting a then-altar boy in the 1970s. Brignac died in 2020 while awaiting trial at the age of 85. He had pleaded not guilty.
Litigation involving Brignac turned up thousands of still-secret emails documenting behind-the-scenes public relations work that New Orleans Saints executives did for the archdiocese in 2018 and 2019 to contain fallout from clergy abuse scandals.
___
Associated Press reporter Nicole Winfield contributed from Rome.
___
Contact AP’s global investigative team at [email protected] or https://www.ap.org/tips/
veryGood! (74931)
Related
- What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
- Trump seeks dismissal of charges in Stormy Daniels hush money case
- David Beckham Roasts Victoria Beckham Over Her Working Class Claim
- 77-year-old Florida man accused of getting ED pills to distribute in retirement community
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Pennsylvania House passes legislation to complete overdue budget. Decisions now lie with the Senate
- Bullet fired at football field ruptures 7-year-old's spleen, shatters community's heart
- Body Electric: What digital jobs are doing to our bodies
- 'Most Whopper
- Man arrested for murder of woman beaten to death in 1983
Ranking
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Grandmother recounts close encounter with child kidnapping suspect
- Starbucks is distributing coffee beans it developed to protect supply from climate change effects
- Emoji reactions now available in Gmail for Android users
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- NFL releases adaptive and assisted apparel, first pro sports league to do so
- A year after Thai day care center massacre, a family copes with their grief
- Emoji reactions now available in Gmail for Android users
Recommendation
Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
Slovakia halts military aid for Ukraine as parties that oppose it negotiate to form a new government
Trump seeks dismissal of charges in Stormy Daniels hush money case
This Love Is Blind Couple Got Engaged Off Camera During Season 5
Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
Powerball jackpot rises to estimated $1.4 billion after no winners Wednesday
The communities experimenting with how to be more resilient to a changing climate
Trump lawyers seek dismissal of DC federal election subversion case, arguing presidential immunity