Catholic World News
20 August 2013
In a letter to priests, Archbishop John Myers of Newark strongly denounced recent media coverage of a settlement in which the plaintiff charged that the prelate allowed a priest to remain in ministry despite evidence of prior sexual abuse.
“This past week local media, once again, provided deceitful and misleading information about situations in the Diocese of Peoria and in this Archdiocese,” Archbishop Myers said in his letter, as quoted on the blog of Father Jim Chern, the archdiocese’s vocations director.
The prelate added:
One might ask why the representatives of the media do not explore the records of those who are raising false and misleading statements, perhaps for their own benefit, and the records and personal lifestyles of either disgruntled former, or marginalized and retired clergy of either the Archdiocese of Newark or the Diocese of Peoria. One might also ask what are the true motivations of all who have become a part of these ‘traveling bandwagons’ — including our local media representatives and politicians? What is their own historical and present relationship or animus against our Roman Catholic Faith and its Teachings, the Teachings of which I have always been a staunch and outspoken supporter, despite their ‘unpopularity’ in the secular and ‘politically correct’ society that has developed around us?
For those who are truly with us — the Church — in the protection of children, they have my respect, gratitude, and embrace. For any who set out to claim that I or the Church have had no effective part in the love and protection of children, is simply evil, wrong, immoral, and seemingly focused on their own self-aggrandizement. God only knows their personal reasons and agenda. We are still called to love them. And God will surely address them in due time.
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Illinois diocese to pay $1.35 million in suit that alleges Myers failed to stop pedophile priest while bishop there
Northjersey.com
Monday, August 12, 2013 Last updated: Sunday August 18, 2013, 3:52 PM
BY JEFF GREEN
STAFF WRITER
The Record
A Catholic diocese in Illinois has agreed to pay $1.35 million to settle a lawsuit that claims John J. Myers, its former bishop and now the archbishop of Newark, failed to keep an alleged pedophile priest away from children.
The Diocese of Peoria received a complaint from a woman in 1995 that she was molested by Monsignor Thomas W. Maloney during her childhood, but church officials did not act, the suit contends. A year later, the suit says, Maloney went on to abuse 8-year-old Andrew Ward, the plaintiff in the case.
The settlement will be announced Tuesday at a press conference outside Myers’ office in Newark. A deposition of Myers, which had been under court seal since 2010, and other documents also have been released.
Ward’s family is expected to attend the news conference, where they will “discuss Myers’ pattern and practice of repeatedly failing to protect children while working as bishop in Peoria and now as the archbishop of Newark,” said Ward’s attorney, Jeff Anderson.
Anderson said church officials talked to Maloney after receiving the woman’s complaint and he denied the allegation. They did not investigate further, saying it could not be substantiated, he said.
“That’s hardly an investigation,” Anderson said. “That’s what we call in lay terms simply a coverup.”
Ward and at least three other victims were abused by Maloney after the woman came forward, the lawyer said. Many of them reported the abuse following Ward’s lawsuit, he said.
“We know there is a long trail of sorrow and hardship,” the lawyer said. “It was clear he was a very oppressive priest. It’s also clear he was very close to Archbishop Myers.”
Victims’ advocate Robert Hoatson, president of Road to Recovery Inc., said Myers’ handling of the Illinois case bears resemblance to a recent scandal concerning the Rev. Michael Fugee, a former Wyckoff assistant pastor who was arrested in May for allegedly violating a ban on ministering to children. Prosecutors said Fugee, who was accused in 2001 of groping a 13-year-old boy, heard confessions of minors during youth retreats throughout New Jersey, in defiance of the ban.
“The basic modus operandi is keep everything under wraps, hopefully it will go away and just move priests from place to place like he did with Fugee,” Hoatson said.
Anderson agreed that the Fugee case was emblematic of Myers’ attitudes toward complaints of sexual abuse.
“I think there’s an overarching theme here of denial, deceit and deflection,” he said.
Myers’ spokesman could not be reached for comment Monday night. Patricia Gibson, the chancellor and attorney for the Peoria Diocese, said in a statement that the diocese has a policy of not discussing details of settlements. Awards are paid through the diocese’s insurance policies, she said.
The lawsuit, filed in 2008 against the Diocese of Peoria and Maloney, claims that Ward was molested by Maloney in 1995 and 1996. The alleged abuse of the boy began a year after a woman had told the diocese that she had been molested by Maloney as a youth, according to the suit.
Had Myers and the diocese “acted properly” to investigate the woman’s claim, Maloney, who died in 2009, might have been stopped before he preyed upon the boy, said Anderson, who has sued the Catholic church hundreds of times on behalf of sexual abuse victims.
Ward’s mother, Joanne, previously told The Record that in 1995 or 1996, when her son was a second-grader at Epiphany School in Normal, Ill., Maloney picked the boy to help out in the church after Mass on Sunday and sometimes in the morning before school.
She said the abuse happened on two occasions while her son was helping Maloney.
“Maloney molested Andrew once in the church sanctuary before school and once behind the altar after 10:30 Mass on a Sunday.”
She said that she and her husband, David, did not find out about the alleged abuse until 2007. She said she and her husband notified police in Illinois. There was an investigation, she said. But police found there wasn’t enough evidence to bring charges at the time.
Andrew Ward filed his civil suit soon after.
In the Fugee case, the priest was found guilty in 2003 of groping a 13-year-old boy, but his conviction was overturned three years later because of a judicial error. Instead of pursuing a second trial, prosecutors admitted him into a special program for first-time offenders and required the priest and the archdiocese to sign an agreement forbidding his future work with children.
Myers, who returned Fugee to ministry in 2009, has said he was unaware of Fugee’s youth group excursions and that he would not have allowed them had he known. In the aftermath of the scandal, he demoted his top deputy, Vicar General John E. Doran, who signed the priest’s agreement with prosecutors. Several Democratic state lawmakers and victims’ advocates have called for his resignation over the case.
Email: greenj@northjersey.comA Catholic diocese in Illinois has agreed to pay $1.35 million to settle a lawsuit that claims John J. Myers, its former bishop and now the archbishop of Newark, failed to keep an alleged pedophile priest away from children.
The Diocese of Peoria received a complaint from a woman in 1995 that she was molested by Monsignor Thomas W. Maloney during her childhood, but church officials did not act, the suit contends. A year later, the suit says, Maloney went on to abuse 8-year-old Andrew Ward, the plaintiff in the case.
The settlement will be announced Tuesday at a press conference outside Myers’ office in Newark. A deposition of Myers, which had been under court seal since 2010, and other documents also have been released.
Ward’s family is expected to attend the news conference, where they will “discuss Myers’ pattern and practice of repeatedly failing to protect children while working as bishop in Peoria and now as the archbishop of Newark,” said Ward’s attorney, Jeff Anderson.
Anderson said church officials talked to Maloney after receiving the woman’s complaint and he denied the allegation. They did not investigate further, saying it could not be substantiated, he said.
“That’s hardly an investigation,” Anderson said. “That’s what we call in lay terms simply a coverup.”
Ward and at least three other victims were abused by Maloney after the woman came forward, the lawyer said. Many of them reported the abuse following Ward’s lawsuit, he said.
“We know there is a long trail of sorrow and hardship,” the lawyer said. “It was clear he was a very oppressive priest. It’s also clear he was very close to Archbishop Myers.”
Victims’ advocate Robert Hoatson, president of Road to Recovery Inc., said Myers’ handling of the Illinois case bears resemblance to a recent scandal concerning the Rev. Michael Fugee, a former Wyckoff assistant pastor who was arrested in May for allegedly violating a ban on ministering to children. Prosecutors said Fugee, who was accused in 2001 of groping a 13-year-old boy, heard confessions of minors during youth retreats throughout New Jersey, in defiance of the ban.
“The basic modus operandi is keep everything under wraps, hopefully it will go away and just move priests from place to place like he did with Fugee,” Hoatson said.
Anderson agreed that the Fugee case was emblematic of Myers’ attitudes toward complaints of sexual abuse.
“I think there’s an overarching theme here of denial, deceit and deflection,” he said.
Myers’ spokesman could not be reached for comment Monday night. Patricia Gibson, the chancellor and attorney for the Peoria Diocese, said in a statement that the diocese has a policy of not discussing details of settlements. Awards are paid through the diocese’s insurance policies, she said.
The lawsuit, filed in 2008 against the Diocese of Peoria and Maloney, claims that Ward was molested by Maloney in 1995 and 1996. The alleged abuse of the boy began a year after a woman had told the diocese that she had been molested by Maloney as a youth, according to the suit.
Had Myers and the diocese “acted properly” to investigate the woman’s claim, Maloney, who died in 2009, might have been stopped before he preyed upon the boy, said Anderson, who has sued the Catholic church hundreds of times on behalf of sexual abuse victims.
Ward’s mother, Joanne, previously told The Record that in 1995 or 1996, when her son was a second-grader at Epiphany School in Normal, Ill., Maloney picked the boy to help out in the church after Mass on Sunday and sometimes in the morning before school.
She said the abuse happened on two occasions while her son was helping Maloney.
“Maloney molested Andrew once in the church sanctuary before school and once behind the altar after 10:30 Mass on a Sunday.”
She said that she and her husband, David, did not find out about the alleged abuse until 2007. She said she and her husband notified police in Illinois. There was an investigation, she said. But police found there wasn’t enough evidence to bring charges at the time.
Andrew Ward filed his civil suit soon after.
In the Fugee case, the priest was found guilty in 2003 of groping a 13-year-old boy, but his conviction was overturned three years later because of a judicial error. Instead of pursuing a second trial, prosecutors admitted him into a special program for first-time offenders and required the priest and the archdiocese to sign an agreement forbidding his future work with children.
Myers, who returned Fugee to ministry in 2009, has said he was unaware of Fugee’s youth group excursions and that he would not have allowed them had he known. In the aftermath of the scandal, he demoted his top deputy, Vicar General John E. Doran, who signed the priest’s agreement with prosecutors. Several Democratic state lawmakers and victims’ advocates have called for his resignation over the case.
Email: greenj@northjersey.com
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