“96-year-old retired priest accused of child porn possession” & related articles and VIDEO

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RIVERDALE – A 96-year-old retired Bronx priest indicted on child pornography charges appeared in court Tuesday.

Monsignor Harry Byrne was living in a residence with another retired priest. Court records show that it was that residence where child porn was allegedly found on his computer.

Byrne faces 37 counts of possession obscene sexual performance by a child and 37 counts of possessing sexual performance by a child.

According to the indictment, Byrne had images on his computer of girls as young as 8. It alleges that Byrne viewed the images in front of many other individuals at the retirement home.

The former priest’s attorney says Byrne is innocent, adding that the computer that was under surveillance in a five-month investigation was accessible to more people than just Byrne.

Byrne was released following Tuesday’s court appearance. He’s due back early next year.

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Retired priest, 96, who slammed Catholic Church for mishandling pedophilia cases facing child porn charge

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Updated: Tuesday, October 31, 2017, 9:22 PM

BY

Monsignor Harry Byrne, 96, appears at his arraignment in Bronx Supreme Court on Oct. 31.

Jefferson Siegel/New York Daily News)

A 96-year-old priest was indicted on charges of hoarding vile photos of underage girls on his computer after folks at his Bronx retirement home spied the creepy collection.

Monsignor Harry Byrne “had dozens of photographs on his computer of girls 8 to 14 years old performing sex acts with men or posing naked,” Bronx District Attorney Darcel Clark said in announcing Tuesday’s indictment.

“People at the defendant’s residence were subjected to it when they entered his room.”

Byrne, the chancellor of the Archdiocese of New York from 1968-70, was living at the St. John Vianney Center for Retired Priests in the Riverdale section of the Bronx.

He faces 37 charges of possessing a sexual performance by a child and 37 more of possessing an obscene sexual performance of a child. If convicted, Byrne could spend up to four years in prison.

The probe started five months ago, based on complaints from the home, officials said.

The Archdiocese and the retirement residence were both cooperating with the investigation, according to church spokesman Joseph Zwilling.

Bryne arrived for his arraignment in a green plaid shirt and wheelchair, and listened to the Bronx Criminal Court proceeding via his hearing aid.

His attorney insisted the accused pervy priest was innocent of all charges at the hearing before Judge Robert Neary.

 

Byrne in the past has ripped the Catholic Church for its mishandling of the pedophile priest crisis.

(Jefferson Siegel/New York Daily News)

“Monsignor Byrne has dedicated 72 years to charity and church with an unsullied history,” said defense lawyer Marvin Ray Raskin.

“It is difficult to imagine, at the age of 96, he knowingly understood and is responsible for the content of the subjects on the computer accessible to numerous people.”

But prosecutors charged Byrne used internet search engines to locate the pornography online. The illegal images were found in a forensic sweep of the priest’s computer by the NYPD Computer Crimes Squad, officials said.

Raskin said his client, who was released without bail, was battling a variety of health issues.

In a July 2010 blog post, Byrne railed about the Catholic Church’s horrific mishandling of the pedophile priest crisis.

“Bishops … quietly reassigned miscreants and thereby exponentially multiplied the number of victims,” he wrote.

“In the U.S., not one cover-up bishop has been been arraigned before church authorities for his part in the scandal.”

Byrne was an activist priest who worked to create affordable housing in the Bronx and Manhattan, and he remained outspoken on church issues even after his retirement.

In 1970, he became the first non-German pastor at St. Joseph’s parish in Manhattan’s Yorkville neighborhood.

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96-Year-Old Retired Priest Arrested on Child Pornography Charges

NBC    New York

Published at 1:45 PM EDT on Oct 31, 2017 | Updated at 6:00 PM EDT on Oct 31, 2017

 

He allegedly had dozens of photos of girls as young as 8 either posing naked or engaged in sex acts with men

Monsignor Harry Byrne faces 37 counts of possessing an obscene sexual performance by a child, Bronx D.A. Darcel Clark said in a statement. (Published Tuesday, Oct. 31, 2017)

A 96-year-old retired priest and one-time senior official of the Archdiocese of New York had a trove of child pornography on his computer and showed it to others at the retirement home for priests where he lived, prosecutors alleged on Tuesday.

Monsignor Harry Byrne faces 37 counts of possessing an obscene sexual performance by a child, Bronx D.A. Darcel Clark said in a statement. He allegedly had dozens of photos of girls as young as 8 either posing naked or engaged in sex acts with men.

Prosecutors also allege that Byrne viewed the images “in front of many individuals” at the St. John Vianney Center for Retired Priests, where he lives.

“People at the defendant’s residence were subjected to it when they entered his room,” Clark said.

He faces four years in prison if convicted of the top charge against him.

Byrne was the chancellor of the archdiocese from 1968-1970, a position that meant he oversaw the central administrative offices and official documents. A spokesman for the archdiocese said it was cooperating fully with prosecutors.

Byrne’s attorney said the priest was currently being cared for in a medical facility.

“Monsignor Byrne has dedicated 72 years to charity and church with an unsullied history. He was ordained in 1945. It is difficult to imagine that at the age of 96+, this stellar member of the priesthood knowingly understood and is responsible for the content of the subject on a computer accessible to numerous people,” his attorney said in a statement.

A 96-year-old retired priest who was once a high-ranking official of the Archdiocese of New York was arraigned in State Supreme Court in the Bronx on Tuesday on charges of possessing child pornography. The pictures, which were on his computer, were of girls ages 8 to 14 years old performing sex acts with men or posing naked, the Bronx district attorney said.

In announcing the indictment, the Bronx district attorney, Darcel D. Clark, said that Msgr. Harry J. Byrne, who lives at the St. John Vianney Center for Retired Priests in the Bronx, regularly showed people who came into his room the disturbing images.

“Anyone who views child pornography supports horrific child exploitation,” Ms. Clark said in a news release.

Monsignor Byrne pleaded not guilty to the charges.

“Monsignor Byrne has dedicated 72 years to charity in the church with an unsullied history,” said his lawyer, Marvin Ray Raskin. “It is difficult to imagine that at the age of 96, he knowingly understood and is responsible for the content of a particular subject on a computer accessible to numerous people.”

Monsignor Byrne was indicted on 37 counts of possessing child pornography. He was arraigned before Justice Robert Neary and released, and is due back in court on Jan. 17. If convicted of the top charge, he could face up to four years in prison and would have to register as a sex offender.