November 14, 2012. 12:47 pm
Father Godwin Scerri at the St. Joseph orphanage in Malta. (The Windsor Star-Handout)
Posted by: Trevor Wilhelm
A pedophile priest who fled southern Ontario two decades ago, only to be convicted of abusing boys at an orphanage in Malta, will spend five years in prison there after a failed bid to overturn his sentence.
Defrocked priest Godwin Scerri — still wanted in Essex County for alleged sex abuse in Emeryville and on Pelee Island — was convicted in 2011 of abusing boys in Malta.
The Malta Today news agency is reporting that Scerri was handcuffed and taken to jail this week after a judge dismissed an appeal.
Scerri abused an undisclosed number of boys at an orphanage in Malta. But he was cleared of a rape charge on a technicality, because the crime allegedly took place in a different location than the one listed on the charge sheet.
Scerri was born in Malta but worked as a Catholic priest in Ontario from 1981 to 1991. He served from 1981 to 1987 as an associate pastor of St. William’s Church in Emeryville, and from 1987 to 1991 as the pastor.
The OPP charged Scerri in June 1993 with sexual assault and gross indecency after a 22-year-old man came forward.
The local victim told police Scerri abused him between 1983 and 1987, starting when he was 12 years old. It happened on Pelee Island and in Emeryville.
But before the case went to trial, Scerri fled to Malta where he was named spiritual director of a girls’ secondary school.
Then, in October 2003, Scerri and two other members of the Missionary Society of St. Paul were charged with abusing and raping children at the St. Joseph Home, an orphanage in Santa Venera. The court case went on for eight years.
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Court confirms prison sentence in St Joseph Home abuse case
Two priests sentenced to 11 years’ imprisonment after court of criminal appeal confirms sentence.
Malta Today
13 November 2012
Defrocked priests Carmelo Pulis and Godwin Scerri were in a visible state of shock when police officers put handcuffs around their wrists, escorted them out of a courtroom and took them down a rear lift to holding cells beneath the building, until they were driven by prison van to Corradino Prisons to start serving definite prison terms.
Pulis and Scerri – sentenced last year by Magistrate Saviour Demicoli to six years and five years imprisonment respectively – had hoped to the very end for an acquittal on appeal.
Their judgment was confirmed on appeal by Mr. Justice Scicluna on the basis of clear evidence of lewd and lustful acts which were committed by the two on a number of ‘passive victims’.
The Court said that although Pulis and Scerri were considered to be ‘father figures’ for the boys at St. Joseph Home in Hamrun, “the fact remains however, that corruption of minors is a serious and ugly crime which could leave serious effects, be they physical or psychological on whoever experienced them.”
Mr. Justice Scicluna said that the witnesses in the case had been “credible” even though he found “blatant contradictions” by witness Lawrence Grech in a number of instances. “However the court was not ready to speculate on the motivations behind reports of abuse, because such reports were corroborated by a number of other victims.”
While explaining that it found nothing disproportionate in the jail terms imposed by the lower court in August 2011, Judge Scicluna ruled that it was “not disturbing” the convictions imposed by Magistrate Demicoli against the two, which were within the parameters at law.
The Court also rejected the defendants claim that they were prosecuted on alleged crimes which were time-barred.
While the Court went into the detail of each witness – 11 victims in all – it focused mainly on witness Lawrence Grech, who was the main subject of Fr. Pulis and Fr. Scerri’s application for appeal.
Judge Scicluna kept a neutral approach to Grech, who was proven to have been “the preferred one” among the boys at St. Joseph’s Home, but despite this fact, he was also abused.
On the issue of credibility, the Court said that it was true that Grech considered Fr. Pulis as a ‘father figure’ and kept close contact with him even after he left the institution, met up with him in Australia and chose him to celebrate his wedding mass.
The Court acknowledged that Grech had lied on occasions and dented his credibility during the course of the case, but his claims of abuse were also corroborated by other victims. It added that it was quite typical of victims of such abuse to suffer from fear, shame and submissiveness.
Pray for me
Shortly before Mr. Justice David Scicluna entered his court room at 9:30am, Fr. Pulis was overheard speaking to a caller on his cell phone as he paced through the corridor on the first floor. He told the caller, “please pray for me because I’m facing my final judgment.”
Once inside the courtroom, and seated next to each other in the dock, Pulis appeared anxious and fidgety, while Scerri sat immobile with his hands folded.
Tensions were high as three former orphans at St. Joseph Home in Hamrun, led by Lawrence Grech – the prime witness and main promoter of the criminal case which convicted the two priests – entered the courtroom and sat behind the accused.
Five police officers were inside the courtroom as silence took over for the next two hours, as Judge David Scicluna read out his 80 page judgment.
Pulis and Scerri looked bewildered as the Judge retired to his Chambers at the end of the sitting, and were immediately approached by their lawyers who explained to them what was to happen next.
Surrounded by five policemen, the two priests were separated and taken out of the courtroom, had their cell phones taken and escorted to holding cells until they were transferred to Corradino Prisons.
Inside Corradino
The priests arrived at Corradino Prisons at 13:00 when all other inmates were having lunch. They were handed to the Chief Warder, strip-searched, registered, photographed and given a briefing about the prison regime.
Pulis and Scerri were then escorted to Division 8, known to be reserved for vulnerable persons, where inmates are housed in a segregated unit divided by two metre by three meter cubicles with a curtain for privacy.
During a medical examination late in the afternoon, it was established that Fr. Pulis had to be transferred to Mount Carmel Hospital’s Forensic Ward – and placed under ‘suicide watch’ after prison authorities were informed that the priest had recently attempted to harm himself.
No forgiveness
Addressing the media outside the law courts soon after he witnessed defrocked priests Godwin Scerri and Carmelo Pulis be escorted to jail in a prison van, Lawrence Grech – who had put his face to the cases against the two priests – said that he was not going to forgive them.
“I will not forgive,” Grech said, adding that “government must now insist with the Archbishop’s Curia to transfer all the files it has on many other victims to the Police, just across the road, so that they would be thoroughly investigated.”
Grech, who according to Judge David Scicluna who presided over the Court of Criminal Appeal was the subject of “blatant contradictions” and at times “lied” in his evidence, cried when he was asked how he felt when he saw Pulis and Scerri being handcuffed and taken to prison.
“I regarded Fr. Pulis as my father…what can I say, I am saddened,” he said.
Also asked to react to the Court’s comments in his regards, Grech defended himself by saying that the priest’s lawyers did all they could to attack his credibility.
Asked about the compensation he and the other victims expect for their ordeal while in the hands of a Church-run institution, Grech replied: “just like abroad…”
He was interrupted by a journalist who asked if it was in the “million’s” but Grech replied “we are talking to our lawyer…”
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Court confirms jail sentences for child abuse priests
timesofmalta.com
Tuesday, November 13, 2012, 11:31
Two former priests were imprisoned today after an Appeal Court confirmed their conviction of child sexual abuse.
Godwin Scerri and Charles Pulis, formerly members of the Missionary Society of St Paul, were sentenced in August last year to five and six years imprisonment respectively for sexually abusing boys in their care at St Joseph Home in Sta Venera. They were free pending the appeal.
The prison terms were confirmed this morning in an judgment delivered by Mr Justice David Scicluna before a packed hall.
In his sentence, Mr Justice Scicluna found that as regards the charges against Charles Pulis, the charges filed by one of the victims were time-barred. The other accused, Godwin Scerri was found not guilty of abusing one of the boys. However sentence was not changed.
The original sentence was delivered by Magistrate Saviour Demicoli in a judgement of over 100 pages. The cases happened some 20 years ago and th cases first came to public attention in September 2003.
The victims are seeking monetary compensation from the Church. Lawrence Grech, once of the victims, said on TVAM this morning that the Church was ‘an enemy’ which had cut off all contacts when the court case was instituted.
Hallelujah! Ex priest Godwin Scerri is finally behind bars where he belongs. Defrocked and behind bars. That’s the way it should be for every single one of these wolves in sheep’s clothing.
I wonder if the OPP have taken steps to have him extradited yet? If not, why not?
26 August 2011: “Ontario police want Godwin Scerri to face charges in Canada” and comments
26 August 2011: OPP anxious for priest’s return
I think if they started the process now it should all be sorted out by the time he’s ready for release from the Maltese prison? and then they could just pack this fugitive off to the airport, pop him on a plane and straight to a courtroom in London Ontario? It should be done, should it not? Justice has finally been done in Malta, it must be done in Canada.