philly.com
Posted: Thursday, January 17, 2013, 1:02 PM
Joseph A. Slobodzian, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
Facing imminent arrest for the alleged sexual assault of a 10-year-old pupil in his English class, parochial school teacher Bernard Shero penned a sad letter apologizing to his parents for the “ridicule and shame,” took an overdose of sleeping pills and waited for death in his Bristol apartment.
Death did not arrive on Feb. 10, 2011 but Philadelphia police Det. Andrew Snyder did and the detective told a Common Pleas Court jury today how lucky timing let him arrest Shero instead of follow him to the morgue.
Shero, 49, and Rev. Charles Engelhardt, 66, are on trial for the sexual assault of the 10-year-old in 1998 and 1999 while he was an altar boy and pupil at St. Jerome’s church and school in the Northeast.
The former altar boy reported the sexual assaults to authorities in January 2009 and by February 2011 the then-former teacher knew he was going to be arrested and charged as part of the county grand jury investigation of child sexual abuse in the Catholic Archdiocese of Philadelphia.
Shero’s letter did not admit to the alleged sex assault or mention the boy, now 24, and identified in the grand jury report as “Billy Doe.”
But city prosecutors successfully moved to allow the jury to hear the note under the legal theory that the attempted suicide could be interpreted as “evidence of guilt” – the same as evidence of a suspect’s decision to flee prosecution.
Defense attorney Burton A. Rose did not linger on the issue during his cross-examination of Snyder.
That other priest, Edward Avery, now 70, pleaded guilty last year shortly before he was to go on trial with two other priests in the investigation of clergy sex abuse of children. Now defrocked and serving 2-1/2 to five years in prison, Avery is expected to testify later today.
“Shero’s letter did not admit to the alleged sex assault or mention the boy, now 24, and identified in the grand jury report as ‘Billy Doe.’”
I think perhaps of greater import is the fact that he did not deny the allegations (I think if he denied the allegations in the suicide note that the media would have reported that fact? No?)