“Indianapolis priest charged with kidnapping and battery in dispute with his wife” & related articles

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indystar.com

Published 6:41 p.m. ET Feb. 27, 2018 | Updated 9:12 a.m. ET Feb. 28, 2018

An Indianapolis priest is facing multiple charges after authorities say he struck his wife, held her against her will and threatened to choke her at a local church.

The Rev. Luke Reese, a parochial vicar at Holy Rosary Church, faces two counts of criminal confinement and one count each of kidnapping, domestic battery, battery resulting in bodily injury and intimidation.

Reese is a priest of the Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of Saint Peter and was assigned to the ordinariate community in Indianapolis as well as working in the Holy Rosary Parish. He was granted a six-month leave of absence in September 2017 after he disclosed the incident, the ordinariate confirmed in a statement Tuesday night

The charges stem from a Sept. 24, 2017, incident between Reese and his wife after he found her in a car with another man, according to court documents detailing the investigation.

Reese’s wife told police she and her husband drove in separate vehicles to a park near 34th Street and Central Avenue where they could talk. When she got into his car, she told police, he locked the doors and began to drive.

As Reese was driving, he repeatedly slapped her and demanded the pass code to her cellphone, she told police.

He drove her to Holy Rosary Church, where he continued to demand access to her phone, according to court documents.

When she refused, Reese’s wife told police he forced her to kneel at the altar and threatened to choke her. He also slammed her against a wall inside the church, according to court documents.

When they returned to the car, she relented, she told police, and gave him the pass code to her phone, where he read text messages she had exchanged with the other man. He again began slapping her, she told police, causing her to hit her head on the car’s window.

From the church, Reese’s wife told police they went to another church in Auburn, Ind., then to her grandmother’s home, where he told her she would stay away from the “temptation” of Indianapolis. Reese planned to have his wife tell her family “what she had done by talking to another man,” his wife told police.

But when his wife’s grandmother asked about the bruising and swelling on her face, Reese began to yell.

“I hit her, that’s what’s wrong with her,” the grandmother remembered him saying, according to court documents.

“A priest and you beat her?” she remembered asking.

“I could have killed her,” Reese replied, according to court documents.

Reese’s attorney declined to comment about the allegations Tuesday night. Messages sent to Reese’s wife’s attorney were not immediately returned.

A jury trial is scheduled for May, according to online court records. The charges of criminal confinement and kidnapping are all Level 5 felonies, each punishable by up to six years.

The charges were first reported Tuesday afternoon by independent reporter Damien Fisher.

Reese, formerly an Anglican priest, was ordained in the Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter at Our Lady of Walsingham in Houston in June 2016, according to the Archdiocese of Indianapolis. He has since served as an associate pastor in Indianapolis’ Holy Rosary Parish.

He made history as the first married priest in the Archdiocese of Indianapolis, according to the Criterion, a publication of the archdiocese.

Because Reese’s archbishop is in Houston, Indianapolis Archbishop Charles C. Thompson cannot immediately make any official decisions regarding discipline and his status within the church, according to Greg Otolski, a spokesman for the Archdiocese of Indianapolis.

Otolski said he had no knowledge of any of the incident taking place inside Holy Rosary Church. Placing Reese on leave was a decision mutually made by leadership in both Houston and Indianapolis after the allegations came to light.

In a written statement, the ordinariate said Reese has been barred from performing any public ministry since he was placed on leave.

“Bishop Steven J. Lopes of the Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of Saint Peter has pledged the diocese’s full cooperation with the civil authorities conducting the investigation,” the statement reads. “The Ordinariate is committed to collaborating with authorities to ensure justice is provided for all concerned, and affirms the Catholic Church’s clear teaching that domestic violence is never justified.”

IndyStar reporter Vic Ryckaert contributed to this story. 

Call IndyStar reporter Holly Hays at (317) 444-6156. Follow her on Twitter: @hollyvhays.

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‘A priest and you beat her?’ Vicar hit wife at church, told her to ‘confess’ cheating, Indiana police say

Miami Herald

February 27, 2018 09:09 PM

Updated February 27, 2018 09:10 PM

An Indianapolis, Indiana, priest faces kidnapping and battery charges after police say he assaulted his wife in church in September leaving her face bruised and swollen, according to court records.

An Indianapolis, Indiana, priest faces kidnapping and battery charges after police say he assaulted his wife in church in September leaving her face bruised and swollen, according to court records. Indianapolis police

After leaving the church, Reese took his wife back to the car and again demanded that she reveal the passcode to her phone, court records said. Eventually the wife let him access the phone, on which Reese read texts she had been swapping with the other man, court records said — and then Reese began slapping her again, his wife told authorities, banging her head against the car window.

When the victim’s grandmother saw her granddaughter, she noticed how swollen and bruised the woman’s face was, the grandmother told police. That prompted Reese to yell, “I hit her, that’s what’s wrong with her,” according to court records obtained by the Star.

“A priest and you beat her?” the grandmother asked Reese.

“I could have killed her,” Reese responded, court documents said.

Reese then left Auburn with his wife and took her back to Indianapolis, WTRH reports, where Reese began to slice up her clothing and made her go to bed. Then he again looked at his wife’s texts and sexually assaulted her, the wife told police.

Reese was charged on Oct. 14 with criminal confinement, kidnapping, domestic battery and intimidation, according to Marion County Court records. He is scheduled to be tried by jury in May.

Reese became the first married priest in Indianapolis after he was ordained in 2016, FOX 59 reports. He worked as a parochial vicar at the Holy Rosary Catholic Church of Indianapolis, but took a six-month leave of absence beginning in October, the same month that criminal charges were filed against him.

The church wrote in a letter to parishioners announcing Reese’s leave that if anyone inquired about where Reese had gone, church staff would “politely but firmly tell you to ‘mind your own business.’ ”

The couple filed for divorce in December, according to Marion County court records.

The wife’s attorney has spoken out about the alleged abuse.

“Abuse is horrible and cannot be tolerated at any time, but when it is perpetrated by a priest, within a church, it shatters the trust of the community at large who hold their clergy to such high regard and esteem,” Mary Foley Panszi, the attorney, said in a statement to WTHR. “The fact that a priest could conduct such horrible abusive actions over a more than 24 hour period of time which has led to his arrest on multiple felonies.”

Before becoming a Catholic priest in Houston, Texas, in June 2016, Reese had been ordained as an Anglican priest, according to the Archdiocese of Indianapolis.

________________________

Reese, Rev. Luke

520 Stevens St., Indianapolis, IN 46203
317-636-4478

Reese, Rev. Luke

Born October 16, 1968. 2006, ordained as an Anglican priest; 2012, received into the Catholic Church. June 29, 2016, ordained a priest for The Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter, at Our Lady of Walsingham, Houston, TX, appointed associate pastor of Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary Parish in Indianapolis; 2017 (Oct), granted a six-month leave of absence.

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Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary parish bulletin, 01 October 2017 (Click to enlarge)

 

 

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Archdiocese of Indianapolis

The Crieterion Online Edition

June 24, 2016

Former Anglican priest to make history as first married priest in archdiocese

Father C. Ryan McCarthy, left, places a deacon’s dalmatic on transitional Deacon Luke Reese during a May 31 ordination Mass at the Cathedral of Our Lady of Walsingham in Houston in which Deacon Reese and two other men were ordained for the Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter. Father McCarthy is pastor of Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary Parish in Indianapolis, where members of the ordinariate in central and southern Indiana worship. (Submitted photo)

Father C. Ryan McCarthy, left, places a deacon’s dalmatic on transitional Deacon Luke Reese during a May 31 ordination Mass at the Cathedral of Our Lady of Walsingham in Houston in which Deacon Reese and two other men were ordained for the Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter. Father McCarthy is pastor of Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary Parish in Indianapolis, where members of the ordinariate in central and southern Indiana worship. (Submitted photo)

By Sean Gallagher

On June 29, transitional Deacon Luke Reese, a former Anglican priest, will become the first married priest in the Archdiocese of Indianapolis when he is ordained in a liturgy witnessed by his wife Gina of 24 years and their seven children.

Soon after, Deacon Reese will begin ministering in parishes in central and southern Indiana, another step in a winding spiritual journey for him and his family.

“I’m really excited about it,” said Deacon Reese, who was ordained to the diaconate on May 31. “I look forward to the adventure of it all.”

Since the Reese family was received into the full communion of the Church in 2012, they’ve sought to live out their faith as many Catholic families strive to do. At the same time, they’ve been a family of firsts.

They and two other families were the first from an Anglican background in central and southern Indiana accepted as members of the Houston-based Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter, which was established in 2012 by Pope Benedict XVI. The ordinariate functions like a diocese for former Anglicans and Episcopalians in the United States and Canada.

In full communion with the Church, the ordinariate is able to maintain its Anglican spiritual heritage in its worship—and in having married men ordained as priests.

Reese’s history-making will continue when Bishop Steven J. Lopes, the shepherd of the ordinariate, ordains him a priest on June 29 at the Cathedral of Our Lady of Walsingham in Houston.

Deacon Reese will minister to ordinariate members in central and southern Indiana at Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary Parish in Indianapolis and is expected to assist at other archdiocesan parishes.

“I look at the priesthood as service—service to God’s people,” Deacon Reese said. “It’s not about me, ultimately. It’s about what I can do to be the face of Christ for somebody who might not otherwise see the face of Christ in a given day.”

‘We’re all saints in the making’

Throughout nearly 25 years of marriage, Deacon Reese has sought to show Christ’s face to Gina and their children through his loving care and concern for them.

As a priest, he’ll also do this for a broader spiritual family.

“I think my experience as a father is going to be invaluable in thinking of my congregation as my spiritual children,” Deacon Reese said. “It’s not a one-time thing. Everybody is a project. We’re all saints in the making.”

Deacon Reese became a priest in the making shortly after he and his family were received into the Church in 2012.

He had been ordained a priest in the Anglican tradition about 10 years ago. To be properly formed for priestly life and ministry as a Catholic, he began commuting in the fall of 2012 from his family’s home in Indianapolis to Saint Meinrad Seminary and School of Theology in St. Meinrad.

He also received assistance from the archdiocesan vicariate for clergy, religious and parish life coordinators in formation for pastoral ministry.

Although he has now been in formation for the priesthood for four years, when asked how he views his upcoming ordination he says with a laugh, “Scary.”

“I don’t know if you can ever really be ready for something as big as the priesthood,” Deacon Reese said. “There are a lot of expectations placed upon a man who is put up in front of a congregation. He needs to be a solid leader.

“He just doesn’t say Mass for people. He provides an example.”

‘Our family is just like any other’

Deacon Reese’s family shares his healthy respect for the enormity of what’s about to happen in his life—and theirs.

“It’s exciting, a little overwhelming, a little scary, because of the awesome nature of this,” said Gina. “It’s a very important, holy role that he’s going to be assuming. And I’m supporting him in that. I’m his partner in life.”

“I’ve been thinking about how our family life will change,” added Alasdair Reese, 16, who will be a junior this fall at Bishop Chatard High School in Indianapolis. “I’m nervous. But if it’s what my dad wants to do, I think he should go for it.”

Although the Reese family is aware of the high demands of priestly life and ministry that Deacon Reese will take on, he and Gina have sought to maintain reasonable expectations for their children.

“I think we’ve tried hard to not to make our children feel like they have to be perfect,” she said. “There can be a lot of pressure and implied expectations. Whether it’s real or not, the feeling is that ‘Well, Dad’s going to be a priest. Then we always have to be on our best behavior.’

“Our family is just like any other family, trying to know, love, and serve God to the best of our abilities. Our situation is atypical of the average Catholic family’s, but we are really just like everyone else.”

In fact, Gina believes that the challenge to balance priestly ministry with family life will have similarities to what many families face.

“It’s really no different from being the family of a business man who travels or a fireman who is on call, only a priest is in the business of ministering to God’s people,” she said. “We support him in that with all the sobriety and humility that the vocation demands.

“I don’t fully know or understand all that may be required of us as a family as a result of Luke’s call to ministry, but does anybody ever know what lies ahead of any major decision in life? Do we parents fully understand what parenthood will involve? Do newlyweds fully comprehend marriage and how it will form and change them over the course of a lifetime?”

‘We support the celibate ministry’

Although having a Catholic priest at the head of their family will be something that the Reeses will learn to live with in the weeks and months to come, Deacon Reese sees the history that he’s making by being the first married priest to serve in the archdiocese more as an exception due to his ties to the Anglican tradition than groundbreaking.

“We support the celibate ministry within the Church,” he said. “And we recognize its value.”

He doesn’t foresee making the fact that he is married a prominent part of his ministry in archdiocesan parishes.

“I’ll go into situations and people may know me [to be a priest], but they won’t necessarily know about me,” he said. “I don’t plan to make an issue of the fact that I’m married with kids in my sermons or in parish life.”

Although people who attend Masses that Deacon Reese will celebrate may not know he is married, leaders in the ordinariate and the archdiocese have worked to make sure that he’ll be able to financially support his family through what he’ll earn through his priestly ministry.

That will include times when he’ll offer pastoral counseling to people experiencing family difficulties. Although he has his own experiences of family life, Deacon Reese said he wants to be careful not to “read my family’s situation into the larger pastoral family situation.”

“There are going to be some things where there is some overlap, and I’ll counsel someone and think, ‘Well, we’ve had this in our household,’ ” Deacon Reese said. “But I don’t want to do that.”

Instead, he’ll seek to “differentiate myself [in my priestly ministry] from my home experience … to counsel them better” by not seeing his experience with his family as necessarily normative for people in other situations.

‘We are blessed to have him’

In whatever way Deacon Reese will be called upon to minister to Catholics in the ordinariate and the archdiocese, Father C. Ryan McCarthy, pastor of Holy Rosary, is certain that he will show a love for the Church.

“He exhibits his great love for the Church in everything he does,” Father McCarthy said. “It’s a desire to give God honor and glory through the Church.”

Bishop Lopes shares Father McCarthy’s perspective on Deacon Reese.

“Luke possesses a true generosity of heart and an obvious love of Christ and his Church,” he said. “We are blessed to have him beginning his ministry as a Catholic priest and continuing to build up the body of Christ, leading more and new disciples into a life-giving relationship with God.”

Deacon Reese will begin this ministry in the archdiocese with an Anglican Use Mass at 11:30 a.m. on July 3 at Holy Rosary.

From there, he’ll begin ministry at Holy Rosary and other parishes in the archdiocese.

“A priest is for service,” Deacon Reese said. “A priest is not his own man. He’s for Christ. He’s for the Church and God’s people.”

(For more information about the Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter, visit www.ordinariate.net.)


More about Deacon Luke Reese

  • Age: 47
  • Wife: Gina
  • Children: Ella, Abby, Alasdair, Olivia, Edmund, Owen and Irene
  • Home Parish: Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary Parish in Indianapolis
  • College: Hanover College in Hanover, Ind.; Butler University in Indianapolis; University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Mich.
  • Seminary: Saint Meinrad Seminary and School of Theology in St. Meinrad
  • Favorite Scripture verse: “Unless the Lord build the house, they labor in vain who build. Unless the Lord guard the city, in vain does the guard keep watch” (Ps 127:1).
  • Favorite saint: St. Peter Damian
  • Favorite prayer or devotion: An ancient prayer to Mary known as Sub Tuum Praesidium (“Under Your Patronage”): “We fly to your patronage, O holy Mother of God; despise not our petitions in our necessities, but deliver us always from all dangers, O glorious and blessed Virgin. Amen.”
  • Favorite movie: England, My England
  • Favorite authors: Blessed John Henry Newman and C.S. Lewis
  • Favorite book: The Bible; Dune by Frank Herbert
  • Hobbies: Music, judo, camping, gardening

One Response to “Indianapolis priest charged with kidnapping and battery in dispute with his wife” & related articles

  1. Sylvia says:

    And so in 2016 Luke Reese was ordained as the first married priest in the Diocese of Indianapolis, and a little over one year later he is without doubt the first married priest in the diocese who is facing charges related to wife battering, and whose wife is seeking a divorce.

    What a dirty mess.

    If all or even most of what that we read is true he is one sick and twisted man.

    And, the nerve of the Pastor at Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary to tell parishioners that, as Father Reese’s pastor, he is not free to discuss the priest’s “personal life” and those who ask will be told to mind their own business!

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