RutlandHerald.com - We Are Vermont

Vt. Catholic Church asks court for mercy

Faces year's third trial on misconduct claims



Monsignor John McSweeney of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Burlington (right) testifies in Superior Court in Burlington on Wednesday during the opening day of a sexual abuse trial.

Burlington Free Press

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By KEVIN O’CONNOR Herald Staff - Published: December 4, 2008

BURLINGTON — At first glance, they’re the same child-sex claims in the same court that sparked a record $8.7 million verdict. But with a different accuser, a different judge and a different jury, Vermont’s Catholic Church is hoping for a different outcome.

The state’s largest religious denomination, socked this spring with a ruling of negligence in its 1970s hiring and supervision of a pedophile priest, pleaded for leniency Wednesday at the start of its third trial of the year involving the same retired clergyman.

“Looking back on it, we can say it was ill-advised because we have the benefit of hindsight,” church counsel Thomas McCormick said. “The present is how do we, as a judicial system, deal with an organization’s responsibility for decisions made 36 years ago?”

Twenty men have filed civil lawsuits in Burlington’s Chittenden Superior Court alleging the statewide Roman Catholic Diocese was reckless for not telling their childhood parishes about past sexual abuse of boys by former priest Edward Paquette, who served in Rutland in 1972, Montpelier in 1974 and Burlington in 1976.

In the first trial in May, a jury rejected the diocese’s defense that it wasn’t liable for the priest’s misconduct and awarded plaintiff Perry Babel, a 40-year-old Burlington native, $950,000 in compensatory damages and an additional $7,750,000 in punitive damages.

But in a similar trial in August, the diocese altered its defense in a case brought by 41-year-old Burlington native Thomas Murray and expressed remorse for priest misconduct it said it tried to curb. A jury went on to deliberate for three days before announcing it couldn’t agree on a verdict, prompting the judge to declare a mistrial.

The diocese now is expressing regret in the case of David Navari, a 43-year-old Burlington native and information-technology specialist in Takoma Park, Md. In a trial that began Wednesday, Navari’s lawyer, Jerome O’Neill, said his client was an 11-year-old altar boy at Burlington’s Christ the King Church when Paquette groped the fifth-grader’s genitals on two occasions in 1977.

“We’re talking about a little boy,” O’Neill said as he displayed a childhood photo of his client.

Navari had stood still and silent as the priest unbuckled the boy’s belt.

“He thinks, ‘Is this something a priest is supposed to do to help me get ready for Mass?’” O’Neill said. As for the child telling an adult: “Who would believe him?”

Navari went on to grow angry, anxious and afraid, lose interest in religion and pick fights to prop up his masculinity, his lawyer said. In later years, he binge-drank and suffered from insomnia and clinical depression.

“The diocese must be held accountable,” O’Neill said. “The diocese had a pattern and practice of aiding and abetting its priests in molesting children. It covered it up for years.”

The lawyer said his client was seeking compensatory and punitive damages but limited his specific request to the words “serious money.”

In response, McCormick expressed the church’s regrets.

“Father Paquette should not have fondled David Navari — not once, not twice, not at all,” the diocesan attorney said before repeating his opening words from the last trial: “It’s illegal now, it was illegal then. It’s immoral now, it was immoral then. It’s wrong now, it was wrong then.”

That said, McCormick contended that Navari’s lawsuit was filed after the state’s time limit for submission. He also questioned how a jury could assess the diocese’s actions of the 1970s when its leader at the time, Vermont Catholic Bishop John Marshall, died in 1994.

“Why did he make the decisions that he did? He’s not here to say.”

The lawyer added that past church leaders had followed since-debunked advice of psychiatrists who at one point hoped Paquette could be cured through 11 sessions of electric shock therapy.

“Looking back, you would think, ‘Who in their right mind would think electroshock would treat pedophilia?’” McCormick said. “Times were different in the ’70s than they are today. At that time, pedophilia was thought to be a mental condition associated with depression.

“Yes, Bishop Marshall knew there had been abuse, but he was turning to the medical profession for an assessment about whether Father Paquette could be given another chance. The advice he was given was wrong and the decision he made was mistaken, but it was not a corrupt culture.”

Navari’s claims are similar to those made by the winner of the $8.7 million verdict.

But Chittenden Superior Court has a new judge, Dennis Pearson, who is presiding over a new jury made up of five men and seven women.

The priest misconduct scandal has sparked more than 30 Vermont lawsuits in the past six years. The statewide diocese has spent at least $2 million to resolve nine of the cases. It’s appealing the record $8.7 million verdict to the state Supreme Court, and it’s awaiting a retrial in the case that ended in August with a hung jury.

In addition, the church faces 21 more filings in Chittenden Superior Court, all which claim that religious leaders were negligent in their hiring and supervision of at least 11 retired or recently deceased pedophile priests.

Sixteen of the pending cases involve Paquette, who church records show molested boys in Massachusetts and Indiana before the diocese assigned him without public warning to Rutland’s Christ the King Church in 1972, Montpelier’s St. Augustine’s Church in 1974 and Burlington’s Christ the King Church in 1976.

The Vermont diocese doesn’t have insurance for priest misconduct, but says it held a comprehensive liability policy with the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Co. from 1972 to 1978. The church can’t find its copy of the policy, however, so it has taken the insurer to U.S. District Court in Burlington in hopes the company will unearth the paperwork and pay for the costs associated with the lawsuits.
Contact Kevin O’Connor at kevin.oconnor@rutlandherald.com.








READER COMMENTS


Where do you think all these bishops and monsignors got to where they are today????
They all started out as a priest or whatever their called and climbed the ladder along with the rest of the pedophiles in the name of god.... Of course they're going to cover for their sick-o brothers (or fathers), as with any brotherhood or sisterhood.. You know; cops, lawyers, judges and most union members... I'm an admitted homophobe and a bigot, but what I can't understand is why the CATHOLIC CHURCH is so against gay activity, when the CATHOLIC CHURCH is a proponent of this sick activity..........
-- Posted by None None on Fri, Dec 5, 2008, 1:25 pm EST

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I believe it's time to expose perhaps the most criminal enterprise operating in America: The Catholic Church.

According to published reports in the NYT, they have paid out over $1-Billion in compensation to abuse victims in the past 25 years aside from the 10's of millions to lawyers. The article estimates 10-15% of the priesthood prey upon defenceless children and most are not criminally charged.

It's a disgrace the blind eye the various Bishop's and church hierachy take and then they wonder why Catholic school enrollment is down just like their Sunday collection plate.

Apart from hypocrits who turn a blind eye, who in their right mind would want to give hush-money to cover up and protect these rogue priests?

Amen I say and A-Woman if you're that way inclined and hope my custard is hot as have some stewed prunes and cornflakes waiting with my name on them.
-- Posted by None None on Thu, Dec 4, 2008, 11:13 pm EST

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I also look forward to the Demise of the Roman Catholic Church and religion as whole, is a "ROOT OF ALL EVIL" Just take a look around the world and see the divisions that religion has caused in the name of "God".I will not beat around the burning bush with my comment here today.These people ,and anybody that believes in any religion, or a God has a lot to learn about the truth in our society today.I also will state that if you just take a moment and think of the past parishioners that went into the booth to tell there confessions to a priest, that priest, will not tell anybody else for reasons unknown to me,but will tell the parishioner, go out into the church and say a few Hail Marys and a couple of Our Fathers then expect God to forgive there Sins.Please,will somebody explain this to me ,I have to wonder if most of these people ever truly believe in God in the first place.I will now call all and anybody today that believes in A GOD or a creator is Delusional.Myself, and millions of others believe we have evolved over millions of years,and I have no problem being a Ape descendant,actually I am proud to be one of the millions of monkeys that can talk walk and write at the same time.Now I will take the next couple of lines to urge all the readers to take a blink of a eye in (geographical time), out of there busy lives and read; "THE GOD DELUSION" written By;Richard Dawkins. This man understands the harm religion has caused in the past ,and into the future ,if we still exist for much longer, under the circumstances we all face today.Give peace a chance ,and "Imagine" what the world would look like without religion to mess it all up. Please,everybody for your selves and loved ones, near and far,Read to your kids and anybody that will listen,THE GOD DELUSION will change your lives forever.42-2-u all,
-- Posted by Kevin DeMars on Thu, Dec 4, 2008, 8:08 pm EST

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It sure seems criminal for the church to simply move child molesters around. I suppose they were trying to avoid a scandal at the expense of a vulnerable segment of their own population. These are criminal offences that the church really had an obligation to report to the police. The church chose to protect the offenders instead and for this there must be consequences.
-- Posted by Comfy Anon on Thu, Dec 4, 2008, 6:47 pm EST

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CRUCIFY THE DIOCESE FIANCIALLY FOR GAMNING THE COURTS, YET AGAIN!!!

BLEED THE CRIMINAL CURIA DRY, TO THE POINT THEY ARE REMOVED FROM THEIR OFFICES, BY LAITY OUT CRIES & DIRECT COST, OR GUN POINT!

THE ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH REMAINS A CRIMINAL ENTERPRISE & NEEDS TO BE TAKEN OUT BUY FEDERAL RICO PROSECUTION, AS THE SINGLE LARGEST PEDOPHILE RING ON THE GLOBE!

www.bishop-accountability.org/abustracker for daily verifed & vetted reporting on the USCCB (Unremoved Sexual Criminal Cabal Bishops) and Roman La Cosa Nostra Curia, costing laity MULTIPLE ANNUAL BILLIONS OF DIVERTED OFFETORY PLATE DOLLARS (Tax Free), with no correction, child endangerment still a CLEAR & PRSENT DANGER, and no removal of the main perpetrators, several hundred EVIL cardinal and bishop office holders.

The immediate solution? "STOP DONATING LAITY!" as St. Peter Damien correctly asserted.

"The ony condition for the triumph of evil is for good men(or women) to do nothing!" Edmund Burke.
-- Posted by Albino Luciani on Thu, Dec 4, 2008, 5:20 pm EST

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I agree totally, this is a criminal enterprise who only admitted to what they felt the police could prove, then would admitt to more as evidence grew. How can they ever be believed.
-- Posted by None None on Thu, Dec 4, 2008, 3:48 pm EST

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COMMENTARY

Published in the Rutland Herald
Rutland, Vermont
August 20, 2008

ACCOUNTABILITY AND THE CHURCH

http://www.rutlandherald.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080820/OPINION03/808200321/1039/OPINION03

By SISTER MAUREEN PAUL TURLISH

Pedophile priest Edward Paquette is an archetypal figure, a product of the clerical system that spawned him or at least enabled and protected him. He speaks to the tragic need to change all states' inadequate childhood sexual abuse statutes for the protection of everyone.

To even consider that Paquette would really remain a priest even though removed from ministry because the church teaches that there is an indelible priestly character taken on by the soul during ordination ceremonies is appalling.

It is insulting to the priests I know, especially those I have met across the country who attempt to minister to two and even three parish communities in rural areas of Colorado, Iowa, Louisiana and Minnesota.

Sexual abusers like Paquette and his ilk are men of unrelenting depravity and as such have abrogated any claims to such an appellation by the perfidy of their actions in the sexual abuse of numerous children, young people or vulnerable adults of either sex.

However, the more important reality is not that Edward Paquette or those like him retain forever some indelible priestly mark. Rather, it is that most of them can never be criminally prosecuted for their alleged crimes. They are either dead or beyond the law as it stands.

They will never be listed on any state sexual predators' list and why?

Because their enablers, their bishops, did not put our children first; they did not have the integrity to do what they were morally bound to do in the first place, and that was to call the police. Instead, they transferred them from parish to parish over many decades where they continued to savage children.

This reality is much harder to stomach, and it is the reason why every state in the nation should be passing new legislation that will open a civil window of at least two years to get some of these sociopaths and their records into a civil, if not criminal, courtroom where they belong.

How can accommodations in law, such as the arbitrary statutes of limitation that virtually bar victims of childhood sexual abuse from pursuing justice, be permitted by any state?

Justice and charity are what Jesus taught. He never said it was contingent on the price tag.

The people of every state deserve better laws that protect our children more than they protect child abusers, molesters and rapists.

Accountability and transparency in the present and future offers neither justice nor forgiveness for the crimes and sins of the past. The individual enablers, leaders of the institutional church who knew and covered up or facilitated such heineous crimes against children must be held accountable by society.



Sister Maureen Paul Turlish
Victims' Advocate
maureenpaulturlish@yahoo.com
__________

Sister Maureen Paul Turlish is a victims' advocate and a Delaware educator who has spoken before the Senate and House Judiciary Committees in support of Delaware's new Child Victims Law which was passed in July, 2007. She is on the National Representative Council for Region 4 of VOTF, Voice of the Faithful and is a board member of DACOA, the Delaware Association of Children of Alcoholics.
-- Posted by SMP TURLISH on Thu, Dec 4, 2008, 12:28 pm EST

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So... The court should show the church mercy for the crime of child molestation, which they helped cover up and transfer the problem pedophile priest(s)from parish to parish? I don't think so!
The church KNEW that these men had problems and all they did is move them around so that they could spread the pain and suffering to more children and families.
I for one hope they bankrupt the Catholic church.
These predator priests and those who enabled them (like McSweeney) should all rot in prison for the remainder of their days.
Would Jesus ask the courts for mercy in this case?
Somehow I suspect not.
I say bleed em financially dry until they have to close up shop... let them answer to God on judgement day... perhaps they'll find their mercy there at the pearly gates.
I for one hope God will consider the suffering of the innocent children who were physically violated and left mentally scarred for life.
No mercy!
-- Posted by Mike Guay on Thu, Dec 4, 2008, 12:25 pm EST

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