14-year-old Brian Teeman, sex abuse victim of Msgr. Thomas O'Brien shot himself in November 1983. Will the bishops at the summit address the relationship between clergy abuse and suicide during their summit? |
February 2019
Sex
Abuse Victims and Clerical Suicide —
A Study of the Toxic Legacy of Clerical Molestation
By
Randy Engel
Introduction
On
February 21-24, 2019, Pope Francis will convene an international “summit” on clerical sexual abuse and the
protection of minors (and vulnerable adults) in the Church in the New Synod
Hall in Rome. The meeting will focus on three particular areas —
responsibility, accountability and transparency. It will include plenary
sessions, working groups, moments of common prayer and listening to
testimonies, a penitential liturgy and a final Eucharistic celebration. The plenary
sessions with be directed by the Italian Jesuit, Father Federico Lombardi, former
Director of the Vatican Press Office from 2006 to 2010.
In
attendance will be an estimated 130 presidents of Catholic episcopal bureaucracies from around
the world. Included in this configuration is the United States Conference of
Catholic Bishops (USCCB) which, if the truth be told, has been a major player
for decades both in the promotion of clerical homosexuality and the cover-up of
sexual abuse cases by bishops, priests, and religious (male and female) in the
United States.
Members
of the Preparatory Committee for the February meeting include Cardinal Blasé
Cupich, head of the Chicago Archdiocese; Cardinal Oswald Gracias of Mumbai
(Bombay), India; and sex abuse “experts”
Archbishop Charles Scicluna, a papal trouble-shooter from Malta, and German
Jesuit Rev. Hans Zollner, a member of the Pontifical
Commission for the Protection of Minors and Vulnerable and President of the
Centre for Child Protection (CCP) at the Pontifical Gregorian University in
Rome. The CCP will be the subject of a future article in the Catholic Inquisitor.
In
a December 12, 2018 statement issued by the Vatican Press Office headed by Opus
Dei numerary and spin-master, Greg Burke (now retired), the Catholic laity was told:
Each of us needs to own this challenge (of a
comprehensive and communal response that will bring healing to victim
survivors), coming together in solidarity, humility and penitence to repair the damage done, sharing a
common commitment to transparency and holding everyone in the church
accountable (bold added).
Unfortunately,
when it come to “repairing the damage done” to victims of clerical sexual abuse,
the sad, unvarnished truth is that NO
ONE including the current occupant of the Chair of Peter and the Catholic
hierarchy, and no amount of financial compensation or belated apologies can EVER bring back the years of childhood
innocence which have been brutally stolen from young victims of clerical abuse,
most especially when said victims have SUICIDED — died
by their own hand.
I
began to collect information and data on the connection between pederasty and
the suicide of victims and their clerical perpetrators in 1987 when I started
my research for The Rite of Sodomy. which
was published nineteen years later in 2006.
This article on one of the deadly outcomes of clerical sexual abuse is
based on a small selection of suicide cases from my files.
But
first, some historical footnotes about suicide and its relationship to
homosexuality and pederasty.
Homosexuality, Pederasty and Suicide
From
ancient Athens where suicide, murder and assassination by Athenian boy lovers
or their quarry were not unknown; to Victorian London’s “molly houses” where
same-sex prostitution and criminality flourished; to turn-of-the 20th
century homosexual scandals and suicides associated with Germany’s Alfred
Krupp, aka, the “Cannon King’s” pederast affair with young boys in Berlin and
Capri; to the modern Castro District of San Francisco where “domestic violence”
aka “love crimes” between same-sex male and female couples remains a serious
“psychosexual” problem for both public health and law enforcement officials — homosexuality, pederasty and suicide have
always maintained a symbiotic relationship.
Like
its secular counterpart, the clerical homosexual world, of which pederasty is a
subset, is historically and universally a world of sexual deviancy, violence and criminality
including drug use, pornography, rape, prostitution, homicide, murder,
blackmail, robbery and embezzlement, and
SUICIDE, the latter being the main subject of this commentary.
It
should, therefore, come as no surprise to either Francis or the Catholic
hierarchy or the Catholic laity that the current epidemic of suicide among
homosexual clerical predators and their victims
is unlikely to be curbed, much less ended any time soon unless the root
causes are addressed at the February summit.
Church Teachings on the Malice of
Suicide
The
1917 Pio-Benedictine Code of Canon Law, Canon 1240 §1
specifically provides: “Unless they gave before death a sign of repentance, the
following are deprived of ecclesiastical burial: 3°: Those who kill themselves by deliberate counsel.”
However, the 1983 Code of Canon Law, Canon 1184 §1 avoids the
specific category of those who directly suicide. It reads: “Unless
they gave
some signs
of repentance before death, the following must be deprived of ecclesiastical funerals 3/ other manifest sinners who cannot be granted
ecclesiastical funerals without public scandal of the faithful.”
Admittedly,
I find the use of the phrase “without public scandal of the faithful,”
manifestly ironic given that this very same clause has been called forth ad nauseam by members of the Catholic hierarchy
to explain away their cowardness and lack of true faith in not reporting crimes
of pederasty to secular law enforcement authorities.
Part
III, Paragraph 2282 of the Catechism of
the Catholic Church, promulgated
by Pope John Paul II in 1992, states that “Grave psychological
disturbances, anguish, or grave fear of hardship, suffering, or torture can
diminish the responsibility of the one committing suicide.”
In
summary, direct suicide has been defined as self-murder, and as such,
objectively speaking, stands condemned by Holy Scripture, the Catholic Church
and Tradition. Deliberate suicide is unlawful and a mortal sin, which is why,
in hatred of the sin, the Church has, in the past, denied the unrepentant suicide
a Christian burial.
There
are obvious exceptions to this rule, of course, including minors, and adults
who are of unsound mind, or under the influence of mind-altering medications.
However,
the unfortunate trend today is to not deny any
suicide a Catholic burial on the mistaken belief that no sane person would deliberately take
his own life, and therefore no suicide is culpable for his actions.
The Suicide of Victims of
Pederasty
While
most boys and girls, young men and women, who have been sexually abused by
clerics and religious contemplate suicide at some stage of their lives, statistically
more females attempt suicide, but
more males complete the act and kill
themselves.
The
more intellectual, sensitive and creative the victim the more traumatic and
long-lasting the effects of the assault. The greater the religiosity of the parents
of the victim and their attachment to the Church, the less likely the victim
(especially a boy) is to reveal the abuse to them.
Many
victims of clerical sexual suffer
life-long episodes of lack of trust, and never feel really safe from harm. For
them, suicide is always a lingering option.
The
anti-authority attitudes engendered by the abuse is likely to be reflected in
increased anti-social behaviors including illegal drug use, petty theft, and
truancy. Physical and emotional disorders especially in the form of eating
disorders such as anorexia and bulimia nervosa are common to abuse victims of
both sexes and are often precursors to suicide attempts.
Oral/anal
sexual penetration or attempted penetration of minors, especially acts of sodomy and fellatio performed on
young boys, dramatically increases the rate of suicide of abuse victims. The
performance of adult homosexual acts on minor boys also increases the
likelihood that they will adopt a homosexual death-style. In addition to the
nature of the sexual abuse, the duration of the abuse which sometimes covers a
period of many years is a key factor in the high incidence of suicide among
abuse victims.
Approximately
25% of childhood sexual abuse victims state that they were initially unaffected
by the assault. However, later interviews reveal that sexual abuse, especially
clerical sexual abuse, leaves mental, emotional, physical and spiritual scars that
are never fully erased by the victim.
Long-term
healing comes to victims of clerical sexual abuse largely from facing the
reality of their abuse and confronting their abuser where possible, and
recognizing that while they can never regain a lost childhood – it is lost forever – they can find new life (separate from the
abuse) and new hope and peace with God in the world to come.
Cases Studies Involving
Victim Suicide
· The Case of Brian Teeman – Diocese of
St. Joseph/Kansas City
Brian was an 8th grade
high school freshmen at Archbishop O’Hara High
School. when he took his own life with a gunshot
wound at his family home on November 1, 1983. He was only 14 years old.
The perpetrator, Msgr. Thomas J. O’Brien, abused Brian when he was an 11-year-old
altar boy at the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary
Church in Independence, Mo. The
sex acts took place before Mass. The priest bought the victim’s silence with
threats including the threat of hell and excommunication.
The
diocese was aware of O’Brien’s criminal
proclivities involving young boys, but covered-up the abuse by sending O’Brien
for psychological in-patient “evaluation” and “treatment,” first to the Paraclete Fathers in
New Mexico and later to the St. Luke Institute in far-away Maryland.
The Teeman family never knew the
reason for their son’s suicide, until 28 years later, when they were notified
by another of O’Brien’s victims, that their son had also been sexually abused
by Msgr. O’Brien. The diocese spent $1.4 million fighting the case, but eventually
settled the “wrongful death re suicide” suit for $2.25 million in July 2013.
The settlement was not covered by the Chicago Insurance Company. In addition,
the diocese was forced to pay out millions more for dozens of additional
victims of O’Brien.
Msgr.
O’Brien retired in 2002, but did not “retire” from pederasty and continued to
rack up additional victims. At the time of his death in October 2013 at the age
of 87, six more cases were pending. Monsignor Thomas J. O’Brien never spent a single
day in jail, nor was he defrocked.
The case of sex abuse victims of Catholic priests suiciding
is not reserved only to the United States. Just before the
Christmas of 2007, a 13-year-old boy, Bartek Obloj, hanged himself in his home
in the village of Hlundo, Poland. He left a suicide letter stating that his
parish rector, Fr. Stanislaw Kaszowski, had molested him. Local
state officials later testified that the priest’s “sadistic behavior” and “sexual
exploits” were notorious, but complaints to the Ordinary of the Archdiocese of PrzemyÅ›l, Archbishop Jozef Michalik, at the time, the President of the
Polish Episcopal Conference, fell upon deaf ears.
Father Kaszowski denied Obloj’s accusations
and refused to attend a court hearing on the charges made against him. Later,
his superiors moved him to another a parish just twenty miles away. No
further information is available on the case.
Although
convicted civilian pederasts face harsh prison sentences in Poland, clerical
perverts are rarely prosecuted “for the good of the Church,” and victims of
sexual abuse receive neither attention nor therapy nor financial compensation.
Such was the case even when Karol Józef Wojtyła, the future Pope
John Paul II, was archbishop of Krakow.
· The Case of Brian Gergely – Diocese
of Altoona - Johnstown
Brian Gergely’s abuse in
the sacristy and confessional at the hand of
Monsignor Francis McCaa, pastor of Holy Name Parish in Ebensburg,
Penn., began
at the age of 10 and continued for more than four years. Gergely killed himself
at age 46 in July 2016 by hanging in his family’s garage, shortly after the Pennsylvania
legislature, under pressure from the Pennsylvania Catholic Conference, failed to
pass a law to lift the statute of limitations on lawsuits and criminal
prosecutions against the church. Gergely would not have profited from the
measure as he had already settled his case with the diocese in 2005, but he had
continued to advocate for other victims of clerical sexual abuse.
Family members
said that Brian had forgiven McCaa for his crime and that his suicide was
motivated by a sense hopelessness that other victims of clerical abuse will
ever receive full justice from the Catholic Church. According to his lawyer, Richard
M. Serbin, Gergely’s suicide was the 4th suicide among the abuse
victims he represented and that didn’t include those who met premature deaths
from illegal drug use and alcoholism related to their early abuse. While scores
of the boys were abused by Monsignor McCaa, he received no jail time and was not defrocked.
·
The
Case of John K. Houston – Archdiocese of Chicago
In 1980, a ten-year old
altar boy at St. Bede’s Church in the Archdiocese of Chicago was sexually
abused by Rev. Norbert Maday. That altar boy and former Marine and veteran of
the Gulf War, John Houston, took his own life at the age of 33 in October 2002. Or perhaps it would
be more truthful to say that Maday and Cardinal Francis George took the young man’s
life – Maday when he sexually assaulted Houston, and Cardinal George when he excused
and fawned over the convicted pederast and attempted to get Maday a “Get Out of
Jail Early” card, while nary giving a passing glance to Houston and the dozens
of Maday’s other victims who were robbed of their childhood and set upon a path
of alcohol and illegal drug use.
As with the majority of
clerical abuse cases in the United States, the statute of limitations for
Illinois prevented Cook County authorities from pursuing the Houston case in
1992. It was only after a geographical quirk of fate (Maday crossed state lines
to Wisconsin), that the serial predator was eventually convicted in 1994 and
sentenced to 25 years in prison for the sexually abuse of two young boys and
for threatening to kill one of the victim’s brothers if the victim squealed. From
the deposition that Cardinal George gave on the Houston Case, it is clear that
he was one of those prelates who never met a clerical pederast he didn’t like,
including the unrepentant laicized Maday, currently a registered sex offender
in Wisconsin.
· The Case of Rev. James Norman Chevedden
S.J.
The Chevedden case is an unusual in
that it falls under the Vatican’s category of “vulnerable adults” (never fully
defined), and not minors. Thus the priest was not a minor when he was abused, but
was in his early 50s; His abuser, Brother Charles Leonard Connor, was a serial
sexual predator from the same Jesuit order, the largest religious order in the
United States.
Ordained a Jesuit priest on July 31, 1978,
Chevedden loved the priesthood from the time he was a young boy. He learned
Mandarin and taught abroad in Taiwan for almost 20 years. Then in the summer of
1995, he underwent a psychotic mental breakdown and was returned to San
Francisco for treatment by his superiors. One year later, in 1996, he took up
residence at the Sacred Heart Jesuit Center in Los Gatos, Calif. In 1998, he
seriously injured his spine and feet by
jumping off of a scaffold at the Jesuit facility. It was not a suicide attempt,
but the result of not taking his regular medications.
It was at the Sacred Heart Center that one of
his caretakers, Brother “Charlie” Connor began to sexually molest Chevedden.
When the priest resisted his sexual advances, Connor sent the victim’s
wheelchair careening into a barrier as punishment. Anxious and fearful he would
not be believed, Chevedden remained silent about his abuse.
In the meantime, Connor, along with other
Jesuit perps, continued to abuse and sodomize two mentally disabled young men
who lived and worked the Sacred Heart Center for more than two decades. For
this crime, on January 17, 2001, Connor was
sentenced to six months house arrest away from the center, and the
Jesuits, who claimed they didn’t know about the abuse, paid out a $7.5 million settlement to “John Doe” and
“James Doe.” In 2002, Connor was permitted to return to the Sacred Heart Center
which at this point was housing at least five sexual predators from the Jesuit
California Province.
It was at this time that Chevedden gathered
up enough courage to report Connor’s abuse to his family, his therapist, and
his Jesuit superiors.
According to San Francisco
psychiatrist, Dr. George Maloof, whom the Jesuits paid to treat the priest for
two years before his death, “Chevedden had paranoid delusions, but I have no
doubt that he was accurate in what he described. He was very precise in
detailing and documenting what transpired.”
Maloof stated that the main concern of the
Jesuit superiors was to keep Chevedden’s allegations from becoming public.
“They didn’t want another case involving Brother Connor,” Maloof said. “They
were determined to quash any further disclosures of abuse.” On the other hand,
Maloof said, “Chevedden was ready to blow the whistle and make the issue
public.”
“Regrettably,” Maloof said, “he
[Maloof] put the brakes on the priest and persuaded him to work out a compromise with his superiors if
he wished to remain with the Society of Jesus. Restrictions were placed on
Connor’s activities and whereabouts at the center, but were not strictly
observed by Connor. Maloof said he warned the Jesuit leaders that they were
making a big mistake in not separating the victim from his abuser and that the
loose environment was “completely unsupportable.” Unfortunately, his dire warnings
went unheeded by the Jesuit superiors.
On May 19, 2004, Chevedden’s 56th
birthday, the priest was given permission to appear for jury duty in downtown
San Jose. His superior assigned one of its known sex offenders from the center
to drive him to the courthouse. Chevedden never returned to the Sacred Heart
Center. That afternoon, shortly after the jurors were dismissed, Rev. James
Chevedden jumped to his death from the roof of the courthouse parking garage. Three
years later, on Dec 14, 2007, the
Chevedden family reached a $1.6 million “wrongful death” settlement
with the California Province of the
Jesuits without the latter admitting liability.
· Mass Suicide in Diocese of Ballarat,
Australia
The Diocese of Ballarat, which covers
the 41 dioceses of the Central Highlands
of Victoria, has been one of the
Catholic Church’s international epicenters of suicides of clerical sexual abuse
victims, almost all males.
In May and December 2015, the Royal Commission into Institutional Child
Sexual Abuse heard weeks of testimony of a pedophile/pederast ring that
operated in Ballarat for more than 30 years. In the early 1970s, it is reported
that every boy between the ages of
10 to 16 at St. Alipius Primary School was molested by ring members which
included all male teachers and the chaplain. Of the 33 boys captured in a grade
four class picture, 12 were said to have suicided. Most were victims of the infamous
Father Gerald Ridsdale.
Take a gander at Ridsdale’s clerical record
and rap sheet:
Ridsdale began culling young
male victims prior to his ordination.
He attended three seminaries – in Werribee
(Australia), Genoa (Italy) and Dublin (Ireland). After
his ordination on July 25, 1961, at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Ballarat, he went
on to claim new victims in parishes in Horsham, Inglewood, Camperdown, Ballarat
North, Mildura, Swan Hill, Warrnambool, Ballarat East, Apollo Bay, Edenhope,
Melbourne and Mortlake.
In 1980, Bishop Ronald A.
Mulkearns gave Ridsdale a “study leave” at the National Pastoral Institute
where he offended. From 1982 to 1985 he was assigned to the Catholic Enquiry
Center in Sydney where he assaulted his altar boy. In the fall of 1989, Mulkearns
sent the serial predator to the U.S. to the Paraclete Father’s “rehabilitation
center” at Jemez Springs, New Mexico where Ridsdale later admitted he claimed
more victims. When he returned to Australia, he was reassigned as a hospital
chaplain in New South Wales. His crimes were not reported to the police.
In May 1993, Ridsdale was
arrested for child sexual assault and sentenced to two years and three months,
but was released after three months. At his first court hearing he was
accompanied by Cardinal George Pell, who had served as a priest in the Ballarat
area from 1971 to 1987, and Father Adrian McIInerney, the pastor of St. Alipius Parish They were present to give
character witness on behalf of Ridsdale. Later, Pell excused himself for his
act of “priestly solidarity” by claiming that he didn’t know the extent of the
Ridsdale’s crimes.
In November 1993,
Ridsdale was laicized.
In August 1994, he is was
arrested for abusing 20 boys and one girl from 1961 to 1981 and sentenced to
prison for 18 years. In August 2006 he was sentenced to 13 years after abusing
10 boys from 1970 to 1987. In April 2014 he was sentence to eight years for
abusing 11 boys and three girls from 1961-1980. Ridsdale managed to claim more
than 130 known victims, and an estimated 1000 unknown victims. In April 2019, he
is eligible for parole at the age of 84.
I
believe that this sampling of hundreds of files on victim abuse suicides from a
collection started 32 years ago, clearly demonstrates the urgent need of the
Holy See to acknowledge and address the tragedy of clerical victim suicide and
make it priority topic at the February 2019 meeting in Rome.
To be continued.....
To be continued.....
Truly sad beyond words........the priests who are guilty of this crime kill bodies AND souls.
ReplyDeleteOne of our pastors who died of AIDS and who was a known pederast left suicide victims in his wake. One a ten year old boy , buried in Monmouth Cty ,NJ.He had other victims who also committed suicide..........
"They cannot speak for themselves; but their names should be remembered...
William K. Filkins, 1966-1986
Gregory Krofchik, 1959-1993
Kevin Krofchik, died 1998
George Hanyok
Nicholas Hanyok
OH MY GOD !
And to think that Bishops Andrew Pataki and Michael Dudick KNEW THIS and kept him, allowing him the opportunity to destroy even MORE innocents? To think that other priests knew and kept their mouths SHUT allowing him to substitute in their parishes while they vacationed? You are ALL responsible for this. ALL!
OH MY GOD! 'Monsters' ALL!"
https://www.tapatalk.com/groups/snapsurvivorsnetwork/victims-of-john-danilak-who-did-not-survive-t3233.html
All I can say is revive the death penalty for such depraved men.
ReplyDeletePauly Fongemie
Catholic Tradition web site
Thank you for t his. Could you please post the statistics on numbers of suicides from clerical sex abuse that you allude to in the first part of the article. That would be useful to put in letters to bishops.
ReplyDelete