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- <text id=90TT0444>
- <title>
- Feb. 19, 1990: Bleak Days For Covenant House
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Feb. 19, 1990 Starting Over
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 66
- Bleak Days for Covenant House
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The founder of a program for troubled teens is forced out
- </p>
- <p>By Mary Cronin
- </p>
- <p> For thousands of runaway teenagers in New York City and
- other urban areas, Covenant House is the home that compassion
- built. Now the man who founded the nation's most successful
- program for runaways is himself in need of compassion. Father
- Bruce Ritter, 61, the energetic Franciscan who built Covenant
- House largely on the basis of his own charisma, has been
- accused by four young men of having sexual relationships with
- them while they were under his care.
- </p>
- <p> Last week Ritter was forced to step down as president of
- Covenant House while the allegations are investigated by state
- and local prosecutors and his religious order. Whether or not
- the probes result in formal charges, says an observer close to
- the church, "the chances of Father Ritter returning to Covenant
- House are zero."
- </p>
- <p> Fortunately, the organization that Ritter created seems
- strong enough to survive his departure. One of the last
- remaining bulwarks against the New York City notion that
- nothing need be done because nothing can be done, Ritter
- personifies Covenant House in the minds of the 800,000 donors
- on his mailing list. Last year Covenant House's budget was $85
- million, three times what the Federal Government spends annually
- on programs for runaways.
- </p>
- <p> It was on Holy Thursday in 1968 that Ritter abandoned the
- comfortable life of a chaplain and a professor of theology at
- Manhattan College for the mean streets of the city's Lower East
- Side. Challenged by a student to practice the good works he
- preached, Ritter responded with a colorful act of muscular
- Christianity: he paid $50 to a couple of toughs to scare drug
- dealers into vacating their apartments. He used the space to
- house homeless children. Later he opened a shelter for runaways
- in a three-room hovel on East Seventh Street and solicited
- money to help the hundreds of teenagers who flocked to the
- shelter: drug addicts, prostitutes or simply abandoned, lonely
- adolescents with no place to go.
- </p>
- <p> Over the years, Ritter gradually expanded the operation to
- a paid staff of 1,700 and about 2,000 volunteer workers. In
- 1984 President Reagan called Ritter an "unsung hero" in his
- State of the Union address. George Bush, who considers Ritter
- one of the brightest of the nation's "thousand points of
- light," visited his Times Square center last June.
- </p>
- <p> But six months later, Ritter was making headlines in the New
- York Post. The newspaper reported that the district attorney's
- office was investigating allegations by Kevin Kite, a
- 26-year-old former prostitute and drug runner with a history
- of lying. Kite claimed that he had an eight-month-long sexual
- relationship with Ritter after the priest brought him from New
- Orleans to New York City in 1989. He also alleged that Ritter
- diverted up to $25,000 in Covenant House money to finance the
- affair. Ritter denies Kite's story, although he says he helped
- get Kite a scholarship at Manhattan College. Covenant House
- officials say they paid Kite's board at the college, gave him
- pocket money and bought him a computer. They also say a
- Covenant House contact in upstate New York provided Kite with
- papers that allowed him to take the identity of Tim Warner, a
- young boy who died of leukemia in 1980.
- </p>
- <p> Ritter explained all this by saying that like many former
- drug runners, Kite needed a fake identity to be protected from
- the Mob. Ritter brought Kite's father to New York, where he
- declared that his son was a chronic liar. Still, Ritter warned,
- copycats might surface in the wake of Kite's allegations.
- </p>
- <p> Then, on Jan. 24, another accusation surfaced in the Village
- Voice. John Melican, 34, of Seattle, told the weekly that from
- the time he was 17, he had an intermittent 13-year sexual
- relationship with Ritter. Melican repeated his claims to the
- New York Times, which published them last week. The Times also
- reported that a third man, Darryl Bassile, 31, had approached
- the paper in mid-January to say he too had sexual relations
- with Ritter. He had complained earlier to the Franciscan friary
- in Union City, N.J., after he heard of Kite's charges, and it
- started an investigation. A fourth accusation came from Paul
- Johnson, 33, an admitted felon who claimed that he was involved
- with Ritter for six years. Ritter denies that he had a sexual
- relationship with any of these men.
- </p>
- <p> Last Tuesday Franciscan Minister Provincial Father Conall
- McHugh, who heads the order on the East Coast, directed Ritter
- "to begin a period of rest and recuperation without
- responsibility for Covenant House until the inquiry is
- completed."
- </p>
- <p> Even before the suspension, Covenant House's board of
- directors was searching for someone to replace Ritter when he
- retires. Board member Frank Macchiarola, 48, a former New York
- City school chancellor known for his ability to salvage
- troubled youths, was named interim president--with Ritter's
- blessing, he says. In December, Covenant House took in $3
- million less than the $15 million it expected, but contributions
- are recovering. Said chief operating officer Jim Harnett: "I
- don't know what the impact of the new allegations will be, but
- for the moment we have put all expansion plans on hold."
- </p>
- <p> Although the institution will survive, Covenant House will
- miss Ritter's flair and spirit. Shane Sanders, 20, sold drugs
- and lived on a rooftop in Harlem until checking into a Covenant
- House shelter three weeks ago. Says he: "I finally came here
- because I couldn't stand living on the streets all the time.
- I find it hard to believe all these things against a man who
- built Covenant House for 22 years. It hurts a lot of us. Father
- Bruce is like our father."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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