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- <text id=94TT0581>
- <title>
- May 09, 1994: Religion:After the Fall
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- May 09, 1994 Nelson Mandela
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- RELIGION, Page 56
- After the Fall
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Faced with lawsuits and struggling to treat clerics accused
- of sexual abuse, the Catholic Church lags behind in forging
- a policy on priestly pedophilia
- </p>
- <p>By Howard Chua-Eoan--Reported by Sam Allis/Boston, Richard N. Ostling/New York and
- Elizabeth Taylor/Albuquerque
- </p>
- <p> "But whoso shall offend one of these little ones which believe
- in me, it were better for him that a millstone were hanged about
- his neck, and that he were drowned in the depth of the sea."
- </p>
- <p>-- Jesus, according to Matthew's Gospel
- </p>
- <p> Over a period of 14 years, Father John Hanlon of St. Mary's
- in Plymouth, Massachusetts, would occasionally take boys under
- his charge to a nude beach. It was, a lawyer would later claim,
- the parish priest's way "to desensitize" them to their own nakedness.
- Hanlon, however, would subject his wards to more dissolute initiations.
- He sexually abused 10 of them, ranging in age from 12 to 15,
- including William Wood, now 27. Eleven years of shame and silence
- passed before Wood realized "I couldn't deal with it anymore.
- I was drinking and dreaming. I was totally violent. I loaded
- a gun and originally planned to kill him. But I was too drunk
- to drive. I called the police, and they took it from there."
- Hanlon, now 65, denied the charges, but last week a jury in
- Plymouth County found the priest guilty, and he was sentenced
- to three concurrent life terms for the rape of Wood. Said district
- attorney William O'Malley: "He's a pedophile who happens to
- be a priest. The rape of a child involves some element of betrayal
- of trust, whether it's a boy scout leader or a high school coach."
- </p>
- <p> The harsh judgment on Hanlon is only the latest chapter in a
- plague of lawsuits that is bedeviling the Roman Catholic Church
- in America. The most famous case of sexual-abuse charges brought
- against a Catholic priest was dropped when the accuser of Chicago's
- Joseph Cardinal Bernardin admitted on Feb. 28 that he was not
- positive that the abuse, which he had remembered under hypnosis,
- had actually occurred. However, the church still faces hundreds
- of lawsuits around the country. Roderick MacLeish Jr., a Boston
- lawyer involved in civil actions against alleged child abusers,
- claims that of the 400 active cases handled by his firm, 250
- involve clergy--and the vast majority of them belong to the
- Catholic Church.
- </p>
- <p> Over the last few years, the church has been forced to pay out
- tens of millions of dollars in fines and settlements. Meanwhile,
- if they are not subjects of criminal investigation, most fallen
- priests are sent into therapy and are either retired or dispatched
- to posts that do not put them into regular contact with children.
- "I don't believe the church should dump pedophiles out onto
- the street," says Bishop John Kinney, head of the Ad Hoc Committee
- on Sexual Abuse for the National Conference of Catholic Bishops.
- "We have a responsibility for them. The church should be able
- to find some way to care for them."
- </p>
- <p> Nonetheless, the church still has not designed an effective
- nationwide policy to remedy its troubles. While pedophilia is
- considered a grievous sin, it is also seen as disobedience to
- the celibacy rule. The American Catholic Church does not even
- have a grasp of the numerical dimensions of the situation. How
- many pedophilia cases is the church dealing with? "I don't know,"
- says Bishop Kinney. "We don't have the statistics yet." Each
- of the 188 dioceses in the U.S., he explains, is its own de
- facto principality, reporting directly to Rome. Thus, Kinney
- says, the U.S. bishops' organization cannot easily impose its
- will on any of them. Each diocese is also its own corporation
- and thus an attractive target for lawsuits. Does the church
- know how much money has been paid to settle claims of sexual
- abuse? "I don't know," repeats Kinney. "There has been no great
- effort to get at that figure." Estimates range from $60 million
- to an astronomical $500 million. Two weeks ago, a jury in Pennsylvania
- ruled that the Altoona-Johnstown diocese had to pay $1.57 million
- to a man who was sexually assaulted when he was a youngster
- by a local parish priest. The jury said the diocese was responsible
- because it deliberately ignored complaints of abuse.
- </p>
- <p> The church has usually preferred to settle in secret and hush
- up scandal. According to a well-placed church insider, over
- the past quarter-century, at least five U.S. Catholic bishops
- were accused of sexual involvement with boys under 18. In each
- instance the bishop was deemed guilty by officialdom, called
- on the carpet but not removed from his post. Information about
- each case was restricted to a small circle of church officials
- in Rome and the U.S. Today the hierarchy can still resist suggestions
- to learn more about pedophilia. For example, there are no good
- data on pedophile recidivism. Dr. Leslie Lothstein of the Institute
- of Living in Hartford, Connecticut, proposed to the National
- Conference of Catholic Bishops three years ago that a study
- be conducted to learn, once and for all, what the rate is among
- pedophiles. The bishops declined the idea, according to Lothstein.
- </p>
- <p> Furthermore, the church applies no set psychological standard
- for the selection of priests. Virtually every seminary uses
- some kind of test today to help identify the most obvious cases
- of potential pedophilia. (The test most often mentioned is the
- Minnesota Multi-Phasic Personality Inventory.) Still, says the
- Rev. Canice Connors, director of the St. Luke Institute in Suitland,
- Maryland, a treatment center for priests with psychological
- problems, there are dioceses today where "if you're 18 and breathing,
- you're in." The church may have a practical reason not to set
- too rigorous a standard for applicants: their ranks are thinning.
- In 1966 the number of preordination seminarians was 8,361; by
- 1992 it had plummeted to 3,651, a 56.3% drop.
- </p>
- <p> "There is a major dispute about whether or not it ((sexual abuse))
- is a moral question," says Connors. "As long as Rome sees it
- only as a moral violation of the celibate commitment," little
- will change. Says Dr. Gene Abel, a psychiatrist who last spring
- participated in a church-sponsored think tank on sexual abuse
- by clergy: "I was startled. They didn't talk about pedophilia.
- They talked about celibacy. They hadn't looked into pedophilia.
- They hadn't conceptualized it that way."
- </p>
- <p> For the most part, the Catholic Church uses two treatment centers
- in America for pedophiliac priests: St. Luke Institute in Maryland
- and the facility operated by the Servants of the Paraclete in
- Jemez Springs, New Mexico. At St. Luke the regimen involves
- breaking down denial and incorporates 12-step programs to control
- sexual addictions. It also provides drug therapy involving Depo-Provera,
- a synthetic compound, similar to the female hormone progesterone
- that lowers the sex drive. In its nine years St. Luke has treated
- 137 priests for pedophilia and ephebophilia, the sexual obsession
- with postpubescent children. The center operated by the Servants
- of the Paraclete has treated about 400 clergymen for "psychosexual
- issues" over the past 12 years.
- </p>
- <p> Pedophilia and ephebophilia "are not curable but can be contained,"
- explains Curtis Bryant, in-patient director at St. Luke. After
- treatment, patients are reassigned and put under direct supervision
- of local bishops. St. Luke insists that none are placed in positions
- where they will come into contact with children. What happens
- if a patient is seen cruising a playground? "We consider that
- a relapse," says Dr. Stephen Montana, director of St. Luke's
- out-patient services. There is no guarantee against recidivism.
- Indeed, at the center run by the Servants of the Paraclete,
- several former patients committed abuses after their release.
- One of these was James Porter, a patient in 1967, who was charged
- by 21 Minnesotans of molesting them. Sued by Porter's victims,
- the Servants of the Paraclete, while admitting no wrongdoing,
- eventually agreed to pay an average of $21,000 to each victim.
- </p>
- <p> Already the dioceses are being adversely affected by squeamish
- insurance companies that expected church liabilities to include
- only tumbles down rain-soaked steps. Now they are reluctant
- to extend coverage and even to remit payment for expensive lawsuits.
- New Mexico's Santa Fe archdiocese has settled 48 cases within
- the past year against priests who served there. Some insurers,
- however, are stonewalling over payments. Just before Christmas,
- Archbishop Michael Sheehan claimed that bankruptcy loomed and
- asked for added financial assistance from parishioners at all
- 91 parishes in the archdiocese.
- </p>
- <p> The diocese-by-diocese approach has created a babel of reactions.
- Rather than go into the problem piecemeal, says Lisa Cahill,
- professor of ethics at Boston College's theology department,
- "the missing piece is for the church to take responsibility
- as an institution." At the moment, however, Rome considers pedophilia
- a local American problem.
- </p>
- <p> In the face of expensive court proceedings, says Cahill, "the
- mind-set is, first, how to respond effectively to a lawsuit.
- They think about undermining the credibility of witnesses as
- opposed to really giving people a sense that they are being
- heard. The first thing victims want is recognition from the
- church in an immediate, honest way. Too often it's `See my lawyer.'"
- The church will probably be better served by exhibiting less
- belligerence and greater openness. Says Connors: "It's the lie
- that is killing us. You can't lie and expect change. This issue
- can't thrive without secrecy."
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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