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  Ex-Priest Rejects Offer on Hudson Bat Charge

By Jeff Diamant
Jersey Journal
December 21, 2006

http://www.nj.com/news/jjournal/index.ssf?/base/news-0/1166684915220330.xml&coll=3

James Hanley, the former Catholic priest who admitted molesting about a dozen boys in what was New Jersey's most notorious clergy sex abuse case, has declined a prosecutor's plea offer on charges in an unrelated March incident at a Secaucus motel.

Hanley, 70, appeared Dec. 11 in Hudson County Superior Court for a brief hearing, shackled and wearing a green jail uniform and walking with a cane. He has been jailed since late October, when a warrant was issued for his arrest for missing a court date, Assistant Prosecutor Howard Bell said.

Hanley was indicted in June on charges of possessing a weapon for an unlawful purpose and making terroristic threats, Bell said. He will remain in jail until his next court date, Jan. 22, unless he can post his $50,000 bail, which has a 10 percent cash option.

Authorities say that on March 10 Hanley swung a bat at three employees at the Extended Stay Motel in Secaucus. An officer drew his gun and ordered Hanley to drop the bat, but Hanley did not, prosecutors say. Instead, Hanley turned around and started to walk away, still holding the bat, prosecutors say.

The officer put his gun back in his holster, kicked Hanley's legs out from under him and arrested him, prosecutors say.

The deal discussed in court last week would have involved probation and 364 days in jail, Bell said.

Hanley's lawyer, John Conbery, could not be reached for comment.

Hanley, who admitted molesting boys between 1968 and 1982, never spent a day in jail for that abuse, largely because nobody told police until statutes of limitations had expired. He was formally removed from the priesthood in 2002.

Last year, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Paterson reached a $5 million settlement with 21 people who said Hanley abused them. In court papers, the former priest has admitted abusing about a dozen boys - masturbating and showering with them and engaging in oral sex.

Most of the victims were parishioners at the Church of St. Joseph in Mendham when Hanley was a priest there.

He no longer has formal ties to the Paterson Diocese, save for a monthly stipend he receives.

Many of Hanley's victims have followed the motel case closely, hoping to see their abuser jailed. None were in court last week, though the parent of one alleged victim, Mark Serrano, was there.

"He's finally in a place where kids can't be harmed by him," Mark Serrano said. "I don't know for how long, though."

 
 

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