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  Four Barred from Working As Priests

Oakland Press
April 21, 2007

http://www.theoaklandpress.com/stories/042107/loc_2007042174.shtml

Detroit — Three Roman Catholic priests accused of sexually abusing minors have been permanently barred from working as priests, and a fourth was removed from the ministry, the Archdiocese of Detroit said Friday.

Dennis Laesch, Ronald Williams and James Wysocki "have been permanently removed from ecclesiastical ministry, are prohibited from wearing clerical clothes and publicly representing themselves as priests," Msgr. Ricardo Bass, Cardinal Adam Maida's delegate for clergy matters, said in a statement.

Wysocki was ordained in 1967 and became associate pastor at St. Michael Parish in Pontiac.

In 1972, he was named chaplain and counselor at Pontiac Catholic High School.

He became pastor at St. Mary Queen of Creation in New Baltimore in 1977 and had served as pastor of Holy Cross in Marine City until February 2003.

Dennis Duggan, formerly the pastor at St. Patrick's Parish in White Lake Township, has been laicized, that is, removed from priestly ministry and excused from the promise of celibacy and other priestly obligations.

The other three men remain priests but are restricted in their public ministry, Bass said.

The statement did not indicate where any of the men had worked as priests nor mention the specific allegations against them.

Thus far, the Vatican has completed investigations of at least 22 priests in the 1.3-million member Detroit archdiocese since 2004, with only one priest being returned to ministry.

Maida last year announced a plan to reduce the number of parishes in the six-county archdiocese from 306 to 290 by 2011. The archdiocese had 414 priests in 2000, but that dropped to 317 by 2005 and is projected to drop to 243 by 2015.

The decline was accelerated in part by the removal of priests accused of sexual abuse, he said.

 
 

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