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  Placa Accuser Says, If Canon Trial Can Clear Priest of Molestation Charges, Clearly New York Needs the Child Victims Act

By Kay Ebeling
City of Angels
December 7, 2009

http://cityofangels5.blogspot.com/2009/12/placa-accuser-says-if-canon-trial-can.html

NEW YORK -- Richard Tollner was driving home from a meeting with a client Friday night when he found out from a reporter that the priest he accused of pedophile sex crimes had been "cleared" by a canonical trial.

"A Newsday reporter called me Friday night and asked what do you think of the results of the trial," Tollner told City of Angels this morning. "I said what do you mean trial. She says, the canonical trial. I said, I wouldn't know. I've been calling the archdiocese the last two years, all they say is 'We have nothing to report," Tollner said.

"It's occurrences like this, Placa being cleared, that create the need for a Child Victims' Act in New York," Tollner added. The current statute of limitations for Placa's charged crimes ran out in 1982. "The Church made it look like there's only one person who's come forward about Placa and that's not the case, there's three known victims."

Richard Tollner testified at that canonical trial that "cleared" Alan Placa and, before last week, had been waiting over two years to hear the results. "I used to call every month asking what are you going to do about Placa."

At those Canonical hearings in the Albany archdiocese business offices, Tollner had to use Church provided legal counsel for the hearings: "The church provided me with a what they call a Promoter of Justice. Then he was always on vacation when I called him with questions," Tollner said.

"We were basically supposed to just use the church people, I could use an attorney for counsel but not in the hearing."

That "canonical penal trial" ordered by Vatican ended up clearing the charges and Alan Placa is now going to be reinstated as a priest.

"They had testimony, they just didn't listen."

"The hearings were right here in Albany, in the church offices, just in a conference room. It was a very simple thing, it was basically three judges, they were priests from upstate New York and a guy from Philadelphia

"We hit them right between the eyes with exactly what they needed, and they never heard us," Tollner said. "I'm surprised," with the results.

"We had five witnesses who were fellow seminarians, family members, and other victims

"Other victims

"Plural."

PLURAL

Sometimes they just submitted written testimony but they still submitted witness testimony to the trial.

"I was there five or six times, spent about two hundred hours on research and preparation, because this was super hard testimony," Tollner said.

News reports from last week state: "Placa was placed under investigation by the Church after he was identified as 'Priest F' in a grand jury investigation in New York's Suffolk County. The grand jury heard testimony from three alleged victims, two students and an altar boy, who said that a "Priest F" had molested them in the 1970s," the paragraphs that are picked up and repeated in most the news articles about Placa's cleared charges state:

City of Angels knows of at least two other victims of Placa who could be witnesses but refuse to come forward and testify.

When the Newsday reporter called Tollner, "Boy was she surprised because I was like, you've gotta be kidding me," Tollner said. "Because I thought they'd do something. I was expecting them to do something, I didn't know if they would laicize him, but that's what they wanted them to do.

Tollner says he testified before at least five times in the canonical hearings two years ago along with several other witnesses.

Still, "A lot of people I talked to are not surprised that Placa was cleared," Tollner said, "because Placa was also an attorney for the church, he was handling their sex abuse cases.

"If people find out that the attorney who handled their cases and talking people out of going to the police, which Placa did, he talked victims out of filing charges. When they find out he was sexually abusing kids himself, you'd think that would go to his character, as an attorney."

I asked Tollner, What are you going to do, if the Child Victims Act passes, and he said, "I'll be very happy for the other victims."

 
 

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