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  Another Lansing Predator Priest Is Exposed; SNAP Responds

SNAP
August 26 2010

http://www.snapnetwork.org/snap_statements/2010_statements/082510_another_lansing_predator_priest_is_exposed_snap_responds.htm

Statement by Barbara Dorris Outreach Director 314 862 7688

We applaud the brave Lansing area victims of predator priests who are coming forward to expose terrible crimes. We hope their actions will help each of them in the long, tough recovery process that follows heinous childhood victimization. And we hope their courage will inspire others who have been violated to reach out, get help, expose predators, protect kids, and heal more.

The bishop's claim that charges against Slowey can't be "substantiated" is baloney.

There's an easy way for bishops to get at the truth in child sex allegations: disclose them, and urge anyone with information that could prove or disprove the accusation to come forward. That's essentially what bishops have promised - to be "open" about child sex cases. That's clearly what bishops could do - they have websites and PR staffs and parish bulletins and diocesan newspapers. But that's still what bishops virtually never do, preferring instead to quietly settle cases behind closed doors and hope that the crimes and cover ups remain covered up.

We hope others who have been hurt by Michigan clerics will seek out independent sources of help, and call secular officials, not church officials.

(SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, is the world’s oldest and largest support group for clergy abuse victims. We’ve been around for 22 years and have more than 9,000 members. Despite the word “priest” in our title, we have members who were molested by religious figures of all denominations, including nuns, rabbis, bishops, and Protestant ministers. Our website is SNAPnetwork.org)

Contact David Clohessy (314-566-9790 cell, 314-645-5915 home), Barbara Blaine (312-399-4747), Barbara Dorris (314-862-7688 home, 314-503-0003 cell)

http://www.freep.com/article/20100825/NEWS06/100825040/1319/Lansing-diocese-rocked-by-2nd-dead-priest-accused-of-molesting

Aug. 25, 2010

Lansing diocese rocked by 2nd dead priest accused of molesting By PATRICIA MONTEMURRI-FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER

The Catholic Diocese of Lansing was rocked today by revelations about another priest, long-dead, now accused of sexually molesting a boy decades ago.

Lansing lawyer David Mittleman announced today that he has negotiated a $225,000 settlement from the Diocese of Lansing on behalf of a man who says he was molested by the late Rev. John Slowey at an orphanage in the mid-1950s.

Lansing diocese spokesman Michael Diebold confirmed the cash settlement in the Slowey case.

He said Slowey served an assignment at St. Vincent Home for Children in the mid-1950s. But Diebold said the diocese has received no other complaints about Slowey.

Diebold said the diocese notified the county prosecutor about the complaint against Slowey when they learned about it, and started a diocesan inquiry. Diebold said the diocese reached a settlement with Mittleman’s client, but cautioned they didn’t have any further substantiation about the claim.

“Even though an allegation has been brought by someone, even though we’re unable to substantiate that allegation, it doesn’t mean we won’t help people who are hurting,” said Diebold. “So there was a compromise reached with Mittleman’s client to cover his client’s healing expenses.”

On Tuesday, Lansing Bishop Earl Boyea publicly identified a different priest, the Rev. John Martin, who died in 1968, as having abused at least six boys when Martin served as pastor of St. Isidore Catholic Church in Laingsburg.

In the newest case, lawyer Mittleman says his client was 5-6 years old when he was molested in the mid-1950s by Slowey at what was then known as St. Vincent’s orphanage in Lansing. Mittleman said his client, who is also a lawyer, repressed the memory until about 18 months ago when he had a visible, emotional breakdown.

Since then, his client, who does not want to be identified and is in his late 50s, has not been able to work.

Mittleman said his client told his story to Lansing diocese officials.

“I think they believed in how candid my client was and based on his reputation, decided to do the right thing,” said Mittleman.

Michigan law makes it hard to victims of such long-ago abuse to bring successful civil court actions for compensation.

Currently, Michigan law contains a statute of limitation on filing civil lawsuits for past abuse. In most cases, the law requires a victim to bring a suit within two years of the abuse. If the abuse happened when the person was a youngster, the victim has until one year past an 18th birthday to sue. In Michigan, several lawsuits have been shot down by the state courts, which have ruled the suits were filed too late.

Bills in the legislature to extend the statute of limitations, to make it easier for victims to sue, have stalled – partly because of lobbying against some of the changes by the Michigan Catholic Conference and other organizations.

Mittleman said he hopes the Slowey case will give some impetus to the legislation to extend the statutes.

“I think to escape responsibility because some time has passed, with such an egregious act, is ridiculous,” said Mittleman.

Teresa Kettelkamp, who is the executive director for the Secretariat of Child and Youth Protection for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, said today that she believed more bishops were acknowledging that it’s necessary to publicly identify the names of deceased priests for whom credible accusations of long-ago abuse have surfaced. She said many bishops have been reluctant to release those names because the accused aren’t alive to defend themselves.

She lauded Boyea for releasing Rev. John Martin’s name, after Boyea learned this summer that victims, now in their 60s and 70s, had come forward to reveal they were molested by Martin as youngsters in the 1950s and 1960s.

“The bishops are finally coming around,” said Kettelkamp. “I think they’re realizing how powerful it is to release the names of the credibly accused, even if they are deceased, to encourage other victims. It’s not uncommon for victims to think ‘it just happened to me.”

“To have something come out in public might be just the ounce of courage victims needs to come forward for a chance for healing,” Kettelkamp said.

 
 

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