BishopAccountability.org
 
  Lawsuit against Missouri Monastery Involves Las Vegas Episcopal Priest

By Jeff German
Las Vegas Review-Journal
June 23, 2011

http://www.lvrj.com/news/lawsuit-against-missouri-monastery-involves-las-vegas-episcopal-priest-124432963.html?ref=963

A Las Vegas Episcopal priest resigned from his duties at a local church Thursday after his name surfaced in a lawsuit alleging a Missouri monastery covered up sexual abuse by him.

The lawsuit, filed in Missouri by a former choir boy, alleges the Roman Catholic monastery, Conception Abbey, kept secret the boy's 1987 sexual assault by Bede Parry, then a Catholic priest who directed the choir.

Parry, 69, who was not named as a defendant in the lawsuit, had been serving as the organist and choir director at All Saints' Episcopal Church in Las Vegas since 2000.

He said he informed the Episcopal Diocese of Nevada of his resignation as the Missouri suit became public Thursday morning.

Bishop Dan Edwards, who heads the Nevada diocese, confirmed the resignation and said that because Parry remains a priest, the diocese is conducting an internal investigation to determine whether any further action needs to be taken against him.

"Certainly we regard this situation with grave concern," Edwards said. "We will need to be sure we are following the right process to be fair to all concerned."

Parry said he also asked the diocese to relieve him of his priest duties.

"I feel terrible for anybody that I've hurt," he said. "I feel terrible that my actions would cause a lawsuit to be filed against the abbey, and I feel terrible about letting down my friends and the diocese here."

Parry did not deny the 1987 incident in Missouri, and said the abbey sent him to New Mexico afterward for several months of treatment.

But Parry insisted that he has had no other sexual incidents with minors since then, including during his time in Las Vegas.

Edwards said Parry's work at All Saints' has "not involved contact with youth or children."

The former choir boy, identified only as John Doe 181, was attending a summer choir camp in Missouri when the 1987 sexual assault occurred, the lawsuit alleges.

His parents confronted abbey officials after the assault and were told that Parry had a "mental breakdown" and would undergo treatment, the suit says.

"In fact, Father Parry did not have a mental breakdown," the suit alleges. "Instead, Father Parry was a known serial child predator who had sexually abused numerous students before Father Parry sexually abused plaintiff."

Parry admitted to abbey officials that he had other "inappropriate sexual relationships" between 1973 and 1979 while a monk at the monastery, the suit alleges.

Parry didn't deny those allegations Thursday.

"The actions of the abbey were outrageous and utterly repugnant to a civilized society," the suit says.

Abbey officials in Conception, Mo., said they were working on a prepared statement to respond to the lawsuit.

Minnesota attorney Jeff Anderson, who filed the suit on the former choir boy's behalf, said the allegations focus on the "institutional failures" of the abbey and Catholic Church to protect innocent children from Parry.

"They took a gamble and rolled the dice knowing there was a risk that he was going to offend again," Anderson said.

Anderson, who has made a career of filing sexual abuse cases involving clergy, said he has no proof that Parry committed any sexual acts against members of his Episcopal church in Las Vegas. But he added, "We have every reason to believe he is at grave risk for continuing to do it."

The suit alleges that the results of psychological testing in 2000 showed that Parry was a "sexual abuser who had the proclivity to re-offend with minors." The results were provided to Catholic and Episcopal church leaders in Nevada, the suit says.

Parry acknowledged the results, but said Episcopal leaders here were not informed in 2000.

He said he told church officials about the 1987 incident when he was applying to become an Episcopal priest in 2002. They did a background check and ended up allowing him into the priesthood in 2004.

Barbara Blaine, president and founder of the Chicago-based watchdog group, Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), showed up outside All Saints' Episcopal Church Thursday morning to call attention to the suit and Parry's past. The Washington Avenue church here has as many as 500 members.

"The reason that this is so horrific is that the Episcopal Church authorities knew about Father Parry's history, and yet they still allowed him to come and work here," she said. "It doesn't matter how many times a predator says they're not going to do it again; unfortunately it usually does happen again."

Blaine, 54, who said she was a victim of sexual abuse by a priest herself as a young teenager, added that church officials should be held accountable for allowing Parry to work there.

Contact reporter Jeff German at jgerman@reviewjournal.com or 702-380-8135.

 
 

Any original material on these pages is copyright © BishopAccountability.org 2004. Reproduce freely with attribution.