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  Priest's Lawyer Frustrated at Inability to View Church Audit

By Andrew Duffy and Meghan Hurley
Ottawa Citizen
September 20, 2011

http://www.ottawacitizen.com/Priest+lawyer+frustrated+inability+view+church+audit/5427651/story.html

Father Joseph LeClair's lawyer says he's deeply frustrated by his inability to obtain the audit that triggered a police probe at Blessed Sacrament Parish.

Diocesan officials, he said, have rebuffed his attempts to review the audit by Deloitte and Touche LLP. That audit formed a key part of a sixmonth review by the diocese into financial irregularities.

"It's insulting frankly, to call a spade a spade," Ian Stauffer told the Citizen in an interview on Monday.

"I'm insulted by this as a lawyer: when you represent someone you expect there to be some fairness. If they're going to accuse your client of something, you expect to at least see the evidence so you can respond. It's wrong what they've done here."

Diocesan officials, he said, in refusing to give him a copy of the audit, say the matter is in police hands.

Stauffer made the comments two days after Msgr. Kevin Beach, vicar general of the Ottawa archdiocese, announced that the police have been asked to investigate "questionable" financial transactions made by LeClair during the last five years of his tenure at Blessed Sacrament.

A spokesperson for Beach said the vicar general will not answer questions about the case until after he has met with Blessed Sacrament's parishioners. That meeting is to take place after the 11 a.m. mass on Sunday.

LeClair, 53, has been enrolled in an addictions treatment program for the past three months in Aurora to deal with his gambling problem.

Stauffer said LeClair is in relatively good spirits and believes his addiction is now behind him.

Blessed Sacrament reported deficits in four of the past five years despite taking in $2.95 million during that time.

At the end of May, the parish was in a net deficit position of $40,718, according to the audit.

Stauffer said LeClair has told him that he was able to control his addiction such that he did not take church money to gamble.

"That's what I'm being told: that the gambling money came from his winnings," Stauffer said.

"He'd lose, but he'd also win more and he'd reinvest that, for lack of a better term, into the gambling.

"Which went on - and I know there seemed to be a gambling frenzy there for awhile - but honestly, Father Joe has said to me, and I can only pass on what he tells me - that he has never used any money from church proceeds for his gambling. And people either believe that or not believe that."

The diocesan review of Blessed Sacrament raised concerns about the handling of Sunday collections, the misuse of church accounts, the failure to set aside refugee sponsorship money and deficient accounting practices.

"What I don't understand," Stauffer said, "is how all of this could go on for years and no one ever say anything about it, if there's a real concern."

The parish council and its finance committee, he said, should have offered LeClair more direction in terms of how to manage church money.

"They should have been doing oversight."

LeClair was the only one who could sign cheques issued from church accounts.

He did not need a counter-signature and did not have to submit receipts to have cheques approved.

The former chair of Blessed Sacrament's finance committee, Herve Dejordy, has called LeClair "a oneman band."

Neither Dejordy nor another member of the finance committee, Jim Ovens, would comment on the situation Monday.

 
 

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