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Accused Priest Had Been Assigned to Three Bucks Parishes

PhillyBurbs
May 10, 2012

http://www.phillyburbs.com/ap/state/pa/accused-priest-had-been-assigned-to-three-bucks-parishes/article_a416757f-b582-580b-9be6-5c50c4d15e31.html

The Rev. James J. Brennan exits the Criminal Justice Center, Monday, March 26, 2012, in Philadelphia. Brennan is charged with the attempted rape of a 14-year-old boy in the 1990s. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

Defense lawyers for an accused predator-priest who had been stationed three times in Bucks County are challenging evidence that he once told church supervisors he had been sexually abused as a boy.

The Rev. James Brennan, 48, is charged with sexually assaulting a teen in 1996, when he was on leave from the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Philadelphia.

Brennan was stationed at St. Andrew Parish in Newtown Township from 1989 to 1991 and later at parishes in Lower Southampton and Feasterville.

While serving there, the grand jury report alleges, the priest befriended a 9-year-old parishioner identified only as “Mark.”

The alleged rape occurred years later when Mark was age 14, according to the grand jury.

Brennan was on a requested leave of absence when he invited Mark to stay with him at a private residence in Chester County, according to the grand jury report.

According to the report, Brennan showed Mark pornographic images on a laptop computer. Mark said that he was tired, and attempted to sleep on the living room couch, but Brennan insisted the boy come upstairs to sleep in the priest’s bedroom.

Church memos presented Wednesday at his trial state that Brennan requested the leave, at least in part, to deal with childhood sexual abuse. But Brennan later denied telling Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua or his aide, Monsignor William Lynn, that he had been abused.

His lawyer suggested he had instead had a crisis of faith, and reviewed several lengthy, contemplative letters Brennan sent the archdiocese during his leave. The letters describe his progress with his psychologist and spiritual director, but do not specifically refer to any abuse.

However, a detective felt they implied more than spiritual failings, given passages about the priest’s “wounded heart” and “tormented state of unbridled passion.”

“I would say it’s written by someone being tormented by something,” Detective James Dougherty testified.

The priest and teenager would again cross paths in 1999, according to the grand jury.

Then-Archbishop of Philadelphia Anthony Bevilacqua had assigned Brennan to teach at Assumption Blessed Virgin Mary in Lower Southampton.

Mark, then a 17-year-old student at Archbishop Wood High School, was assigned to yard work at Assumption as part of a community service project and when “on his fifth or sixth visit to the parish, he found Father Brennan masturbating in a shed with his pants down.

Upon seeing Mark, Father Brennan said, “Come here,’ but Mark left the area and never returned to complete his community service.”

The defense emphasized that the archdiocese quickly removed Brennan from ministry when his accuser came forward in 2006, and widely publicized the complaint — to suburban prosecutors and supervisors at the parishes and Catholic high school where he had worked.

No one else has ever accused Brennan of abuse, defense lawyers note.

Prosecutors say Lynn had been warned before 1996 that Brennan was a risk because of earlier complaints from nuns that he was having loud parties and living with two other men when he served as chaplain at a special-needs facility in Delaware County. Brennan described the men as his brother and a nephew, but prosecutors allege at least one was his former student at Cardinal O’Hara High School.

Brennan was once reprimanded for roughhousing with the same student behind closed doors at O’Hara, where he worked as a teacher and guidance counselor from 1991 to 1996, according to Dr. Thomas O’Brien. O’Brien, who ran the guidance department, later became superintendent of archdiocesan schools.

The former student has not been called to testify during the trial, which began in late March and is expected to last three more weeks.

The accuser testified that Brennan abused him at a West Chester apartment where the priest lived while on leave. Brennan concedes they viewed pornography and shared a bed but said nothing sexual happened, according to transcripts of his 2008 church, or canon, trial.

Brennan returned from his archdiocesan leave in 1997, then moved to a Trappist monastery in 2000 for several months. He returned to the archdiocese yet again, serving five years at a Feasterville parish, before asking in late 2005 for leave to work at a small parish on the Outer Banks. That request was pending when his accuser’s father came forward, a day after the accuser attempted suicide.

Brennan is on trial with Lynn, the longtime secretary for clergy. Lynn is charged with child endangerment and conspiracy for allegedly keeping Brennan and other accused priests in ministry.

 

 

 

 

 




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