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Kc Priest Pleads Guilty to Child Porn Charges

By Bill Draper
Associated Press
August 2, 2012

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hduUQzvYIDAqjAY2kvZjvJyp0qYQ?docId=618ac8cb58034fea9675a1eb656e6518

FILE - This undated file photo provided by the Clay County, Mo., Detention Center shows Rev. Shawn Francis Ratigan. A lawyer for Ratigan said the priest planned to plead guilty during a hearing Thursday, Aug. 2, 2012. He was scheduled for trial later this month for production, possession and attempted production of child pornography. (AP Photo/Clay County Detention Center, File)

A Roman Catholic priest in Kansas City pleaded guilty Thursday to producing child pornography in a federal case that also led to charges against the diocese bishop for failing to report suspected child abuse, and prosecutors said they would recommend that he be sentenced to life in prison.

The Rev. Shawn Ratigan, 46, had been scheduled for trial later this month. He was charged with child pornography in May 2011 in Clay County after police received a flash drive from the priest's computer that contained hundreds of images of children, most of them clothed, with the focus on their crotch areas. Prosecutors alleged he photographed girls, sometimes under their skirts, in and around churches where he had worked in the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph.

Under terms of the plea deal, Ratigan pleaded guilty to four counts of producing child pornography and one count of attempting to produce child porn. Eight other counts against Ratigan were dismissed.

Acting U.S. Attorney David Ketchmark said the guilty pleas represent one charge for each of five victims whose abuse started in June 2005 — one year after Ratigan was ordained as a priest.

"With today's guilty plea, the defendant publicly acknowledged for the first time that he sexually assaulted five young children over the course of several years," Ketchmark said at a news conference after Ratigan's plea hearing. "When a defendant who wears a religious collar, who has the trust of a community, engages in conduct of this nature, his crimes are more devastating and more reprehensible."

The case opened old wounds for the Catholic Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph, which in 2008 agreed to pay 47 clergy abuse victims a total of $10 million and promised to train its priests about sexual abuse awareness and to report any suspicions that children were being placed in danger.

It also led to misdemeanor criminal charges against the diocese and Bishop Robert Finn — the highest-ranking Catholic official in the U.S. to be charged with shielding an abusive priest — for failing to report suspected child abuse to the state. Both have pleaded not guilty and are scheduled to go to trial in September.

In a statement released Wednesday, the diocese expressed its "profound concern" for anyone harmed by Ratigan and said it is committed to making sure "every report of sexual abuse, boundary violation or misconduct is addressed thoroughly and immediately."

Ratigan, who appeared in court in an orange jail jumpsuit, with his hands and feet shackled, softly acknowledged to U.S. District Judge Gary Fenner that he understood that each count carried a maximum sentence of 30 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

Ketchmark said the priest's plea means his victims won't have to go through a trial. Beyond that, the prosecutor said Ratigan gets very little from the plea deal, especially since the eight related counts that were dropped can be taken into consideration when he is sentenced.

"Our recommendation will be a virtual life sentence to ensure there's no opportunity for him to harm another child," Ketchmark said.

Rebecca Randles, a Kansas City attorney who has represented in civil suits dozens of people who said they were abused by priests, read a statement on behalf of victims' families saying they are relieved they don't have to relieve the abuse during testimony at a criminal trial.

"We're happy about this, that this chapter is coming to a close without our children being identified or having to testify in the trial process," Randles said. "We're glad that Shawn Ratigan is taking ownership for his actions and we appreciate the sensitivity with which the prosecution has treated our children."

The first case involved photos Ratigan took of a 6-year-old in June 2005, with her panties pulled aside and focusing on her genital area. Similar pictures were taken in May 2006 of a 2-year-old; between Sept. 1 and Nov. 1, 2007, of a 5-year-old; and between Aug. 1, 2008, and Sept. 1, 2009, of a girl who was 8 and 9 years old during that period.

All four of those resulted in guilty pleas for producing child porn. Ratigan also pleaded to attempting to produce child porn in July 2009 when he took close-up photos of the crotch area of a 7-year-old in a bathing suit.

Ratigan also is facing three child pornography charges in Clay County, which were filed in May 2011 after police received a flash drive from the priest's computer that contained hundreds of images of children, most of them clothed, with the focus on their crotch areas. Prosecutors alleged he photographed girls, sometimes under their skirts, in and around churches where he had worked in the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph.

Jim Roberts, a spokesman for the Clay County prosecutor's office, said Thursday that Ratigan's pleas in federal court won't have an impact on the state charges.

"We're still proceeding," he said.

Unlike the cases in the 2008 settlement that involved claims of abuse from decades ago, Ratigan was an acting priest whose behavior was reported to diocese officials in May 2010, seven months before hundreds of disturbing images were found on his laptop and a full year before church officials reported him to police.

Instead of reporting Ratigan to the state Division of Family Services, as required under Missouri law, Finn sent the priest out of state for a psychological examination then ordered him to stay at the Sisters of St. Francis of the Holy Eucharist, a facility in Independence, where he could say Mass for the sisters.

Finn also ordered Ratigan to avoid contact with children. Later, after the diocese received reports Ratigan had attended a St. Patrick's Day parade and a child's birthday party at the invitation of the child's parents, Finn ordered that police be given copies of the photos recovered from Ratigan's laptop.

After Ratigan was charged with child pornography, Finn apologized for how he had handled the situation and acknowledged that he waited a year before reading a report from a parish principal about Ratigan's behavior around children.

 

 

 

 

 




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