BishopAccountability.org

Irish priest who claimed he had sex with a murder victim accused of raping a schoolgirl

By Craig Mcdonald
Irish Mirror
March 26, 2018

https://www.irishmirror.ie/news/irish-news/irish-priest-who-claimed-sex-12251876

Fr Gerry Nugent has been accused of raping a school girl

Father Gerry Nugent, the priest at the centre of the trial of murdered Polish woman Angelika Kluk

Angelika Kluk

Serial killer Peter Tobin
Photo by Danny Lawson

A disgraced Irish priest who claimed he had sex with a murder victim has been accused of raping a schoolgirl.

The accuser is now aged 51 and is to launch a civil action against the Church over the alleged attacks that she says destroyed her life.

The woman – who asked to be identified only as Teresa – said Fr Gerry Nugent made his way into her life when she went to stay with her gran as a vulnerable 11-year-old.

She claims the disgraced cleric – who died from a heart attack in 2010 – subjected her to two years of sexual abuse before raping her for the first time days after her 13th birthday.

Teresa, who lives in Glasgow, said: “I objected but he said it was OK, that this is what the priest does with his special ones.

“He said I had been approved to be a special one.

“I told my gran but she was furious and told me I was evil – and I just let him do what he wanted.”

Shamed Nugent – who was born in Dublin – was removed as parish priest following the murder of Angelika Kluk whose body was found in his church, St Patrick’s in Anderston, Glasgow, in 2006.

Polish national Angelika was murdered by serial killer Peter Tobin who had been unwittingly hired as a handyman at the church. During Tobin’s murder trial, at which he was found guilty, lurid details about Nugent’s sexual activity with prostitutes and Angelika were heard.

Teresa hopes that speaking out will encourage other victims to come forward. She added: “I’ve been struggling to cope with what Nugent put me through.

“I contacted the church and told them what had happened and they agreed to pay for counselling.

“But someone from within the church told me to take legal advice and that is what I’ve done.

“I’d visit my gran and Nugent was her priest and friend. He made my gran happy. He’d tell jokes and had lots of stories and I adored him. My gran used to refer to alcohol as the devil – yet he was the only one she didn’t mind having a drink.

“I was about 11 when he started doing things which I felt uncomfortable about. He’d hold me or stroke me – like some kind of pet cat.

“One time he put his arms around me and started rubbing himself on me. He raped me just after I turned 13 and gave me a gift for my birthday.

“But my gran took it off me as a woman from the church had one similar that had gone missing.”

Teresa claims the abuse continued until she was 15, when her gran died.

She added: “She passed away suddenly and that was it – I said I didn’t want anything to do with him. He said that I was evil, just as my gran had said. I felt nothing when I saw in the news he had died.”

There was standing room only at Nugent’s funeral when he died, aged 66. The service was conducted by Archbishop of Glasgow Mario Conti, one of Scotland’s most senior churchmen, who paid a carefully-worded tribute to a man with a “big heart”.

Three years previously, Archbishop Conti had relieved Nugent of his parish duties as a catalogue of transgressions were made public.

Angelika was found murdered under the floorboards of Nugent’s church and during killer Tobin’s trial, Dublin-born Nugent claimed he had a sexual relationship with the student while she was living at the church’s chapel house.

The alcoholic was also found guilty of contempt of court after failing to give straight answers to questions while giving evidence.

He was forced to retire and the Catholic Church issued an apology over his behaviour.

After his death, it emerged he also used prostitutes in the chapel house.

There had been numerous complaints to the church about his sexual advances toward vulnerable members of his flock.

At a previous parish in Glasgow’s Ruchill, he came to the attention of Strathclyde Police when a woman accused him of rape.

Teresa said: “I didn’t go to the police when I decided to come forward as I knew he was already dead.

“I first approached the church instead in 2015, and Archbishop Tartaglia sat and listened and said he believed me completely.

“Meetings continued but the barriers came down last year and they said they wanted me to get a lawyer so I could apply for compensation.

“I asked, ‘How much is appropriate for multiple rapes of a child?’

“I don’t want money for foreign holidays or frivolous reasons. I want it so I can continue my counselling for as long as I feel I need it.

“I want to get my health and life back on track. It has affected every aspect of my life for more than 30 years.”

A spokesman for the Archdiocese of Glasgow said: “The church has apologised unreservedly to all who have been affected in any way by abuse by the clergy. Such abuse is evil and indefensible.

“The person in this case brought her case to the attention of the church several years ago and we’ve been in supportive and sympathetic dialogue.”




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