Lowell priest charged with soliciting a prostitute

LOWELL (MA)
Lowell Sun

By Grant Welker, gwelker@lowellsun.com
UPDATED: 08/06/2013

LOWELL — Monsignor Arthur Coyle, a top official in the Merrimack Valley area for the Archdiocese of Boston, was arrested Sunday and charged with soliciting a prostitute, after having been spotted by police circling around known prostitution spots in the city more than a dozen times in the past 10 months.

Coyle, who has lived at St. Rita’s Parish rectory on Mammoth Road for the last year, allegedly drove to the back of a cemetery off Boston Road with a woman in the passenger’s seat who is a known prostitute, according to police. He had paid her $40 for oral sex, police said.

The archdiocese announced Monday afternoon that Coyle has taken a voluntary administrative leave as a result of the charges. While on leave, he is prohibited from performing any public ministry, which will last until an outcome is reached on the case, the office said. …

Coyle, 62, was honored last December — a month after he allegedly was first stopped for suspected solicitation in Lowell — by Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley and Pope Benedict XVI when he was given the title of Prelate of Honor, a rank within the title of monsignor. In a statement at the time, O’Malley credited Coyle for “exemplary service” throughout his priesthood and said Coyle’s leadership as episcopal vicar would be “of great assistance” as the archdiocese moved ahead with plans to reorganize some parishes. …

Three police officers in Lowell’s Special Investigations Section, which investigates drug and prostitution crimes, spotted Coyle on Sunday allegedly driving on Branch Street, near spots known for prostitution. Officers were familiar with Coyle’s black Chevrolet Equinox, seeing him circle around the areas at night “well over a dozen times” since he was first stopped last November, Officer Rafael Rivera said in his report.

Officers routinely keep track of vehicles they see frequently pass through an area known for prostitution or drug-dealing, police spokesman Capt. Kelly Richardson said. Officers in an unmarked car Sunday saw a known prostitute in Coyle’s vehicle so they followed him as he drove to a secluded area, he said.

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