|  | Nailed?Bishop Tod Brown and His Undisclosed Molestation Accusation
 
 By Gustavo Arellano
 Orange County Weekly
 April 24, 2007
 
 http://www.ocweekly.com/news/news/nailed/27055/
 [See also other 
        articles by Gustavo Arellano.]
 Orange County Catholicism hasn't quite been the same ever since Bishop 
        Tod D. Brown made like Martin Luther and hammered a document to the doors 
        of Holy Family Cathedral in early 2004. That document, titled "The 
        Covenant With the Faithful," featured seven theses that Brown claimed 
        represented a new era of transparency for a diocese long plagued by priestly 
        pedophilia and its cover-up by Church and even county leaders.
 [Documents discussed in this article:• • •• Hicks 
        to Steinbock Accusing Brown (7/3/97)
 • Steinbock's 
        Reply (7/11/97)
 • Gordon 
        on Investigation (8/6/97)
 • Gordon 
        on Single Allegation (9/29/97)
 • Hicks 
        to Mahony Accusing Brown (3/10/02)
 • Cox's 
        Reply (3/26/02)]
 
 He especially pointed the faithful to the fourth thesis: "We will 
        work collaboratively with all members of the diocese to promote an atmosphere 
        of openness and trust, and empower them as partners in parochial affairs 
        and thereby create a new era for our Church in Orange County."
 
 But the promises quickly proved a PR sham, as His Excellency reverted 
        to secrecy and stonewalling in dealing with the victims of priests and 
        lay workers who once roamed the county's parishes with little fear of 
        punishment. When Brown did as he promised and finally released the names 
        of accused priests serving in the Orange diocese just a month after his 
        public nailing, it came in the form of a one-page press release. The names 
        were bunched together in one paragraph, one after another, without explanation—no 
        corresponding years of service or number of accusers. And while the Orange 
        diocese settled with more than 90 victims for $100 million at the end 
        of 2004, it still fought with lawyers to block the release of personnel 
        files that revealed church complicity in molestations.
 
 Nevertheless, Brown continues to show off his "Covenant With the 
        Faithful"; it remains tacked at Holy Family Cathedral and a picture 
        of the occasion is prominently featured on the Diocese of Orange's website.
 
 But according to church records, that single nail seems to have caught 
        Brown in a lie—or at least an inconsistency between his public pronouncements 
        and the paper trail.
 
 Documents obtained by the Weekly reveal that church officials have investigated 
        an allegation of sexual abuse against Brown—yet Brown has never 
        uttered a word on the matter.
 
 On July 3, 1997, a man we'll call Larry (the Weekly doesn't disclose the 
        name of alleged sexual-abuse victims without their permission) wrote 
        to the Diocese of Fresno stating, "I was sexually molested by Father 
        Todd [sic] Brown when I was 12 years old in 1965," while the future 
        bishop served at Our Lady of Perpetual Help in Bakersfield. During psychological 
        counseling, Larry claimed to realize that "the abuse perpetrated 
        on me by Father Brown was not a fantasy, but a detailed memory."
 
 He asked that the Diocese of Fresno "investigate the possibility 
        that Father Brown is still perpetrating himself on children under the 
        guise of trust as a priest."
 
 Fresno Bishop John T. Steinbock responded 
        to Larry a week later. Steinbock asked Larry to undergo a psychological 
        examination before proceeding with any investigation. The bishop also 
        noted that "the priest in question has been ordained 34 years, has 
        led an exemplary life, and has never had any such allegation against him 
        in all those years." At the time, Brown was the bishop of Boise.
 
 The next correspondence between Larry and the Fresno diocese occurred 
        on Aug. 6, 1997. In that letter, 
        diocesan director of human resources R. Patrick Gordon wrote that a preliminary 
        investigation "does not reveal any inappropriate behavior beyond 
        your letter," and that Larry should not "be concerned about 
        other persons" having possibly suffered abuse at the hands of Brown. 
        On Sept. 29, Gordon wrote 
        again and repeated what Steinbock had previously expressed: there 
        were no other records of molestation allegations against Brown, save for 
        Larry's. "His [Brown's] life, as we know it, has been an extremely 
        public one and subject to scrutiny and investigation," Gordon wrote. 
        "We are confident that should there have been any other complaints 
        similar in nature to your memory, they would have been discovered and 
        addressed."
 
 This isn't the first time Steinbock's name has been associated with the 
        Orange diocese's sex-abuse scandal. He graduated from St. John's Seminary 
        in Camarillo—a notorious breeding ground for pedophile priests—in 
        1963, the same year as Brown, and served as auxiliary bishop in the Orange 
        diocese in the mid-1980s. Steinbock also played a key role in sending 
        Orange County's most notorious pedo-priest, Eleuterio Ramos, to Tijuana 
        after Ramos admitted to church officials that he had molested (see "King 
        of the County Pedophiles," Dec. 14, 2005). Larry claims that 
        Steinbock told Larry he had notified Brown about the matter.
 
 The Weekly called Jesse Avila, director of communications for the Fresno 
        diocese, to verify the existence of Larry's letters. "This is the 
        first time I heard of this," Avila replied and promised he'd look 
        through the diocesan archives for copies of the letters. He didn't respond 
        by press time.
 Five years after his correspondence with Steinbock, Larry wrote to church 
      officials about Brown again. On March 10, 2002, Larry sent a letter 
      to Archdiocese of Los Angeles Cardinal Roger Mahony about his alleged abuse 
      at the hands of Brown. By this time, Brown was bishop of the Diocese of 
      Orange and beginning to deal with the sex-abuse scandal he inherited from 
      previous bishops. Larry claimed Gordon told him that Brown "was an 
      administrator and that he had no more contact with children."
 
 It's not clear why Larry wrote to Mahony, since the cardinal's only connection 
      with Brown is that both graduated from St. John's just a year apart. Nevertheless, 
      Mahony's office responded: on March 26, 2002, then-Vicar for Clergy Craig 
      A. Cox wrote to Larry that he "profoundly regret[ted] that you 
      yourself experienced childhood sexual abuse. ... While our human condition 
      means we can never expect to root out all sinfulness, we will do our best 
      to prevent child abuse and to assure the integrity of the Church's ministry. 
      Please pray for the success of these efforts." No record exists, however, 
      of whether Cox or Mahony told Brown about the allegation. Larry also wrote 
      to Boston Cardinal Bernard Law, but his office never responded.
 
 Brown isn't the first bishop accused of sexual abuse. In the early 1990s, a man accused Archdiocese of Chicago Cardinal Joseph Bernardin of abuse but later recanted. Mahony was accused in 2002, but Fresno police quickly dropped the charge after the accuser couldn't provide evidence other than her admittedly schizophrenic memory. As a result, Mahony included himself in the Los Angeles Archdiocese's 2004 "Report to the People of God," a recounting of all the Los Angeles-area priests ever accused of sexual abuse.
 
 Brown, however, has never publicly disclosed the allegations that Larry made against him. The Orange diocese did not return calls from the Weekly seeking comment for this story.
 
 Sources familiar with the Orange diocese sex-abuse scandal told the Weekly they've never heard of a molestation allegation lodged against Brown; and if he were to honor his "Covenant With the Faithful," he would have already disclosed such an accusation. The sources also question why Brown wouldn't have publicly acknowledged the existence of Larry's complaints—if, as Larry claims, Steinbock alerted Brown about the matter in 1997.
 
 "I've reviewed the documents," says Ryan DiMaria, a Newport Beach-based lawyer with the well-known firm Manly & McGuire and himself a victim of sex abuse at the hands of an Orange County Catholic priest. "Based on my prior experience, they appear authentic and very troubling."
 
 Larry is currently mulling his legal options. He admits to not having approached the Orange diocese or Brown with his story, but only because "it's been a process for me to even talk about the matter." He expects waves of skepticism to greet him, but Larry doesn't care. "I can handle whatever may come," he says.
 
 Contact: garellano@ocweekly.com
 
 
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