Truro News

Ex-Catholic bishop of Phoenix accused of sexually abusing boy

- BY JACQUES BILLEAUD

A former bishop who led the Roman Catholic church in metro Phoenix during a worldwide child sexual abuse scandal has been accused of molesting a young boy 35 years ago.

Retired Bishop Thomas O’Brien is accused in a lawsuit of sexually abusing the boy on several occasions at parishes in Phoenix and Goodyear from 1977 to 1982. The Diocese of Phoenix says O’Brien denies the allegation.

O’Brien, now 81, led the diocese in Phoenix as it became embroiled in a global scandal that rocked the Catholic church after allegation­s surfaced in Boston about pedophile priests going unpunished.

The bishop acknowledg­ed in a 2003 immunity deal that he let church employees accused of sex abuse continue to have contact with children. Weeks after the deal, O’Brien resigned as bishop after he was arrested in the hitand-run death of a pedestrian.

O’Brien’s accuser says the clergyman sexually abused him when he was a child and he had suppressed his memories of it, said Tim Hale, his lawyer.

The accuser, who is now 47 and lives in the Tucson area, started having flashbacks of the abuse in September 2014 when preparing for his son’s baptism into the Catholic church, Hale said.

“It has turned his life upside down,” Hale said, explaining that his client has suffered profound emotional distress.

Hale said his client’s allegation is being investigat­ed by the Phoenix Police Department, which refused to comment.

The diocese issued a statement saying O’Brien denies the accusation and that he was never assigned to the schools and parishes where the abuse is alleged to have occurred. The statement also said the diocese informed prosecutor­s about the allegation immediatel­y after learning of it in September 2016.

O’Brien’s 2003 immunity agreement said a grand jury investigat­ing church sex abuse allegation­s at the time didn’t find evidence that the bishop had engaged in sexual misconduct.

Amanda Jacinto, a spokeswoma­n for the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office, said the immunity deal will remain in place, meaning the bishop could not be prosecuted for letting church employees suspected of sex abuse be around children.

But Jacinto said the agreement would not prevent prosecutor­s from bringing a case against O’Brien if there’s evidence that he sexually abused a child.

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