Sex-abuse claims’ overseer resigns
CONCORD, N.H. — A monitor appointed to oversee the handling of sexual-abuse claims at St. Paul’s School in New Hampshire has resigned, accusing campus officials of thwarting his efforts.
Jeffrey Maher was appointed as the school’s independent compliance overseer last year as part of an agreement with the attorney general’s office that subjected the school in Concord to up to five years of government oversight in lieu of criminal charges. The 2018 agreement followed an investigation that found credible evidence of abuse involving 20 former faculty members over several decades.
Maher, a former college safety director and police captain, resigned Monday, citing what he called “an intolerable working environment.” He said school leadership questioned many conditions of the agreement, discouraged investigations and tried to limit his access to information. He said an administrator publicly berated him and that he was retaliated against for trying to do his job.
“I have been criticized and accused of exceeding the scope of my responsibilities,” he wrote. “It would seem such accusations arrive only when I am less than laudatory of the school’s policies and protocols.”
In a statement, the school said it had raised concerned with the attorney general earlier this month about Maher acting outside his role. It denied all of his allegations, saying it has initiated numerous investigations into misconduct allegations. And it said if school officials had questioned conditions of the agreement, Maher would have been obligated to document those concerns in his reports, none of which included such allegations.