Chicago Sun-Times

Expert: ‘ Actuarial’ model says ex- priest unlikely to molest again

- BY ANDY GRIMM Staff Reporter Email: agrimm@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ agrimm34

Daniel McCormack, a former priest convicted of molesting children in his Chicago parish, is a minimal risk to abuse children if released from a state mental institutio­n, a state psychologi­st testified Thursday.

Raymond Wood, the former clinical director for the state’s Sexually Violent Person program, was the lone witness called by lawyers for the defrocked priest, who has been held at a state mental hospital since he was released from prison in 2009 after serving a sentence for sexually abusing five boys while he was pastor of St. Agatha’s Church.

Wood’s testimony set up a duel of experts for Judge Dennis Porter, who will have to rule on whether McCormack, who has been accused of abusing dozens of young boys in civil lawsuits, can be held in state custody indefinite­ly even after completing his sentence for aggravated criminal sexual abuse.

Wood, an expert on statistica­l evaluation­s on the likelihood that sex offenders will repeat their crimes, said that he is often outraged by what he reads in case files detailing their crimes, but believes that “actuarial” models are better predictors of future behavior than other methods.

“My wife complains that I’ll say as I read [ files] ‘ This is a really bad guy,’” Wood said. “But as a profession­al, I want to be engaging in the best profession­al standard that I can.”

Wood took the stand a day after a psychiatri­st had testified for the prosecutio­n, stating that McCormack was likely to victimize other children if released without court- ordered supervisio­n, citing a long history of McCormack groping younger men and boys dating back to before his ordination and continuing even after he was arrested in 2005.

Assistant Attorney General Joelle Marasco questioned whether Wood had factored in the large number of victims, and the fact the priest continued to molest multiple boys even though he’d been confronted by parents, then arrested, and told by supervisor­s that he was not to have contact with children or even continue his work as a teacher and basketball coach.

Wood was the third person to evaluate McCormack’s risk factors for harming more children, though the expriest has refused to answer questions citing pending civil and criminal cases against him, leaving his evaluators with only reports from Chicago Police investigat­ions and an internal review by the Chicago archdioces­e.

Before he was charged criminally, McCormack was sent by the church to a mental hospital for sex offenders in Maryland, where he denied being sexually attracted to children.

None of McCormack’s victims have taken the stand in the trial, and the courtroom gallery was all but empty save for a lawyer from the Chicago archdioces­e, which has paid out millions to settle lawsuits brought on behalf of children who say they were molested by McCormack.

Closing arguments are scheduled for Friday at 2 p. m. If Judge Porter rules that McCormack is a “sexually violent person,” he will be committed to a state facility for sex offenders indefinite­ly.

 ??  ?? Daniel McCormack | SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO
Daniel McCormack | SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO

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