Chicago Sun-Times

PRIEST IN SEX ABUSE PROBE TO MOVE AWAY FROM CATHOLIC GRADE SCHOOL AMID FUROR

- ROBERT HERGUTH REPORTS,

When a student reported last year that she had seen an image of a naked boy on the Rev. Richard McGrath’s cellphone, the priest, who was president of Providence Catholic High School in New Lenox, was asked by the school and the police to hand over the phone.

McGrath refused, which officials say effectivel­y killed an investigat­ion by the police. Their focus later turned to accusation­s that the priest sexually abused another student at the far southwest suburban school in the 1990s — allegation­s that Will County prosecutor­s are reviewing and which also are the subject of a lawsuit by that former student.

McGrath, 71, was removed from Providence after the initial allegation­s surfaced in December. Since then, the Chicago Sun-Times has learned, he moved to the St. John Stone Friary, a four-story monastery in Hyde Park run by the Augustinia­n order of priests that’s across an alley from a preschool and around the corner from a Catholic grade school.

The Archdioces­e of Chicago, the Catholic Church’s arm in Cook and Lake counties, says it was informed McGrath had moved to the South Side building. But it didn’t notify the preschool operator or its own St. Thomas the Apostle grade school.

On Friday, after the Sun-Times reported that online, Cardinal Blase Cupich sent a letter to the parish and school communitie­s “to apologize for the distress this situation has caused” and said that, at his request, the priest would move.

“We have asked the Augustinia­ns to move Father McGrath from the friary immediatel­y, and they have agreed to do so,” Cupich wrote. “We will conduct an additional review of all religious communitie­s in Chicago with regard to their members residing in our diocese.”

The man who is accusing McGrath of abusing him held a news conference in April, when he filed his lawsuit, spelling out what he says the priest did. And the police have publicly said they are investigat­ing.

Despite that, Cupich says the archdioces­e was unaware of the sexual abuse allegation­s.

“When my office was notified by the Augustinia­n order that Father McGrath had been moved to St. John Stone Friary, it mentioned allegation­s that he had ‘inappropri­ate material’ on his mobile phone and had completed safe-environmen­t training,” Cupich wrote. “It said nothing about an allegation of sexual abuse against him. Had they fully informed us of his status, we would not have permitted him to live there.”

In a written statement issued before Cupich’s letter went out, the Augustinia­n order — to which McGrath belongs and which operates Providence — says it “has cooperated fully with civil authoritie­s” and that McGrath “has been removed from all public ministry and is living in a supervised environmen­t.”

The order’s statement also says, “There has been no allegation” that McGrath — who previously worked at St. Rita High School on the Southwest Side — “has harmed any child during the time he has been subject to this supervisio­n.”

The order did not respond to a question about why it was sheltering McGrath even though he refused to give the police his phone, which the school was paying for.

Across the alley from the monastery, the nonprofit Chicago Child Care Society runs a preschool program and has a play lot. Around the corner is the St. Thomas the Apostle Grade School.

Dara Munson, chief executive officer of the Chicago Child Care Society, says she hadn’t known of McGrath’s presence, but it would have been “nice for us to be made aware.”

“The archdioces­e should have known” about McGrath’s presence “and let the school know,” says a member of the St. Thomas community who spoke only on the condition of not being identified by name. “It’s outrageous. This is exactly the kind of backwards s--that makes people stop going to church, stop sending their kids to Catholic school.”

Cupich, who recently boasted about the archdioces­e’s protocols for dealing with priest sex abuse, declined an interview request.

The lawsuit against Providence and the Augustinia­ns was filed by Robert Krankvich of Crest Hill, who accuses McGrath of abusing him when he was a student at the Will County school for two years in the mid-1990s. He says McGrath threatened him to keep quiet.

While diocesan priests generally are tied to specific churches and geographic regions and report to local bishops, religious orders operate somewhat independen­tly.

Marc Pearlman, a lawyer for the former Providence student who’s suing, says that however McGrath ended up living so close to children, “It’s not acceptable.”

McGrath’s attorney couldn’t be reached.

One of McGrath’s colleagues at the Hyde Park friary let a SunTimes reporter into the building on Wednesday, called McGrath’s extension and handed off the phone. McGrath picked up but declined to comment.

“WE HAVE ASKED THE AUGUSTINIA­NS TO MOVE FATHER MCGRATH FROM THE FRIARY IMMEDIATEL­Y, AND THEY HAVE AGREED TO DO SO.”

CARDINAL BLASE CUPICH

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 ?? SUN-TIMES FILES ?? The Rev. Richard McGrath
SUN-TIMES FILES The Rev. Richard McGrath

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