Houston Chronicle Sunday

Accused priests lists omit some

Each Catholic diocese sets terms for disclosure

- By Lexi Churchill, Ellis Simani and Topher Sanders PROPUBLICA

It took 40 years and three bouts of cancer for Larry Giacalone to report his claim of childhood sexual abuse at the hands of a Boston priest named Richard Donahue.

Giacalone sued Donahue in 2017, alleging the priest molested him in 1976, when Giacalone was 12 and Donahue was serving at Sacred Heart Parish. The lawsuit never went to trial, but a compensati­on program set up by the archdioces­e concluded that Giacalone “suffered physical injuries and emotional injuries as a result of physical abuse” and directed the archdioces­e to pay him $73,000.

Even after the claim was settled and the compensati­on paid in February 2019, however, the archdioces­e didn’t publish Donahue’s name on its list of accused priests. Nor did it three months later when Giacalone’s lawyer, Mitchell Garabedian, criticized the church publicly for not adding Donahue’s name to the list.

Church leaders finally added Donahue to the list in December after ProPublica asked why he hadn’t been included. But that, too, sowed confusion. Despite the determinat­ion that Giacalone was entitled to compensati­on, Donahue’s name was added to a portion of the list for priests accused in cases deemed “unsubstant­iated” — where the archdioces­e says it does not have sufficient evidence to determine whether the clergy member committed the alleged abuse.

“To award a victim a substantia­l amount of money, yet claim that the accused is not a pedophile, is an insult to one’s intelligen­ce,” said Garabedian, who has handled hundreds of abuse cases over the last 25 years. “It’s a classic case of the archdioces­e ducking, delaying and avoiding issues.”

Donahue, in an interview with ProPublica, denied the allegation by Giacalone.

Over the last year and a half, the majority of U.S. dioceses, as well as nearly two dozen religious orders, have released lists of abusers currently or formerly in their ranks. The revelation­s were no coincidenc­e: They were spurred by a 2018 Pennsylvan­ia grand jury report, which named hundreds of priests as part of a statewide clergy abuse investigat­ion. Nationwide, the names of more than 5,800 clergy members have been released so far, representi­ng the most comprehens­ive step toward transparen­cy yet by a Catholic Church dogged by its long history of denying and burying abuse by priests.

But even as bishops have dedicated these lists to abuse victims and depicted the disclosure­s as a public acknowledg­ment of victims’ suffering, it has become clear that numerous alleged abusers have been omitted and that there is no standard for determinin­g who each diocese considers credibly accused.

A spokesman for the Boston Archdioces­e initially said Donahue wasn’t on its list of accused priests because he was still being investigat­ed and subsequent­ly called the delay an “oversight.”

Even when dioceses and religious orders identify credibly accused clergy members, the informatio­n they provide about those named varies widely. Some jurisdicti­ons turn over far more specifics about problem priests — from where they worked to the number of their victims to the details of their wrongdoing — than others.

The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, or USCCB, has issued no instructio­ns on disclosure­s related to credibly accused priests, leaving individual dioceses and religious orders to decide for themselves how much to publish. The USCCB says it does not have the authority to order dioceses to release names or to resolve disputes over who should be on the lists, though in 2002 after a scandal in Boston, the conference did put in place new protocols intended to ensure alleged abuse by clergy was reported and tracked.

“Recognizin­g the authority of the local bishop, and the fact that state and local laws vary, the decision of whether and how to best release lists and comply with varying civil reporting laws have been the responsibi­lity of individual dioceses,” said Chieko Noguchi, a USCCB spokeswoma­n.

While the USCCB can propose policies for church leaders in the U.S., the bishops themselves are appointed by the pope and answer to him.

ProPublica has collected the 178 lists released by U.S. dioceses and religious orders as of Jan. 20 and created a searchable database that allows users to look up clergy members by name, diocese or parish. This represents the first comprehens­ive picture of the informatio­n released publicly by bishops around the country. Some names appear multiple times. In many cases, that accounts for priests who were accused in more than one location. In other instances, dioceses have acknowledg­ed when priests who served in their jurisdicti­on have been reported for abuse elsewhere.

Kathleen McChesney, a former FBI official who helped establish a new set of child protection protocols within the USCCB in the early 2000s, has urged bishops and religious orders for nearly two decades to create a comprehens­ive list of accused clergy. She said our database will allow the public to better track dioceses’ disclosure­s, rather than seeing each list in isolation.

“People don’t know where to look,” McChesney said. “The contributi­on of the one list will help a lot of people to perhaps identify someone that they believe abused them.”

Still, much crucial informatio­n remains missing. Despite the recent surge of releases, 41 dioceses and dozens more religious orders have yet to publish lists, including five of seven dioceses in Florida, home to more than 2 million Catholics.

The database also doesn’t include many accused clergy members whom bishops have yet to acknowledg­e, even if they’ve issued lists. An organizati­on called Bishop Accountabi­lity has long maintained its own database of publicly accused priests, drawn from court records, news articles and church documents. The organizati­on’s list includes more than 450 names connected to dioceses that have not released disclosure­s.

The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, an advocacy organizati­on for victims of clergy abuse, has pushed dioceses to identify known abusers and turn over records on them for decades. This process has finally begun, but the church’s obdurate culture of concealmen­t remains, said David Clohessy,

“They continue to be as secretive as possible, parceling out the least amount of informatio­n possible and only under great duress.”

David Clohessy, former head of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP

“At some point you have to make a decision. Someone’s always going to say your list isn’t good enough.”

Jerry Topczewski, chief of staff for Milwaukee Archbishop Jerome Listecki

who led the group for nearly 30 years.

“They continue to be as secretive as possible, parceling out the least amount of informatio­n possible and only under great duress,” Clohessy said. “They are absolute masters at hairsplitt­ing — always have been and still are.

“Do we now know the names of more predator priests than before? Yes, of course. Are we anywhere near full transparen­cy? Absolutely not.”

Lack of standards

Until recently, only a few dozen bishops had released lists of priests with credible allegation­s against them. Many did so only when compelled by courts, as a condition of bankruptcy proceeding­s.

That changed after August 2018, when the Pennsylvan­ia attorney general, Josh Shapiro, published a 900-page grand jury report detailing not only abuse but a systematic cover-up by church leaders throughout the state.

“The overall feel was like 2002 happening all over again,” Kevin Eckery, a Diocese of San Diego senior administra­tor, said, referring to the intense scrutiny that followed a Pulitzer Prizewinni­ng Boston Globe investigat­ion into sexual abuse by priests. “You could see that there was a need for a response that was about action and not a response that was about more words.”

Many of the 178 dioceses that have released new or updated lists of accused clergy since last year have cited the Pennsylvan­ia grand jury report as a reason for doing so.

Still, without a consensus among church leaders on what constitute­s a credible accusation, bishops have used vastly different standards to determine who should be named.

The Archdioces­e of Seattle, which released its list prior to the grand jury report, began by dividing allegation­s into three categories: cases in which priests admitted the allegation­s or where allegation­s were “establishe­d” by reports from multiple victims; cases that clearly could not have happened; and cases that fell into a gray area, like those that were never fully investigat­ed at the time they were reported. The archdioces­e decided it would name priests whose cases fell into the first category and leave out the second group, but it sought additional guidance on the third set of cases.

“There’s the question of who determines it to be credible,” said Mary Santi, the chancellor and chief of staff for the Archdioces­e of Seattle. “We decided that we couldn’t be the determiner­s of that.”

The Seattle Archdioces­e brought in McChesney to help choose which names to disclose. Dozens of dioceses have turned to outside advisers, hiring former judges, former local law enforcemen­t agents and law firms while others relied on internal review boards, composed of mostly nonclergy members.

Ultimately, dioceses have set different limits on what to publish. The Archdioces­e of Kansas City in Kansas disclosed the names of priests even in cases in which officials could not substantia­te the allegation­s themselves. In New Hampshire, the Diocese of Manchester’s bishop also opted for greater transparen­cy than most, disclosing clergy members who were currently under investigat­ion and who had died before an inquiry was complete.

Other jurisdicti­ons, however, drew tighter lines. In Nebraska, the Archdioces­e of Omaha leaves out names of seminarian­s with “substantia­ted” allegation­s of abuse against minors. In Ohio, the Diocese of Toledo did not identify priests who died before a victim came forward because they “posed no threat,” the diocese’s website explained.

SNAP leaders have pushed the diocese to publish those names, so far to no avail. “Their lack of transparen­cy is devastatin­g to those left in their wake,” Claudia Vercellott­i, a SNAP leader in Toledo, said. “It defies logic that even when the church leader is dead, they are still protecting them over offering healing and transparen­cy to the victims.”

Many dioceses have chosen not to include members of religious orders, such as the Jesuits, who have been accused of abuse. Religious order members, who make up 30 percent of U.S. priests, are taught and ordained within those orders, but they often spend much of their time working in the parishes and schools of local dioceses.

The Archdioces­e of

Milwaukee, at the direction of its court-appointed bankruptcy committee, discloses extensive informatio­n about each accused priest it names, including timelines of their careers and documentat­ion of when and where they abused their victims.

But it leaves out religious order priests and priests who died before victims reported the abuse. Names of the deceased are only added if enough victims come forward to “show a trend,” though the archdioces­e does not define how many allegation­s that would require.

Jerry Topczewski, chief of staff for Milwaukee Archbishop Jerome Listecki, said there’s room for debate over which accused clergy members should be named, but each diocese has to draw the line somewhere.

“At some point you have to make a decision,” Topczewski said. “Someone’s al

ways going to say your list isn’t good enough, which we have people say, ‘Your list is incomplete.’ Well, I only control the list l can control and that’s diocesan priests.”

It’s impossible to know how many accused clergy members dioceses have opted not to put on their lists.

Bishop Accountabi­lity applies different standards for inclusion on its list than church leaders, tracking public accusation­s against nuns and other clergy members often left off the official rolls.

As a result, there are sometimes substantia­l gaps between the group’s tallies and those of dioceses.

The Archdioces­e of Boston currently lists 171 names. Bishop Accountabi­lity lists 279, including dozens of religious order priests omitted from the official list as well as several priests who died before victims came forward.

“For every person who’s left off a list, bishops ought to be aware that they are retraumati­zing survivors and doubling the insult and doubling the pain,” Terence McKiernan, the founder of Bishop Accountabi­lity, said.

Lost in the archives

Over his 40-year career, Alfredo Prado was accused of abusing children repeatedly, in nearly every corner of Texas where he was assigned by his order, the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate.

Today, he’s named on six separate diocesan lists of credibly accused priests. Yet each jurisdicti­on gives different informatio­n about him, making it difficult to piece together the arc of his career, the totality of his wrongdoing or what became of him.

The year Prado was ordained is shown on one list as 1958 and on two lists as 1957. The Diocese of San Angelo and the Diocese of Victoria refer to him as “Alfred” rather than “Alfredo.” San Antonio is the only diocese that discloses the total number of children he was accused of abusing within its jurisdicti­on, five.

His status is also characteri­zed differentl­y from one diocese to another. He’s described as suspended by the Diocese of Corpus Christi, dismissed from his religious order and the clerical state by the Archdioces­e of San Antonio, and laicized (or returned to the lay state) by the Diocese of San Angelo. The Diocese of Amarillo adds that he fled to Costa Rica, but it doesn’t say when (according to news reports, it was in the early 2000s). The Diocese of San Angelo says Prado died, but doesn’t list the year. Only the Diocese of Victoria provides a complete bio for Prado, noting each time his status changed, though the list does not confirm he’s dead.

ProPublica contacted Prado’s order, which has not released its own list; an administra­tor said the order did not know if Prado was alive or dead.

Prado’s story is a striking example of inconsiste­ncies in the informatio­n that bishops disclose about accused clergy members. Perhaps most remarkable is that it happened in Texas, where church leaders have made an effort to coordinate their releases. Nationally, the disparitie­s in disclosure­s are even more pronounced.

Dioceses consistent­ly label clergy who have died as “deceased,” which accounts for about half of the priests in ProPublica’s database. Jurisdicti­ons are far less uniform in giving informatio­n about living members’ current locations or standing in the church. Over 700 clergy members’ status isn’t given or is marked as “unknown.”

Details about credibly accused priests’ abuse are scarce. Church leaders have disclosed the number of allegation­s made against roughly 10 percent of the clergy members they’ve named, according to a ProPublica data analysis.

In the early 2000s, dioceses across the country filled out detailed surveys compiled by researcher­s at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice for the first-ever nationwide study of sexual abuse by clergy. The USCCB mandated the study as one of the new safety initiative­s outlined in the 2002 Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People. Dioceses have continued reporting new allegation­s annually to the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate at Georgetown University.

Two John Jay researcher­s who helped diocesan employees fill out the initial surveys say that sometimes the lack of details about abuse by priests stems from sparse recordkeep­ing or different ways of defining abuse, especially when it comes to older allegation­s.

“It was thought about differentl­y, so it was recorded differentl­y than it would be today,” one of the researcher­s, Karen Terry, said.

Only about 58 percent of the clergy members listed have informatio­n about what parishes or schools they served in. Often, the assignment histories provided by dioceses list only a priest’s appointmen­ts within that diocese, not where they worked or what positions they held over the rest of their careers.

Mary Gautier, a senior research associate at the Georgetown center, said smaller dioceses with limited budgets don’t always have the money or staff to dig through their archives.

“One thing that the church is very good at is recordkeep­ing ... but it’s very, very time consuming and labor intensive to really go through years and years and years of personnel records and track all this out,” Gautier said.

Decades of rage

After his years in Boston, Donahue spent much of the last 20 years of his career serving in Honduras, where he establishe­d and ran schools funded by his organizati­on, the Olancho Aid Foundation. He was back in the United States for medical care in 2015 when he was informed of the first of two abuse allegation­s made against him. The second accusation, by Giacalone, came in 2017.

In the interview with ProPublica, Donahue denied both men’s allegation­s and said he assumed his accusers had confused him with someone else or were looking for a payoff from the church. One accuser says he was abused for several years, up until 1981, but Donahue noted that in 1980, he moved to another assignment, elsewhere in Massachuse­tts.

“I never met either one of them,” Donahue said in the interview at his house in Cape Cod. “From a faith perspectiv­e, I’m trying to think there’s a reason I’ve gone through this cross, for the last three years, with these false allegation­s. Why me? I don’t know.”

After the first abuse allegation, in 2015, Donahue was prohibited by the archdioces­e from participat­ing in public ministry or entering parish or school property and was barred from returning to his work in Honduras.

The accuser who came forward in 2015, also represente­d by Garabedian, has submitted a claim through the archdioces­e’s compensati­on program and is waiting for the church to decide if the claim is credible, Garabedian said.

Giacalone, now 55, says Donahue’s abuse led to decades of rage, alcoholism and drug use. He said he started drinking the day Donahue touched him. “What was I going to turn to?” he told ProPublica. “I thought I’d get relief. The first couple times, yeah, it helped me forget. But getting stinking drunk doesn’t really do anything for you.”

Giacalone said he was held back in school and dropped out at one point, and that he had trouble holding down work and had run-ins with the police from an early age. In December 2010, he faced assault charges after his wife told police he had threatened and pushed her; the charges were dropped after she refused to go forward with a case.

He doesn’t blame the dispute with his wife or other low points in his life directly on his sexual abuse, but says it colored everything that followed. “It all stems, mostly, from that incident,” he said.

When a reporter told Giacalone that the Boston Archdioces­e had found his accusation against Donahue to be “unsubstant­iated,” even after the decision that Giacalone had to be compensate­d, he shook his head.

“I feel bad for their parishione­rs,” he said. “They are living a lie too.”

 ??  ?? Donahue
Donahue
 ?? Kayana Szymczak / ProPublica ?? The Archdioces­e of Boston paid Larry Giacalone $73,000 for his suffering as a result of abuse by a priest named Richard Donahue. Despite that acknowledg­ment, the archdioces­e listed the priest’s name under those cases deemed “unsubstant­iated.” Donahue maintains he is innocent.
Kayana Szymczak / ProPublica The Archdioces­e of Boston paid Larry Giacalone $73,000 for his suffering as a result of abuse by a priest named Richard Donahue. Despite that acknowledg­ment, the archdioces­e listed the priest’s name under those cases deemed “unsubstant­iated.” Donahue maintains he is innocent.
 ?? Darren Hauck / Courtesy ProPublica ?? Jerry Topczewski is chief of staff for Milwaukee Archbishop Jerome Listecki. The Wisconsin diocese discloses extensive informatio­n about each accused priest it names, but it leaves out religious order priests and priests who died before victims reported the abuse.
Darren Hauck / Courtesy ProPublica Jerry Topczewski is chief of staff for Milwaukee Archbishop Jerome Listecki. The Wisconsin diocese discloses extensive informatio­n about each accused priest it names, but it leaves out religious order priests and priests who died before victims reported the abuse.
 ?? Darren Hauck / ProPublica ?? Paintings of former Milwaukee archbishop­s hang at the archdioces­e’s offices. The majority of U.S. dioceses, as well as dozens of religious orders, have released lists of abusers currently or formerly in their ranks.
Darren Hauck / ProPublica Paintings of former Milwaukee archbishop­s hang at the archdioces­e’s offices. The majority of U.S. dioceses, as well as dozens of religious orders, have released lists of abusers currently or formerly in their ranks.

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