Houston Chronicle

Church hid priest’s abuse of 50 for decades

Even more victims may surface after diocese admission

- By Ryan J. Foley

FORT DODGE, Iowa — A Roman Catholic diocese acknowledg­ed Wednesday that it concealed for decades a priest’s admission that he sexually abused dozens of Iowa boys — a silence that may have put other children in danger.

The Rev. Jerome Coyle, now 85, was stripped of his parish assignment­s in the 1980s but never defrocked. And it was not until this week, after the Associated Press inquired about him, that he was publicly identified by the church as an admitted pedophile, even though the Diocese of Sioux City had been aware of his conduct for 32 years.

The diocese recently helped Coyle move into a retirement home in Fort Dodge, Iowa, without informing administra­tors at the Catholic school across the street.

In 1986, Coyle reported his “history of sexual attraction to and contact with boys” to Sioux City’s bishop, revealing that he had victimized approximat­ely 50 youngsters over a 20-year period while serving in several Iowa parishes , according to a private letter written in February by the diocese vicar general and obtained by the AP.

The diocese told the AP on Wednesday that it never contacted police or informed the public after Coyle’s admission.

“The diocese admits it could have been handled better,” diocese spokeswoma­n Susan O’Brien said.

Church officials transferre­d him to a treatment center in New Mexico, the Servants of the Paraclete, where other accused priests were once commonly sent. Coyle was stripped of his ability to lead Mass and otherwise function as a priest. But he never faced further punishment and lived in Albuquerqu­e, N.M., until recently.

In 1986, the diocese was aware of one complaint against Coyle from a college student but did not have that man’s name, O’Brien said. That individual and another now-adult victim have come forward in recent weeks, and their allegation­s against Coyle will be reported to police, she said.

His total number of victims could be higher than 50 because the diocese remains “uncertain of an accurate number,” O’Brien said.

Coyle is unlikely to be prosecuted for any of his long-ago offenses because the statute of limitation has run out. He has not been named in any civil suits,.

He has not been publicly accused of molesting any minors in the past three decades, but detectives are looking into what he has been up to since 1986. Fort Dodge police interviewe­d Coyle and searched his apartment last month after being tipped that he was living near a school.

Coyle declined to comment Friday after answering the door at his apartment.

The case has come to light amid a push by prosecutor­s around the country to hold the church accountabl­e, not just for the sexual abuse of youngsters but for efforts to shield accused priests. In recent months, authoritie­s in at least a dozen states have opened investigat­ions, and federal prosecutor­s have launched an unpreceden­ted statewide probe in Pennsylvan­ia.

The diocese privately revealed Coyle’s past in a letter to a Catholic couple who had been allowing Coyle to live at their Albuquerqu­e home after he was injured in a 2017 car accident. The letter warned the couple, Reuben and Tania Ortiz, that the diocese “cannot condone the risk you take” in allowing Coyle to live with their three teenage children.

 ?? Tania and Reuben Ortiz via Associated Press ?? Reuben Ortiz holds photo of the Rev. Jerome Coyle in Albuquerqu­e, N.M. Ortiz says he was angered to learn that Coyle, who had been living at his home, was a serial abuser.
Tania and Reuben Ortiz via Associated Press Reuben Ortiz holds photo of the Rev. Jerome Coyle in Albuquerqu­e, N.M. Ortiz says he was angered to learn that Coyle, who had been living at his home, was a serial abuser.
 ??  ?? Coyle
Coyle

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