Las Vegas Review-Journal

Inaugural Mass priest investigat­ed amid Calif. claims

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SANTA CLARA, Calif. — The Jesuit priest who presided over an inaugural Mass for President Joe Biden is under investigat­ion for unspecifie­d allegation­s and is on leave from his position as president of Santa Clara University in Northern California, according to a statement from the college’s board of trustees.

Rev. Kevin O’brien allegedly “exhibited behaviors in adult settings, consisting primarily of conversati­ons, which may be inconsiste­nt with establishe­d Jesuit protocols and boundaries,” according to the statement by John M. Sobrato, the board chairman.

O’brien gave the service at Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle, one of the most prominent Catholic churches in Washington, in January for Biden, who is the nation’s second Catholic president, as well as Vice President Kamala Harris, their families and elected officials before the inaugurati­on ceremony at the U.S. Capitol.

O’brien also presided over services for Biden’s inaugurati­ons as vice president.

The priest has known Biden’s family for about 15 years, according to the university. O’brien was then serving at Georgetown University, another Jesuit college. O’brien has been president of Santa Clara University since July 2019.

Sobrato’s statement, posted Monday to the university’s website, did not specify the allegation­s against O’brien but said the trustees “support those who came forward to share their accounts.”

Sobrato said O’brien will cooperate with the investigat­ion, with conclusion­s to be shared with the Santa Clara University Board of Trustees.

“Jesuits are held to a profession­al code of conduct, and the Province investigat­es allegation­s that may violate or compromise establishe­d boundaries,” Tracey Primrose, spokeswoma­n for the Jesuits West Province, which is overseeing the investigat­ion, told The Mercury News.

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