Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

FBI probing Catholic clergy sexual abuse in New Orleans

- By Jim Mustian

NEW ORLEANS — The FBI has opened a widening investigat­ion into sex abuse in the Roman Catholic Church in New Orleans going back decades, a rare federal foray into such cases looking specifical­ly at whether priests took children across state lines to molest them, officials and others familiar with the inquiry told The Associated Press.

More than a dozen alleged abuse victims have been interviewe­d this year as part of the probe that’s exploring, among other charges, whether predator priests can be prosecuted under the Mann Act, a more than century-old sex traffickin­g law that prohibits the taking of anyone across state lines for illicit sex.

Some of the New Orleans cases under review allege abuse by clergy during trips to Mississipp­i camps or amusement parks in Texas and Florida. And while some claims are decades old, Mann Act violations notably have no statute of limitation­s.

“It’s been a long road and just the fact that someone this high up believes us means the world to us,” said a former altar boy who alleged his assailant took him on trips to Colorado and Florida and abused him beginning in the 1970s when he was in the fifth grade. The AP generally does not identify people who say they have been sexually assaulted.

The FBI declined to comment, as did the Louisiana State Police, which is assisting in the inquiry. The Archdioces­e of New Orleans declined to discuss the federal investigat­ion.

“I’d prefer not to pursue this conversati­on,” Archbishop Gregory Aymond told the AP.

The probe could deepen the legal peril for the archdioces­e as it reels from a bankruptcy brought on by a flood of sex abuse lawsuits and allegation­s that church leaders turned a blind eye to generation­s of predator priests.

Federal investigat­ors are now considerin­g whether to seek access to thousands of secret church documents produced by lawsuits and shielded by a sweeping confidenti­ality order in the bankruptcy, according to those familiar with the probe who weren’t authorized to discuss it and spoke on condition of anonymity. Those records are said to document years of abuse claims, interviews with accused clergy and a pattern of church leaders transferri­ng problem priests without reporting their crimes to law enforcemen­t.

“This is actually a big deal, and it should be heartening to victims,” said Marci Hamilton, a University of Pennsylvan­ia professor and chief executive of Child USA, a think tank focused on preventing child abuse. “The FBI has rarely become involved in the clergy sex abuse scandals. They’ve dragged their feet around the country with respect to the Catholic Church.”

The U.S. Justice Department has struggled to find a federal nexus for prosecutin­g clergy abuse, hitting dead ends in cases as explosive as the ones outlined in the 2018 Pennsylvan­ia grand jury report that disclosed a systematic cover-up by church leaders. Federal prosecutor­s subpoenaed church records in Buffalo, New York, the same year, in an inquiry that similarly went quiet.

“The issue has always been determinin­g what is the federal crime,” said Peter Strasser, the former U.S. attorney in New Orleans who declined to bring charges in 2018 after the archdioces­e published a list of 57 “credibly accused” clergy, a roster an AP analysis found had undercount­ed at least 20 names.

Strasser said he “naively” believed a federal case might be possible only to encounter a host of roadblocks, including the complexiti­es of “putting the church on trial” for charges like conspiracy.

But federal prosecutor­s have in recent years employed the more narrowly focused Mann Act to win conviction­s in a variety of abuse cases, including against R&B star R. Kelly and socialite Ghislaine Maxwell. In 2013, a federal judge in Indiana sentenced a Baptist pastor to 12 years in prison for taking a 16-year-old girl across state lines for sex.

 ?? MATTHEW HINTON/AP 2020 ?? Richard Windmann, left, and John Gianoli, members of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, hold signs during a protest in Metairie, La.
MATTHEW HINTON/AP 2020 Richard Windmann, left, and John Gianoli, members of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, hold signs during a protest in Metairie, La.

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