The Arizona Republic

An ASU professor quits amid a sex-abuse scandal.

ASU: He abused minors in past

- Jason Pohl Reach the reporter at 602-444-8515, jpohl@azcentral.com or on Twitter: @pohl_jason.

A renowned professor of medieval art history at Arizona State University was forced to resign Thursday after the Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn announced he had sexually abused minors decades ago while he was an East Coast priest.

Professor Jaime Lara was ordained in 1973 and was in active ministry until 1992 when he was laicized by the Vatican for sexually abusing children, the Diocese of Brooklyn confirmed Wednesday on its website.

Upon learning of his history as a priest, ASU officials on Thursday requested he resign from his role as a research professor from the university’s Tempe campus, school officials confirmed to The Arizona Republic.

His resignatio­n was tendered that same day and effective immediatel­y.

The laicizatio­n, which prohibits Lara from carrying out priestly duties, was handed down by a decree from the Vatican office “authorized to deal with cases involving sexual abuse of minors by a cleric,” the Diocese said.

Lara majored in cultural anthropolo­gy at Cathedral College in New York, according to his curricula vitae. After graduating in 1969, he went on to earn a Master of Divinity at Immaculate Conception Seminary in Huntington, New York. He then studied in Puerto Rico and Colombia before returning to New York City.

He was ordained there in 1973 and remained in the church until 1992, the Brooklyn Diocese confirmed on Wednesday, posting the names of seven other former clerics who had been defrocked for child sex abuse offenses.

It was between 1979 to 1981 that Lara sexually abused three children ranging in age from 9 to 11 years old at St. Francis Xavier Church in Brooklyn, New York, the victims’ attorney, Mitchell Garabedian, told The Republic in a Friday telephone interview.

“This is just another instance of the Catholic Church hiding a predator and therefore unnecessar­ily putting children in danger,” he said. “The risk of reoffense is too great for the Catholic Church to continue its secrecy in these matters. Transparen­cy is needed, and transparen­cy is needed immediatel­y.”

Garabedian has represente­d hundreds of victims of sexual abuse and was portrayed in the Academy Award-winning 2015 film Spotlight, which told the story of his effort and that of Boston Globe journalist­s to illuminate rampant sexual misconduct in the Catholic Church.

He called the church’s announceme­nt this week involving Lara as “spin control.”

“My clients are trying to gain a degree of closure and move on with their lives,” he said, adding that

ASU failed to fully vet Lara’s history before bringing him aboard the institutio­n. “Unfortunat­ely, his stature in the community, however false, was not a surprise to me.”

Attempts to reach Lara for comment on this story Friday were unsuccessf­ul.

After being barred from the church in 1992, hebegan his career in teaching, first as a visiting professor of art and humanities in Colombia. In 1995 he began working as an adjunct professor at Yale, where he gained recognitio­n and was published extensivel­y before his departure in 2009.

Lara taught for years at institutio­ns around the country before landing at ASU in 2013, records show. Administra­tors apparently did not know he spent nearly two decades as a priest, and Lara’s time in active ministry — where he was known as Rev. James Lara — is notably absent from his 18page CV, reviewed by The Republic.

It was unclear Friday whether the university would conduct any followup investigat­ions into Lara or the process through which he was hired. There are no reports of abuse committed during his time at ASU, the university said.

His university page online indicates he taught multiple upper-division art and history classes at ASU. He also created a new course, the Afterlife of the Apocalypse in Art, Architectu­re and Western Culture.

University officials on Friday — part of a long holiday weekend — were unable to confirm the veracity of his CV, officials said. It was not immediatel­y clear to what extent he taught classes on campus or whether he was exclusivel­y serving as a researcher based at ASU.

Garabedian said the alleged victims in this case against Lara are involved in settlement discussion­s.

He described Lara’s movement from the church to academia — and his ability to fly under the radar — as institutio­ns merely “passing the trash.”

“The Catholic Church cannot hide behind the veil of religion, nor can Arizona State hide behind the veil of education, as an excuse to put children at risk with predators.”

 ?? ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY ?? Professor Jaime Lara resigned.
ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY Professor Jaime Lara resigned.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States