The Columbus Dispatch

Priest’s body exhumed in investigat­ion of 1970 killing

- By Alison Knezevich

BALTIMORE — Police in Maryland have exhumed the body of a Catholic priest who died in 2001 as part of the investigat­ion into the unsolved killing nearly 50 years ago of a Baltimore nun.

Baltimore County officials announced this past week that they had opened the grave of A. Joseph Maskell to compare his DNA with crime scene evidence in the cold case of Sister Catherine Ann Cesnik, whose body was found in Lansdowne, Md., in 1970.

Maskell’s body was exhumed Feb. 28 at Holy Family Cemetery in Randallsto­wn and returned to its grave the same day, county police spokeswoma­n Elise Armacost said.

Cesnik’s case is the subject of the upcoming Netflix documentar­y “The Keepers,” a seven-part series premiering May 19. The documentar­y explores the theory that the Cesnik was killed because she knew of sexual abuse committed by Maskell.

Abuse allegation­s emerged in the 1990s against Maskell, who was a chaplain and guidance counselor at Archbishop Keough High School in Baltimore. The Roman Catholic Archdioces­e of Baltimore has settled with at least a dozen people who said Maskell abused them.

One of the women who came forward in the 1990s with allegation­s of abuse by the priest has implicated him in the nun’s death.

Maskell, who was removed from the ministry in 1994, denied allegation­s of abuse and also denied knowledge of Cesnik’s death.

Armacost said there was little physical evidence remaining in the decades-old case, but detectives “felt very strongly that in the interest of leaving no stone unturned, it was necessary to exhume Maskell’s body and compare his DNA to the evidence that is remaining.”

It will take up to six more weeks to get results from the DNA testing, Armacost said. She would not say what evidence remains from the crime scene.

Attorney Joanne Suder, who has represente­d Maskell’s alleged victims, said at least one client told her they confided in Cesnik about abuse, and that the nun said she would tell “higher-ups.”

“I think if the various law enforcemen­t agencies had done a proper job in the ’70s, that could have avoided the necessity to do (an exhumation) in 2017,” Suder said.

Archdioces­e of Baltimore spokesman Sean Caine said the exhumation “was total news to us.”

“We support it, especially if it helps lead them to a definitive conclusion about what happened,” Caine said.

After Maskell was removed from the ministry, he went to Ireland, Caine said. Church officials here learned of his whereabout­s in the summer of 1996, when the archdioces­e received an inquiry from an Irish bishop asking whether Maskell was in good standing.

Maskell was living in Wexford, Ireland. Archdioces­e officials sent letters to Maskell instructin­g him not to perform any priestly duties and asking him to return to Baltimore, Caine said.

In 1998, the archdioces­e learned that Maskell had returned to the United States and was living at Stella Maris, a Catholic nursing facility in Timonium, Md.

Since the 1990s, police have gathered the DNA of about six other people as part of the investigat­ion into Cesnik’s death, Armacost said. They also have identified another suspect who is still living, she said. She did not provide details.

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