The Guardian (USA)

‘What if I’m not the only person?’ Survivor names priests who abused him decades ago

- Ramon Antonio Vargas

Some in the US cities of Pittsburgh and New Orleans knew Naos McCool as a Roman Catholic priest who worked with college students and first responders, and also officiated his share of weddings.

But Derek McCarthy wants the public to know that McCool, a Spiritan priest, was one of four men who sexually molested him while attending an Irish boarding school – decades before he secured a six-figure settlement from the cleric’s religious order.

McCarthy has spoken openly about his abuse at Rockwell College in Tipperary before, making news headlines across Ireland. But a recent interview with the Guardian marked the first time he has publicly named his abusers, including McCool, who is still living and held relatively prominent roles at some American institutio­ns.

“What if I’m not the only person [who endured this]?” said McCarthy, who now resides in Northampto­n, Pennsylvan­ia.

McCarthy, 58, also said he wanted to visibly demand an in-person apology from McCool – who is reported to be in an Irish nursing home – and his other still-living abuser, a Spiritan priest named Martin McDonagh.

“After all these years, see me face-toface,” McCarthy said. “So I can look at you and ask you, ‘Why?’ That’s all I want to know – why.”

McCarthy’s remarks are the first linking figures such as McCool and McDonagh to the Catholic church’s long unfolding clerical molestatio­n scandal.

As McCarthy told it in a written complaint submitted to attorneys for the Spiritans, he was sexually abused dozens of times by McCool, McDonagh, the late Spiritan priest Michael Comerford and school chiropodis­t Dr Jeremiah Lambe while he attended Rockwell as a child in the 1970s.

McCarthy’s complaint recounted how he had already been abused by some of the other men when he went to McCool to report them. McCarthy was about 14 at the time and believed McCool – his dean of studies – would protect him.

But, after McCool initially projected a sense of concern, he ordered McCarthy to his office after the boy was late to class one day. There, McCool exposed himself to McCarthy and carried out a sex act.

McCarthy recalls that on dozens of occasions over the next year or, McCool

would beat him with a wooden stick and sexually assault him. The abuse unfolded when the school library was unattended or in McCool’s private dormitory room.

It all became so overwhelmi­ng that McCarthy once threw himself in front of a car near his family’s home in hopes that he wouldn’t have to go back to school.

Of McCool, McCarthy said: “He is one of the most violent people I’ve ever met in my life.”

‘State of decline’

One detail stands prominentl­y out in McCarthy’s recollecti­on of his abuse. He said he would sometimes see McCool wearing a New Orleans police department jacket.

A 1978 newspaper article contains a clue as to why McCool would have had such a jacket. The article explains that McCool at the time had been spending more than a month for each of the previous five summers assisting a priest stationed at Our Lady of Guadalupe Church & Internatio­nal Shrine of St Jude, which sits on the edge of New Orleans’s French Quarter.

The article notes that the priest with whom McCool collaborat­ed was “the Catholic chaplain for New Orleans police” and firefighte­rs. And it quoted

McCool as he described one of the most chilling moments of his duties alongside New Orleans police: discoverin­g a person who had died by suicide.

“He was a handsome 18-year-old boy who took the easy but wrong way out,” McCool reportedly said.

A survey of local newspaper clippings shows McCool maintained his associatio­n with Our Lady of Guadalupe and St Judge through 2011. He was listed as an officiant in about a halfdozen weddings in the New Orleans area.

Additional­ly, McCool worked as the assistant dean for students in the school of education at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh from 2001 to 2015. He was also the chaplain of the university’s football team and had a scholarshi­p endowment named after him.

A statement from university officials said McCool also worked as the school chaplain at Vincentian Academy, a Catholic high school in suburban Pittsburgh that closed in 2020.

A Duquesne spokespers­on said in a statement that McCool’s affiliatio­n with the university ended after he suffered “a serious stroke”. As McCarthy understand­s it, McCool – like McDonagh – has since been living at a nursing home in Dublin.

The Duquesne spokespers­on said

McCool “presently is in a state of decline that makes it impossible to engage with him meaningful­ly”.

Meanwhile, as is common with people who survive such a traumatizi­ng ordeal, McCarthy remained silent about his abuse for years. The Chicagobor­n Irishman moved back to the US when he turned 18, joined the American air force and lived as best he could.

He decided to pursue legal action against the Spiritans after a 2018 visit to Ireland with his wife, Mel, stirred the excruciati­ng memories of his abuse. The process that ensued was grueling, requiring him to relive and retell his molestatio­n.

It culminated with an hours-long mediation at Dublin’s Four Courts in late July. McCarthy agreed to settle for €100,000 ($105,400) in damages and about €16,000 ($16,862) more to cover legal costs, said documents provided by his lead attorney, Jef McAllister.

McAllister, Time magazine’s former London bureau chief, said his side agreed on that figure after his colleague estimated that McCarthy could get about €190,000 ($200,000) by going to trial, which might have dragged the case out another two years or more.

McCarthy – who has also survived a stroke and a bout with cancer – said the amount he accepted afforded him a measure of relief. He invested it into home improvemen­ts as well as his retirement.

“It was vindicatio­n, you know?” said McCarthy, one of more than 400 survivors who have come forward with abuse allegation­s against a total of about 80 Spiritan priests, according to the Irish Independen­t newspaper.

‘A hidden crime’

Despite having settled the civil side of his case, McCarthy said he is cooperatin­g with investigat­ors at Ireland’s Garda law enforcemen­t agency.

Yet what gratified McCarthy holds as most important about how his decision to speak out about the settlement in Ireland is that it brought him in communicat­ion with others who were abused at Spiritan schools.

He hopes identifyin­g McDonagh and McCool in the US media has a similar effect, especially in the case of the latter, given the roles he held in two major American cities.

“It’s important that it comes out,” said McCarthy, whose home is a drive of only a few hours from Duquesne. “I will do anything in my power to help any victim of this because it’s a crime – and [often], it’s a hidden crime.”

McCool did not respond to an email or a private message on social media seeking comment. The Spiritan order’s US province in Pittsburgh did not respond to requests for comment about

McCarthy either – but it also did not contest his account.

Neither police nor church officials in New Orleans commented.

Duquesne’s spokespers­on said the university “presently has no knowledge of … McCool engaging in similar conduct during his time” at the institutio­n. But the spokespers­on noted that Duquense has “strong policies and procedures for dealing with allegation­s of sexual abuse” which can be reported to the university’s Title IX office, which investigat­es complaints of that nature.

“The charges made in Ireland are quite disturbing, and the university has great sympathy for those who have been harmed by people who should be trusted,” Duquesne’s statement said. “The reporting of such conduct is of great importance … and the university is grateful to those who do make reports.”

He is one of the most violent people I’ve ever met in my life

Derek McCarthy

 ?? ?? Derek McCarthy of Pennsylvan­ia stands outside the Irish boarding school where he says he was sexually abused repeatedly as a student in the 1970s. Photograph: Courtesy of Derek McCarthy
Derek McCarthy of Pennsylvan­ia stands outside the Irish boarding school where he says he was sexually abused repeatedly as a student in the 1970s. Photograph: Courtesy of Derek McCarthy
 ?? Derek McCarthy ?? Derek McCarthy as a student at Rockwell College in Ireland. Photograph: Courtesy of
Derek McCarthy Derek McCarthy as a student at Rockwell College in Ireland. Photograph: Courtesy of

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