The Guardian (USA)

New Orleans Catholic priest charged with rape may be too sick to stand trial

- David Hammer of WWL Louisiana and Ramon Antonio Vargas in New Orleans

A 92-year-old Roman Catholic priest from New Orleans who is charged with raping a teenager after strangling him unconsciou­s is now “in and out of consciousn­ess” himself, according to the clergyman’s defense attorney, who is seeking to postpone a trial date in the case.

The assistant district attorney who is leading the prosecutio­n of Lawrence Hecker said on Friday he was ready to “roll [the defendant] in on a gurney” to keep a 25 March trial date in the case. But a lawyer for Hecker’s accuser said they were growing increasing­ly worried that the suspected serial predator’s trial would be delayed – and that he may not live long enough to ever stand judgment in a criminal court.

“If for some reason he is unable to stand trial before he dies, it will be another victory for the pedophiles and their protectors in the Catholic church and another heartbreak for Hecker’s countless survivors,” said the lawyer’s accuser, Richard Trahant.

Hecker has been jailed since he was arrested on 8 September on grand jury charges that he strangled a high school student in the mid-1970s and raped him while he was unconsciou­s. The charges came decades after Hecker provided an administra­tive statement in 1999 to New Orleans Catholic church leaders in which he admitted to sexually molesting or harassing numerous children whom he had met in his first couple of decades after becoming an ordained priest in 1958.

Hecker was also diagnosed as a pedophile when sent off to a behavioral treatment center after providing his typed admission. But the archdioces­e let him remain in active ministry in Catholic churches and schools until he retired with full benefits in 2002, during an earlier boiling point in the global Catholic church’s ongoing clerical abuse crisis.

The archdioces­e then waited 16 years before publicly identifyin­g Hecker as a credibly accused child molester, along with dozens of other clergymen. Disclosing such a list of credibly accused clergy predators prompted so much litigation that the archdioces­e sought federal bankruptcy protection in 2020.

Less than a month before his indictment, Hecker granted a remarkable interview to WWL Louisiana and the Guardian in which he answered questions about his child molestatio­n admissions. He was lucid and stood the whole time during the interview, an 18minute session which took place outside his apartment in 100F (37.7C) heat.

Multiple times, Hecker said “yes” when asked whether his admission to his superiors was truthful. He said society was more permissive of such behavior back then, though it was as illegal in the 1960s and 1970s as it is now for adults to engage in sexual activity with minors.

Hecker has pleaded not guilty to the charges of child rape and kidnapping first filed against him in September. In the August interview, Hecker was asked specifical­ly about the allegation­s of the accuser in the case now pending against him, and he denied them.

Unable to afford $800,000 bail, Hecker experience­d mental decline, disorienta­tion and other physical ailments while being held in jail in New Orleans, and he had been hospitaliz­ed, attorneys said at a court hearing in late January.

At a follow-up hearing on Friday, one of Hecker’s attorneys, Robert Hjortsberg, argued that prosecutor­s would be trying “a vegetable” if they succeeded in taking Hecker to trial beginning on 25 March.

Hjortsberg later clarified outside the courtroom that Hecker’s medical records did not say he is a “vegetable”. But Hjortsberg said Hecker’s transfer to a long-term medical facility had prevented his legal team from meeting with him.

The case’s lead prosecutor, Ned McGowan, countered that Hecker was “conscious and, in some respect, resting comfortabl­y”, according to medical records that both sides could access.

McGowan said Hjortsberg had so far stopped short of arguing that Hecker was mentally incompeten­t to stand trial. If Hecker’s defense team made that move, McGowan said the court would need to “convene a panel very quickly” to assess the defendant’s mental competence ahead of the March trial date.

But a trial delay would be a virtual certainty in that scenario. And Trahant said that prospect was frustratin­g after his client began working with authoritie­s years ago to bring charges against Hecker.

Hecker would face mandatory life imprisonme­nt if convicted as charged.

• In the US, call or text the Childhelp abuse hotline on 800-422-4453 or visit their website for more resources and to report child abuse or DM for help. For adult survivors of child abuse, help is available at ascasuppor­t.org. In the UK, the NSPCC offers support to children on 0800 1111, and adults concerned about a child on 0808 800 5000. The National Associatio­n for People Abused in Childhood (Napac) offers support for adult survivors on 0808 801 0331. In Australia, children, young adults, parents and teachers can contact the Kids Helpline on 1800 55 1800, or Braveheart­s on 1800 272 831, and adult survivors can contact Blue Knot Foundation on 1300 657 380. Other sources of help can be found at Child Helplines Internatio­nal

 ?? ?? Laurence Hecker’s lawyer said he was ‘in and out of consciousn­ess’. Photograph: Gerald Herbert/AP
Laurence Hecker’s lawyer said he was ‘in and out of consciousn­ess’. Photograph: Gerald Herbert/AP

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