The Guardian (USA)

Mental competency hearing delayed for US priest charged with raping teen

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

A mental competency hearing has been delayed again for a 92-year-old retired Catholic priest faced with charges of raping a teenager after strangling him unconsciou­s in 1975 in a New Orleans church.

Lawrence Hecker’s trial on state charges of aggravated rape, aggravated kidnapping, aggravated crime against nature and theft has been delayed several times since January.

A psychiatri­st and her team evaluated the elderly Hecker in the Orleans parish criminal courthouse on April 4, but prosecutor­s told Judge Ben Willard they had just received the evaluation report this morning. Hecker’s defense team said they had not yet seen the report.

Testimony from the evaluating doctors is now scheduled for 23 May. The standard for competency to stand trial is whether someone is able to understand the proceeding­s pending against him and meaningful­ly assist the attorneys representi­ng him.

Several victims of Hecker – who admitted to church leaders in the late 1990s that he molested and sexually harassed at least seven children but was never punished or removed from ministry – are increasing­ly frustrated by the multiple delays caused by Hecker’s failing health.

An attorney representi­ng Hecker’s accuser in the current rape case said the longer the trial is delayed the less likely the priest is to stand trial.

New Orleans district attorney Jason Williams said he, too, is frustrated and went so far as to accuse Hecker of “malingerin­g”.

“He’s obviously malingerin­g, because he certainly was competent in [media] interviews,” Williams said, referring to when Hecker stood for 18 minutes in stifling heat last August and admitted to WWL Louisiana and the Guardian that he had engaged in “willing sex” with multiple underage boys in the 1960s and 1970s. Hecker spoke at length about why he thought he was free to do what he’d done because of the “sexual revolution” and acknowledg­ed that he now knew it was wrong and was “truly repentant”.

In that same interview, Hecker denied ever choking a boy unconsciou­s and raping him. He quickly and emphatical­ly denied ever having “unwilling” sex with anyone. Confronted with his written statement from 1999, he said he remembered the boys with whom he admitted engaging in “overtly sexual acts”.

Hecker was indicted and arrested in September, just two weeks after that interview. He walked unassisted to a vehicle that took him to jail. But in mid-January he was rushed to intensive care, and in court hearings since then his defense attorneys said he had experience­d mental decline, disorienta­tion and a number of physical ailments.

He was later transferre­d to a longterm care facility while held in custody in lieu of $800,000 bail.

Court-appointed forensic psychiatri­st Dr Sarah Deland interviewe­d Hecker in a closed area attached to Willard’s courtroom in early April. It’s unclear when her report was finished but it was not received until Thursday.

Hecker’s lead defense attorney, Bobby Hjortsberg, says he remains in a long-term care facility.

Richard Trahant, an attorney for the alleged victim, said his client immediatel­y reported the alleged attack in 1975 to the principal of his high school at the time, Paul Calamari, another priest the archdioces­e considers credibly accused of child sexual abuse. But Trahant said Calamari failed to report Hecker’s alleged crime after being informed of it at the school he led, the now-shuttered St John Vianney Prep.

Trahant also said on Thursday for the first time that St John provided his client with psychiatri­c care after he reported the rape, but he is not aware of law enforcemen­t being notified until the church was forced to turn over

Hecker’s file to district attorney Jason Williams last summer.

After Trahant’s client reported Hecker to law enforcemen­t in June 2022, it took more than a year for charges to be filed in connection with his accusation­s.

Calamari’s attorney declined comment on Trahant’s allegation­s.

Hecker has been a suspected child molester both in and out of the church for much of the time that has passed since his 1958 ordination.

In addition to Trahant’s allegation that the 1975 rape allegation was immediatel­y reported to church officials, sealed clerical files obtained by the Guardian and WWL Louisiana show the parents of another former student at St John Vianney reported Hecker had sex with their son.

The archbishop at the time, the late Philip Hannan, confronted Hecker about that claim in 1988. Hecker told WWL and the Guardian that Hannan did not punish him because the archbishop was convinced Hecker would to not do it again.

In 1999, Hecker admitted in a typed statement given to church officials that he had sexually charged relationsh­ips with at least seven underage boys and engaged in “overt sexual acts” with three of them. That prompted church officials to send him to a church psychiatri­c facility which diagnosed him as a pedophile who could not be rehabilita­ted.

Nonetheles­s, his superiors let him continue working as a priest full time for three more years, assigning him to a church with a grammar school attached.

Hecker finally retired in 2002 with full benefits after a clergy abuse and cover-up scandal that ensnared the Catholic archdioces­e of Boston attracted worldwide headlines. The New Orleans archdioces­e kept paying Hecker’s benefits until the organizati­on filed for bankruptcy in 2020 and was ordered to stop by a judge.

The church reported one of Hecker’s alleged crimes to New Orleans in 2002 but made no mention of his confession to other instances of abuse three years earlier. It also did not publicly acknowledg­e that Hecker was a credibly accused child molester until 2018.

New Orleans’ archdioces­e – which has been led by Archbishop Gregory Aymond since 2009 – did not turn over Hecker’s church personnel file to law enforcemen­t until this past June, when the organizati­on received a subpoena threatenin­g penalties if it did not hand the documents over.

Hecker would receive mandatory life imprisonme­nt if ever convicted as charged.

Regardless of that individual case’s outcome, Williams has said his office would consider criminal charges against anyone who participat­ed in covering up child sexual abuse, including with respect to Hecker.

 ?? ?? An undated photo of Lawrence Hecker. Photograph: Provided photo
An undated photo of Lawrence Hecker. Photograph: Provided photo

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