The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Hundreds of accused left off church sex abuse lists

- By Claudia Lauer and Meghan Hoyer

Richard J. Poster served time for possessing child pornograph­y, violated his probation by having contact with children, admitted masturbati­ng in the bushes near a church school and in 2005 was put on a sex offender registry. And yet the former Catholic priest was only just this month added to a list of clergy members credibly accused of child sexual abuse — after The Associated Press asked why he was not included.

Victims advocates had long criticized the Roman Catholic Church for not making public the names of credibly accused priests. Now, despite the dioceses’ release of nearly 5,300 names, most in the last two years, critics say the lists are far from complete.

An AP analysis found more than 900 clergy members accused of child sexual abuse who were missing from lists released by the dioceses and religious orders where they served.

The AP reached that number by matching those public diocesan lists against a database of accused priests tracked by the group BishopAcco­untability.org and then scouring bankruptcy documents, lawsuits, settlement informatio­n, grand jury reports and media accounts.

More than a hundred of the former clergy members not listed by dioceses or religious orders had been charged with sexual crimes, including rape, solicitati­on and receiving or viewing child pornograph­y. On top of that, the AP

found another nearly 400 priests and clergy members who were accused of abuse while serving in dioceses that have not yet released any names.

“No one should think, ‘Oh, the bishops are releasing their lists, there’s nothing left to do,’” said Terence McKiernan, co-founder of BishopAcco­untability.org, who has been tracking the abuse crisis and cataloging accused priests for almost two decades.

Church officials say that absent an admission of guilt, they have to weigh releasing a name against harming the reputation of priests who may have been falsely accused. By naming accused priests, they note, they also open themselves to lawsuits from those who maintain their innocence.

Some dioceses have excluded entire classes of clergy members from their lists — priests in religious orders, deceased priests who had only one allegation against them, priests ordained in foreign countries and, sometimes, deacons or seminarian­s ousted before they were ordained.

Others, like Poster, were excluded because of technicali­ties.

Poster’s name was not included when the Davenport, Iowa, diocese issued its first list of two dozen credibly accused priests in 2008. The diocese said his crime of possessing more than 270 videos and images of child pornograph­y on his work laptop was not originally a qualifying offense in the church’s landmark charter on child abuse because there wasn’t a direct victim.

Less than a year after he was released from prison, he admitting to masturbati­ng in the bushes on church property, which abuts a Catholic high school. Still, the diocese did not list him. And he went on to violate the terms of his probation, admitting he had contact with minors.

Child pornograph­y was added to the church’s child abuse charter in 2011 and, though the diocese promised it would update its list of perpetrato­rs as required under a court-approved bankruptcy plan, it never included Poster.

“It was an oversight,” diocese spokesman Deacon David Montgomery told the AP. He said the public had been kept informed about the case through press releases issued from Poster’s arrest until his removal from the priesthood in 2007.

Poster, who now lives in Silver Spring, Maryland, declined to comment when reached by the AP.

Of the 900 unlisted accused clergy members, more than a tenth had been charged with a sex-related crime — a far higher percentage than those named publicly by dioceses and orders, the AP found.

Dioceses varied widely in what they considered a credible accusation. Like Poster, some of the priests criminally charged with child pornograph­y weren’t listed because some dioceses said a victim needed to report a complaint.

Other dioceses created exceptions for a host of other reasons, ranging from cases being deemed not credible by a board of lay church people to the clergy members in question having since died and thus being unable to defend themselves.

“If your goal is protecting kids and healing victims, your lists will be as broad and detailed as possible. If your goal is protecting your reputation and institutio­n, it will be narrow and vague. And that’s the choice most bishops are making,” said David Clohessy, the former executive director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, who now heads the group’s St. Louis chapter.

The largest exceptions were made for the nearly 400 priests in religious orders who, while they serve in diocesan schools and parishes, don’t report to the bishops.

Richard J. McCormick, a

Salesian priest who worked at parishes, schools and religious camps in dioceses in Florida, New York, Massachuse­tts, Indiana and Louisiana, has been accused of molesting or having inappropri­ate contact with children from three states. In 2009, his order settled the first three civil claims against him. Yet he does not appear on any list of credibly accused clergy members.

McCormick finally faced criminal charges after one of his victims spotted the priest’s name on a very different list — one posted in 2011 by a Boston lawyer who represents church sexual abuse victims.

Thirty years had gone by, but Joey Covino said he immediatel­y recognized a photo of McCormick as the priest who had molested him over two summers at a Salesian camp for underprivi­leged boys in Ipswich, Massachuse­tts.

When he and his brothers returned to the camp for a second year, “I was petrified — petrified — and I couldn’t say anything,” said Covino,

 ?? RICHARD DREW - THE AP ?? In this Wednesday, Aug. 14 file photo, attorney Jeff Anderson, left, points to a chart of sexual abuse perpetrato­rs during a news conference in New York, accompanie­d by sexual abuse victims Birdie Farrell, center, and Joseph Carramano.
RICHARD DREW - THE AP In this Wednesday, Aug. 14 file photo, attorney Jeff Anderson, left, points to a chart of sexual abuse perpetrato­rs during a news conference in New York, accompanie­d by sexual abuse victims Birdie Farrell, center, and Joseph Carramano.
 ?? FAITH NINIVAGGI-THE AP ??
FAITH NINIVAGGI-THE AP

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