The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Priest in child sex abuse scandal released

- By Alex Horton

Phil Saviano, an advocate for sexual assault victims, had a list of Bostonarea clergymen alleged to have raped young boys. And it was growing.

He created a New England chapter of a support group for people who said they had been abused by priests and drew up the list of alleged offenders, along with other data points, beginning in 1997.

One of the names kept coming up in discussion­s: Paul Shanley.

Shanley was a well-respected clergyman nicknamed the “Street Priest” for his habit of roaming dangerous neighborho­ods to help troubled youths. But he also secretly used the anonymity of vulnerable, wayward boys as a weapon and a shield.

Shanley, 86, was released from state prison Friday after serving a 12-year sentence for the rape and indecent assault of a boy in a Massachuse­tts church in the 1980s. He was defrocked by the Vatican in 2004 and convicted the following year.

“The fact he was sent away for 12 years was a triumph for the survivor community,” Saviano told The Washington Post.

Shanley’s outing and eventual conviction were partly attributab­le to the Boston Globe’s landmark 2002 investigat­ion that raised questions about widespread abuse among Boston clergymen and whether officials with the Archdioces­e of Bostonhad looked the other way.

The Pulitzer-winning reporting and related suits persuaded victims to come forward across the world, resulting in at least five conviction­s in the Boston area, including Shanley’s, and the resignatio­n of the thenarchbi­shop of Boston, Bernard Law.

The probe led to the 2015 Oscar-winning film “Spotlight.” Saviano, whose list was instrument­al to the launch of the full investigat­ion, was portrayed in the movie by actor Neal Huff.

Saviano said his Facebook page has been inundated with comments about Shanley’s release, which has exposed the problem of posttrauma­tic stress among survivors.

“It can be very difficult and nerve-racking, and it sends people to therapists when this is back in the news,” he said. “It brings up a lot of memories and a lot of raw feelings. One memory will lead to another memory.”

The graying Shanley, hobbling on a cane to his new residence across the street from a dance studio with clients as young as 2, is registered as a level 3 sex offender, considered the most likely to reoffend. The designatio­n has triggered publicatio­n of his name, his conviction­s and his address in Ware, about 80 miles west of Boston, the Globe reported.

Shanley was imprisoned at Old Colony Correction­al Center in Bridgewate­r, and his 10-year probation carries the condition he has no contact with children 16 years old and younger, the Globe reported.

“A guy rapes a little kid, and that little kid is ruined for the rest of his life and he gets, on average, I think it was eight years before. This guy ends up doing 12 or 15, but everybody that he hurt has to deal with it the rest of their lives,” one of Shanley’s victims, Paul Busa, told a local CBS affiliate.

Robert Shaw Jr., the lawyer who represente­d Shanley in a criminal appeal case, told the Associated Press he understand­s the community’s emotional reaction.

“I’m sure that law enforcemen­t will ensure that the community feels safe, and I have every expectatio­n that they are going to fulfill their obligation and be certain that Paul Shanley also remains safe,” Shaw said, according to the AP. Shanley declined to answer questions from reporters, according to the Globe.

Middlesex District Attorney Marian Ryan’s office opposed Shanley’s release, but two forensic psychologi­sts said he did not qualify as a sexually dangerous person despite his level 3 status, the Globe said.

Attorney Mitchell Garabedian, who represente­d dozens of men who say they were abused by Shanley, told the AP the evaluation was incomplete because it did not involve direct interviews with Shanley.

A 2002 civil suit brought allegation­s against the Archdioces­e of Boston, which triggered a cascade of documents and disclosure­s from top officials. The disclosure­s contained names of priests the church had allegedly reassigned to quell allegation­s and suspicions of abuse, Shanley among them.

The early accusation­s against Shanley began a domino effect of more alleged victims coming forward, said Anne Barrett Doyle, co-director of Bishop Accountabi­lity, a watchdog group that collects data and documents on sexually abusive clerics.

Doyle told The Post the Archdioces­e of Boston should be held responsibl­e for closely tracking Shanley.

“They created Paul Shanley. He should continue to be their problem,” Doyle said. Her organizati­on maintains a database of names of about 4,000 clergymen and other religious figures accused of sexual assault, she said.

The Archdioces­e of Boston released a statement July 25 calling Shanley’s crimes “reprehensi­ble,” adding “no young person should ever have to experience such violations of their safety and dignity.” In 2003, the Archdioces­e of Boston settled a lawsuit of $85 million for 552 alleged victims of abuse.

Shanley’s release is possibly one of the last for men sent to prison as a result of the Globe’s investigat­ions and related suits. Few priests were convicted due to statutes of limitation­s for alleged crimes committed many years in the past. Shanley moved to California in 1989, which stopped the clock on the statute, the Globe reported.

Ronald H. Paquin was released in 2015, 12 years after he pleaded guilty to raping a 12-year-old altar boy. Jesuit priest James Talbot was freed in 2011 after serving six years in prison for molesting two boys. Robert V. Gale was released in 2009 after five years following his guilty plea in the sexual assault of a boy.

John Geoghan was stomped and strangled to death in prison in 2003, one year into a nine-to-10-yearsenten­ce for child molestatio­n.

Saviano, who reached a settlement with his alleged abuser and Massachsus­etts’ Worcester Diocese in 1995, has kept a watchful eye out for threats against Shanley, he said, and he is deleting threats of violence on his Facebook page. He said he is concerned that intense public scrutiny may back abusers into a corner where they might commit crimes in order to reach prison again.

“He’s out now. It’s too bad. He lived to be 86 and lived long enough to get out,” Saviano said. “The concern now is where he is and the degree of people keeping an eye on him.”

Saviano chooses to focus more on the survivors. His friend Joe Crowley brought accusation­s against Shanley and struggled with smoking and alcohol as a way to cope with his trauma, he told The Globe.

But Crowley was sober for more than 20 years, Saviano said, attributin­g his recovery to Shanley’s conviction and to helping other survivors. Crowley was found dead on Easter Sunday this year, at age 58.

 ?? DENISE LAVOIE / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Denis O’Connor, left, and John Harris, speak after a news conference in Boston on the upcoming release from prison of defrocked priest Paul Shanley. Both men said Shanley raped them decades ago. They said they are concerned that Shanley could abuse...
DENISE LAVOIE / ASSOCIATED PRESS Denis O’Connor, left, and John Harris, speak after a news conference in Boston on the upcoming release from prison of defrocked priest Paul Shanley. Both men said Shanley raped them decades ago. They said they are concerned that Shanley could abuse...
 ?? MASSACHUSE­TTS SEX OFFENDER REGISTRY BOARD VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS) ?? This undated identifica­tion photo released via the Commonweal­th of Massachuse­tts Sex Offender Registry Board website shows Paul Shanley, released Friday from the Old Colony Correction­al Center in Bridgewate­r, Mass.
MASSACHUSE­TTS SEX OFFENDER REGISTRY BOARD VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS) This undated identifica­tion photo released via the Commonweal­th of Massachuse­tts Sex Offender Registry Board website shows Paul Shanley, released Friday from the Old Colony Correction­al Center in Bridgewate­r, Mass.

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