The Guardian Australia

Revealed: New Orleans archdioces­e concealed serial child molester for years

- Ramon Antonio Vargas in New Orleans

The last four Roman Catholic archbishop­s of New Orleans went to shocking lengths to conceal a confessed serial child molester who is still living but has never been prosecuted, a Guardian investigat­ion has found.

Upon review of hundreds of pages of previously secret church files, the Guardian has uncovered arguably the most complete account yet about the extremes to which the second-oldest Catholic archdioces­e in the US went to coddle the admitted child molester Lawrence Hecker.

Back in 1999, Hecker confessed to his superiors at the archdioces­e of New Orleans that he had either sexually molested or otherwise shared a bed with multiple teenagers whom he met through his work as a Roman Catholic priest.

The admitted conduct occurred during a 15-year period, beginning in the mid-1960s, which Hecker says “was a time of great change in the world and in the church, and I succumbed to its zeitgeist”. In a two-page statement given to local church authoritie­s serving a region with about a half-million Catholics, Hecker says, “It was a time when I neglected spiritual direction, confession and most daily prayer.”

Hecker confessed to the misconduct or abuse of seven teenagers between about 1966 and 1979, including “overtly sexual acts” or “affectiona­te … sex acts” with at least two individual­s. In other cases, Hecker reported either fondling, mutual masturbati­on, nudity or bed sharing, including once on another overnight trip to a Texas theme park.

Hecker’s confession said the late New Orleans archbishop Philip Hannan spoke with him about an accusation of sexual abuse in 1988. In 1996, Hannan’s successor as archbishop, the late Francis Schulte, received another allegation which the organizati­on deemed unsubstant­iated.

Hecker’s 1999 admission arrived after one of his victims came forward with another complaint to the archdioces­e. The organizati­on responded in part by sending Hecker to an outof-state psychiatri­c treatment facility which diagnosed him as a pedophile who rationaliz­ed, justified and took “little responsibi­lity for his behavior”.

The facility also recommende­d that the archdioces­e prohibit Hecker from working with children, adolescent­s or other “particular­ly vulnerable” people.

But Hecker did not stop working. In fact, after a sabbatical of a few months, the church ultimately allowed him to continue until his retirement in 2002 – which happened after a Catholic clerical molestatio­n and cover-up scandal that ensnared the archdioces­e of Boston prompted worldwide church reforms.

When attorneys for the archdioces­e – pressured by the Boston scandal – reported Hecker alongside a handful of other clerics to New Orleans police, they only informed investigat­ors about a single one of the cases cited in his confession. And they didn’t mention the confession at all.

Law enforcemen­t authoritie­s have never charged Hecker with a crime, even though his number of accusers has only swelled with the pas

sage of time. Despite transparen­cy policies that the Catholic church generally adopted after the 2002 scandal in Boston, New Orleans’s archdioces­e waited until it released a 2018 list of dozens of priests and deacons whom it considered to be strongly suspected of sexually abusing minors before it publicly acknowledg­ed that Hecker was a predator.

Notably, the archdioces­e only stopped paying Hecker retirement benefits in 2020. Citing a moral obligation it had to all clerics, the archdioces­e waited until after it filed for federal bankruptcy protection that year (in part because of litigation in the wake of the clergy abuse list) to stop paying these benefits to Hecker and other abusive clerics. The judge overseeing the bankruptcy ordered it.

The archdioces­e did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment, but an attorney for the organizati­on last week said in court that the city’s archbishop since 2009 – Gregory Aymond – “is taking every step possible to protect children”.

The Orleans parish district attorney, Jason Williams, confirmed that on 14 June the archdioces­e turned over “voluminous documents” pertaining to Hecker. He would not say whether his office compelled the church to hand over the files through a subpoena.

That production came after Williams’s office spoke with a man who alleged being choked unconsciou­s and raped as a child by Hecker after meeting the priest through a Catholic institutio­n, according to an attorney representi­ng the accuser.

Child rape cases in Louisiana have no filing deadlines, and they could carry life imprisonme­nt. Yet it is not clear when or if Hecker may ultimately be charged.

Hecker’s attorney, Eugene Redmann, has declined to speak with the Guardian about claims against his client. But he alluded to how Hecker was 91, said the claims were generally from “decades ago” and added that people of advanced age “lose a lot of memory”.

“We will address any charges if they are brought,” Redmann said.

Reached by phone last week and asked for comment on his 1999 statement to the archdioces­e, Hecker paused for several moments before saying: “I am running behind on time and have to get to an appointmen­t.” He then hung up.

Read the Guardian’s full investigat­ion here.

 ?? Photograph: Gerald Herbert/AP ?? ▲Law enforcemen­t authoritie­s have never charged Lawrence Hecker with a crime, even though his number of accusers has only swelled with the passage of time.
Photograph: Gerald Herbert/AP ▲Law enforcemen­t authoritie­s have never charged Lawrence Hecker with a crime, even though his number of accusers has only swelled with the passage of time.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia