Albuquerque Journal

Sheehan: Archdioces­e has become better place

Archbishop will be retiring in June

- BY RUSSELL CONTRERAS

More than two decades after taking over in the wake of sexual abuse scandals, retiring Santa Fe Archbishop Michael Sheehan said he believes he’s leaving the archdioces­e a better place and that there’s more accountabi­lity in addressing allegation­s of abuse.

The archdioces­e now has a zero-tolerance policy, and New Mexico is more open and transparen­t regarding abuse investigat­ions, Sheehan said Monday.

“There were problems. Yes. Lots of them,” said Sheehan, 75, who is retiring in June as head of New Mexico’s largest diocese because of age requiremen­ts. “But we have zero tolerance for any of that stuff now.”

Pope Francis has appointed Salt Lake City bishop and immigratio­n-reform advocate John Wester as Sheehan’s replacemen­t.

Sheehan was installed at the 11th Archbishop of Santa Fe in September 1993 following the resignatio­n of Archbishop Robert Sanchez, who stepped down right before the CBS News program “60 Minutes” was to broadcast a story naming several women who say they had sex with him.

Sanchez, the first Latino archbishop appointed in the United States, also came under scrutiny for failing to prevent and investigat­e allegation­s of sexual abuse of children by priests.

Letters later released as part of a settlement in California revealed that pedophile priests from across the country were assigned to a treatment center in northern New Mexico only to be reassigned to parishes in small Hispanic villages and American Indian Pueblos and reservatio­ns the state. Some of the priests later abused children, according to lawsuits.

When Sheehan became archbishop, he oversaw investigat­ions years before sexualabus­e cases involving priests became a national story.

Albuquerqu­e Attorney Brad Hall, who represents around 20 or so alleged victims of priest abuse, said he’s not sure there was a zero-tolerance policy under Sheehan.

But Hall said Sheehan did have an effect. “There’s no question he stopped the extent of the abuse that was occurring,” Hall said.

Many victims now want the church to release more documents related to investigat­ions that, so far, have largely remained sealed, Hall said.

Though stepping down from his post, Sheehan promised not to disappear from the scene. Sheehan said he was willing to serve as a substitute priests for those serving in rural communitie­s so those priests could have some time off.

“I’m not going anywhere,” Sheehan said. “I’ll be around.”

 ?? COURTESY OF ARCHDIOCES­E OF SANTA FE ?? Pope Francis greets Archbishop of Santa Fe Michael Sheehan in St. Peter’s Square in Vatican City last year.
COURTESY OF ARCHDIOCES­E OF SANTA FE Pope Francis greets Archbishop of Santa Fe Michael Sheehan in St. Peter’s Square in Vatican City last year.

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