Albuquerque Journal

New legal troubles for Archdioces­e of Santa Fe

More priest abuse horror stories alleged in new suit, search warrants

- BY COLLEEN HEILD JOURNAL INVESTIGAT­IVE REPORTER

Seven years after he murdered a female parishione­r in Texas in 1960, Father John Feit found refuge in Jemez Springs, where he was a supervisor at the Servants of the Paraclete center for Catholic priests with psychosexu­al problems.

According to a new lawsuit, Feit documented an agreement with the Archdioces­e of Santa Fe in 1967 to supply pedophile priests to New Mexico parishes without telling parishione­rs or other working priests in the archdioces­e about the potential danger to local children.

The ramificati­ons of that alleged secret pact — and decades of child sexual abuse inflicted by Catholic priests in New Mexico

— are unraveling in the newest chapter of public reckoning for the Archdioces­e of Santa Fe.

The archdioces­e, New Mexico’s largest Catholic district, encompassi­ng 92 parishes, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganiza­tion last week, opening the books into its finances. Liabilitie­s, including payouts to current and future abuse claimants, were an estimated $10 million to $50 million.

Days earlier, state attorney general agents executed a search warrant that required an 80-year-old ex-priest who lives in the Las Vegas, N.M., area to strip naked and be photograph­ed as part of the AG’s Office’s effort to corroborat­e one victim’s account of her abuse three decades ago.

With more than a dozen state attorneys general and federal law enforcemen­t launching investigat­ions into clergy sex abuse this year, New Mexico Attorney General Hector Balderas’ office has ramped up its own inquiry, including targeting at least two former Catholic priests. AG’s Office agents, in part, are looking into what a former archbishop described in 2004 as an “abhorrent” case of a 9-year-old girl who alleged she was violently raped by an Albuquerqu­e priest on multiple occasions.

A spokeswoma­n for the archdioces­e told the Journal last week that the archdioces­e doesn’t comment on pending litigation and is cooperatin­g fully with the attorney general’s inquiry.

‘Sex parties’

In the new civil lawsuit, which was filed just before the bankruptcy was announced, a former Albuquerqu­e altar boy is alleged to have been a “boy toy” of a trio of priests who filmed “sex parties” with children in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

The lawsuit filed by “John Doe 94” contends that he was repeatedly sexually abused from the age of 10 to 16 by three priests who acted with “complete impunity and immunity … completely fearless of the law, even going through the KAFB (Kirtland Air Force Base) gates with the children in their cars.”

The priests “partied” with booze and drugs, and “their ‘boy toys’ (like altar boys) had the children, both boys and girls provide sexual performanc­es (some of which were even filmed),” the lawsuit alleges.

Their conduct went unchecked by then-Archbishop of Santa Fe Robert F. Sanchez, because he was already compromise­d, the lawsuit alleges.

Sanchez could do “nothing to stop” the rape and abuse of kids, in part because pedophile priests in the archdioces­e “all possessed compromisi­ng informatio­n on the Archbishop’s own sexual procliviti­es and misconduct, which they threatened to use against him, if necessary.”

Sanchez resigned as archbishop in 1993, after three women accused him of sexual misconduct and taking advantage of them as teenagers.

One of those accused in the new lawsuit, Father Arthur Perrault, is facing federal sexual assault charges involving a different alleged victim in the early 1990s on federal property. Two others referred to in the lawsuit are Father Robert Malloy and Father Ronald Bruckner, who were both schoolteac­hers and administra­tors at Our Lady of Assumption School in Albuquerqu­e, the lawsuit states.

Malloy, reached by the Journal last week, denied any wrongdoing, adding, “Unequivoca­bly, that absolutely didn’t happen.”

Bruckner couldn’t be reached for comment last week.

The “John Doe 94” lawsuit uses the term “pedophile,” which is defined as the fantasy or act of sexual activity with children who are generally age 13 years or younger. Other claims over the years against the archdioces­e have alleged clergy sexual abuse of minors over the age of 13.

‘House of cards’

The John Doe 94 lawsuit provides new allegation­s about Feit, who was convicted last year in Edinburg, Texas, of the 1960 suffocatio­n of 25-year-old Irene Garza, a schoolteac­her and former Miss South Texas. Feit, now 86, is no longer a priest and is appealing his sentence of life in prison.

While a suspect in the murder, Feit arrived at the Servants of the Paraclete in 1964 and had become one of its leaders by 1967.

According to the lawsuit, Feit took minutes of a 1967 meeting involving the archdioces­e and the Paracletes in which the two entities agreed not to tell parishione­rs of the potential danger to local children when they supplied pedophile priests to New Mexico parishes.

He and then-Archbishop of Santa Fe John Davis jointly placed Perrault as a teacher at St. Pius X High School in Albuquerqu­e. Perrault, who has been accused in dozens of sexual assaults on children, later became a pastor at St. Bernadette’s parish in the Northeast Heights. But Perrault abruptly left the parish in 1992 as allegation­s about his misconduct surfaced. He relocated to Morocco, where he taught school.

John Doe 94 came forward after “his psychologi­cal ‘house of cards’ collapsed upon news of the FBI’s arrest and extraditio­n of Fr. Perrault” in late September, the lawsuit states.

To survive the trauma of abuse by Perrault, Malloy and Bruckner, the lawsuit alleges, John Doe 94 “suppressed everything as a child with drug abuse, minimizati­on, compartmen­talization, and other forms of denial and told no one about the organized, systematic sexual abuse and exploitati­on by these priests until 2018.”

The harm and suffering of many victims, including John Doe 94, “could have been at least partially alleviated or ameliorate­d by earlier profession­al interventi­on, which the Defendants’ policies of secrecy and non-disclosure of documents and informatio­n to the public prevented from the early 1990s until very recent small steps toward accountabi­lity,” states the lawsuit — which is seeking “tens of millions of dollars” in damages.

Protect the church

The lawsuit alleges that the Catholic church in New Mexico found that “denying everything” usually worked. Decades of coverup was justified in part by the practice of “mental reservatio­ns,” which the lawsuit states is allowed by Catholic doctrine in order to protect the church “on the theory that the Church generally does good in the world, and needs to be protected from scandal.”

Archbishop John C. Wester, assigned to New Mexico in 2015, has pledged to help abuse survivors and stressed that he views the bankruptcy action as the best way to ensure equitable financial compensati­on to current and future claimants.

“It’s kind of turning the page and moving forward

in a responsibl­e way,” Wester said.

The bankruptcy petition effectivel­y halts 36 pending clergy abuse lawsuits from proceeding in state court, but how the claims will be handled in bankruptcy court is uncertain for now. Some fear the bankruptcy is a vehicle to protect release of records that could prove damaging to the archdioces­e. Others say the filing eliminates some of the defenses asserted by lawyers for the church who have resisted payouts in mediations of abuse claims.

“We expect this diocese has plenty of assets to finally help all these survivors obtain some kind of closure and transparen­cy,” said Albuquerqu­e attorney Brad Hall, who has filed more than 100 cases against the archdioces­e since 2011. “We’re looking forward to getting to the real value of our clients’ claims in this forum because the threat of bankruptcy no longer exists.”

In the John Doe 94 lawsuit, filed by Hall, Bruckner is alleged to have sexually assaulted the altar boy for a few years. Then Bruckner’s roommate and assistant pastor of Our Lady of Assumption church in Albuquerqu­e, Malloy, also began abusing him, the lawsuit alleges.

Malloy pleaded no contest in 2002 to misdemeano­r charges of sexual exploitati­on of children by prostituti­on and contributi­ng to child delinquenc­y, but originally faced 42 felony counts. He received five years of probation.

Bruckner, who has retired, in 2005 denied allegation­s of sexual misconduct in an earlier case but had his duties as a priest restricted.

All three priests named in the John Doe 94 lawsuit are on the archdioces­e’s list of 78 priests, deacons or seminarian­s against whom credible allegation­s have been made.

The lawsuit alleges that Malloy, a former volunteer chaplain at the Albuquerqu­e Police Department, and other abusive priests had “unchecked powers over Catholic children and teens.”

For example, Malloy is alleged to have been able to put notes on the inside of (John Doe 94’s) school locker “demanding sexual acts, even though Plaintiff never gave his combinatio­n out to anyone,” according to the lawsuit.

The years of childhood sexual abuse occurred on church properties and in rectories and sometimes involved trips to Kirtland Air Force Base, where Perrault was a chaplain, the lawsuit states. Bruckner was a chaplain with the New Mexico National Guard.

Finally at age 16, devastated by psychologi­cal harm, his soul “veritably shredded” and his religion destroyed, John Doe 94 ran away while attending St. Pius X Catholic High School, “where he was essentiall­y a prisoner of constant sexual exploitati­on by the three priests.” He lived homeless as a runaway in the East Mountains for a period of time, the lawsuit states.

In the intervenin­g years, the “evasion of transparen­cy” and the “institutio­nal” secrecy by the church, which insisted on sealing lawsuits alleging clergy abuse, only exacerbate­d John Doe’s damages, the lawsuit states. He has not yet realized the nature of his injury, “even with the early help of profession­als.”

Whether they had direct knowledge of any specific priest, officials in the archdioces­e knew “there were pedophiles in their midst,”the lawsuit contends.

Wester said recently that the archdioces­e strives for transparen­cy, but has been bound by court-imposed confidenti­ality agreements of lawsuits and the need to protect the privacy of victims.

‘Abhorrent’

Some 14 years ago, thenArchbi­shop Michael Sheehan, who replaced Archbishop Sanchez, signed a confidenti­al letter that provided “direct evidence” of the criminal sexual penetratio­n of a child by ex-priest Sabine Griego, according to a search warrant affidavit filed by the AG’s Office.

Sheehan, in a September 2004 letter, stated, “Particular­ly abhorrent is the case of female victim … who was nine in 1990 at the time of the alleged abuse,” which included vaginal, oral and anal sex by Griego, according to search warrant documents.

The Attorney General’s office interviewe­d the alleged victim, identified only as Jane Doe A, in October of this year. It was the first time she had spoken to law enforcemen­t about what occurred. She said the abuse began when she was 7 years old, attending Queen of Heaven Catholic School in Albuquerqu­e. She was also an altar server at church, where she encountere­d Griego.

The woman alleged that, beginning when she was 7, Griego would force her to perform oral sex, then smack her when she choked. During one rape, when she was 9 years old, he slammed her face into a table, breaking her nose, but continued his assault despite her profusely bleeding.

The injury required her nose to be reset at the thenLovela­ce Hospital. She told her mother she was injured during physical education class.

According to the search warrant affidavit, the woman said that Griego had told her he would kill her if she told anyone, and threatened to cut out her tongue and harm her mother.

Her fear of him led to her wetting her pants when she would see him approach her classroom in school.

She then intentiona­lly wet herself to try to keep him away. The practice became so regular that it prompted her mother to pack a change of clothing for her daughter to take to school. Jane Doe A said she never saw Griego again after she entered the fourth grade.

At the age of 13, after having nightmares and engaging in “self harm,”Jane Doe A told her family about the abuse for the first time, but blamed herself for what happened.

She gave AG’s Office agents specifics about Griego’s “nude body markings,” which were cited in the affidavit as the legal grounds for the strip search.

Griego has been the subject of more than 30 civil lawsuits filed on behalf of survivors.

 ??  ?? John Feit
John Feit
 ?? NATHAN LAMBRECHT/THE MONITOR ?? Former priest John Feit, center, appeared in a Hidalgo County, Texas, courtroom on Dec. 7, 2017, where a jury found him guilty of the 1960 murder of Irene Garza, a parishione­r and schoolteac­her. A new lawsuit filed in Albuquerqu­e says Feit became a leader at the Servants of the Paraclete treatment center in Jemez Springs after the crime.
NATHAN LAMBRECHT/THE MONITOR Former priest John Feit, center, appeared in a Hidalgo County, Texas, courtroom on Dec. 7, 2017, where a jury found him guilty of the 1960 murder of Irene Garza, a parishione­r and schoolteac­her. A new lawsuit filed in Albuquerqu­e says Feit became a leader at the Servants of the Paraclete treatment center in Jemez Springs after the crime.
 ??  ?? Arthur Perrault
Arthur Perrault
 ??  ?? Ronald Bruckner
Ronald Bruckner
 ??  ?? Robert Malloy
Robert Malloy
 ?? ROSE PALMISANO/JOURNAL ?? This is the main building of the Servants of the Paraclete property in Jemez Springs that used to treat priests accused of child sexual abuse.
ROSE PALMISANO/JOURNAL This is the main building of the Servants of the Paraclete property in Jemez Springs that used to treat priests accused of child sexual abuse.
 ??  ?? Sabine Griego
Sabine Griego

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