Albuquerque Journal

‘Particular­ly abhorrent’ Archdioces­e bankruptcy won’t hide ugly truth

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In announcing that the Archdioces­e of Santa Fe would seek bankruptcy protection, Archbishop John Wester said the action would help ensure fair compensati­on for sex-abuse victims. His office went on to proclaim in a diocesan letter distribute­d to the faithful at Mass last Sunday that “for over 25 years, the Archdioces­e of Santa Fe has been a leader among its peers in addressing sexual abuse of children by clergy.”

Wester is correct on the first point, given the number of potential cases pending and others not yet filed. Victims will be represente­d and have their days in court. They may do so confidenti­ally if they wish, but in general these proceeding­s will be public. And bankruptcy protection will allow the Archdioces­e to continue to provide valuable services through parishes and schools even as lawyers and the court sort through financial questions like what the Archdioces­e’s assets really are and determine the status of assets transferre­d to parishes by the Archdioces­e in recent years.

No surprise here. Bankruptcy proceeding­s are about money, property and who gets what.

But the statement about being a national leader in the clergy sex-abuse area gives new meaning to the propositio­n that everything is relative, and that what happened here should NOT be judged alone but in context of what has happened in other states like Pennsylvan­ia — where the church was rocked by the results of an investigat­ion by that state’s attorney general.

While the Archdioces­e of Santa Fe has taken meaningful steps to stop abuse and to compensate and counsel victims — some 300 claims to date — the archdioces­e has been anything but transparen­t. It fought tooth and nail to keep court files secret until Judge Alan Malott ordered them opened up last year at the request of KOB-TV.

Meanwhile, new disclosure­s and allegation­s continue to mount, putting the past conduct of the church under a microscope.

And what we see isn’t pretty. In fact, it’s shocking, outrageous and disgusting.

A search warrant affidavit by a sex crimes investigat­or in the state Attorney General’s office dated Nov. 28 in the ongoing criminal investigat­ion of two former priests points out, “It has since been discovered that the Catholic Church’s highest-ranking officials contribute­d to helping contain the known abuse by handling atrocities internally” rather than reporting clear cases of the rape of children to authoritie­s.

Atrocities isn’t an overstatem­ent given what’s in the document.

The affidavit goes on to detail repeated oral, vaginal and anal rape allegation­s made by a Jane Doe — who was just 9 years old when the abuse began— against former priest Sabine Griego when he was assigned to Queen of Heaven Parish in Albuquerqu­e. Even more troubling: The affidavit says that a letter “written by (then) Archbishop (Michael J.) Sheehan explicitly identified Sabine Griego as having committed criminal sexual penetratio­n of the minor on several occasions.”

The September 2004 letter from Sheehan — who was succeeded by Wester in 2015 and in August informed the diocese he has been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease — to the archdioces­e is labeled “confidenti­al” and includes this excerpt: “Particular­ly abhorrent is the case of the female victim (name redacted) who was nine in 1990 at the time of the alleged abuse. She indicated that she endured vaginal, oral and anal sex from the accused.”

Yes, Griego was eventually removed from the priesthood. But this was rape. While Griego would be presumed innocent until proven otherwise in a court of law, these allegation­s were covered up.

The girl was an altar server and a student at Queen of Heaven School — where she alleged Griego on occasion removed her from class and took her to the rectory to “hurt her.”

There’s more. Another search warrant affidavit filed last week discusses alleged abuse by former priest Marvin Archuleta at the parish of Santa Cruz, who allegedly strapped a young boy to a chair and raped him, all the while telling him “this is how we show God’s love.”

The affidavit also quotes a former church-officialtu­rned-confidenti­al-informant who raises the spectre that some documents were destroyed to thwart possible investigat­ions.

And a new lawsuit filed Nov. 26 by attorney Brad Hall on behalf of a former altar boy alleges he was victimized for years by a trio of priests in Albuquerqu­e who would have “sex parties” with children and sometimes film them in orchestrat­ed sex acts.

On the subject of transparen­cy — lauded by the archbishop as a positive in the bankruptcy proceeding — the Archdioces­e has yet to explain the odd situation regarding the Rev. Adam Lee Ortega y Ortiz, rector of the Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis in Santa Fe, who appears to have been confined to the rectory with no public appearance­s since October.

In response to direct questions, it will say only that he is attending to “personal” matters.

All things considered, the decision to file for bankruptcy protection would appear to be the right one — for all concerned. But for those who think the Band-Aid has been completely pulled off of this painful wound and healing is all that’s on the horizon, it would appear they are sadly mistaken.

Wester says the Archdioces­e is on the right path. Trust us, he says. That trust, severely damaged by horrific acts and then cover-ups to protect the perpetrato­rs and Archdioces­e coffers, will have to be re-earned. Finally breaking with the church’s culture of secrecy and truly being more transparen­t is the only way to do it.

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 ?? ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL ?? Archbishop John Wester leads a group in prayer during a June event at the National Hispanic Cultural Center.
ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL Archbishop John Wester leads a group in prayer during a June event at the National Hispanic Cultural Center.

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