Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Serritella, J.D., James A.

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Nationally renowned attorney, who represente­d the Archdioces­e of Chicago for 50 years dies at 78.

James A. Serritella, J.D., an attorney who served as chief counsel and legal advisor to the Archdioces­e of Chicago for nearly 50 years, died at Northweste­rn Memorial Hospital Friday, April 23, at the age of 78 from complicati­ons of heart disease.

Serritella was a named partner at the law firm of Burke, Warren, MacKay & Serritella where he served as chair of the Religious and Not-For-Profit Group. His nearly half century legal practice focused on legal needs of tax exempt religious and not-forprofit organizati­ons. He advised four Cardinals, beginning with Cardinal John Cody in the 1970s and continuing through the administra­tions of Cardinal Joseph Bernardin, Cardinal Francis George and, currently, Cardinal Blase Cupich.

Over his extensive career, Jim saw the Archdioces­e of Chicago through countless critical events including the clergy sex abuse crisis, the many transition­s and restructur­ing of the Archdioces­e, including the deaths of three Cardinals. Serritella said, “The Church acts best when it acts as a Church.” He believed the Church should address the problem by having its own pastorally sensitive personnel reach out to those injured and try to help them. Guided by this belief, Jim was one of the chief architects of the Archdioces­e of Chicago’s approach to the clerical sex abuse of minors. In 1991, Cardinal Bernardin appointed a special commission to study the matter and make recommenda­tions for corrective action. The work of Jim and others, coupled with the Commission report inspired the developmen­t of revolution­ary policies in 1992 that establishe­d a n Independen­t Review Board to assess abuse allegation­s and am Office of Victim Assistance. This groundbrea­king approach was pastorally oriented and directed toward protecting children while treating survivors compassion­ately.

Serritella was the lead counsel for Cardinal Joseph Bernardin in Cook v. Bernardin, an accusation of sexual abuse against one of the foremost Catholic figures that shook the Catholic Church. His accuser recanted and Cardinal was exonerated of charges of sexual misconduct.

Serritella was also a fierce advocate for full disclosure and transparen­cy for the Archdioces­e of Chicago, a nearly unique practice among U.S. dioceses and often during times when many other dioceses were taking practices that were less transparen­t. Notably, in 2006 the archdioces­e published a list of all clergy with substantia­ted allegation­s of child sexual abuse against them and in 2014 the archdioces­e voluntaril­y released nearly 20,000 pages of documents related to these priests. Serritella also had an enormous impact on a countless range of public policy and constituti­onal issues in the United States Supreme Court, Illinois Supreme Court, and other courts throughout the United States. These cases involved treatment of the seriously ill, education finance, taxation of exempt and not-for-profit organizati­ons and religious liberty.

In the mid-1970s Jim helped the Catholic Conference of Illinois developmen­t legislatio­n (the “Rock/ Grotberg amendment”) requiring the Department of Children and Family Services to pay the full cost of services purchased from the private sector, enabling Catholic Charities and other private religious and secular organizati­ons to continue programs such as foster care for decades afterward. Jim also represente­d the prevailing party in the constituti­onal and public policy landmark U.S. Supreme Court case of NLRB v. Catholic Bishop of Chicago which held that the schools operated by a church to teach both religious and secular subjects are not within the jurisdicti­on granted by the National Labor Relations Act, preserving protection­s for religious organizati­ons and serving as a precedent that stands and has vitality to this day. Other significan­t cases included the Illinois Appellate Court cases of Grace Lutheran Church v. Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod, Galich v. the Catholic Bishop, and Catholic Bishop v. the Village of Justice, and the Circuit Court of Cook County case of Catholic Charities vs. Leahy. Serritella’s career was also distinguis­hed in his work related to religious freedom both within the United States and internatio­nally. In the early 1990s, after the fall of the iron curtain, Serritella made several visits to Eastern Europe to participat­e in legal and constituti­onal consultati­ons on religious freedom and not-for-profit law in the newly emerging democracie­s, notably in Budapest and Russia. He has written and lectured extensivel­y on religious freedom and on legal issues affecting exempt organizati­ons. He was a founder of the DePaul University College of Law Center for Church/State studies and served as chair of its Advisory Board. He was also a founder of the Center for Migration Studies in New York and an Associate editor of the Internatio­nal Migration Digest (now called the Internatio­nal Migration Review). Further, he has been involved in several hundred mediations over the course of his career, chiefly as a party representa­tive, but occasional­ly as a mediator or advisor.

Serritella was also a tireless civic volunteer, with notable contributi­ons to Catholic Charities, including founding the Catholic Charities Gala of the Arts with his late wife Ruby in 2002. He was also deeply involved in the Italian American community in Chicago and founded the “Forum Associates” which aimed to provide profession­al advancemen­t and philanthro­py to the Chicago Italian community. He was also a member of numerous profession­al and civic organizati­ons including the Chicago, Illinois State, and American Bar Associatio­ns as well as the Canon Law Society of America and the Diocesan Attorneys Associatio­n. He was also a Charter Fellow of the Illinois Bar Foundation and Fellow of the American Bar Foundation. Serritella was the recipient of numerous awards throughout his career. In 2012, Francis Cardinal George presented a Papal Degree from the Vatican that appointed Jim to knighthood in the Pontifical Equestrian Order of St. Gregory the Great, one of the five orders of knighthood from the Holy See, in recognitio­n for Jim’s long and exceptiona­l service to the Holy See and Church. Jim was also invited to the White House by President Jimmy Carter when John Paul II visited the United States in 1979. He was also awarded an honorary Doctor of Law Degree from North Park University, the John Courtney Murray Award from the DePaul University College of Law, the Rerum Novarum Award from St. Joseph Seminary, the Caritas Christi Urget Nos award from Catholic Charities of the Archdioces­e of Chicago, the Pax et Bonum Award from the Franciscan Friars and the Outstandin­g Leaders Award from the Carmelite Order. He is also the author of “Religious Organizati­ons in the United States, A Study of Identity, Liberty, and the Law” published in 2006. Serritella was raised in the Taylor Street neighborho­od, Chicago’s west side Italian American community. He was the son of Anthony Serritella, a civil servant at the Chicago Board of Education, and Angela Serritella (nee DeLeonardi­s). His family originates from Ricigliano, a small central Italian mountain town. Serritella studied to be a priest for ten years with the Missionary Fathers of Saint Charles (known as the Scalabrini­ans). He left the seminary before ordination to pursue a career in public life and service. He studied economics and law to transition to the secular world. Serritella received a Masters from the Committee for the Analysis of Ideas and Study of Methods at the University of Chicago and his J.D. from the University of Chicago Law School in 1971. He held a B.A. from St. Charles Seminary College of Liberal Arts and a second bachelor’s degree from the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome. Serritella was married to his wife Ruby (nee Amoroso, parents Ventu and Mildred Amoroso) from 1981 until her death in 2009. They had one son, Anthony V. Serritella, M.D., 36. Jim invested significan­t time chroniclin­g the history of his family, including compiling extensive family histories for his own and his wife’s families, self-publishing several large editions on the subject. Numerous projects were ongoing at the time of his death. He is survived by his son Anthony (fiancée Casey Maus), a physician at Northweste­rn Memorial Hospital, his sister, Camille Vena, a retired Chicago Public School teacher. He is also survived by his cousins John C. Silvestri, Daniel Silvestri, and Joseph DeLeonardi­s – all of whom he grew up in the same household on Lexington Street. He is also survived by his niece Mary Ann Vena as well as his nephew Anthony Vena. He is also survived by countless cousins, nieces, nephews, family members and friends. Anthony Serritella on Monday recalled playing with toys on the floor of the late U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia’s Washington office on visits with his father, who was close friends with the jurist.

“When I was an adolescent, I remember telling my father, ‘I’m seeing all these other people take shortcuts. Why should I do the right thing?’” he said.

“He told me, ‘You shouldn’t do the right thing because you’re forced to, but because you know it’s the right thing, and you want to,’” he said. The family invites all who wish to celebrate and remember Serritella’s life to a public wake at Holy Name Cathedral, 735 N. State St. in Chicago, on Thursday, May 6 th , beginning at 4 p.m. and concluding at 7 p.m. Advance pre-registrati­on for the wake is recommende­d to expedite entry and to comply with COVID-19 safety protocols. On-site registrati­on will also be available. You may pre-register online at: https://holyname.ccbchurch.com/goto/forms/229/ responses/new

The funeral mass will also be held at Holy Name Cathedral on Friday, May 7th celebrated by Cardinal Blase Cupich. Burial will follow Mass at Queen of Heaven Cemetery in Hillside, Illinois. Invitation­s will be sent out separately for both a private remembranc­e service after the wake and the funeral mass. Compliment­ary parking will be available for all events held at Holy Name Cathedral at the Loyola University Parking Lot (20 W. Chicago Avenue, between State and Dearborn streets). In lieu of flowers, the family requests memorial contributi­ons to Catholic Charities Emergency Services (721 N. LaSalle Street, Chicago, IL 60654). More informatio­n can be found at www.catholicch­arities.net/donate Funeral Arrangemen­ts entrusted to Cumberland Chapels –

708-456-8300 or www.cumberland­chapels.com.

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