Chicago Sun-Times

EX- SNAP WORKER SAYS CLERGY- ABUSE GROUP COLLUDES WITH LAWYERS

- BY ANDY GRIMM Staff Reporter Email: agrimm@suntimes.com Twitter: @ agrimm34

“SNAP’S COMMERCIAL OPERATION IS PREMISED ON FARMING OUT ABUSE SURVIVORS AS CLIENTS FOR ATTORNEYS, WHO THEN FILE LAWSUITS ON BEHALF OF THE SURVIVORS AND COLLECT SETTLEMENT CHECKS FROM THE CATHOLIC CHURCH.” Stated in the lawsuit by Gretchen Hammond, who worked as a staff fundraiser for SNAP before being fired

A Chicago- based advocacy group that has led a national crusade to expose sexual abuse by Catholic clergy is being sued by a former executive who claims the not- for- profit colluded with lawyers who sued the church in exchange for “kickbacks” on the multimilli­ondollar settlement­s they won.

The onetime employee, Gretchen Hammond, worked as a staff fundraiser for the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests. She claims the group referred clergy- abuse victims to lawyers, who, in turn, sued the church. SNAP collaborat­ed with those attorneys, getting advance copies of lawsuits and hosting press conference­s, leveraging the publicity for fundraisin­g efforts, the lawsuit states.

Hammond was fired from SNAP after she probed the organizati­on’s fundraisin­g, the lawsuit alleges.

“In reality, SNAP is a commercial operation motivated by its directors’ and officers’ personal and ideologica­l animus against the Catholic Church,” the lawsuit states. “SNAP’s commercial operation is premised on farming out abuse survivors as clients for attorneys, who then file lawsuits on behalf of the survivors and collect settlement checks from the Catholic Church.”

SNAP President Barbara Blaine issued a brief statement Wednesday denying the allegation­s in the lawsuit, filed this week in Cook County Circuit Court.

“The allegation­s are not true. This will be proven in court,” Blaine said. “SNAP leaders are now, and always have been, devoted to following the SNAP mission: To help victims heal and to prevent further sexual abuse.”

Hammond copied files from the group during her stint as head of fundraisin­g for the group from 2011 to 2013.

In an interview Wednesday at the office of her lawyer, Bruce Howard, Hammond said that SNAP was aware that its connection­s to lawyers who had sued the church was a frequent line of attack from critics of the organizati­on — and that she was barred from so much as using the word “lawyer” in office emails or fundraisin­g records.

Hammond said she was able to get little informatio­n from the small staff at SNAP about counseling and support groups for victims, but was well aware of the group’s role in making public allegation­s of abuse by priests.

The lawsuit notes that there were no paid counselors on staff at SNAP during the years Hammond worked there. Blaine and SNAP National Director David Clohessy are the only paid employees listed on the group’s tax forms, each making $ 86,000 in 2014, the most recent year for which records were available.

“They had good intentions” at first, Hammond said. “It became less about survivors and more about making money.”

Hammond claims she was accidental­ly included in an email chain in 2012, in which Clohessy sent informatio­n on an abuse victim to a lawyer, a message in which Clohessy asked the attorney “when SNAP could expect a donation.”

Hammond began copying files from the organizati­on after con- fronting Blaine about the email, and complained that she had told donors that SNAP did not engage in “kickback schemes.” Hammond also had access to Clohessy’s email account, and found messages in which he expressed contempt for the church, telling one abuse victim to make a claim against the Archdioces­e of Milwaukee, which was then in bankruptcy.

The lawsuit states the group took in more than half of its revenues from donations — and sometimes more than 80 percent of its fundraisin­g — from lawyers, including an unnamed Minnesota lawyer who donated more than $ 1 million to the group from 2003 to 2011. An unnamed Chicago attorney donated nearly $ 100,000 in 2007 and 2008.

Internal Revenue Service records show the group raised $ 2.8 million from 2010 to 2014. In 2012, the group took in $ 676,923, according to the group’s tax filings. The lawsuit states that 56 percent of that amount came from lawyers. In 2007, the group raised $ 437,407, with 81 percent donated by lawyers.

“i sure hope u DO pursue the WI bankruptcy,” Clohessy wrote in the email. “every nickle they don’t have is a nickle that they can’t spend on defense lawyers, PR staff, gay- bashing, women- hating, contracept­ive-battling etc.”

 ??  ?? Gretchen Hammond ( right) with her attorney Bruce Howard, has sued the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, known as SNAP, a national organizati­on that advocates for victims of sexual abuse at the hands of Catholic clergy.
| RICH HEIN/ SUN-...
Gretchen Hammond ( right) with her attorney Bruce Howard, has sued the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, known as SNAP, a national organizati­on that advocates for victims of sexual abuse at the hands of Catholic clergy. | RICH HEIN/ SUN-...

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