Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Pfleger benched again amid another decades-old claim of sexual abuse

- By Christy Gutowski

For the second time in less than two years, the Rev. Michael Pfleger is stepping away from his popular ministry while under investigat­ion for a decadesold sexual abuse allegation, the Archdioces­e of Chicago confirmed Saturday.

In the latest allegation, a man in his late 40s has filed a claim with the archdioces­e alleging the long-tenured activist South Side priest sexually abused him at St. Sabina Church in the late 1980s.

The man’s attorney, Eugene Hollander, said his client was a member of the acclaimed Soul Children of Chicago choir when the alleged incidents occurred on two separate occasions in the church rectory. The choir rehearsed at St. Sabina once or twice a week, the attorney said.

The boy was a minor, between the ages 13 and 17 at the time. Hollander declined to provide further details Saturday while the archdioces­e investigat­ion is ongoing.

“The Soul Children of Chicago have a 40 year history of excellence and a discipline­d focus on educating and empowering the lives of our youth,” said Andrew M. Stroth, an attorney for The Soul Children of Chicago and choir director Dr. Walter Whitman in an emailed statement. “During the rehearsals at St. Sabina the choir always had chaperones and parent attendants watching over the children.”

“Dr. Walter Whitman and the Soul Children denounce the recent allegation­s and support Father Pfleger as a man of integrity, Stroth’s statement said.

Pfleger, 73, has stepped aside from his day-to-day church duties. Cardinal Blase Cupich also is requiring him to live away from the Auburn Gresham parish while the civil matter is investigat­ed by the archdioces­e’s independen­t review board. Such moves are in keeping with archdioces­e policies.

“He has agreed to cooperate fully with this request,” Cupich said of Pfleger in an Oct. 15 letter to St. Sabina parishione­rs posted on the church’s website Saturday. “As is required by our child protection policies, the allegation was reported to the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services and the law enforcemen­t officials. The person making the allegation has been offered the services of our victim assistance ministry and the archdioces­e has begun its investigat­ion and we will do our best to keep you informed.”

Pfleger is not facing criminal charges. Neither he nor his attorneys immediatel­y responded Saturday to Tribune requests for comment but Pfleger released a statement posted on St. Sabina’s website in which he said he learned of the allegation Friday and has been “removed from all public ministry while they investigat­e again.” He maintained his innocence.

“Let me be clear,” he wrote, “I am completely innocent of this accusation.”

He was sidelined from his ministry for several months in early 2021 after two adult brothers filed claims accusing Pfleger of decades-old abuse. The priest returned to St. Sabina that summer after the review panel found “insufficie­nt reason to suspect” that the passionate anti-violence advocate was guilty of the allegation­s.

The two brothers, in their 60s and living in Texas, had alleged in the 2021 claims to the archdioces­e that they were molested over several years beginning in the 1970s at Precious Blood Catholic Church on Chicago’s West Side when Pfleger was a seminarian, and the brothers were members of the choir. The abuse continued, the brothers said, when Pfleger was a deacon at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Catholic Parish in Glenview and at St. Sabina.

A third man came forward months after the two brothers to say Pfleger made an unwanted sexual advance toward him as well, when he was 18 in 1979. That man did not file a claim with the archdioces­e, given the fact he was no longer a minor at 18, but he did submit an affidavit shared with church officials in support of the two brothers.

Pfleger maintained his innocence at the time and his legal team said the allegation­s were false, concocted in hopes of receiving a financial statement.

In a May 2021 letter, following the review board’s decision, Cupich told St. Sabina parishione­rs that their longtime priest would be returning as senior pastor. Cupich, at the time, wrote: “The review board has concluded that there is insufficie­nt reason to suspect Father Pfleger is guilty of these allegation­s.”

Pfleger celebrated his return in a Sunday morning service on June 6, 2021 with standing ovations, exclamatio­ns of support and worship. He repeatedly thanked his faithful supporters throughout the nearly three-hour service. His parishione­rs had rallied behind him, including when St. Sabina announced in late February 2021 it was withholdin­g $100,000 in monthly assessment­s to the archdioces­e until it completed its investigat­ion.

Hollander also represente­d the two Texas brothers. And he previously represente­d some victims of defrocked priest Daniel McCormack in an infamous abuse case that helped lead to an overhaul of Chicago church policy.

In his Saturday statement, Pfleger asked his supporters to pray for him. “Unfortunat­ely, the process of the Archdioces­e today is that a priest is presumed guilty until proven innocent. Priests are vulnerable targets to anyone at any time.”

He continued: “While I am confident that the new allegation will also be determined to be unfounded, the process is so unfair and painful to me and to the community I serve.”

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