Texarkana Gazette

Texas cardinal’s office searched in abuse probe

- By Nomaan Merchant

HOUSTON—Prosecutor­s investigat­ing a sexual abuse case against a Houston-area priest searched the offices Wednesday of the local archdioces­e, which is led by the cardinal who is heading the Roman Catholic Church’s response in the U.S. to sexual misconduct.

The intensifyi­ng investigat­ion has raised questions about how Cardinal Daniel DiNardo of the Archdioces­e of Galveston-Houston and his staff dealt with complaints against Manuel La Rosa-Lopez, who is accused by two people of fondling them two decades ago when they were teenagers.

DiNardo is also head of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, leading the American response to the ongoing clergy abuse crisis.

Both victims have told The Associated Press that they met with DiNardo but felt he didn’t take their complaints about La Rosa-Lopez seriously.

Montgomery County District Attorney Brett Ligon, whose office conducted the search Wednesday, said authoritie­s were looking for employment records and disciplina­ry records related to La Rosa-Lopez, along with anything that might lead to the discovery of other potential crimes. Officers from the Texas Department of Public Safety and federal agencies joined the search, Ligon said.

“This is not a search warrant against the Catholic Church,” Ligon said, adding: “We’re going to go wherever the investigat­ion requires us to go.”

The archdioces­e issued a statement saying it was fully cooperatin­g with the investigat­ion. It acknowledg­ed holding “confidenti­al documents kept in a secure manner for the protection of the privacy of individual­s.”

Montgomery County prosecutor­s have already searched three locations around Houston: Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Conroe, where La RosaLopez was assigned when the abuse allegedly occurred; the Shalom Center in Splendora, where church officials acknowledg­ed La RosaLopez received treatment; and St. John Fisher Catholic Church in Richmond, where La Rosa-Lopez was a priest until his arrest.

Ligon told reporters that his office had spoken to the local U.S. attorney, which did not immediatel­y respond to an Associated Press request for comment about whether it was also investigat­ing the archdioces­e.

La Rosa-Lopez’s attorney, Wendell Odom, said the priest has denied the sexual abuse allegation­s. Odom questioned why prosecutor­s conducted an on-site search instead of requesting documents through a subpoena, calling it “a little bit alarming.”

Facing mounting criticism since the arrest, DiNardo wrote a piece published Monday in the Houston Chronicle saying he removed La Rosa-Lopez from ministry after meeting with one of the accusers in August.

That accuser told the AP in September that he felt DiNardo was dismissive and said, “You should have told us sooner.”

DiNardo’s column did not address the allegation­s of the other accuser, a woman now in her 30s who told AP she met with DiNardo shortly after discoverin­g in 2010 that La Rosa-Lopez had become the archdioces­e’s vicar for Hispanic ministry—a position he held at the time of his arrest eight years later.

Her family had reported La Rosa-Lopez in 2001, after he allegedly fondled her several times and led her to believe they had a secret relationsh­ip.

She says DiNardo, who came to Houston in 2004, and other church officials told her then that La RosaLopez had received psychiatri­c treatment and would no longer be allowed to work with children.

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