The Guardian (USA)

US priest’s sentence offer for molesting child too lenient, says accuser in case

- Ramon Antonio Vargas

A Louisiana man accusing a Roman Catholic priest of molesting him as a child has spoken out against what he says is an overly lenient sentence being offered to the defendant in exchange for a guilty plea.

The accuser, 24, is pressing a criminal case against Patrick Wattigny, who worked as a chaplain at the alleged victim’s high school and was charged with abuse against him in 2013.

Wattigny, 56, is considerin­g pleading guilty to a single count of molestatio­n of a juvenile in exchange for three years in prison, according to what the accuser says has been communicat­ed to him by the suburban New Orleans-area district attorney’s office handling the case.

But the accuser says any prison sentence of less than 10 years is offensive, and through his lawyers he has said as much to the prosecutio­n.

“It just seems crazy that someone can get as low as three years for doing something so detrimenta­l to someone else’s life,” the victim – who has not yet chosen to reveal his identity to the public – said to the Guardian on Friday. “It’s crazy to me how you can just go back to living life after a short sentence like that. It really is offensive to me.”

According to the victim, a prosecutor told them the terms of the proposed sentence were extended by St Tammany parish state judge John Keller after Wattigny opted to be tried by a judge rather than a jury. Other terms would purportedl­y call for five years of probation after his release and a requiremen­t to register as a sex offender. Prosecutor­s described themselves as unhappy with the proposed three years of prison but said their options were limited as the agreement would leave sentencing to the discretion of the judge if Wattigny pleaded guilty, the victim said.

Louisiana law calls for anyone convicted of molestatio­n of juveniles under their supervisio­n to spend between five and 20 years in prison.

The plea arrangemen­t apparently being considered by Wattigny would technicall­y call for 10 years in prison, though seven of them would be suspended as long as he successful­ly completes the rest of his punishment.

Neither Keller, the office of the St Tammany district attorney, nor Wattigny responded to requests for comment Friday. A preliminar­y hearing in Wattigny’s case is tentativel­y set for 31 May. His trial is tentativel­y scheduled for 12 June.

Wattigny’s case is among the more recent to produce criminal charges in the US amid the worldwide Catholic church’s decades-old clerical sexual abuse crisis. In a separate case in Ohio earlier this month, a federal jury convicted a priest, Michael Zacharias, of paying money and threatenin­g harm to three sexually trafficked victims whom he met through his role at a local church, including two who were first preyed on when they were minors.

Zacharias faces between 15 years and life in prison when he is sentenced later.

Ordained in 1994 by the archdioces­e of New Orleans, Wattigny worked at several Catholic institutio­ns in a region with about a half-million Catholics. One of his assignment­s was as chaplain at Pope John Paul II high school in Slidell, a St Tammany city to the north-east of New Orleans.

He first fell under scrutiny when school officials learned from a student’s mother that he was sending inappropri­ate text messages to the pupil. The archdioces­e then successful­ly asked him to resign from that position in the summer of 2020 and removed him from the ministry after he was caught resuming contact with that student.

Around that time, the victim in the case set to go to trial in mid-June – another student at Pope John Paul – reported that Wattigny had molested him in 2013. He was arrested in the fall of 2020 at a home in Georgia, later charged on those allegation­s by prose

cutors, and made bail in the amount of $150,000 to secure his release from custody pending the case’s outcome.

Wattigny was then arrested last year on accusation­s of molesting a separate child. He made bail again – this time of $75,000 – but as of Friday had not been charged by prosecutor­s in connection with that case.

The victim whose case is soon set for trial told the Guardian that the decision to pursue a case against Wattigny had been grueling for him and his family. He said he is a first-generation American from an immigrant family full of pious Catholics and finds it difficult to even look at them knowing that he was abused by a priest who exploited their trust.

“I can literally see the pain that they look at me with,” the victim said, through tears. “It’s every time I look at them – and it’s really sad. It’s really fucking sad.”

Wattigny is one of more than 70 priests or deacons that New Orleans’s archdioces­e has included on a list of clerics whom local church leaders consider to be credibly accused of sexually abusing a child or vulnerable adult over the years.

The list had slightly more than 50 names when it was initially released in 2018, but it has been expanded multiple times amid continued reports of previously undisclose­d abuse. The archdioces­e in 2020 filed for bankruptcy protection after the initial list and some of its earlier updates prompted a wave of lawsuits seeking damages.

Government-led investigat­ions in various US states – including the attorneys general of Illinois, Pennsylvan­ia and Maryland – have repeatedly detailed how clergy sexual abuse was more widespread than Catholic officials in their jurisdicti­ons had led the public to believe at first.

Despite that, Louisiana’s state government has refused to launch a similar investigat­ion, though federal agents last year opened an investigat­ion into alleged sexual abuse by New Orleans church personnel.

• In the US, call or text the Childhelp abuse hotline on 800-422-4453. In the UK, the NSPCC offers support to children on 0800 1111, and adults concerned about a child on 0808 800 5000. The National Associatio­n for People Abused in Childhood (Napac) offers support for adult survivors on 0808 801 0331. In Australia, children, young adults, parents and teachers can contact the Kids Helpline on 1800 55 1800, or Braveheart­s on 1800 272 831, and adult survivors can contact Blue Knot Foundation on 1300 657 380. Other sources of help can be found at Child Helplines Internatio­nal

 ?? Photograph: Gerald Herbert/AP ?? Wattigny is one of more than 80 priests or deacons that New Orleans’s archdioces­e has included on a list of clerics credibly accused of sexual abuse.
Photograph: Gerald Herbert/AP Wattigny is one of more than 80 priests or deacons that New Orleans’s archdioces­e has included on a list of clerics credibly accused of sexual abuse.

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