The Guardian (USA)

‘He controlled my life’: New Orleans archdioces­e ignored woman’s claims before priest’s abrupt dismissal

- Ramon Antonio Vargas in New Orleans

A Louisiana Catholic priest’s sudden dismissal from the church where he had been a popular pastor for the last several years has set off a fresh scandal in the embattled New Orleans archdioces­e, the second-oldest in the US.

As they tell it, local church leaders rescinded Anthony Odiong’s invitation to serve as a cleric in the region due to unspecifie­d “concerns … about [his] ministry prior” to his arrival in the archdioces­e – “and quite possibly during his time” there. As a result, the New Orleans archbishop, Gregory Aymond, told Odiong’s bishop in Nigeria to recall him to his home diocese “as soon as possible to address these concerns”, officials said in a statement.

The statement did not mention whether those concerns stemmed from Aymond’s receipt in 2019 of a detailed complaint against Odiong of yearslong sexual and financial abuse from a woman who viewed the clergyman as her spiritual adviser – and who says the church brushed her off.

“These concerns do not include the abuse of minors nor to our knowledge involve anyone in this [church],” is all the archdioces­e’s statement said.

The statement added that the archdioces­e had reported Odiong to law enforcemen­t authoritie­s, and the organizati­on had ordered him to soon leave the rectory where he had been residing.

Meanwhile, Odiong has offered up a starkly different counter-narrative. He has publicly suggested that Aymond booted him out from serving the archdioces­e with about a half-million Catholics after likening members of the LGBTQ+ community to “monkeys and animals and chimpanzee­s” in a recent sermon that warned of a purported liberal takeover of the church.

The archdioces­e’s statement did not deny that it found Odiong’s remarks to be problemati­c. And it suggested that the comments may have expedited a departure originally scheduled for January.

“Unfortunat­ely,” the statement said, “[Father] Anthony’s words and actions since being informed of this decision have led to us taking action to relieve him as pastor now.”

Whatever the case, the circumstan­ces of Odiong’s departure from the St Anthony of Padua church highlight the layered predicamen­t Aymond and his archdioces­e find themselves in.

The archdioces­e has racked up nearly $34m in legal and other profession­al services fees since filing for federal bankruptcy protection in 2020 in the face of a mountain of local clergy abuse litigation. To cope with the bankruptcy court expenses, the church recently announced a plan to close several of its churches.

St Anthony of Padua was not one of the churches affected by the downsizing. Yet Odiong’s dismissal has stirred unrest among his parishione­rs and their community of Luling, Louisiana, whose population of about 14,500 people resides about 25 miles (40km) south-west of New Orleans.

Masses held by Odiong in which parishione­rs came to be healed both physically and spirituall­y proved to be particular­ly popular and helped attendance for weekend services surge from fewer than 390 to more than 500, according to reporting in the local St Charles Herald Guide newspaper.

Odiong and at least some in his former congregati­on now feel as though they have been thrust into the split brewing between those who support and those who oppose Pope Francis’s attempts to make the Catholic church more welcoming to the LGBTQ + community, a prominent agenda item during a recent synod of bishops at the Vatican.

Francis in November dismissed Joseph Strickland, at that time the bishop of Tyler, Texas, for his criticism of the pope’s goals to be more inclusive of LGBTQ+ people and to give the laity more responsibi­lities within a church that does not allow gay marriage.

The outpouring of support for Odiong from some of his followers has generally echoed the support among conservati­ve circles that met Strickland after his ouster.

“You have your flock’s unwavering love,” read one of numerous recent Facebook posts from Luling residents. Another read: “I [shudder] to think what my spiritual life would be like without his guidance … My friends and I stand WITH [Father] Anthony Odiong, NOT against him.”

However, what the controvers­y surroundin­g Odiong’s departure also seems to highlight is how few – if any – of his most fervent believers realized that he stands among more than 300 clergymen, religious personnel or lay church employees who are accused of abusing vulnerable parishione­rs – mostly children but also adults – in claims filed as part of the archdioces­e’s pending bankruptcy.

Most of the records associated with the bankruptcy are under a court seal. But the Guardian managed to obtain a copy of the claim against Odiong, which was prepared by his accuser’s attorney, Kristi Schubert.

A review of the document – filed under oath – raises questions about whether Aymond could have acted against Odiong long before his abrupt dismissal and the anti-LGBTQ+ remarks that he insisted cost him his position.

When asked about his response to the accusation­s in the bankruptcy, Odiong said: “We have discussed the allegation­s, and I have a lawyer taking care of that.”

He said he could not elaborate but maintained that Aymond had rescinded his invitation for Odiong to minister in the New Orleans archdioces­e because the Nigerian “went against the pope and the synod”.

Schubert, who represents numerous clergy abuse survivors, said: “I am not surprised at all that it took a public scandal for [Father] Odiong to finally see even minimal consequenc­es. In my experience, credible abuse allegation­s alone have not been enough to motivate the church to remove a priest.”

‘Dismissed my claim’

Odiong underwent his clerical training in Nigeria and was ordained in 1993, according to his biography on the St Anthony of Padua webpage. For more than a decade, he served in Nigeria.

But the country has historical­ly been convulsed by sectarian violence against Catholics. In 2006, Odiong moved to Austin, the capital of Texas, to minister there on the invitation of the city’s bishop at the time: Aymond.

Odiong later worked in campus ministry at Baylor University in Waco, Texas. He obtained a master’s degree in theology from Franciscan University in Steubenvil­le, Ohio.

Meanwhile, Aymond became New Orleans’s archbishop in 2009. In about 2016, Aymond invited Odiong to serve as the pastor of St Anthony.

Odiong’s healing masses helped improve church attendance. Their popularity led to the constructi­on of a new healing chapel dedicated to the Virgin Mary, which opened in 2020.

He took parishione­rs with him to Medjugorje, the site in Bosnia which has attracted a million pilgrims annually since 1981, when six children and teenagers there said they had witnessed the appearance of the Virgin.

But the year before the healing chapel at St Anthony opened, a woman who described meeting Odiong at Franciscan University in 2007 contacted the archdioces­e of New Orleans with detailed abuse accusation­s against

Odiong.

The abuse claim that the woman later filed in bankruptcy court described how Odiong positioned himself to be her spiritual director.

“From May 2007 until December 2018, Father Odiong and I spoke daily,” said the woman, who recalled being 37 when she met the clergyman. As her personal spiritual adviser, she said Odiong “came to control nearly every aspect of my life, including my financial and relationsh­ip decisions”.

Among numerous other alleged misdeeds, she accused Odiong of forcing her to perform sexual acts – including oral intercours­e – with him during the sacrament of confession, at private masses in her home and in at least one motel room. She described the acts occurring in New Orleans, in west Texas, in Pennsylvan­ia and in Alabama, in her car while stopped in a church parking lot – despite the vow of celibacy that Catholic clergyman make.

The woman said Odiong told her she would earn forgivenes­s for her sins through her sexual service. She accused him of threatenin­g to “place a curse on her head” if she ever refused, of insinuatin­g that she was mentally ill by calling her a “troubled woman”, and of stealing money, including thousands of dollars from her.

At one point, needing the floors

of her home redone, she alleged that Odiong forced her to hire a man who she learned was “a rapist”. Her floors did not end up getting redone, and she was drawn into a legal dispute that cost her nearly $50,000, she said.

The woman said she mostly stopped engaging with Odiong in late 2018. That was weeks after Aymond had released the first version of a list naming several New Orleans Catholic clergymen whom the church considered to be credibly accused of molesting children or vulnerable adult parishione­rs, igniting a wave of additional claims of church molestatio­n that eventually thrust the archdioces­e into bankruptcy.

Odiong was not on the list, which was one piece of the broad fallout from a 2018 Pennsylvan­ia grand jury report that found Catholic clerical sex abuse in that state was much more widely spread than the church had acknowledg­ed.

And in early 2019, the woman – whose home is in Pennsylvan­ia – contacted a religious brother serving as the New Orleans archdioces­e’s point of contact for abuse claimants, and reported Odiong.

She said the archdioces­e’s victims assistance coordinato­r told her: “I do not think you are rememberin­g things correctly.” Then, toward the middle of July that year, she said, she reported Odiong directly to Aymond.

The woman said she sought to boost her credibilit­y by saying she had ghostwritt­en some of the letters Odiong sent to Aymond over the years, including ones that successful­ly asked for financial assistance to complete his education while also requesting an invitation to work in New Orleans.

Nonetheles­s, “I felt like he dismissed my claim as well,” the woman said of Aymond.

The woman cited copies of text messages and phone call logs to establish the volume of contact that she had with Odiong and to support her assertion that she had conversed with Aymond. She captured telephone recordings that showed she contacted detectives in Luling and her Pennsylvan­ia home town about Odiong, though it is unclear if those agencies pursued investigat­ions.

After the woman reported him to the archdioces­e, Odiong wrote to her saying that the victims assistance coordinato­r had contacted him, according to an email her lawyer provided. It is unclear what else the archdioces­e may have done in response to her claims.

Informatio­n produced during the bankruptcy’s discovery process and reported on by the Guardian has establishe­d that the archdioces­e over the last several decades has gone to extreme lengths to shield abusive clergymen – including the handful of ones convicted of or charged with crimes by subpoena-wielding authoritie­s despite the church’s protection.

Odiong did serve as the pastor of St Anthony of Padua through most of 2023, presiding over weddings, baptisms, weekly masses and services at the healing chapel.

As recently as August, Odiong, Aymond and a third clergyman hosted a three-day series of masses at a church in the New Orleans suburb of Metairie. Odiong presided over a healing service following the mass, according to an archdioces­an bulletin.

Odiong’s removal

It was not until a Saturday service on 18 November at St Anthony of Padua that Odiong informed his congregati­on that their time together was coming to an end. He said his plan was to move by January to Florida, where he intended to build a chapel like one whose constructi­on he was overseeing in Texas.

At Sunday mass on 26 November, he elaborated with remarks that took aim at the LGBTQ+ community.

“The church is dividing already,” Odiong said during his homily that day, according to a video available on YouTube. “Now the gays have taken over the church. The LGBTQI – whatever you call them – have a strangleho­ld on the church now. We’re going to begin to bless all kinds of monkeys and animals and chimpanzee­s, and priests who will not do it will be persecuted.”

Odiong went on to suggest that he was “not safe” because of his beliefs on that topic. “Yet, I’m not afraid – I’m excited,” he said. “I like a good fight.”

As Odiong tells it, Aymond told him that he had until the next several days to move out of St Anthony of Padua’s rectory. The archbishop had rescinded Odiong’s invitation to minister in the New Orleans archdioces­e, the ousted clergyman said.

Before St Anthony’s Sunday mass on 3 December, the church announced it would not livestream video of the service as usual.

At mass, the archdioces­e said, parishione­rs were read a statement telling them that Odiong’s removal was being expedited over various but unspecifie­d concerns. The archdioces­e’s statement asked Odiong’s congregati­on to respect his privacy and keep him in their prayers “during this time of transition”.

The statement triggered a wave of Facebook comments in support of Odiong. One accused the archdioces­e of having “besmirched a holy man’s character to his congregati­on” with no substantia­l specifics.

The woman who has accused Odiong of abuse is demanding damages from the archdioces­e’s bankruptcy case, which remains unresolved. She argues that she lost at least $150,000 in wages after her mental anguish over Odiong’s alleged domination interrupte­d her ability to work as a licensed clinical social worker.

The woman’s lawyer, Schubert, said it was disturbing but unsurprisi­ng that the archdioces­e “allowed Odiong to continue to hold a position of trust and authority” for years despite her client’s complaint.

Schubert said her client’s case was only the latest to illustrate how “abuse allegation­s will typically be ignored or covered up as long as possible” by institutio­ns like the archdioces­e.

“The only thing I’ve really ever seen the church respond to quickly is the fear of bad publicity,” Schubert added. “They don’t fix things that are bad. They fix things that make them look bad.”

As for Odiong, he said he plans to continue in ministry as long as he has the permission of his supervisin­g bishop in the diocese of Uyo, Nigeria.

“You have to let this play out,” Odiong said. “This is just the beginning.”

• Informatio­n and support for anyone affected by rape or sexual abuse issues is available from the following organisati­ons. In the US, Rainn offers support on 800-656-4673. In the UK, Rape Crisis offers support on 0808 500 2222. In Australia, support is available at 1800Respec­t (1800 737 732). Other internatio­nal helplines can be found at ibiblio.org/rcip/internl.html

[Our] concerns do not include the abuse of minors nor to our knowledge anyone

 ?? ?? Anthony Odiong delivering a homily in which he refers to members of the LGBTQ+ community as ‘monkeys and animals and chimpanzee­s’, in November 2023. Photograph: YouTube page of St Anthony of Padua church of Luling, Louisiana
Anthony Odiong delivering a homily in which he refers to members of the LGBTQ+ community as ‘monkeys and animals and chimpanzee­s’, in November 2023. Photograph: YouTube page of St Anthony of Padua church of Luling, Louisiana
 ?? ?? Gregory Aymond after his installati­on mass held in the St Louis Cathedral in New Orleans on 20 August 2009. Photograph: Judi Bottoni/AP
Gregory Aymond after his installati­on mass held in the St Louis Cathedral in New Orleans on 20 August 2009. Photograph: Judi Bottoni/AP

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