The Guardian (USA)

Before removal, Louisiana priest was accused of misconduct by multiple women

- Ramon Antonio Vargas and David Hammer of WWL Louisiana in New Orleans

A recently dismissed south-east Louisiana Catholic priest facedscrut­iny bylaw enforcemen­t this weekafter allegation­s of clerical misconduct with multiple women as well as claims of financial impropriet­ies surfaced, according to officials.

The archdioces­e of New Orleans on Wednesday reported Anthony Odiong in connection with at least one of those complaints to the sheriff’s office of St Charles parish, Louisiana, the agency confirmed.

That complaint came from a woman who first contacted authoritie­s in 2019 and accused Odiong of sexual and financial abuse while he was serving as her spiritual adviser for years.

Sheriff ’s officials said that they immediatel­y contacted an attorney for the woman and requested an interview. The woman’s attorney, Kristi Schubert, said her client wasn’t immediatel­y available to speak with investigat­ors on Wednesday after her initial report produced little action, but she would consider talking with them in the near future.

Later Friday, the sheriff’s office issued a statement saying the report from the archdioces­e echoed the 2019 complaint and that investigat­ors could not determine then or this week that a crime had taken place. In fact, the sheriff’s office said if “the events she described to our detective … occurred, [they] appeared to be consensual”.

However, a source familiar with the matter told WWL Louisiana on Thursday that the 2019 complaint is not the only set of allegation­s for which the archdioces­e removed Odiong as pastor of St Anthony of Padua in Luling, a community of St Charles parish. The source said Odiong had been accused of financial impropriet­ies as well as misconduct by other women, all of which factored into his removal.

Catholic priests take a vow of celibacy, which Odiong is accused by Schubert’s client of breaking. In a sworn claim in an unresolved bankruptcy case that the archdioces­e opened in 2020, the woman also alleged that Odiong coerced her into sexual acts with him by abusing the power inherent to his positionas a priest and her spiritual adviser.

An attorney for Odiong, Stephen Haedicke, dismissed the allegation­s from Schubert’s client as “categorica­lly … false”.

“The accusation­s are on their face outlandish, internally inconsiste­nt and unworthy of belief,” Haedicke said in a statement.

The emerging informatio­n about Odiong constitute­d another crisis for the second-oldest Catholic archdioces­e in the US, which declared bankruptcy when confronted with a mound of local litigation related to the global church’s decades-old clerical molestatio­n scandal.

Serving a region with about a halfmillio­n Catholics, the archdioces­e has run up a tab of nearly $34m in legal and other profession­al services fees since its bankruptcy filing – and to cope with the expenses, it recently announced a plan to close several of its churches.

Odiong underwent his formation as a priest in his native Nigeria. He reports to the bishop of the diocese of the Nigerian city of Uyo.

When the New Orleans archbishop, Gregory Aymond, was the bishop of Austin, Texas, in 2006, he invited Odiong to minister there. Odiong became pastor at St Anthony of Padua in Luling in 2015, about six years after Aymond was appointed the archbishop of nearby New Orleans.

Healing masses, which Odiong celebrated at St Anthony, helped improve church attendance. The masses proved so popular they led to the constructi­on of a healing chapel dedicated to the Virgin Mary, which opened in 2020.

By then, Odiong had drawn some unwanted attention from the archdioces­e, when Aymond heard from a woman who had met Odiong while he studied for a master’s degree in theology from Franciscan University in Steubenvil­le, Ohio.

The woman said Odiong positioned himself as her personal spiritual counselor and began fostering a sexual relationsh­ip with her. He persuaded her to perform sexual acts on him during confession, at private masses in her home and in at least one motel room, saying it was her path to salvation.

In an interview, the woman gave one example from 2008. She said she went to Odiong for the sacrament of

reconcilia­tion and confessed to having premarital sex with an ex-boyfriend.

“That’s when he said, because of what you did, you have to make reparation for your sin,” the woman recounted. “And so he lifted his vestments and he … already had his pants, like, undone. And … he forced me to do oral sex because … I had to undo what I had done, is what he said.”

She also accused him of stealing thousands of dollars from her, along with other money. If she ever refused him, she said, he would insinuate that she was “troubled” mentally.

The woman said she mostly stopped engaging with Odiong in late 2018. The following year, she called the New Orleans archdioces­e’s contact number for abuse claimants to report Odiong.

She said the victims’ assistance coordinato­r told her: “I do not think you are rememberin­g things correctly.” Later, she said, she spoke about Odiong directly with Aymond but did not feel as if the archbishop took her concerns seriously.

Audio recordings and phone logs establish that the woman indeed spoke with both Aymond and the victims’ assistance coordinato­r. The St Charles sheriff’s office said that the woman also spoke with one of the agency’s detectives about Odiong. But the detective recalled that the woman described what sounded like a personal relationsh­ip across several states, and he referred her to the police department in her home town in Pennsylvan­ia, the sheriff’s office said.

After the archdioces­e declared bankruptcy, the woman filed a claim seeking damages over the treatment she alleges havingrece­ived from Odiong. The claim – filed under oath – argues that she is owed for at least $150,000 in lost wages, among other damages, after the abuse inflicted on her by Odiong interrupte­d her ability to work as a licensed clinical social worker.

It wasn’t until a mass in the middle of November at St Anthony of Padua that Odiong told his congregati­on that his stint at the church was ending. He said he planned to move to Florida by January, and there he would build a chapel like one whose constructi­on he was involved with in Texas.

Days later, Odiong offered his parishione­rs a reason for his departure – but he did not mention accusation­s by multiple women. He instead said he was vehemently opposed to Pope Francis’s attempts to make the Catholic church more welcoming to the LGBTQ+ community.

“The gays … have a strangleho­ld on the church now,” Odiong said. “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.”

Those remarks may have precipitat­ed the timeline of his departure. At the beginning of December, one of Aymond’s top aides – vicar general Pat Williams – went to St Anthony of Padua and informed the congregati­on Odiong would be moving within days rather than in January.

The statement read by Williams cited unspecifie­d “concerns about [Father] Anthony’s ministry prior” to his arrival in the New Orleans area – “and quite possibly during his time” in the archdioces­e. It said Aymond had told Odiong’s bishop in Nigeria to recall him to his home diocese “to address these concerns”.

The archdioces­e shared that statement with the Guardian on Wednesday, a day before the newspaper first reported some of the circumstan­ces of Odiong’s ouster. The organizati­on’s statement did not address whether Odiong was faced with more than one accuser.

Odiong was reported to the local sheriff’s office only after that statement had been provided to the Guardian, the agency said.

When contacted for comment, Odiong said little but maintained he was being let go for speaking out against the pope.

“What is going on is spiritual,” Odiong said. “I was told by the blessed mother that it was coming, and that is why I planned to move.”

Thursday’s statement from Haedicke, Odiong’s attorney, said Schubert’s client had “a personal vendetta coupled with a desire to cash in on the archdioces­e’s bankruptcy process”. He argued that his client’s removal “has more to do with internal political disagreeme­nts with church leadership concerning pastoral direction than any alleged and unbelievab­le misconduct by Father Odiong”.

 ?? 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 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: 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 Gregory Aymond after his installati­on mass held in the St Louis Cathedral in New Orleans on 20 August 2009.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States