 Former parish priest John
Geoghan (AP)
The scandal in Boston has led to calls for
Cardinal Law's resignation and has also prompted Catholic bishops
nationwide to adopt new procedures to prevent and report sex
crimes.
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(CBS) A former priest
who has become a central figure in a sexual abuse scandal that has shaken
Boston's Roman Catholic community was sentenced to the maximum sentence of nine
to 10 years Thursday for fondling a 10-year-old boy in 1991.
Judge
Sandra Hamlin said Geogan "hid behind his collar" and his position in the church
to prey on young boys.
Geoghan received the sentence a day after the
Archdiocese announced it was suspending a pastor in Abington following
allegations of sexual misconduct with a minor. He was the ninth priest suspended
since the new policy was announced.
In western Massachusetts on
Wednesday, a former chancellor for the Catholic Diocese of Worcester and a
former official at the Vatican was removed from his pastorship at St. Mary's
parish in North Grafton because of an allegation involving sexual misconduct
with a minor in 1967.
Also on Wednesday, prosecutors and attorneys for
Goeghan argued about whether the statute of limitations has expired on other
charges he faces. The case had been scheduled to go to trial Wednesday.
Attorneys Geoghan argued the charges should be dismissed because the
alleged victim made a molestation accusation in 1986. The court should apply the
10-year statute of limitations that existed then, argued Geoffrey Packard,
Geoghan's attorney. The current 15-year time limit on child rape charges took
effect in 1996.
In the case Geoghan was sentenced in Thursday, the
victim testified that Geoghan approached him at the Waltham Boys and Girls Club
and offered to teach him how to dive. He said he recognized Geoghan as a priest
he had seen in his housing project.
After coaching him verbally for 10
or 15 minutes, the priest stuck his hand down the boy's shorts and squeezed his
buttocks, the young man testified.
Geoghan did not testify, and no one
testified on his behalf.
The Geoghan trials are at the root of a scandal
that has rocked the U.S. Catholic church and sparked calls for the resignation
of Boston's Cardinal Bernard Law, the most senior U.S. prelate.
Law and
five other bishops are accused of knowing of Geoghan's abuses but ignoring them
as they shuttled him from parish to parish.
In all, more than 130 people
have accused Geoghan of sexually abusing them over the course of his 30 years as
a priest in Boston's diocese, and he faces more than 80 civil suits.
He
will be sentenced on Thursday for his conviction last month on charges that he
molested a 10-year-old boy as the two swam together more than a decade ago. He
faces life in prison if convicted in the current case.
He is now charged
with two counts of rape of a child in the early 1980s. The rape is alleged to
have taken the form of oral sex.
During the hearing on Wednesday before
Judge Margaret Hinkle lawyers tried to pin down the sequence of events that led
to the filing of charges, calling eight witnesses, including the alleged victim
and his mother Barbara Boyd.
Under questioning by defense attorney
Geoffrey Pacard and Assistant District Attorney David Deakin, the two described
how Geoghan befriended them and often came to see them.
Boyd said that
once a week for several months Geoghan would arrive just after her son had gone
to bed. The priest would then go upstairs and spend half an hour in the boy's
darkened room.
When the mother asked the priest to come earlier, he
stopped coming at all, she testified.
Her son said he waited four years
to tell his mother that Geoghan sexually molested him, and told her only after
he was caught sexually abusing his brother.
"I recall telling her
everything about the sexual abuse and the oral sex," the man, now 27, told the
court.
But Boyd said she was certain her son never mentioned oral sex,
instead telling her only that Geoghan had fondled his genitals. "He told me that
Father Geoghan had touched him ... between his legs," she said.
The
testimony will probably be repeated before a jury if Hinkle rules that the rape
trial proper should go ahead.
In the wake of Geoghan's first trial,
thousands of pages of documents unsealed by a court order revealed the diocese
quietly settled child sex abuse claims against at least 70 priests in the last
10 years.
Under pressure, the church has also handed police the names of
dozens of priests accused over the last 40 years of sexual abuse of children.
Earlier this month Law suspended six active priests because they were
accused of sexual impropriety earlier in their careers.
The extent of
the cover-up and the sheer number of priests involved have shocked Boston's
large Catholic community. A recent poll published in the Boston Globe found that
48 percent of area Catholics believed Law should quit.
Law, who has made
several extraordinary public apologies for the Geoghan fiasco, said he will not
step down and Catholic scholars said public pressure was unlikely to force him
out.
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