Church in
Crisis Priest says he also was victim of clerical abuse
By GILL DONOVAN
Fr. Michael Hands, a Rockville Centre, N.Y., priest who in March
pleaded guilty to sodomizing a 13-year-old boy, said in a 138-page sworn
statement that he, too, was sexually abused as a teenager by a cleric, and that
the diocese had pressured him to remain silent about it.
According to a Jan. 3 Newsday report, Hands is now
cooperating with prosecutors in an effort to obtain a lighter jail sentence.
Hands gave his sworn statement Dec. 26 to Michael Dowd, an attorney
representing about 100 persons who have filed civil suits charging abuse by
priests. The priest is yet to face cross-examination.
In September 2001, when Rockville Centre Bishop William Murphy
learned of Hands allegation that Msgr. Charles Ribaudo had abused him
when he was a high school student, Murphy removed Ribaudo as pastor of St.
Dominics Parish in Oyster Bay, N.Y. Hands said he wasnt able to
admit to having been abused by Ribaudo until after he had undergone extensive
therapy following the charges that he had abused a minor.
Some three months after Ribaudo was removed, however, Msgr.
Francis Caldwell, director of priest personnel for the diocese, told Hands that
Ribaudo had been evaluated. Hands said Caldwell told him, We want to
reinstate [Ribaudo] back in the parish before Christmas.
Caldwell told him, Hands said, that the only way Ribaudos
return could happen would be if Hands would promise never to mention the
allegation to anyone else. Hands said he told Caldwell that he wouldnt
broadcast his accusations on television but that he might tell them to a judge
if it would help the judge understand his own act of sexual abuse.
Hands said his conversation with Caldwell led him to think that in
return for his remaining silent the diocese would pay for Hands medical
insurance, his psychiatric therapy and offer him other financial help after he
voluntarily left the priesthood.
Hands said other diocesan priests have told him that the diocese
wanted to reinstate Ribaudo because he had proven to be an effective fundraiser
at the affluent Oyster Bay parish.
The allegation against Ribaudo was first reported by
Newsday April 5. In March, when the newspaper began investigating an
independent sources information about the allegation, Hands said he
received another call from Caldwell, asking him to call Newsday and deny
he had ever been abused by Ribaudo. Hands said he declined to do so.
The April 5 Newsday story reported that Ribaudo denied ever
having abused Hands. The story reported further that Ribaudo resigned from
ministry March 12 and that he was stripped of his priestly powers
March 27.
On Jan. 3, Newsday said Hands 138-page sworn
statement provides an insiders view of the dioceses
handling of clergy sexual abuse, in which Hands, once considered a rising
star in the diocese, names names and tells what he had learned from his years
as a priest. Hands charged, for instance, that the diocese repeatedly
transferred abusive priests to dioceses in Florida.
Hands is not the only U.S. priest convicted of child abuse to seek
leniency through cooperation with authorities. In Boston, Fr. Ronald Paquin
pleaded guilty Dec. 31 to three charges of oral rape of a child and received a
12-year prison sentence. Paquin, whose history of sexually abusing minors was
made public last spring when a Boston judge ordered his church records be
released to the public (NCR, June 7), has said that, like Hands, he was
abused by a priest as a teenager.
Jeffrey Newman, a Massachusetts attorney for 17 victims of Paquin,
told the Boston Herald Jan. 1 that he plans to make use of Paquin as a
witness. Ive always thought the real truth beyond the verbiage of
the [released archdiocesan] documents would emerge through the testimony of
people like Paquin, he said.
Gill Donovan is a staff writer for NCR. His e-mail
address is gdonovan@natcath.org
National Catholic Reporter, January 17,
2003
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