Church in
Crisis Victim sues bishops conference, alleges conspiracy
The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops has been accused of
conspiracy in nationwide clerical sexual abuse cover-ups in a suit filed Sept.
16 in Orange County, Calif., Superior Court.
According to the Los Angeles Times, the plaintiff, David
Price, alleges he was molested over a five-year period in the 1980s by Msgr.
Michael Harris, principal of Mater Dei High School. He is simultaneously suing
the Orange diocese, the Los Angeles archdiocese and the St. Luke Institute in
Maryland.
Prices original suit against Harris in 1994 was rejected by
the state on the grounds the statute of limitations had expired. Now Price
claims he dropped an appeal suit because the Orange diocese threatened him with
$32,000 worth of legal bills unless he signed a release.
The Orange diocese is now charged with fraud, said the
Times. The issue, Prices suit states, is that diocesan attorneys
claimed Prices original suit had no merit, even though diocesan leaders
already knew of Harris misconduct from the St. Luke Institute to which
hed been sent in 1994 for evaluation.
The conspiracy suit against the U.S. Conference of Catholic
Bishops is seen by the conference legal counsel as having no merit because the
conference has no binding jurisdiction over the bishops. Jesuit Fr. Thomas J.
Reese, editor of America magazine, provided a second reason when quoted
as saying the U.S. bishops werent smart or coordinated enough
to orchestrate a conspiracy.
-- Arthur Jones
National Catholic Reporter, September 27,
2002
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