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Vol. 190 No. 4, February 9, 2004

Signs of the Times

Canon Lawyers Say Due Process Limited for Accused Priests

As U.S. dioceses work through the cases of clerics accused of sex abuse of minors, several canon lawyers who are defending accused priests have complained that the procedures limit due process for their clients. “Under church law you are innocent until proven guilty,” said Frank Morrisey, an Oblate priest and canon lawyer who is defending several U.S. priests. Yet once a cleric has been accused, he is suspended from public ministry before he can mount a defense, he said. Critics say that this amounts to punishment without proof of guilt.

Father Morrisey said that the accused has to wait months for the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, which has overall authority in sexual abuse cases, to review the diocese’s preliminary investigation and tell the diocese how to proceed in the case. One must expect a six- to eight-month delay after a bishop sends th! e case to the doctrinal congregation. Another canon lawyer, the Rev. Nicholas Rachford, said this delay puts accused priests in a state of “suspended animation.”

Father Rachford said that the suspension from ministry before proof of guilt causes the loss of reputation of the accused. “He is removed from ministry. He is removed from the rectory,” said Father Rachford, tribunal judge for the Byzantine Eparchy of Parma, Ohio. (An eparchy is the Eastern-rite equivalent of a diocese.) “This is a loss of reputation as soon as he leaves the rectory.”

Father Rachford said there seems to be a presumption of guilt with the presentation of the accusation, even before the preliminary investigation has been conducted. Many priests are being suspended from public ministry right after the accusation, although the norms say that suspension is to be imposed after the sending of the preliminary investigation to the doctrinal congregation, said Father Rachford. The Rev. Ronny Jenk! ins, consultant to the U.S.C.C.B. on the special norms, said that the suspension is applied “to protect the public just in case. It is not an indication of guilt.” Father Jenkins said that the diocese must provide the suspended priest with food, housing and a salary during this administrative leave.

During the preliminary investigation, an accused priest does not have the formal due process that he would have at a trial; but he retains basic rights, such as the right to his good name, said Father Jenkins. Church officials are also required to provide a church lawyer for an accused person who is unable to provide for one, he said.

As for how quickly the doctrinal congregation is getting back to dioceses, the time varies. The Archdiocese of Detroit received answers on two major cases “in a couple of months,” said Auxiliary Bishop Walter A. Hurley, who handles sexual abuse issues for the archdiocese. The Archdiocese of Chicago waited about six months before it was t! old to hold a trial for one priest, said the Rev. Patrick Lagges, archdiocesan judicial vicar. He said the archdiocese has 13 other cases still pending. About 10 were sent to Rome at the end of July and the rest at the end of September, said Father Lagges.

Father Morrisey said that another problem in presenting a defense is that many alleged offenses happened decades ago. Evidence and witnesses are hard to find, and many cases could end up being decided on the word of the accuser versus that of the accused, he said.

John Thavis

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