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    Lawyer: Pa. church official threw peer 'under bus'

    PHILADELPHIA (AP) — An indicted Catholic church official is showing signs he won't take the fall alone for the priest abuse scandal in Philadelphia, with his lawyer saying Wednesday that a successor threw him "under the bus."

    Monsignor William Lynn, 61, is the only official from the Archdiocese of Philadelphia facing trial for allegedly failing to remove accused predators from the priesthood. He served as secretary of clergy from 1992 to 2004.

    Defense lawyers argue that Lynn took orders from then-Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua and other superiors in the church hierarchy.

    Prosecutors hope to include dozens of old abuse allegations to show a pattern of conduct at the trial, which is scheduled to start in late March and last several months.

    One such case involves a West Chester University chaplain accused in 1994 of taking pictures of students in their underwear.

    He next became chaplain of Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, worked with a parish youth group and later admitted taking boys on overnight trips, one to Jamaica, before retiring to the New Jersey shore, prosecutors said.

    When a New Jersey diocese asked the Philadelphia archdiocese about the priest, Monsignor Timothy Senior allegedly wrote in a letter that Lynn, his predecessor, did not fully investigate complaints against the priest.

    "Maybe that's an answer to why Monsignor Senior is not here (as a defendant). He obviously doesn't mind throwing Monsignor Lynn under the bus," defense lawyer Jeffrey Lindy argued.

    Prosecutors call the archdiocese "an unindicted co-conspirator" in the case. A 2005 grand jury report blasted Bevilacqua and his successor, Cardinal Justin Rigali, for their handling of abuse complaints, but they were never charged. Bevilacqua is now 88 and in failing health.

    A judge will hear more arguments Monday on whether 27 of the 63 priests described in that grand jury report can be referenced at Lynn's trial. Prosecutors want to show that Lynn kept them on the job despite knowing of complaints stored in "secret archives" at the archdiocese.

    They have detailed the cases over a three-day pretrial hearing this week. The cases include a priest who allegedly pinned loincloths on naked boys playing Jesus in a Passion play, and whipped them, in keeping with the drama; a priest who held what prosecutors called "masturbation camps" at the rectory, having boys strip naked and teaching them to masturbate; and a pastor written up for disobedience for complaining to Bevilacqua about an accused priest being transferred to his parish.

    "I truly would love a jury to see how these were handled," Assistant District Attorney Patrick Blessington said in court. "The more cases they see ... the clearer the picture becomes."

    Although some of the abuse dates to the 1960s through 1980s, before Lynn's time as secretary for clergy, he had access to the secret files. And many of the cases were not reported until years later, during his tenure.

    Defense lawyers hope to limit the trial evidence to Lynn's handling of the priest and ex-priest on trial with him. The Rev. James Brennan, 48, and defrocked priest Edward Avery, 69, are charged with rape. All have denied the charges.

    The archdiocese declined to respond to the comments made Wednesday about Monsignor Senior, citing a gag order in the case.

    Lynn is on leave from the archdiocese. Jury selection is set to start next month.

     

    13 comments

    • Paul King  •  27 days ago
      Ten million children raped Worldwide since 1950 and only a handful of the criminals brought to justice. The Pope should be in jail.
    • RichardM  •  Miami, Florida  •  27 days ago
      Invoking the "I was only following orders" defense they learned from their Nazi buddies.
    • ed-words  •  25 days ago
      This guy is really stressed out. Why would anyone throw a pear under a bus?
    • Firefly  •  26 days ago
      "Pattern of conduct" could open the door for the RICO Act?

      From the Wikipedia: The RICO Act allowed law enforcement to charge a person or group of people with racketeering, defined as committing multiple violations of certain varieties within a ten-year period.
    • ed-words  •  27 days ago
      Holy Spirit, WHERE ARE YOU?
    • Larry  •  Arden, North Carolina  •  24 days ago
      To the person who recommended local participation in chosing bishops. The Soviets, Nazi-Germans and now the Chinese tried the same thing.
    • Honey  •  27 days ago
      Thanks to God, the men who did these things have been exposed and brought to justice.
    • Del  •  27 days ago
      Finally, the dirty old #$%$ man network of Catholic "priest" child-rapers starts to unravel.
    • ed-words  •  27 days ago
      Let's take a vote! Give Jessica Ahlquist a thumbs up. Now!
    • Ed  •  Austin, Texas  •  28 days ago
      It is about time, I hope he starts talking about how the RCC has been covering up child rape for so long. Where are you RR, and mick, has the RCC stoped payment on your checks?
    • Wombat  •  Tucson, Arizona  •  26 days ago
      Wolves are part of a pack. They were passing these kids off to each, so is the way of god.
    • Ed  •  Austin, Texas  •  28 days ago
      I hope they eat one another alive trying to get out of their cover up.
    • Ehécatl  •  28 days ago
      This is what happens among ambitious clergy. They eat each other alive just to get power and become a bishop. Unfortunately, innocent children get chewed up in the process. The answer? Stop having bishops appointed exclusively by Rome and get local participation in the process. And by "local participation" I mean all kinds of people not just bishops or other priests.
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