Gleeson SJ in Philadelphia: inquiring student minds at work

Are we Catholics past the point of settling with accusers to avoid bad publicity and/or losing in court in sexual abuse and/or harassment matters? Rev. Thomas Gleeson SJ, outed three weeks ago in Philadelphia, could have had his day in court 11 years ago, but Jesuits fought the very idea and settled with the accuser, a former Jesuit scholastic. Case closed, end of story, they thought or hoped. Hardly.

As a campus chaplain at St. Joseph’s U., he had been placed in a position too public to be ignored by The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), and there he was again, in the very limelight he’d wanted to avoid by the settlement. And people in charge of his new place of employment tried once again to slide under publicity radar, and once again failed. (His crucial role in ousting a fellow Jesuit from the Wheeling Jesuit U. presidency — under suspicious circumstances partly of Gleeson’s own making — was a bad move by someone seeking anonymity.)

This time, Phila. Daily News coverage drove the St. Joe’s president, Rev. Timothy Lannon, S.J., to issue a university-wide memo “as students were finishing midterms and packing up for spring break,” as the student newspaper, The Hawk, noted this week. The memo was terse, even perfunctory: Gleeson had been accused but had been vetted by the Jesuits — “cleared for assignment,” a spokeswoman told the News.

Missing from the memo was “information concerning Gleeson’s history and subsequent settlement,” The Hawk’s editors wrote. Indeed, “the poorly worded statement created more questions and concerns than conclusions, and the university has yet to reveal how it plans to move forward with Gleeson’s case in the future,” they wrote in a carefully constructed editorial.

They added:

Given the enormous accusations currently levied against the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, it is surprising that Saint Joseph’s University officials did not think more carefully before responding in a seemingly distant and ineffective way.
The university could have opened the door for conversation about the circumstances and reasoning behind Gleeson’s hire, providing a great opportunity for community discussion on issues that are dominating Philadelphia’s headlines. Instead, St. Joe’s offered the same one-way declaration that has plagued the Catholic Church for decades.

Instead, the university offered “lackluster explanations” that did not inspire confidence. “When the university doesn’t defend their employees it makes it hard for students to get behind them with support,” the editorial noted.

That’s a fair description of how the Gleeson business has been handled, not only in Philadelphia but before that in West Virginia and before that in California. (It’s also how much or most priest abuse and/or harassment has been treated, for that matter.)

At what point, we must ask, does Jesuit loyalty to their own (as bishops’ to their priests) give way to the sort of “open communication” that has been respectfully requested by St. Joseph’s U. student editors?

Grim statistics

SNAP has studied the matter:

—256 of the Chicago archdiocese’s roughly 400 parishes have, at one time, had an accused pedophile priest working there,

– 30 parishes had two or more alleged predator priests assigned to them at one time, and

– a disproportionate percentage of parishes in lower income neighborhoods had accused priests working at hem.

The leaders:

Two parishes have had five accused priests [each] (St. Leonard in Berwyn and St. Aloysius in Chicago). Six have had four accused priests [each] (Holy Innocents in Chicago, St. Christina in Chicago, St. Eulalia in Maywood, St. John Vianney in Northlake, St. Thomas of Villanova in Palatine, and Resurrection Life Center in Chicago).

Maybe a new group?  Priests who Stood by Unknowing or Uncertain (PSUU)?  In silence, that is.  Many of them feeling not so good at this point, I bet.

Father Owino plea

Father Owino pleaded:

FAIRFAX, Va. — The Rev. Felix Owino entered a guilty plea to aggravated sexual battery Wednesday in Fairfax County, Va., Circuit Court according to court officials.

He will be sentenced Dec. 17.  He is

a former Associate Professor [sic] at Wheeling Jesuit University [where he had taught for two years] and also had a residence at St. Paul Parish in Weirton [WV, 30 miles north of Wheeling],

where he was an associate pastor. Associate pastor yes, associate professor not likely.  Rather, instructor, as below.

He is being held at the adult detention center in Fairfax, will serve no more than five years in prison, could be (after that) deported to his homeland of Kenya, according to officials cited by the Charleston (WV) Daily Mail.

Prosecutors said Owino was drinking the night he inappropriately touched an 11-year-old girl in Herndon.

Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) wants to hold officials’ feet to the fire.

“We suspect there are other crimes for which Owino could be prosecuted and convicted, which would likely keep him away from kids and behind bars even longer,” SNAP Outreach Director Barbara Dorris said in a news release.

SNAP is asking Wheeling Bishop Michael Bransfield and others to disclose any other allegations of sexual abuse made against Owino.

“Church and college officials have a chance to help law enforcement by aggressively seeking out others with information about Owino,” SNAP Director David Clohessy said in a news release. “It is their moral and civic responsibility to keep this child predator in jail and away from children.”

Later: Here’s a succinct, well-written account by Wash Post man Tom Jackman that adds key details:

A Catholic priest from West Virginia pleaded guilty in Fairfax County on Wednesday to aggravated sexual battery for inappropriately touching an 11-year-old girl while he was visiting the girl’s Herndon home.

The Rev. Felix Owino, 44, was arrested after the girl told her parents of the incident in July, which occurred while Owino, the girl and others were watching a movie on television. Police described Owino as a family friend.

Owino, originally from Nairobi, Kenya, is a member of the Apostles of Jesus missionary congregation, an African congregation of priests and brothers. He was serving as a philosophy instructor at Wheeling Jesuit University in West Virginia and as an associate pastor at St. Paul Roman Catholic Church in Weirton, W.Va. [italics added]

Yet later, yet other accounts (from Mike Fahy):

Washington Post [as above]

Centre Daily Times [AP]

Pittsburgh Tribune-Review

A priest who lived at St. Bede Parish in Point Breeze [PA] on and off between 1997 and 2006 pleaded guilty Wednesday to molesting an 11-year-old girl in Virginia.

. . . . .

After learning about the criminal charges against Owino, Pittsburgh Bishop David Zubik sent a letter to St. Bede parishioners urging them to contact the Allegheny County District Attorney’s Office and the diocese if they knew of anyone with whom the priest might have had inappropriate contact.

There were no accusations against Owino during the time he lived at St. Bede, and nobody came forward after the bishop sent his letter to parishioners, said the Rev. Ronald Lengwin, spokesman for the Pittsburgh diocese.

He spent a good deal of time in Pittsburgh:

Owino, who is a native of Nairobi, Kenya, lived at St. Bede from September 1997 to May 2001 and again from September 2003 to January 2006, while attending graduate school at Duquesne University. He earned a master’s degree in philosophy in 1999 and a doctorate in philosophy in 2005, according to school officials.

WTRF-TV-7- (CBS)

WTOV-TV-9

He confessed to the judge:

Prosecutors said the Rev. Felix Owino was drinking the night he inappropriately touched an 11-year-old girl.

“I did what they said,” Owino told a Fairfax County, Va., judge in a soft-spoken voice.

. . . . . .

Prosecutors said Owino was watching a movie at the family’s home when he moved to the back of the room next to the victim and rubbed the girl’s hands and feet. He then touched her in inappropriate places and told the girl, “Do not tell.”

The child told her mother, and the mother kicked Owino out of the house and ordered him to stay on the steps until police arrived. Prosecutors said Owino admitted he touched the girl and told police he’d not done anything like that before.

Prosecutors said the victim’s family accepted the plea deal, and victims’ advocates said families usually do that to protect their child from going to court.

Although Owino made a plea deal with prosecutors for a maximum of 5 years, the judge made it clear the decision is ultimately up to him. He could reject the plea bargain out and give Owino the maximum sentence of 20 years.

Owino could also be deported because he’s not an American citizen.

Yet later:

Comment by Judy Jones of SNAP:

This brave little girl is to be commended for doing the right thing by immediately telling her mom. Then her mom did the right thing by calling police.

Now hopefully others, who have been harmed by Owino, will also speak up and contact police. This predator priest needs to be kept in jail and away from kids.

— Judy Jones, SNAP Midwest Associate Director, 636-433-2511, snapjudy at gmail dot com

Very important observation.