|
2000
coverage of Robin Sharpe discussion | Mikai
| Doug Brown
A bit of greed, some "memories"
created by junk science, mix into a society eager to find a witch
to burn and what do you get?
Father Paul
Shanley

We know now
that Paul Shanley was convicted. His conviction was based on
the jury's acceptance of testimony from a well-coached accuser
who gave a convincing theatrical performance. Although the trial
was televised the camera did not show his face nor was his identity
revealed. His sometimes strong, sometimes shakey voice conveyed
a rather preposterous story (including being fondled in the confessional)
which simply could not have happened as he told it. It reminded
me of the testimony of one of the children at the Martensville
trial of the young female offender: the brash boy claimed the
sixteen year old girl had forced him at gunpoint to suck her
breasts, suck her vagina and then took him to the kitchen and
fed him lunch. This happened on several successive days. Amazingly
the judge bought it and she was convicted. Albert Lavoie at that
time decreed that the accuracy of a child's memory of such a
traumatic event was not the point: something must have happened.
A child could not possibly make this up. Ya, right. (Her conviction
was overturned at appeal).
Shanley's accuser
regressed to a child-like state to put forth his equally unbelievable
story. The jury accepted the prosecutor's statement that something
must have happened. The 27 year old man had no motive because
he had already received half a million dollars, it was said.
Shanley was
really being tried for material he had written and spoken in
the past where he not only defended man-boy sex but had apparently
stated that often the boys were the seducers. This is a fairly
outrageous opinion but it is not an act. In response to such
opinion, I say, hey wait a minute, Paul. Let's discuss this.
Driving such opinion underground ensures it will continue to
flourish. Convicting a man for his opinions, assuming his opinions
led to actions for which there is NO EVIDENCE, simply feeds lawyers
representing poor people looking for pay-outs from the church.
Lawyers:
Most sex abuse claims probably filed
By ARTHUR H. ROTSTEIN, Associated
Press Writer, February 10, 2005,
TUCSON, Ariz. - Sixteen clergy
sex abuse claims have been filed in response to public notices
made as part of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Tucson's bankruptcy
proceedings, lawyers said Thursday.
Of the 16, two were already
filed as lawsuits in Pima County Superior Court, said Susan Boswell,
the diocese's lead attorney in its Chapter 11 reorganization
case.
Boswell said it hasn't been
determined yet whether all 14 new claims are valid.
Taylor Ashworth, representing
the tort claimants' committee, said he anticipated that 30 more
claims from alleged victims who already filed lawsuits would
be added to the 16 by Friday.
"How many are valid, we'll
see," Ashworth said.
Anyone filing a claim in hopes
of obtaining a settlement under the bankruptcy must do so by
the court's April 15 deadline. In early November, the diocese
ran public notices in Arizona, regionally and even nationally
in English- and
Spanish-language publications telling clergy sex abuse victims
how they could file claims and by when.
Boswell said the diocese may
run the ads one more time.
Ashworth said he does not expect
many more claims to be filed.
Bankruptcy Judge James Marlar
held a lengthy discussion with attorneys over a proposal to hire
a California consulting firm to estimate the likely number of
presently unknown abuse victims with repressed memories - potential
future
claimants.
The judge balked at proposed
costs submitted - as high as $500 hourly fees for its top executives.
"I guess I'm having difficulty determining how anyone is
worth $500 an hour," Marlar said. "Why not use an economist
or a statistician
from the University of Arizona or Arizona or ASU?
"We're going to quickly
get a bill of $75,000, $100,000."
But A. Bates Butler III, representing
unknown future claimants, said the California firm Hamilton,
Rabinovitz and Altschuler of Carmel, Calif., is considered the
best at such scientific modeling in bankruptcy cases and that
agreement among all parties to use the firm would eliminate any
need for "dueling experts" and ultimately trim costs.
Butler also suggested that
the firm might be willing to cut its costs if it were guaranteed
similar work on bankruptcy cases involving other dioceses as
well, such as Portland and Spokane, Wash.
Meanwhile, Marlar authorized
Boswell to distribute a revised disclosure statement, told other
parties to file objections by March 8 and ordered a March 18
hearing.
He told Boswell to include
a general summary for public consumption, "to make sure
that people without a background in the law understand in layman's
terms what this plan is expected to accomplish."
Marlar also said he anticipates
that creditors will have voted to confirm the diocese's reorganization
plan by late spring or early summer.
Base convictions
on sound evidence
Chattanooga Times Free Press
(Tennessee), Editorial, January 29, 2005
:
It should be our
fervent wish to protect children from sexual abuse and to see to
it that those who do abuse children are punished to the fullest
extent of the law. But solid evidence should back up any
conviction of a person suspected of
committing such a crime.
For that reason, it is troubling to learn that a theory of so-called
" repressed memories" is the basis of the prosecution
of a defrocked Catholic priest in Massachusetts. Paul R.
Shanley is accused of raping a boy repeatedly in the 1980s.
Others originally accused Mr. Shanley as well, but they have
withdrawn from the case.
This case is difficult because whether or not Mr. Shanley is
guilty, he is clearly not a sympathetic figure. Officials
in the Boston Archdiocese had evidence that he was in favor
of sex between boys and men, but they transferred him from
parish to parish. Even if it was not certain he had acted on
his views, he should not have been given repeated opportunities
to do so.
Nevertheless, the question before the court is whether he did
act on his beliefs, not merely whether he advocated them.
His lone remaining accuser says he suppressed the memories of
abuse, and they were triggered only when news accounts of
the clergy sex abuse scandal in Boston appeared.
We do not suggest the accuser is making this up. He may have
been abused just as he belatedly remembers. Or he may be
honestly mistaken. But the sudden resurfacing of decades-old
memories seems to be a shaky basis for convicting
even a man who held the disgusting views of Mr. Shanley.
Stronger, clearer evidence should be required to find someone
guilty of such a serious crime beyond a reasonable doubt.
1
accuser for Shanley trial
By Marie Szaniszlo, Boston
Herald, , January 19, 2005
Prosecutors yesterday dropped
charges involving a third alleged victim in the case against
defrocked priest Paul Shanley, leaving only one accuser as jury
selection began in the trial of one of the clergy sex-abuse scandal's
most notorious figures.
The
third alleged victim, a 35-year-old man who has battled drug
addiction and homelessness, vomited after an October hearing
and never contacted prosecutors again, they said. Last July,
they dropped charges involving two other men who were allegedly
raped in the 1980s, when all four attended St. Jean's parish
in Newton.
Yesterday,
four jurors - three men and one woman - were selected to hear
charges brought by the fourth man, a 27-year-old former military
police officer who says he was repeatedly raped in the church
rectory, confessional and restroom between the ages of 6 and
11, when he took religion class at St. Jean's.
Now
73, Shanley faces up to life in prison if he is convicted of
child rape, one of the charges that caused the Vatican to defrock
him last year.
Dear Friend of Justice,
On Tuesday Father Paul Shanley
will go on trial in Middlesex County for allegedly sexually abusing
a man named Paul Busa. Busa alleges that Shanley repeatedly raped
him for several years, beginning when he was six. But he says
he repressed all memory of the abuse until Shanley's name appeared
in a Boston Globe article that appeared in January of 2002.
Shanley was Boston's much
respected street priest during the 60's and 70's. He was also
as close to openly gay as a priest could dare in those days.
His remarks about homosexuality frequently brought complaints
about him to his superiors and eventually ended his street mission.
Shanley himself is gay and had sexual relations with older teens
and young men. He may or may not have violated age-of-consent
laws. I've seen no clear evidence, however, that this occurred.
Paul Shanley may be no saint.
But he is no pedophile either.
There was a major Boston
child-sex panic in the late 70s. No one accused Shanley. The
first wave of the priest cases occurred in the early 90s. Again,
even though the hysteria at that time focused on priests, no
one accused Shanley.
The Boston Globe attacked
Shanley three years ago. But the one "child" victim
they produced was 20 years old when he met Shanley. They evidently
had a consensual relationship that lasted a few years.
Paul Busa was not the first
accuser produced by the Globe article. The first was a guy named
Greg Ford, who was in Shanley's catechism class after Shanley
ceased to be a street priest. Ford claimed that the Globe article
caused him to "recover" the long-repressed memories
of his abuse. Soon three other young men Ford knew from that
class also "recovered" their memories. Ford and two
others have been dropped from the case. The DA realized that
they had very serious credibility problems. (All four also received
large cash settlements from the Catholic Church.) Only Paul Busa
remains.
It is very alarming that
Paul Busa is going to be permitted to give his recovered-memory
testimony. Such testimony is unreliable and no jury should be
presented with unreliable evidence. To do so violates the Constitutional
rights of the defendant. While it is proper for juries to decide
credibility, reliability is a very different legal issue.
I don't think Shanley's
chances are very good. He has been tried and convicted -- many
times over -- by the local media. The attitude of the media is
that Shanley is a bad man and therefore has no Constitutional
rights and no right to due process. But if Paul Shanley can be
denied his rights, so can we all.
The unreliability of recovered-memory
testimony has been scientifically established beyond all reasonable
doubt. It's admissibility anywhere is a terrible precedent. But
DA Martha Coakley -- whom the Globe lovingly describes as "a
rising star of the Democratic Party" -- is committed to
it, having already prosecuted and convicted Ray and Shirrkey
Souza in a case that began with recovered memory. Coakley wants
to be the next Massachusetts Attorney General. And her mentor
-- AG Thomas Reilly -- wants to be the next governor. In Massachusetts,
politics always trumps justice.
Most people are unaware
of the basic facts of the Shanley case because the media coverage
has been so wretched. I recommend this excellent article by JoAnn
Wypijewski -- a first-rate journalist:
The
Passion Of Father Paul Shanley
Legal Affairs, The Magazine at the
intersection of law and life, September / October 2004
Paul Shanley
became the most demonized among the church's fallen fathers.
But however numerous Shanley's sins, they have nothing to do
with the evidence to be presented against him in court. On the
irrevocable damage caused by recovered memories.
By JoAnn Wypijewski

IN OCTOBER, THE MOST HATED
MAN IN MASSACHUSETTS is scheduled for trial. Paul Shanley, a
political radical who ministered to runaways and spoke out for
gay rights in the 1970s, was once known as Boston's "street
priest." By 2002, he'd become "a depraved priest,"
according to a Boston Globe editorial. The city's largest-circulation
gay paper, Bay Windows, argued in an editorial, "He
deserves whatever the criminal justice system has in store for
him." And after Mass one Sunday at Boston's Jesuit Urban
Center, a gay man said he could never be an impartial juror in
a criminal case against Shanley: "It's just too awful."
Those opinions were voiced before Shanley was arrested, charged,
and indicted in June 2002 for indecent assault and battery and
for child rape.
Shanley, then Father Shanley,
emerged as a central figure in the Catholic sexual abuse scandal
from the day The Globe launched a series of Pulitzer Prize-winning
articles about the church in January 2002. No other priest has
received as much high-profile national press attention. Few others
have faced trial. When Shanley was released on $300,000 bail
the following December, after seven months in jail, his lawyer
used a body double to divert the media frenzy. When people in
Provincetown on the tip of Cape Cod learned Shanley had taken
up residence there, signs began appearing on lampposts, warning
neighbors that a pedophile was in their midst.
The criminal charges against
Shanley, 73, are rooted in the "recovered memories"
of one man, Gregory Ford, whose claims, it now turns out, will
never be tested in court. Through the deft maneuvers of his personal
injury lawyer, Roderick MacLeish, Jr., Ford became a poster child
for priestly abuse early in the scandal. The media relentlessly
replayed Ford's assertions that beginning when he was a little
boy, he was pulled out of religious instruction class by Shanley,
who fondled, sodomized, and otherwise sexually assaulted him
in the church and rectory of St. Jean L'Evangeliste in Newton,
Mass., where the priest was pastor in the 1980s. After Ford made
those allegations, three other men made similar claims, all involving
the classes at St. Jean's. Like Ford, the other three said they
immediately forgot being raped or abused. And like Ford, they
said they recovered their memories after reading the Globe
article about Shanley or with other press coverage of the priests
scandal. All four sued the Boston Archdiocese for civil damages,
all received monetary settlements, all had the same lawyer, and,
until recently, all were listed as victims in the criminal case.
This July, the Middlesex County District Attorney's office announced
that "in order to make this the most manageable case for
a jury to hear," it would not go forward with charges on
behalf of Ford and one of the other men. In other words, prosecutors
have deemed the allegations of Shanley's headline accuser too
risky or unsupportable, yet the prosecution proceeds. The Boston
media have barely noted this development.
Until the criminal allegations,
there were no claims against Shanley involving sex with young
children. Instead, there were claims of sexual encounters between
the priest and adolescents or young adults during the late 1960s
and '70s. Shanley himself, according to people close to him,
has admitted to past "sexual misconduct." In a January
2002 letter to friends, he explained that "it was never
with a child but with a highly sexualized adolescent, never with
an 'innocent,' and was so non-traumatic then that some of the
victims returned. And it was never repeated in the thirty years
since that I have tried to make up for my wrongs." Following
the advice of attorneys, Shanley does not speak to the press
or to the public. "They want angels or devils," he
told a confidant. "Anything in between is very difficult
for them." He has pleaded not guilty to the charges against
him.
TO SOME DEGREE, THE D.A.'S
DECISION IN JULY creates a new battleground. The headline victim
is now Paul Busa, a classmate of Ford's at St. Jean's. But the
claims of Busa and Ford, who were childhood friends, have been
closely linked for two years. So Ford remains integral to the
case, his story a matter for the prosecution to avoid and for
the defense possibly to exploit. It's hard to imagine that charges
would have been brought in the first place without Ford.
To start at the beginning,
on January 31, 2002, a friend of Paula and Rodney Ford in Newton
called to alert them about a long article in The Globe
titled "Famed 'Street Priest' Preyed Upon Boys." The
article related the story of a teenager who'd come to Father
Shanley for counseling in the 1970s and was inveigled into a
game of strip poker. It said that the priest abused the runaways
he was thought to have helped. And it quoted a man who said he
"became Paul's sex slave" at the age of 20 and sank
into a depression that never lifted.
The Fords read with interest.
Their son Gregory, now 27, has had a hard time in life. He has
been in 17 mental institutions or halfway houses. At age 11,
he began drinking; he has also used anabolic steroids, cocaine,
LSD, and other drugs. He has threatened his father with a knife
and a metal pipe, assaulted a girlfriend, burned a local field,
and threatened to kill his whole family and burn down the house.
The Fords told the Newton Tab that Gregory's problems
had no explanation before that day in January. After reading
the Globe article, Ford's father said, "I knew from
that moment on that I was going to have all the answers."
The Fords showed Gregory the
article with Shanley's picture. He didn't react. Then they showed
him a photograph of himself receiving his First Holy Communion
from Shanley, and he fell to the floor in tears. Over the next
year and a half, Gregory reported a series of "flashbacks,"
recovered memories of abusive and violent incidents, numbering
more than 70, most of which involved strip poker and anal penetration.
In depositions taken for the civil case brought by Ford against
the Boston Archdiocese for failing to protect him from Shanley,
Gregory Ford testified that he buried the memory of each attack,
and thus approached each new encounter with the priest as if
it were the first, without fear. At the time this began, Ford
would have been 6; Shanley, 52.
The day after Ford's epiphany,
Paul Busa, also 27 and then a military police officer at Peterson
Air Force Base in Colorado, got a call from his girlfriend telling
him about the Globe article. The girlfriend called Busa
again 10 days later to tell him that Ford had recovered memories
of abuse. According to papers filed in his civil case, Busa's
memories "began flooding back." He called Ford, who
by then had retained MacLeish, a Boston lawyer who has represented
more than 200 alleged victims in the latest public scandal and
who earlier negotiated dozens of secret settlements with the
church. A few days later Busa was flying to Boston, his ticket
paid for by MacLeish. By March, Busa had retained the lawyer.
At MacLeish's suggestion, Busa consulted two psychiatrists who
had also talked to Ford. Back at Peterson, another psychiatrist
had encouraged Busa to keep a journal, his "emotional barf
bag," in which he reconstructed his memories, backdating
them to February 1, 2002, the day he heard about the Globe
story. He was discharged from the Air Force that April, and now
works for the Newton fire department.
Busa and Ford were joined in
their allegations by Anthony Driscoll, another childhood friend
and classmate, also 27. He asserted that while flying to Las
Vegas to gamble, he experienced "severe flashbacks"
of rape and other indecencies by the priest. Driscoll met with
Ford and MacLeish in March 2002 and spoke with Busa at about
the same time. He reportedly did not say then that he thought
he'd been abused. He did, however, ask MacLeish to recommend
a psychiatrist, and subsequently met with the same doctors seen
by Busa and Ford. That April, MacLeish filed a civil complaint
for him. In July, the prosecution dropped Driscoll along with
Ford from the case against Shanley.
The remaining victim in the
criminal case, now 34, has requested anonymity. His civil complaint
never underwent discovery and little is known about him, except
that he has a history of incarceration and drug and alcohol abuse.
He claims to have been abused by Shanley in the early 1980s and
to have recovered his memories in 2001, after reading a newspaper
article about another accused priest. He did not make a civil
or criminal complaint until 2002, after Ford came forward, and
after he himself had retained MacLeish. According to Shanley's
defense counsel, Frank Mondano, the man's first memory is dated
to the day that it would be admissible under the state's six-year
statute of limitations. That day was a Tuesday, when CCD (as
these Catholic religious classes are called) never met.
For Busa and Ford, the memories
of abuse are nearly identical. Both say Father Shanley regularly
pulled them out of CCD, sometimes as often as every week, between
1983 and 1989. All of the criminal activity would have occurred
before the 10 o'clock Sunday Mass. Until Gregory Ford came forward,
none of the thousands of children who attended CCD at St. Jean's
while Shanley was pastor reported anything untoward. No one is
on record at the time as having noticed anything unusual involving
the boys and Shanley. Not their parents. Not the several women
who taught the classes, including Ford's mother. Not Verona Mazzei,
the woman who supervised the program. After Ford made his accusations,
Mazzei told reporters she could not confirm his account of the
priest's continual class disruption. By the time of the indictment,
she said she'd been advised by lawyers not to comment; her position
was compromised because Paul Busa was her daughter's fiancé.
The couple married this summer.
The accusations against Shanley
rely on a psychological theory called dissociated or repressed
memory. It holds that the mind can submerge the most traumatic
memories in some walled-off place, where they remain unaltered
and retrievable in exact detail by a triggering event or therapy.
The idea comes from Freud's early work, and is one which he ultimately
rejected. It was reformulated in some feminist psychotherapeutic
circles beginning in the 1970s, and reached its apex in the 1980s
and early '90s, when children, prodded by therapists, began reciting
"memories" of satanic ritual abuses committed at their
day care centers. Many people went to prison as a result of those
stories. Most of those convictions have since been reversed;
others continue to be fought. Yet the theory persists. Daniel
Brown, a psychotherapist who testified to the grand jury in Shanley's
case, argues that "material that is too intense may not
be able to be consciously processed and so may become unconscious
and amnesic."
Other experts, however, reject
the notion that highly traumatic memories can be spontaneously
repressed and recovered. One of Ford's first therapists, Robert
Azrak, testified in a deposition that "there is no scientific
basis" for the type of recovered memories described in this
case. As Richard McNally, a clinical and experimental psychologist
at Harvard and the author of Remembering Trauma, pointed
out, "There is just no mechanism in the mind for keeping
the door shut to traumatic memory. The more times a particular
type of event happens, the harder it may be to distinguish one
incident from another, but that doesn't mean people fail to remember
the entire set of events." Remembering trauma, McNally said,
"is crucial to evolutionary development; if you've been
threatened, you better remember if you want to survive."
That was as true for cavemen as it is for the contemporary child
who, once burned, learns to avoid a hot stove.
In a series of experiments
involving people who claimed to have recovered memories of alien
abduction-a patently false memory-McNally and colleagues found
that their subjects remembered things actually presented to them
as well as the control group did, but that the subjects had far
higher rates of false recall and recognition. The responses of
the self-described alien abductees mirror the responses from
separate studies that the researchers conducted involving people
who reported recovered memories of childhood sexual abuse.
The tricks of memory and imagination
are illustrated by a trauma that Gregory Ford indisputably experienced
at CCD. When Ford was 11, Driscoll held a sharpened pencil upright
on Ford's chair as a joke. Ford sat down on it and howled in
pain, and, according to accounts at the time, there was blood.
Verona Mazzei called Ford's mother, who hurried to the church
and took her son to an emergency room. Doctors treated Gregory
for a puncture wound to the buttock. They found no injury to
the anus nor anything indicative of sexual abuse, according to
medical records cited by the defense in Ford's civil case. Shanley
does not figure in the story.
Driscoll, Busa, and Ford never
forgot the essential features of that incident. Driscoll said
he lives with guilt for hurting Ford. In Ford's recovered memories,
however, the pencil incident prompted Shanley to arrive on the
scene and resulted not in a puncture wound but in the rape of
Ford and an anal laceration. This version of events has been
repeated by Ford's parents and lawyer. It was, according to Busa,
the subject of the first conversation he had with Ford, by phone
in February 2002, after he heard of his friend's recovered memories.
Two years ago, MacLeish argued
that Ford hadn't buried every memory of abuse; occasionally a
shard would surface, as when, at 19 and juiced on steroids, he
cried out, "I was raped!" However, Gregory's sister,
Kathryn, testified in a deposition that a neighbor witnessing
the outburst had told her that her brother "specifically
said 'my father raped me.' " Kathryn was firm in her recollection,
especially, she said, because the claim was so shocking and "impossible."
Last year, when the neighbor contradicted her in the press, Kathryn
recanted. Now everyone's memory is synchronized that Gregory
screamed at his father, "How would you like it if you were
fucking raped?" before being taken off to an institution.
There the story took another
twist. A doctor noted, "Patient revealed being sexually
molested by neighbor and cousin(s) for about 3 years ages 7 to
9." Doctors considered this a major breakthrough and, according
to court documents, Gregory's parents instantly suspected one
adult. But then Mr. Ford interviewed his son, and the family
concluded it was all a misunderstanding, and that Gregory had
been talking about sexual games, strip poker, with other boys.
This is now the family narrative, though the doctors assert there
was no confusion, and the playmates say they have no memory of
strip poker, according to depositions cited by the defense in
the civil case.
In light of such contradictions
and the difficulties Ford's medical history could cause on the
witness stand, the prosecution dropped him as an accuser. For
the same reasons, a year ago, lawyers who represented the church
against Ford's civil claims prepared a defense. According to
a pretrial memorandum, they planned to argue that Ford and the
other plaintiffs could not prove "the essential predicate
to all of their claims: that Paul Shanley, based upon the credible
evidence, in fact abused Gregory Ford." The recovered memories
were not believable, the memorandum states, and were unsupported
by corroborating evidence. Yet in April of this year, Archbishop
Sean O'Malley, in the ninth month of his assignment to lead the
Boston church beyond its devastating scandal, made cash settlements
with Ford Busa, and Driscoll. Although the amounts were not disclosed,
The Globe reported that Ford got over $1.4 million, the
largest known payout to an alleged victim in the Boston area.
In May, O'Malley sent two priests to ask Shanley to resign from
the priesthood. Shanley, near tears, refused. Days later, the
archdiocese defrocked him. Where previously the church had held
itself above the law, now it was saying that defense is not an
option.
SO MUCH OF WHAT IS PUBLICLY
KNOWN ABOUT PAUL SHANLEY has its origin in a two-and-a-half-hour
press conference that MacLeish held in April 2002. That event,
televised live in Boston, showcased Ford's recovered memories
and featured, as evidence of the priest's moral corruption, a
PowerPoint presentation of strategically edited excerpts from
a 1,600-page personnel file that the archdiocese had kept on
Shanley, and that it released only after MacLeish and the press
sued for access.
Following that press conference,
it was reported that Shanley's file reveals a 30-year pattern
of accusations of sexual abuse, cover-ups, and transfers of the
priest from parish to parish. That they contain an admission
by Shanley of rape as well as the results of a psychiatric examination
showing that "his pathology is beyond repair." That
they indicate Shanley was a founding member of the North American
Man/Boy Love Association. That they show he left St. Jean's in
1989 because of sex abuse charges, and was transferred to California
although the church knew he was a child molester. Those claims,
repeatedly recycled, created a portrait of the priest as criminal
before any legal charge was made. Not one of them is supported
by documents in the file.
The documents do contain one
allegation later determined to be by a 16-year-old in 1966, which
Shanley forcefully denied and which was not pursued further at
the time. There are also four allegations involving male teenagers,
dating back about 25 years, which were made in 1993-94. By then
Shanley, finished with parish work, was nearing retirement. One
March 1994 document appears to be notes taken by a church official
of a conversation with a staff member from the Institute of Living,
a clinic in Connecticut where Shanley was sent for evaluation
after the 1993-94 allegations. In the notes, Shanley is said
to have admitted to the "substance of complaints-sexual
activity w/ 4 adolescent males and w/ men and women" going
back many years. The archdiocese settled those claims by 1998.
Shanley never admitted to the version of events in the settlements;
other allegations arose subsequently.
The bulk of Shanley's file
chronicles the progress of his life of controversy during one
of the most tumultuous periods in American history. He had been
ordained in Boston in 1960, at 29, and spent his first few years
in parish work. By the late 1960s, as tens of thousands of runaways
began converging on the city, he took up a roving ministry to
youth. It would be his official assignment until 1979. He held
folk Masses in a storefront, grew long hair and sideburns, and
shed his black suit and Roman collar for jeans and a coarse shirt.
Photographs of him disclose an ambiguously rakish figure, part
hippie, part nerd. He is said to have had tremendous charm. In
those years Shanley was surrounded by teenagers, male and female,
sometimes up to 30 "cases" in 30 minutes by his account.
He began his workday at 6 or 7 p.m., touring the Boston Common,
the red-light Combat Zone, and the city's squares and subway
stations into the small hours of the morning, finding kids lost,
strung out, raped, pregnant, suicidal, entrapped by vice cops,
or en route to one of those horrors.
"Imagine yourself, a social
worker newly arrived in a town," he wrote in a 1972 newsletter.
"There is no ADC, no Children's Service, no Mental Health
Center, no Legal Aid, no Social Security, no Blue Cross, no Family
Counseling, no Guidance people, no Red Cross, no TB wagon-nothing.
You are all alone, buddy." With Sister Barbara Whelan, he
fitted out a Winnebago and started Bridge Over Troubled Waters,
a mobile clinic providing free, confidential treatment for venereal
disease and other ailments to street people. He was accused of
abetting delinquency.
The kids had come to Boston
as part of the great youth rebellion-after the Summer of Love,
after Woodstock, after the Stonewall riot in Greenwich Village
marked the beginning of the modern gay movement. The drinking
age was 18 then, and bars were thick with young teens passing
fake IDs and grinding to songs from Sticky Fingers. In
the Fenway, police were entrapping, arresting, and beating gays,
but in underground bookshops the magazine Fag Rag proclaimed
"Cocksucking as an Act of Revolution." The Vietnam
War was over, almost. It had come home in the form of drugs and
broken vets, a generation turning to spiritualism and mystic
cults. In the Catholic Church priests were leaving the collar
for love. Others stayed in, questioning everything. "Social
sin," the U.S. bishops wrote in 1973, applies to "structures
that oppress human beings, violate human dignity, stifle freedom,
impose gross inequality." Meanwhile in South Boston, white
Catholic gangs were stoning black children. And at the headquarters
of the archdiocese, Father Shanley's personnel file was growing
fat with letters of condemnation and a few of praise. The spirit
of Vatican II had unleashed forces of both liberation and reaction.
The clash would be greatest over sex.
Shanley's file is rife with
sex, in the form of his words and reported words on the subject.
In the civil complaints he filed, MacLeish filled gaps where
evidence of criminal action was lacking by stressing Shanley's
"deviant beliefs." Because of what Shanley had said,
MacLeish argued, the church should have known what he had done.
For example, a woman who attended a 1977 lecture by Shanley noted
in a letter, "He can think of no sexual act that
causes psychic damage-'not even incest or bestiality.' "
Shanley himself, as disclosed in the file, had written, "We
can say some things without question: Any sexual act with the
same or the opposite sex is sinful if it is rape. Or if it involves
the seduction of children." Whichever statement better represents
Shanley, neither proves what he might have done.
By 1973, Shanley was offering
a "ministry to sexual minorities." Gay Community
News printed his phone number every week with the notice:
"Fr. Paul Shanley . . . has been working with younger gays
and bisexuals, to overcome the negative conditioning of the Catholic
Church. For raps and counseling." To review the archives
of GCN and Fag Rag now is to witness a community
putting itself together. Along with politics and current events,
sex, including intergenerational sex, was discussed regularly
and without restraint. "For me it was the Golden Age,"
says John Mitzel, a writer who worked on both papers and now
owns a gay bookstore in Boston. At 17 he had run away from his
Cincinnati home, where his mother had mistaken homosexual precocity
for mental illness. "I've always been interested in older
men, and I was sexually active from about the age of 12. I would
follow hot-looking men onto the bus-20-, 30-, 40-year-olds-then
get off where they did. My technique was rather crude. I'd just
say, 'Can I blow you?' Of course, they ran off in horror. They
don't teach you how to be a sexual predator at age 12."
In Boston, the grittier edge
of such transactions was to be found at hustling grounds like
Park Square and bars like The Other Side, where a man who calls
himself Wayne Hay worked from 1974 to 1977. "That's where
I met Paul," Hay recalled. "He'd come around every
night. Mostly he was looking for someone he already knew was
in trouble. These were people abandoned by their family because
they were gay-throwaway kids, really. I saw Paul take people
who had no place to go but under a bridge, or who were looking
for a trick at 3 a.m. so they'd have a place to sleep."
Amid the nightly gossip, Hay says, he never heard anyone complain
or even talk about sex with Paul Shanley.
By 1977 anyone wanting to report
molestation could call an anonymous tip into a hotline instituted
by the Boston D.A. Innuendo poured in about hundreds of gay men.
It was a year of panic that set the stage for Shanley to articulate
his most "deviant belief." In nearby Revere, a police
dragnet implicated 25 men and 64 youths in an alleged sex ring.
Police detained the young people, or enlisted psychiatrists and
priests, to coerce them into cooperating. A group called the
Boston/Boise Committee was formed to defend civil liberties.
Ultimately none of the men did time, and the district attorney
responsible for the scandal was swept from office. Afterward,
the committee held a conference to discuss sex between men and
teenage boys. Shanley was among the clerics, ethicists, lawyers,
activists, and psychologists invited to speak. He told the story
of a gay teenager, rejected by his family, who took up with an
older man. When the boy's parents found out, they called the
police and the man was imprisoned. "He had loved that man,"
Shanley said of the boy. "And when he realized that the
indiscretion in the eyes of society and the law had cost this
man perhaps 20 years . . . the boy began to fall apart. We have
our convictions upside down . . . the 'cure' does far more damage."
At his 2002 PowerPoint show,
MacLeish projected a sentence from a 1979 account from Gaysweek
that read, "At the end of the conference, 32 men and two
teenagers caucused and formed the Man Boy Lovers of North America."
The suggestion or assertion that Shanley was among the 32 has
been repeated in the press many times since. But Shanley wasn't
part of that group, say a Catholic priest and Protestant minister
who were.
AND YET SHANLEY MAY WELL HAVE
SEDUCED TEENAGERS. In the civil cases against the archdiocese,
MacLeish gathered affidavits from 19 men who say the priest used
them sexually when they were young. The statements were meant
to demonstrate that the recovered memories of Ford and the others
were consistent with Shanley's sexual modus operandi. The D.A.'s
office has reportedly entered those affidavits in the criminal
case against Shanley for the same dicey purpose. Their admissibility
will no doubt be challenged by the defense.
Taken together, the affidavits
present an alarming picture of a priest obsessed with sex, one
who exploited school settings or counseling sessions to make
conquests. Individually, many lack credibility; all are untested;
and some raise an issue studiously avoided since the scandal
broke: teenage consent.
The standard argument is that
the priest was in a position of power; there could be no consent.
On the strength of that claim, even men who say they had sex
with Shanley while in their 20s have won financial settlements
from the church.
Yet repeatedly in the affidavits,
the teenager faces a choice: to go away for the weekend with
the priest after being propositioned, to climb into his bed naked,
to travel alone to another state to visit him, or stay with him
another night, or return for counseling, all after allegedly
being molested or raped. Repeatedly, the teenager chooses the
priest. In one affidavit, a 14-year-old comes to Shanley to talk
about his worries; there is a full-body massage and a sleepover.
He returns another time and there is a candlelight bath, Gregorian
chants on the stereo, and the priest performs oral sex. Five
times in six months the teenager comes to see the priest and
they have sex; they stay in contact for years. Walking with the
priest on the street, the accuser says, "I felt lucky to
have Father Shanley as a father figure." In another affidavit
Shanley is said to advise that if a 16-year-old ever finds himself
tempted by girls and in need of sexual relief, the priest will
offer himself up as the "lesser of two evils." Later
Shanley invites the youth to a cabin in the Blue Hills outside
Boston, and he accepts. That night, he says, the priest "performed
oral sex on me. . . . I was profoundly embarrassed and mortified."
If Shanley did make the "lesser
evil" proposition, it was clearly manipulative. It was also
a seduction, to which the 16-year-old was capable of consenting,
and, by his own account, did. Regrets don't negate the choice.
At the same time, the seduction wouldn't have been a good idea
even if the kid had come home happy. A priest's authority, like
that of a professor or psychiatrist (some of whom were regularly
having sex with students and patients during that period), further
complicates the already complicated emotions around sex. Many
of Shanley's accusers came from violent, sometimes extremely
violent, homes, which may have made them more vulnerable and
made things more complicated still. But complexity has been a
casualty of the Shanley story as told, from all sides. Shanley
says every encounter was a willing encounter; his accusers say
every encounter was abuse. Perhaps it was something in between,
and both are deceiving themselves, as people often do about sex,
revising events in a way that puts their own actions in an acceptable
light. Perhaps, given the evasions of memory, the lure of money,
or self-justification, neither accused nor accusers even know
the truth anymore.
However outrageous Shanley's
actions with teens and young adults seem today, they belong to
their time. "What you have to understand is there was a
void then for young gay people," said John Scagliotti, a
gay filmmaker who lived in Boston in the '70s. "A lot of
them got to the only gay person they knew who was out or sort
of out, and he was usually older. And a lot of the people who
got into 'helping' also did it because they liked the young things.
The problem is as soon as you're talking about sex, you're also
talking about fear, and wherever there's fear, there's also the
possibility of exploitation. But Shanley had a fear of sex, too.
Those ads saying 'Gay, Bi, Confused? Call Father Shanley'-if
he'd added one more sentence, 'Want to have sex with an older,
handsome priest?' I'd have no problem with it. One could get
moralistic about it and say that's a bad thing, but what's really
immoral is the whole homophobic reality that made it so hard
for people to be honest."
IN HIS JANUARY 2002 LETTER
TO LOVED ONES, Shanley confessed: "I am sorry beyond telling
for the wrongs of my life and for the sorrow and anguish of which
I have been the occasion. How I envy those who say in their declining
years: 'if I had it to do over I would not do anything differently.'
For me it is the opposite: I would do many things differently.
For one, I would never have become a priest and tried to wrestle
with mandatory celibacy and the myriad consequences of that folly.
But who knew?"
It is revealing that Shanley,
who fought so publicly for gay rights, has never actually come
out to his family members. Reviewing his personal scrapbook,
which they let me see, I was struck by the little markers of
"difference" that would have gone unnoticed before
gay liberation gave them meaning: pictures of him as a teenage
camp counselor, with rarely a girl in sight; sensitive shots
of sensitive boys his own age, neatly dressed, hands on hips;
here a quote from Oscar Wilde, there a photo of Rock Hudson,
and, before long, a procession of men in black cassocks.
Why did Shanley stay in the
priesthood once there were more options and some safety for gay
men? His best friend, the late Father Jack White (who, guilty
by association, was evicted from a Boston-area rectory soon after
Ford's accusations), said it was a calling that kept Shanley
going, a confidence "that we could revolutionize society
and the church" and a commitment to the Gospel. "Whatever
else is alleged, true or not," White added, "he has
a pastor's heart."
But Shanley was also on the
older edge of a generation that saw the transfiguration of homosexuality
from something sick to something people claimed with pride. As
Shanley noted in one of his lectures, before Stonewall, only
in the priesthood could a gay man with no particular courage
escape the prying questions, the life of whispering, and be admired.
And only in the priesthood could a young man be transformed overnight
from novice to sage. The dislocations accompanying that transition,
the sudden investment of authority and expectation of purity,
must have cut two ways for a young man both aflame with Catholic
idealism and weighted with a sexual secret. Shanley was a closet
case in a closet culture, weak and powerful at the same time.
In one of his writings, part
of the more than 150 pages of his file that constitute a politico-social
memoir of the 1970s, there is a haunting entry: Holy Week 1972:
Midnight. Some where on Route
78 . . . I am overwhelmed with loneliness, ashamed at my pleas
to God to find a way out for me. All my prayers should be for
my people for whom there is no way out. How many 16 year olds
are also lonely tonight on the road, on the run? Is it really
so important for me to go on? The Letters say so. They warn:
"If you give up so must we. You are our hope." People
shouldn't put such hope in a mere man, any man. It's almost sacrilegious.
If they knew the madness in me, festering below the surface,
they would join the ranks of my accusers.
. . . My thoughts run to that
beautiful whiskey priest of Graham Greene's novel, the last one
left in Mexico, underground, no good, yet he cannot leave. Jurors
in Boston this fall won't have to judge the whole narrative of
Shanley's life. They will have to decide whether the state has
proved beyond a reasonable doubt that he raped and molested little
boys over a period of many years while nobody noticed. Because
the whole case hangs on his accusers' recovered memories, the
narrative of their lives will be up for grabs. If they are not
believed, the foundation upon which they have constructed their
present stories of themselves may be rocked. And whatever the
jury's verdict, the accusers have to live with the horror of
what they may now believe their memories to be. For Gregory Ford
there is already no vindication, as there is none for the defense;
Ford's claims will never be more, or less, than that.
As for Shanley, should he lose,
any sentence is likely to be a life sentence, given his age.
His silence, for a man whose life was distinguished by rebellion,
indicates how much he has already lost. Shanley's defeat came
long before his name was made tinder for scandal. When he decided
to resign his pastorship at St. Jean's in November 1989, by his
account because he could not take an oath committing pastors
to give "internal assent" to the Pope's position on
any issue, his lifetime of loyal opposition and prophetic witness
was finished. As he wrote then to the cardinal: "I do not
leave in protest, or for a woman, or from disillusionment. I
leave the active priesthood in grief. . . . To take this oath
would dishonor the priesthood. . . . With rage at the dying of
the light." From there, his archdiocesan file traces his
decline-ailing, without a mission, estranged from the family
of the church, full of doubt and disappointment though not without
a brittle humor, finally
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Truth can never be
told so as to be understood, and not be believ'd. William Blake, The Proverbs of Hell
Truth suppress'd, whether
by courts or crooks, will find an avenue to be told. Sheila Steele, injusticebusters.com
If you hold the mouth
of Truth, It will burst out its rib-cage. Somali proverb
Publisher : Sheila
Steele
Got something
to say about this or any other stories on this site? Go to injusticebustersblog Participate!
- injusticebusters
court advice :
- How to walk yourself through the justice system
-
- Why you should dump your preliminary hearing (written July 1998 and still valid)
-
- Sermonette:
The
Naked Truth -- (You
will find links to many more sermonettes in the sidebar on this
page
Another target
of Dueck's malice: : Wilf Hathway
Our activism
contributed greatly to the good vibes which happened around the
civil trial.
Index
to the stories on this website
This is not
regularly updated so if you are looking for a particular story
and you have a name or keyword, please use the site search engine(at
the bottom of the page) which IS regularly updated
Index to Saskatoon Police stories
This is a pretty good scrapbook
for the 1998-2002 period.

Inquiry into the malicious prosecution of David
Milgaard untanling 36 years of Saskatchewan police and Crown
misconduct: : Opening day |
2 | 3
| 4 | 5
| 6 | 7
|
-
- Stephen
Williams: Canadian
writer subject to Stasi-like treatment by Canadian police
- Terry
Arnold: : Snitch a
suicide?
- RCMP
scenario stings: Brian
Hutchinson starts digging
- Gary
wells: Faulty eye-witness
testimony
-
- Tulia,
Texas
- Gilmer,
Texas
- Willie
Upshaw
- Wrongfully convicted in Canada
- Foster Parent false accusations
- Martensville
- Don
Smith obscenity trial: an obscene conviction
- James
Lockyer
- Hurricane
Carter
- Johnny Cochran speaks up for
Bill Sampson
- Vopnis
- Abdulai
Mohamed

The Terrible Story behind the Atif Rafay and
Sebastian Burns convictions

Trial
set for June 15
We
know part of this disclosure is a forged statement and perjured
affidavit from a Winnipeg cop
-
-
-
-

The
Crown is still fighting Fred Poirier -- and they are losing.
Secret Commissions Case from Northern B.C.
-
-
- 2005: In
the United States the proven wrongful convictions just keep coming
at us!
Canadians who
have been wrongfully convicted because of improper investigations
combined with zealous Crown
A round-up of wrongful convictions in Canada
- Robert
Baltovich
- Michael Burns
- Sebastian Burns
- Rodney
Cain
- Wilbert
Coffin
(hanged, 1953)
- Jason
Dix
- Jim
Driskell
- Jody
Druken
- Randy
Druken
- Hugues
Duguay
- Michel Dumont
- Peter
Frumusa
- Walter
Gillespie and Robert Mailman
- Clayton Johnson
- Yvonne Johnson
- Herman
Kaglik
- Darren
Koehn
- Kulaveeringsam
"Kulam" Karthiresu
- Stephen Leadbeater
- Donald Marshall
- Chris McCullough
- Michael
McTaggart
- Felix
Michaud
- David Milgaard
- Guy
Paul Morin
- Shannon
Murrin
- Jamie
Nelson
- Greg
Parsons
- Benoit Proulx
- Atif Rafay
- Louise
Reynolds
- Thomas
Sophonow
- Gary
Staples
- Billy
Taillefer
- Steven
Truscott
- Joe
Warren
- Leon
Walchuk
-
- AIDWYC
- Innocence Project (Canada)
- Innocence Project (U.S.)
- Northwest Law Center on Wrongful Convictions
-
- Kirstin Lobato
- Jeffrey
Scott Hornoff
- Willie
Upshaw
- Hurricane
Carter
- Guildford
4
- Birmingham
6
- Amirault
- Houston
- U.S. wrongful convictions:
Exonerateed
- Laurence
Adams
- Ludrate
Burton
- Stephen
Cowans
- Wilton
Dedge
- Albert
Johnson
- Kenneth
Marsh
- Dwayne
McKinney
- James Bernard Parker
- Peter
Reilly
- Peter
Rose
- Sylvester
Smith
- Clifford
St. Joseph
- John
Stoll
- Marty
Tankleff
- Wilton
Dedge
- Ray
Krone
-
- Still working on it:
- Dennis Deschaine
- Dennis
Perry
- Tim
Sandfort
-
-
|
Revitalizing the
archives
From 1998 until
2002, injusticebusters was in the throes of identity crisis.
What was it? What were we doing? We grappled with editorial policy
at the same time we were learning the nuts and bolts of building
and posting a website. Once we had a secure, paid site I had
full editorial control, although I talked regularly to Richard
Klassen who was forced to move his family several times and did
not always have access to the internet. Rick's pages: one | two
We posted our
earliest and later actions.
Early versions
of the site can be found on the Wayback Machine.
I began following
other threads to stories of police and prosecutorial misconduct
and the site's character took on another facet: a newsclipping
scrapbook where stories could live longer than they would in
print form. I also began picking up other stories of wrongfully
convicted people. It was an explosion. By 2003 there were over
700 pages. I also had contact with several other people (Don Smith, Leon Walchuk, Monique Turenne, the Vopnis) and kept these stories
going.
It was the
story of the Ross children's treatment at the hands of the Saskatchewan
government which grabbed the attention of The
Fifth Estate.
The civil claim (The $10M Lawsuit as we called it) was only mentioned
briefly at the end of their show which aired in November, 2000.
When Richard
Klassen began to make progress in bringing his civil claim to
court, the government and police defendants alleged he was breaking
the rules of court by publishing discovery material on the internet.
- MacNeil clinic (the document which started it all)
- The Thompson Papers
- Carol
Bunko-Ruys reports
This claim
was absolutely false. However, rather than risk being thrown
out of his civil claim, Klassen undertook before Judge Mona Dovall
to sever all ties with the website.
The court fights:
- Les
Perreaux report
- QB271
These pages have links which
lead to other pages from that era. Now that some of the dust has settled,
I have been going back through the material we had posted in
the early days. In the spirit of keeping the scrapbook alive,
I have been reformatting and placing links. The original material
remains intact. I hope the information, which chronicles our
struggle is useful to you.
The identity
crisis is over. We know who we are --Sheila Steele, March
28, 2005
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