The Catholic Diocese of Yakima agreed
last month to pay $205,000 to a woman who sued over sexual abuse she
said took place at the hands of a Jesuit priest in the 1970s.
The woman, identified as M.P. in the suit filed in April 2010 in Yakima County Superior Court, settled last year with the Jesuits for $288,000. Both suits stem from abuse she said occurred in 1977 when she was 8 years old at St. Joseph’s Parish, which was run by the Jesuits until last summer. The priest in question, Fr. Francis Duffy, S.J., had been accused of molesting girls in Oregon before he was transferred to Yakima, where he served until 1989. He died in 1992.
The woman’s lawyer, Bryan Smith of Tamaki
Law Offices in Yakima, hailed the settlement as an overdue
acknowledgment of responsibility. Previously, he said, the diocese had
placed all of the blame for Duffy’s abuse on the Jesuits. "The Yakima Diocese had not acknowledged
any type of responsibility for Father Duffy despite the fact he preached
in this town under their supervision for 20 years," Smith said. The Rev. Robert Siler, diocese chief of
staff, characterized the settlement differently. The diocese needs "to
prudently protect its legal rights" and taking the matter to court could
have proved costly. But the diocese was unaware Duffy had abused anyone
when he came to Yakima, Siler said. "We simply did not know," he said.
The settlement, he noted, does not mean the diocese has accepted legal responsibility."Consistently, the Jesuits have always accepted responsibility for assigning and supervising the priests they’ve had come to Yakima," Siler said. The lawsuit acknowledged that the diocese may not have known, but still asserted that it bore responsibility. "We never got a jury determination on that," Smith said. "It’s our position that they knew or should have known. ... There is a long history of the diocese knowing about abuse committed within its jurisdiction and borders and doing nothing about it."
Over the past decade, the diocese has
confirmed the names of more than a dozen clergymen who have served in
the diocese and who have been publicly accused of sexual abuse. And,
though the diocese did not accept legal liability in this settlement,
Bishop Joseph Tyson wrote a letter of apology to the woman and has
offered to meet with her for discussion and counsel, Siler said. "We’re very sorry for any abuse the victim has suffered, particularly any abuse at the hand of Father Duffy," he said. But that language, "any abuse," falls
short of the true mea culpa Smith said he would like to see from the
diocese. Still, despite the diocese not taking legal responsibility, his
client is relieved with the outcome, he said. "Any time the church pays money to settle a case, it’s an acknowledgment of wrongdoing," Smith said. "That’s how I view it."
Link (here) to The Yakima Herald
1 comment:
Your defence at the tribunal before God.
"If you present yourself before the tribunal of Jesus Christ in mortal sin, what will you reply to the accusations brought against you? Will you excuse yourself by your ignorance? but you had the lights of conscience and of faith; on your weakness? but you had grace; on your temptations? but you had prayer and the Sacraments; on the scandals that have led you astray? but you had so many holy examples to instruct you. Leaving excuses, will you have recourse to the intercession of Holy Mary and of the Saints? they can no longer do anything for you; to the mercy of Jesus Christ? he is henceforward the God of justice, and no longer the God of clemency: "My eyes shall not spare them, neither will I show mercy". (Ezech. 8:18).
St. Ingatius
The Exercises
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