The note from Missouri Court of Appeals Judge Lawrence Mooney to former St. Louis Archbishop Raymond Burke was just three sentences long.
Written on Court of Appeals stationary and dated October 2, 2007, it read:
Dear Reverend Burke,
I received your invitation to the Law Day Mass.
Because of the Catholic Church's chronic abuse of gays and lesbians, I
do not feel welcome in your church.
I decline to attend.
Very truly yours,
Lawrence Mooney
Two
years later -- in October 2009 -- that private correspondence between
judge and archbishop would make its way into a court filing involving a
protracted legal battle between the Archdiocese of St. Louis and members
of St. Stanislaus Kostka Parish over control of the church's property.
For
attorneys representing the archdiocese, the note suggested that
Mooney's "impartiality might reasonably be questioned."
For the
attorneys for St. Stanislaus, the note -- originally filed under seal
and reported here for the first time -- demonstrated just how low the
archdiocese will stoop to gain control of the traditionally Polish
church north of downtown.
For more than a century, St. Stanislaus has enjoyed a special privilege
within the archdiocese that allows it to control its own property.
In 2004, Archbishop Raymond Burke
attempted to change that, arguing that the church needed to hand over
its estimated $8 million in assets to a trust overseen by the
archdiocese.
Fearing that the archdiocese would take the money and then close the parish,
the congregation balked.
Burke responded by removing the church's
priest.
Members of St. Stanislaus then found a priest
of their own -- Marek Bozek, a native of Poland -- who Burke promptly excommunicated upon the pastor's arrival to St. Louis in December 2005.
In
July 2008, the archdiocese and several former members of St.
Stanislaus, who'd come to side with the archdiocese, sued Bozek and the
church board for control of the parish.
During the discovery
period of that lawsuit (which is still wending its way through St. Louis
Circuit Court with no end in sight), it was revealed that former St.
Stanislaus member Roger Krasnicki had shared 17,000 documents and 255 emails with Greensfelder Hemper & Gale, the law firm representing the archdiocese.
From
1977 to 2008 Krasnicki, a lawyer, had served as the parish's de facto
attorney advising the church on numerous legal issues. For that reason,
St. Stanislaus' attorneys with the Clayton-firm Armstrong Teasdale saw
Krasnicki's aid to Greensfelder as a violation of attorney-client
privilege.
What's more, they argued, it was a conflict of
interest for Greensfelder to then use that information against St.
Stanislaus.
Based on those arguments, Greensfelder should be
disqualified from the case.
St. Louis Circuit Court Judge Brian Hettenbach
saw things differently.
In August 2009, he ruled against St.
Stanislaus' motion to disqualify Greensfelder. St. Stanislaus then
appealed that ruling.
Enter Judge Mooney.
According to
court records, since sending his note to Archbishop Burke in 2007,
Mooney had twice sat in on cases involving the St. Louis archdiocese in
which the appellate court ruled in
favor of the Catholic church.
But in the appeal from
St. Stanislaus, the archdiocese's attorneys argued that Mooney might be
biased against them.
Why? Maurice Graham, the attorney representing Greensfelder on behalf of the archdiocese, tells Daily RFT
that he can't comment on pending litigation.
However, court documents
seem to suggest that the archdiocese's attorneys feared that a
gay-friendly judge would favor a gay-friendly congregation and pastor in
St. Stanislaus and Rev. Marek Bozek.
In his motion requesting Mooney's recusal last October, Graham writes:"St
Stanislaus, through its pastor, Marek Bozek ... has taken a public
position that is contrary to the teachings of the Roman Catholic Church
relating to the participation in the sacraments of the church by persons
who are in active homosexual relationships."
Graham then included as an attachment a lengthy letter that Bozek wrote to his parishoners
in which, among other things, he expressed his belief that all people
be allowed the rights of the sacrament including married priests, women
priests, divorced and remarried people and "lesbian, gay, bisexual and
transgender members of our family."
Graham also included as an attachment the letter that Mooney sent Burke in response to the archbishop's invitation that the judge attend a special mass for lawyers and magistrates.
Mooney declined to talk to the Riverfront Times about the St. Stanislaus' lawsuit. But his bio with the Court of Appeals
doesn't hide his stripes, noting that he's a member of the
International Association of Lesbian and Gay Judges and listing the name
of his "life partner."
Mooney eventually recused himself from
the three-judge panel hearing the appeal. Those judges, meanwhile,
agreed in part with the St. Stanislaus' attorneys.
In a ruling last
February, they told Hettenbach to reconsider his ruling but did not
expressly order that he disqualify Greensfelder from the case.
It's
hard to tell what impact Judge Mooney's recusal had on the case.
Ultimately, the appellate court's decision was circumvented anyway this
past September when St. Stanislaus withdrew their motion to disqualify
Greensfelder in St. Louis Circuit Court.
A month later, the parish took
its case across the river to St. Clair County, where it filed a suit
accusing Greensfelder of professional misconduct for using information
obtained from Krasnicki.
Thomas Keefe, the Belleville attorney who filed the suit in Illinois on behalf of St. Stanislaus, tells Daily RFT
that a change in jurisdiction makes sense because Greensfelder has a
Belleville office -- and the archdiocese has undo influence in St.
Louis.
That said, he'd welcome it if Greensfelder tried to move the case to St. Louis.
"If
that happens, we're also going to sue the archdiocese," says Keefe.
"Right now, they're out of the picture because they don't have
jurisdiction in Illinois."
SIC: RFT/INT'L