A US federal judge has ordered a former Catholic priest to return to
Ireland to face charges that he sexually abused young boys in the 1970s
and early 1980s.
Patrick Joseph McCabe (74) has denied the charges
and fought extradition on the grounds that the alleged offences had
passed the statute of limitations in the US.
Sitting in Alameda,
California, Judge Nandor Vadas ruled that the US statute of limitations
had no bearing on the extradition request and ordered Mr McCabe to be
sent to Ireland to face the charges.
On all nine counts faced by
Mr McCabe, the court said it found “credible evidence has been provided
to this court to establish probable cause”.
The final verdict on
proceeding with the extradition of Mr McCabe will be made by the office
of secretary of state Hillary Clinton. A decision is expected within
weeks.
In a 24-page report on the extradition hearing, the judge
detailed the accusations made against Mr McCabe.
The alleged assaults
took place between 1973 and 1981.
For most of that time he was working
as a curate at Dublin’s Pro-Cathedral on Marlborough Street.
The claims
were made by men who said they were between 10 and 14 when the alleged
offences took place.
The report stated that gardaí were
investigating Mr McCabe in 1988 when he was working in a school in
California.
A short time later, he left the priesthood and Irish
authorities were unable to locate him until Interpol found he was living
in Alameda in 2003.
Mr McCabe has denied the charges against him
and has made repeated attempts to be granted bail from Santa Rita Jail
in Alameda on grounds of ill-health.
He was remanded in custody in
California last August, pending the full extradition hearing.
He is
also the subject of several civil lawsuits by alleged victims in
northern California.