The family of an Indiana Priest reported missing in Greece tells Fox59
News they continue to fear for his life and are frustrated with reports
coming from officials at the US Embassy in Greece.
For
the past three years, Father Christiaan Kappes has been studying in
Athens on behalf of the Vatican, but on Saturday he began frantically
calling his family to tell them about escalating violence involving his
friend and translator, Ioanna Lekakou.
Father Kappes told his family that Lekakou had been involved in
a dispute with her family over her inheritance and that she was no
longer safe.
"He said that her family is out to get the money
that she inherited and they are going to stop at nothing to hurt her in
order to get this money," said Nadia Charcap, Father Kappes' sister.
By Monday, Virgil Kappes said his son told him that he was also
being threatened. The last time Virgil Kappes heard from his son was
when he called from the US Embassy.
"When he got there he says,
'Now, I have to leave this building. I want you to know that I love you.
If you don't hear from me again, I will be dead,'" Virgil Kappes said.
Virgil Kappes said the Embassy didn't offer his son protection, but on Thursday a spokeswoman for the US State Department said that wasn't what she had been told by Embassy officials.
"He
did not, himself, request safe haven. While a consular officer was on
the phone with one of his family members, discussing options to ensure
his safety, Mr. Kappes, himself, got up and departed the embassy," State
Department Spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said during a news briefing
Thursday.
Virgil Kappes said he was the family member on the
phone at the time his son allegedly left. He said an Embassy official
told both he and his son that they couldn't do anything.
"(They
said) 'We can't help you,' I said, 'Can you get me a phone book? I want
to call the police and get police here.' (they said) 'We can't do
that,'" Virgil Kappes said. "This is a US citizen in fear of his life
and they said, 'No we aren't going to do this'?"
Since that
conversation, all the Kappes family has known is that a priest with
Father Kappes' church dropped him off at the Athens airport and also
dropped off Ioanna Lekakou at a different time in hopes that they could
take separate flights to the United States. Neither one boarded a plane.
"I haven't lost him yet, but to be in fear of never seeing your closest friend again is very difficult," Charcap said.
Now,
after four days, Charcap said she is hearing a new story from the US
Embassy. She said she spoke to an official that said her brother may
have returned to the Embassy later in the day on Monday, which would
have been after he was dropped off at the airport. Charcap said the
embassy official also told her that her brother appeared angry with
Lekakou, paced around the Embassy and then left again.
Charcap said the US official then suggested to her that the two may have run off together.
"(My
brother) would not do that," Charcap said. "For me to even sink to the
level of believing some politician over in Greece who is supposed to
look out for his welfare, who turned him away in his time of need and is
now changing his story and saying that my brother is being irate and
just really mad at Ioanna and that, 'He must have just run off and who
knows what happened?' I don't believe it and until you show me
surveillance and you show me, then I'll believe it."
Charcap said she's concerned because it reminds her of the last thing her brother told her during their final conversation.
"He
said, 'Nadia, they're going to kill Ionna and they're going to blame
me, and they're going to make it look like some type of lover's
quarrel,'" Charcap said. "He was like, 'Whatever they tell you, it is
not true.' So that's the part that has me so emotional."