Four news organizations are seeking the release of sealed court
documents from a lawsuit contesting the will of a Rhode Island woman who
gave $60 million to the Legion of Christ.
Jim Fair, Communications Director with the Legion of Christ, said the
donor was “a beloved member of our spiritual family” and the religious
congregation was “respectful and diligent in carrying out her wishes.”
He told CNA Oct. 24 that it is “appropriate” for the documents to stay
sealed “to ensure that potential jurors are not influenced and that the
Legion’s constitutional right to a fair and impartial jury is
protected.”
On Oct. 24 the Associated Press, The New York Times, The Providence
Journal and the National Catholic Reporter submitted a legal filing that
argued the public has a right to access the documents concerning a
legal challenge to the will of Gabrielle Mee.
Mee, a member of the Legion of Christ’s lay movement Regnum Christi, left $60 million to the congregation.
Mee’s niece, Mary Lou Dauray, challenged the will in court. She said
her aunt, who died in 2008, had been defrauded by the order into leaving
her fortune to it.
Since Mee’s death, the Legion of Christ has been through major turmoil
following revelations that its founder Fr. Marciel Maciel had sexually
abused seminarians and fathered children by at least two women.
Fr. Maciel had given financial advice to Mee, while another priest helped her with estate planning.
Rhode Island Superior Court Judge Michael Silverstein threw out
Dauray’s challenge in September on the grounds she lacked standing to
sue.
However, he said the transfer of money from “a steadfastly
spiritual elderly woman to her trusted but clandestinely dubious
religious leaders” raises “a red flag.”
Dauray’s attorney Bernard Jackvony, a former Rhode Island lieutenant governor, plans to appeal the ruling.
He told the AP that the case documents contain information about the
Legion that is not known to the public. He favors their unsealing.
However, Fair defended the Legion. “We believe our actions with regard
to Mrs. Mee and her estate were appropriate and honorable and are
confident we will prevail in any legal actions in this regard,” he said.
Mee became a consecrated laywoman for Regnum Christi in 1991.
Fair said
she was a benefactor of the Legion of Christ and apostolates like Mater
Ecclesiae, Inc. because “that way she could fulfill the wishes of her
late husband and her own to help the Roman Catholic Church.”