An Albuquerque, N.M. man has settled a suit he filed against the
Archdiocese of Santa Fe and a Catholic ministry group that helps
troubled priests over molestation he claims he suffered at the hands of a
priest beginning in the mid-1960s.
The attorney representing Clifford Esquibel told the Albuquerque
Journal for a story in Saturday’s editions the diocese and the Servants
of the Paraclete settled the case for an undisclosed amount.
Esquibel alleged the Rev. John George Weisenborn sexually molested
him when Esquibel was a seventh-grade altar boy at St. Francis Xavier
Parish in Albuquerque beginning in 1966 or 1967. He sued the church and
the ministry last year.
Weisenborn was sent for treatment at a Servants of Paraclete facility
in Jemez Springs called Via Coeli in 1964 after being detained three
times in Washington D.C. for having sex with boys, according to court
documents obtained from the priest’s former religious order.
The abuse began after Weisenborn resumed pastoral duties at
Albuquerque parishes around 1966, the suit contends. Weisenborn was
formally assigned to St. Francis Xavier in 1968 and served there into
the 1970s.
The lawsuit alleged that Esquibel was “plied with alcohol”
and sexually molested by Weisenborn on several occasions at an
Albuquerque motel.
The Servants of the Paraclete opened Via Coeli in 1947 to treat
priests with alcohol and emotional problems. But almost immediately, the
center began receiving priests who had sexually abused children.
Esquibel’s attorney, Brad Hall of Albuquerque, said he asked a judge
to dismiss the case last week. The Archdiocese’s attorney, Arthur Beach
of Albuquerque, confirmed Friday that the case “has been resolved” but
declined to discuss details.
The Archdiocese and the Servants were the target of dozens of
lawsuits in the 1980s and ’90s alleging that priests were molesting
children.
Many alleged that pedophile priests came to New Mexico for
treatment by the Servants of the Paraclete and were then sent to
churches around the state.
The treatment center closed in 1995.