Back in the mid-1980s, James Funnell was the charismatic lay person
who turned around the youth-ministry program at St. John Vianney
Catholic Church in Kirkland.
This week, the Archdiocese of Seattle agreed to pay $635,000 to
settle a lawsuit filed by a man who says he was abused by Funnell and
that the church didn't do enough to prevent it.
It is a pattern that attorney Michael Pfau, who represented the
victim in this case, has seen before.
Over the past decade, his firm has
represented more than 100 people who say they were victimized by church
personnel, and the archdiocese has paid out "tens of millions of
dollars" to resolve the cases, he said.
The archdiocese settled one other case involving Funnell, who later
changed his last name to Fionnghael and moved to Virginia Beach, Va.
An attorney for the archdiocese said the church didn't know anything
was amiss until later on, when the mother of another boy came forward
with allegations and went to police.
In 1989, Funnell was charged with
sexually assaulting that boy and was fired. He pleaded guilty to a
lesser charge.
Funnell had a particular M.O., according to Pfau. He would get a boy
alone, or sometimes gather a small group and get them to play games like
strip pool, so they would have to take off their clothes.
Then he would
show them pornography and touch their genitals, or have them touch
themselves, according to Pfau. "He would convince these adolescents that
this stuff was cool," Pfau said.
The victim in this case, Rolfe Eckmann, agreed to be named. He said
he blamed himself for years. Sometimes, he even went so far as to defend
Funnell.
"You would think you'd know better, but you have a person who is so
charismatic and so doting on you that you fall into the trap," Eckmann
said. "He was good at what he did."
Once a good student, Eckmann says, his grades began falling. He says
he became defiant with his parents, and engaged in self-destructive
behavior, such as drugs. Over the years, he didn't think to blame the
church. His view of the situation changed when he learned that his
parents had gone to the pastor with their concerns, and their concerns
were dismissed.
"He blew them off," Pfau said. They have since learned that the
pastor they'd confided in later had troubles of his own. "There were
some alleged misconduct issues," archdiocese attorney Michael Patterson
said, without providing further details.
Eckmann has since cleaned up his life and runs his own construction
company.
About two years ago, a private investigator representing
another victim called asking questions, and he "had a full-on panic
attack. ... I just didn't want to face it."
Then he decided to tell her what he knew.