Amid calls for a Vatican investigation, Newark Archbishop John J.
Myers is facing fierce criticism for his handling of a priest who
attended youth retreats and heard confessions from minors in defiance of
a court-ordered lifetime ban on ministry to children.
At St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Colts Neck, where the Rev. Michael
Fugee had been spending time with a youth group, angry parishioners said
they were never told about Fugee’s background, and they questioned
Myers’ defense of the priest, the subject of a lengthy story in The Star-Ledger.
“It’s complete craziness that the church can let this happen,” said
John Santulli, 38, a father of two at St. Mary’s. “I’m a softball coach,
and I need a background check just to get on the field. Every single
person I spoke to today said, ‘Oh my God. I didn’t know about this.’
It’s incomprehensible.”
Fugee, 52, is a priest of the Archdiocese of Newark and under Myers’
supervision. His work at St. Mary’s, however, was in the neighboring
Diocese of Trenton, where Bishop David O’Connell has ordered the pastor
of St. Mary to bar Fugee from any church activities, a spokeswoman said
in a statement.
The bishop of the neighboring Diocese of Paterson, Arthur Serratelli,
has likewise said Fugee was on a retreat at Lake Hopatcong without his
permission.
For the first time in his many years as an advocate for victims of
clergy sex abuse, Mark Crawford, state director of the Survivors Network
of those Abused by Priests, called on the archbishop to resign,
characterizing Fugee as the latest in a string of problem priests
shielded by Myers.
“The archbishop continues to insist it’s fine for Fugee to work with
children. It’s a very dangerous message,” Crawford said. “When will it
be enough? When someone gets hurt? What does it take when you have a man
who has admitted groping a child on more than one occasion?”
The Star-Ledger, too, called for Myers to step down in an editorial,
saying the archbishop “has shown a pattern of leniency toward
pedophiles, indifference to potential victims, and a haughty disdain for
those who dare to question his judgment.”
Fugee was convicted in 2003 of criminal sexual contact for allegedly
fondling a 14-year-old boy’s genitals on two occasions. Three years
later, an appellate court vacated the verdict, ruling the trial judge
should not have allowed jurors to hear the part of Fugee’s confession in
which he described himself as homosexual or bisexual.
The rest of the confession was not called into question.
Rather than retry Fugee, prosecutors allowed him to enter a
rehabilitation program for first-time offenders, on the condition that
he undergo counseling for sex offenders and sign an agreement barring
him from any work in which children are involved. The archdiocese’s
vicar general, on behalf of Myers, signed the agreement as well.
Yet The Star-Ledger found Fugee has apparently violated that pledge
with impunity, attending retreats and hearing confessions and traveling
with members of the St. Mary youth group to Canada.
Jim Goodness, a spokesman for Myers, denied Fugee had broken the
agreement because he was under the supervision of other priests and St.
Mary’s two youth ministers, who are longtime friends with the priest.
“Father Fugee remains a priest who is allowed to be in ministry,”
Goodness said Monday (April 29). “There is no change in his status at
this point.”
Prosecutors have now launched an investigation into Fugee’s
activities; that probe remains underway. If he is found to have violated
the agreement, Fugee could face civil penalties, criminal charges or
both, said Assistant Bergen County Prosecutor Demetra Maurice, assistant
chief of the special victims unit.
Others are calling on the Vatican to launch an investigation of its own.
The Rev. James Connell, an influential Wisconsin priest who has
pressed the church for greater transparency on issues of sexual abuse,
emailed a letter to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the
Vatican office that has dealt with the abuse crisis in the Roman
Catholic Church.
Connell, a canon lawyer and the former vice chancellor of the
Archdiocese of Milwaukee, asked for an investigation into whether Myers
violated canon law by failing to notify Rome of the abuse allegations
against Fugee.
Connell also questioned whether Fugee should have been returned to
ministry at all given the priest’s initial confession and then his
willingness to enter the rehabilitation program. Connell calls that
decision another admission of wrongdoing.
“The truth in this crisis has to come to light or we will never have
true justice,” Connell said in a telephone interview. “We cannot expect
there to be healing for the victims and survivors if we do not have that
truth.”
The controversy has stirred the ire of rank-and-file Catholics with
no connection to Fugee or St. Mary’s parish. Carolann Aschoff, a family
attorney from Roseland, N.J., fired off her own letter to Pope Francis
and started an online petition demanding Fugee’s reassignment and other measures for greater accountability and supervision in the church.
“Ignoring the agreement they made — ignoring common sense, ignoring
prudence, ignoring the protection of children — is really beyond
belief,” Aschoff said. “They’re being reckless, and no one should be
reckless with children.”