Although Fr. Michael Fugee resigned from active ministry
Thursday, the fallout from his purported violations of a court
agreement barring contact with children continued through the weekend,
with the resignations of a pastor and two youth ministers from a parish
where he had ministered.
The announcement of the resignations came during weekend Masses at
St. Mary's Church in Colts Neck, N.J., where two letters were read, one
from Trenton Bishop David O'Connell and one from now-former pastor Fr.
Thomas Triggs.
Fugee, a priest of the Newark archdiocese, had volunteered in recent years at Triggs' parish, which is in the Trenton diocese.
O'Connell announced Saturday
he accepted Triggs' resignation, which became effective immediately;
the priest would take a sabbatical before receiving a new assignment.
"The troubling events of the past week and the unrelenting scrutiny
that have surrounded them in the media and within your parish have made
it clear to me that a change in parish leadership is in the best
interest of all concerned," O'Connell wrote in the weekend letter to
parishioners.
"There are few things in life as important as protecting our children
and young people. We all must recommit ourselves to that goal by
supporting the policies of the Diocese of Trenton designed to do
precisely that," he wrote.
In a separate email to Trenton priests, O'Connell said the diocese
did not know Fugee was present because a letter of suitability was never
sought. He called the oversight "a terrible lapse of judgment on the
part of those who extended the invitation."
In his letter,
Triggs expressed thanks to his parish community of six years. He also
announced he had accepted the resignations of the two youth ministers --
Amy and Mike Lenehan -- who had asked Fugee, a close friend, to
occasionally assist with retreats and other activities. While
acknowledging the controversy, the pastor offered no apology in his
letter.
"The controversy that has arisen during the past week, discussed at
the parish forum on Friday night, has made it clear to me that the good
of our parish can only be served if I step down as pastor," Triggs
wrote.
The Friday meeting had Triggs, the Lenehans and several parish
deacons answering questions from a concerned St. Mary's Parish
community.
Although the meeting was closed to the press, Grace Collins, a parishioner in attendance, told NCR
that each gave a brief statement before opening the floor to questions
about how a priest convicted of groping a 14-year-old boy was allowed to
associate with the parish's children.
In 2003, a jury convicted Fugee of aggravated criminal sexual
assault, and he received a sentence of five years' probation. Three
years later, an appeals court overturned that ruling, saying parts of
the priest's 2001 deposition unrelated to his confession should not have
been revealed to jurors.
Rather than retry Fugee, the Bergen County prosecutor's office
drafted a memorandum of understanding, restricting him from "any
unsupervised contact with or to supervise or minister to any child/minor
under the age of 18 or work in any position in which children are
involved."
Fugee and the Bergen County prosecutor signed the document in
July 2007, as did the priest's lawyer and the Newark archdiocesan vicar
general, Msgr. John Doran.
At the St. Mary's meeting, Triggs and the Lenehans reiterated the
position that they had no knowledge of ministerial restrictions
regarding Fugee. The Lenehans described him as "cleared of charges" and
said they felt betrayed when they saw news reports, first in the Newark Star-Ledger, last week.
In his brief comments, Triggs stated he first learned of Fugee's
restrictions from the recent media coverage and said the parish was
reviewing procedures.
Deacon Vincent Renaldi told parishioners he would
lead the parish in those efforts as its child safety coordinator, and he
and a committee will implement new safeguards to its child protection
procedures, including requiring fingerprinting, background checks and
nametags to be worn when around children.
When it came their turn to talk, the parish community appeared divided in their opinion, Collins told NCR.
Some voiced their support of the Lenehans, including members of the
parish's youth group, and called the Fugee fallout a "witch hunt";
others questioned why a letter of suitability -- a requirement since
1995 -- was never sought for Fugee and called for the resignations that
came the following day.
Earlier Friday, the Newark archdiocese released a statement
officially announcing Fugee's decision to leave public ministry on his
own terms.
Saying his decision was "for the good of the Church and for my
peace," Fugee made clear in his letter Thursday to Newark Archbishop
John J. Myers that his activities with St. Mary's and other parishes
occurred outside his assigned archdiocesan ministry and without its
leadership's knowledge or permission.
"My failure to request the required permissions to engage in those
ministry activities is my fault, my fault alone. I am sorry that my
actions have caused pain to my Church and to her people," he wrote to
Myers.
The archdiocese clarified the terms of his removal: Fugee cannot
present himself as a priest, cannot wear clerical clothing and cannot
perform publicly any duties of a priest.
Friday's press release from the archdiocese was an about-face on the
issue. Earlier, Newark communications director James Goodness told the Star-Ledger
that Fugee had done nothing wrong.
Friday's press release confirmed
that the activities with St. Mary's and other parishes fell outside the
duties of his official assignment, and the archdiocese would not have
granted him permission had he first disclosed them.
The archdiocese said it restricted his ministry to the archdiocesan
center, where he was under continual supervision.
But they also
confessed to learning of his extracurricular ministries in mid-April,
and only after a reporter approached them.