The decision to return Fr. Michael Fugee to active but restricted
ministry in the Newark, N.J., archdiocese "was appropriate at the time,"
says Archbishop John Myers, though he added he would seek to avoid
future court agreements appointing the archdiocese into a supervisory
role.
"We would not enter into a memorandum of understanding that places a
burden on the Church. The state has more resources. Our advice would be
to tell the priest, 'Go back for a second trial and clear your name,' "
Myers said.
The response came in the Newark archbishop's first interview since
his archdiocese became embroiled in the U.S. Catholic church's latest
clergy sex abuse scandal, which centered on Fugee, who was arrested May 20
for violating a memorandum of understanding restricting him from
ministry to children.
The order came in lieu of a retrial on charges of
sexual assault against a 14-year-old boy dating back to 1999, of which a
jury found him guilty in 2003 but an appeals court overturned in 2006
on the basis of judicial error.
Myers spoke Thursday with the National Catholic Register, which published the interview Tuesday.
In the interview, he said the facts of the Fugee case "have not been
fully reported" and the assignments he gave the priest, including his
appointment to co-director of the Office of Continuing Education and
Ongoing Formation of Priests, were meant to increase supervision and
prevent contact with children.
Outside of Fugee, Myers said there are "about 16 or 17 priests under
supervision" in the archdiocese, and identified such supervision as an
area requiring greater attention from he and his fellow bishops.
"At the U.S. bishops' meeting in San Diego this June, we discussed
the fact that supervision is a problem under the charter. What if a
priest moves to Florida? How do we supervise [those who move]? My
suggestion is that the bishops work to address these issues soon," he
said.
In Fugee's case, Myers said he was first placed in a parish "with
other priests who all knew his situation" before moving to another
parish where the pastor would allow him to hear confessions at youth
retreats when the others were unavailable.
"There were activities that he was not permitted to do; unfortunately, the pastor permitted this," the archbishop said.
Myers also discussed several aspects of Fugee's court case. He said
the appellate court's decision to overturn the guilty verdict was made
because "the judge's instructions to the jury lacked guidance on how to
deal with whether Father Fugee was acting in a supervisory way with the
young man, such as a coach or a teacher."
In regard to Fugee's 2001 deposition statement in which he confessed
to groping the alleged victim, Myers said the statement, which was made public online by the Newark Star-Ledger,
was "part of a larger period of questioning over some three hours that
was not taken down," during which the priest denied wrongdoing multiple
times. Fugee would later testify in court that the confession was a
mistake and the result of tiredness, Myers said.
"The average person is looking for a black-and-white answer, but
there are cases where there are more grays than black and white. That is
what the court and the review board were dealing with," he said.
The Archdiocesan Review Board "looked into the allegation as if they
were cops," Myers said, with the board opening the case in late 2006 and
ultimately completing the process in 2009.
"The review board did not give Father Fugee a clean bill of health:
He engaged in activity that was ill advised but did not rise to the
level of sexual abuse. They said the limitations stated in the
memorandum were appropriate safeguards. There would be no unsupervised
ministry with minors and youth," he said, adding that Fugee could
celebrate Mass, as well as baptisms and funerals, with young people
present.
"If he were to go outside the diocese to minister to young people, he
still needed permission to do that, and he knew we would have told him,
'No,' " Myers said.
Though barred from active ministry, Fugee, out on bail, is currently
residing in a rectory for a "charismatic-movement parish" where people
come for Mass and then return to their hometowns, Myers said. Any
further canonical action against him will wait until the Bergen County
prosecutor concludes his investigation of the case.