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Priest Accused Of Abuse In US STILL WORKING In India

PATRICK CONDON and RAVI NESSMAN   04/ 5/10 10:32 PM ET   AP

Church

ST. PAUL, Minn. — A Roman Catholic priest was in his native India in 2007 when he was charged with sexually assaulting a teenage girl at his former post in Minnesota. Three years later, he is still serving as a priest in India with the blessing of his local bishop.

And the Rev. Joseph Palanivel Jeyapaul has no intention of returning to the U.S. to answer the charges.

His bishop said Jeyapaul handles paperwork for schools in the diocese office and does not work with children.

"We cannot simply throw out the priest, so he is just staying in the bishop's house, and he is helping me with the appointment of teachers," said the Most Rev. A. Almaraj of the Diocese of Ootacamund in southern India. "He says he is innocent, and these are only allegations. ... I don't know what else to do."

The Vatican weighed in Monday, saying that officials there thought Jeyapaul should be removed from the priesthood and that they cooperated with efforts to extradite him to the U.S. – even providing authorities with his exact location in India.

But they said under church law, the decision of the priest's punishment was up to the local bishop in India. Almaraj held his own canonical trial and sentenced Jeyapaul to spend a year in a monastery.

Critics of the Catholic Church have seized on the case as another example of what they said is a practice of protecting child-molesting priests from the law.

Jeyapaul was one of many foreign priests brought to help fill shortages in U.S. parishes. Last year, about one-quarter of the newly ordained priests in the United States were foreign-born, according to the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate at Georgetown University.

Jeyapaul, 55, came to Minnesota in 2004 and was assigned to work at Blessed Sacrament Catholic Church in Greenbush, a town of fewer than 1,000 people just south of the Canadian border. In 2005, he went to India to visit his ailing mother.

While he was there, Bishop Victor Balke of the Diocese of Crookston, Minn., said he received an anonymous letter accusing Jeyapaul of an inappropriate relationship with a 16-year-old girl. Balke investigated and e-mailed Jeyapaul with the allegations.

"You are no longer welcome here, and I will go to the police if you return," Balke wrote.

Jeyapaul wrote back to say he had been falsely accused but would stay in India.

Balke also notified the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the top office in the Vatican that was formerly headed by Pope Benedict XVI and handles all abuse cases involving priests.

"For my part, I cannot in good conscience allow this matter to be passed over because the cleric has left my territory," Balke wrote to Cardinal William Levada, then head of the office, in late 2005. "In my mind it would be a shameful betrayal towards the women and girls in India to whom Fr. Jeyapaul could at present pose a serious risk."

In a May 2006 letter, a Vatican official said Jeyapaul's bishop in India had been instructed to monitor him "so that he does not constitute a risk to minors and does not create scandal."

No charges were ever filed in connection with the 16-year-old. But in November 2006, Balke wrote another letter to the Vatican, warning that Minnesota prosecutors were pursuing charges against Jeyapaul in connection with another girl – this one, 14 – and hoped to extradite him.

Charges involving the 14-year-old were brought in January 2007. Prosecutors said she accused Jeyapaul of threatening to kill her family if she did not come into the rectory, where he then forced her to perform oral sex on him and groped her.

"It is a false accusation against me," Jeyapaul told The Associated Press. "I do not know that girl at all."

Lisa Hanson, the prosecutor in northern Minnesota's Roseau County, said her office has been working with the U.S. Justice Department to extradite Jeyapaul. She would not say when prosecutors began pressing for his return.

"He's charged with serious felonies here in this country," Hanson said. "We want justice for the victim here and we want to do whatever we can to protect potential future victims everywhere."

Officials at India's Foreign Ministry were not immediately available to discuss whether the U.S. asked for Jeyapaul's extradition.

The Vatican's U.S. attorney, Jeffrey Lena, said in a statement Monday that the church believed that the accusations against Jeyapaul "were serious enough to merit dismissal from the clerical state." But under canon law, Lena said, the Vatican leaves that decision to the local bishop.

Almaraj said the Vatican had never discussed asking Jeyapaul to return to the United States to appear in court. "No steps were taken. Nobody talked about that. Nobody asked about that," the bishop said.

An attorney for the alleged victim in the Minnesota case, Jeff Anderson, demanded on Monday that Jeyapaul be suspended and returned to the U.S. to face justice.

"Everyone knew there was a serious problem, but they chose not to ask and they chose not to tell," Anderson said.

The Vatican has denounced such accusations and has blamed the media for what it calls a smear campaign against the pope and his advisers.

___

Nessman reported from New Delhi. Associated Press Writer Nicole Winfield in Vatican City contributed to this report.

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ST. PAUL, Minn. — A Roman Catholic priest was in his native India in 2007 when he was charged with sexually assaulting a teenage girl at his former post in Minnesota. Three years later, he is st...
ST. PAUL, Minn. — A Roman Catholic priest was in his native India in 2007 when he was charged with sexually assaulting a teenage girl at his former post in Minnesota. Three years later, he is st...
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01:24 PM on 04/06/2010
The outrage from the international community is undeniable. We all must hold these individuals accountable for what they have done to these children and young adults. The time has come for the Vatican to take real action to discourage this deplorable behavior. People of all religions must call for this culture of abuse to end once and for all. Take a look at my article for more on this developing story.

Catholic Priest Scandal: All Roads Lead to Rome:
http://generationbinary.com/wordpress/?p=175
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
floodberg
Attorney (ret.)
12:31 PM on 04/06/2010
I just found a link to the charging documents in this case. Attached is clear proof from both Vatican and the Priest that he was aware of charges, and would not return. You can easily follow the chain of information. It's available online, PDF, very easy to read. http://documents.nytimes.com/the-document-trail-father-joseph-pavanivel-jeyapaul#document/p15
11:35 AM on 04/06/2010
I grew up Catholic but cannot get over what's happening...no words to describe. But I found this post and it says it all.

PLEASE READ

you all really need to read this post by DH -

If you've never had to rush a child to the ER to have lacerated intestines stitched back together; if you never had to hold a child who trembled and shuddered each time he/she had to go potty; if you never had to wash the blood from their underwear or take them to ER to have their esophagus repaired; if you never looked into a pup tent covered in blood from slit wrists or had to chase a tormented child through the woods because they were trying to escape themselves and if you never had to cut a dead child down from a tree, you really haven't seen the reality of what these demon seeds from hell do to kids. I have seen this with my own two eyes. When you can say you have seen those things, then maybe, just maybe, you'll realize this has nothing to do with any church. It has everything to do with criminals and those who protect them. The next time you say it's only God who judges, keep in mind that he gave mankind the power to reason. Do you think it's about time they put it into effect?
04:43 AM on 04/06/2010
Mind you, yesterday I read on here that some bishopy-type was saying that the Catho-holic church has done more to advance pedophilia than anybody else. Ain't life grand.
06:02 PM on 04/05/2010
if he's innocent, go back to US and face the music, Church can afford a good lawyer for ya,
C
05:58 PM on 04/05/2010
Placed in a job with no contact with children, letters from other relgious condemning his actions,
go there, stay here, Blah Blah Blah and be sure to insert lots of don't ask don't tell layers to spread the guilt around so no one actualy gets any punishment,.

No Bennie, its not enough that this creep no longer works with children and did penance,. He needs to be tried in a court of law.

(but hey, archbishop says they do more about abuse than anyone else)
05:32 PM on 04/05/2010
Almaraj said. "He says he is innocent, and these are only allegations. ... I don't know what else to do."

How about not harboring a fugitive from justice? Maybe the guy is innocent. If so, why doesn't he return to the US for trial? And why isn't the state obtaining a writ of extradition?
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CoronaDischarge
Fired Up! Ready to go!
05:12 PM on 04/05/2010
And the reason that the Church does not reassign him to Minnesota again so that he may render unto Caesar is ... what again? Hide him out in a Bishop's house in India serves exactly what higher purpose? Surely the Church doesn't care more about its image than it does in seeing justice done.

Doesn't this open the Church to charges of aiding and abetting if they conspire to keep him from authorities?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Hysterian68
bureaucrat/historian/ranter
03:39 AM on 04/06/2010
and if British and Spanish judges are successful in their effort to strip Benny16 of his diplomatic immunity, he can be prosecuted when he visits the UK or Spain, as he is scheduled to do.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
oregon bird
04:12 PM on 04/05/2010
The church lost Ireland, the USA, now much of civilized Europe is withdrawing funds. And while this is going on, the church is quietly expanding its base in India, Africa and Asia -- where children can be violated without an outcry going up.
06:00 PM on 04/05/2010
can you imagine the stuff that goes uncovered in those countries?
06:26 PM on 04/05/2010
The next big scandal will most probably be the widespread rape of Nuns in Africa by local priests who are afraid of getting HIV/AIDS from the locals. Again the Vatican when for a cover up! However, a report by the Irish Catholic aid agency Cafod about the abuses detailed a case of a nun being forced to have an abortion by the priest who impregnated her. She later died and he officiated at her requiem mass. Also cited is the case of a mother superior who repeatedly complained to her local bishop that priests in the diocese had made 29 of her nuns pregnant. The bishop, according to the report, subsequently relieved her of her duties.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/1234268.stm
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MNKen
Eschew Obfuscation
03:40 PM on 04/05/2010
"...the (Crookston) bishop also told me not to come back, because these allegations have come against you, he said."

Authorities need to bring the bishop in and ask him if this is true. If he did tell the priest to stay in India, then the bishop can be arrested on aiding and abetting a fugitive.

If he says he did not tell the priest to stay away, then the church needs to hand him over because the priest is lying and trying to get the church in trouble. And of course the church is taking a new course of openness and cooperation, right? Right? oh...guess I was mistaken.
03:39 PM on 04/05/2010
Hey he's fixed....they sent him to pray for a year....voila...not a pedophile anymore....something like Tigger

did in 3 weeks...all fixed
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
AwShucks
Obama-Biden 2012 Let's Do it Again
04:16 PM on 04/05/2010
That is not even funny. Tiger cheated on his wife. That is not the same thing.
06:01 PM on 04/05/2010
adultery = pedophilia ? I oont think so.
BraveWarrior
The truth will set you free, like it or not
03:25 PM on 04/05/2010
Interesting how clear are the moral imperatives to root out, denounce and prosecute evil and injustice when it is recognized by others, outside of the accused sphere of influence. What could be more evil, actually molesting children, or knowing about it and covering it up. Does the Pope bear a special responsibility as an icon of human morality. Or is his responsibility to protect the institution that elevated him to this worldly position of power. Is he any more responsible for refusing to punish and expel the violations of his priests. For ordering the Cardinals and Bishops, and victims to an oath of secrecy, designed to protect the image and reputation of the Church. While some question the passivity of the faithful, to demand justice from the church-they forget centuries of the Inquisition that tortured all who questioned or challenged the church's dogma. Yet no speculation or criticism over a government that refuses to admit, investigate and prosecute the kidnappers, torturers and murderers who worked for our government. Strange how passive are the believers in the American way. Is the Pope anymore guilty than President Obama covering up evil? Shouldn't all these people be in jail? Shouldn't law enforcement be prosecuting these people, the secular and the divine?
BraveWarrior
The truth will set you free, like it or not
03:31 PM on 04/05/2010
Of course the priests were not following orders like our freedom lovers.
03:18 PM on 04/05/2010
In India pedophilia is commonplace...he'll be like a kid in a candy store
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shivasquest
02:32 PM on 04/05/2010
Via Sullivan

A "Crime Against Humanity"
05 Apr 2010 09:50 am
Is running an international organization which was, in essence, a conspiracy to commit and cover up the abuse of minors, a crime? Even if you are a head of state? One UN judge says yes - and that the Pope can indeed be prosecuted.
01:11 PM on 04/05/2010
No chance Sonia Gandhi is going to allow this christian catholic to be tarnished.