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Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua, Late Philadelphia Cardinal's Body Examined By Coroner

Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua

PATRICK WALTERS   02/10/12 09:16 PM ET  AP

PHILADELPHIA — The child-molestation scandal in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia has taken a mysterious new turn, with prosecutors asking a coroner to examine the body of Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua to establish whether he died of natural causes.

Risa Vetri Ferman, district attorney in suburban Montgomery County, said Friday that she wants to lay to rest any speculation about Bevilacqua's end, given the "peculiar" timing of the 88-year-old cardinal's death just a day after a judge ruled him competent to testify at the trial of his longtime aide.

Bevilacqua, spiritual leader of the archdiocese's 1.5 million Roman Catholics from 1988 to 2003, died Jan. 31 at a seminary and was laid to rest without an autopsy. He was suffering from dementia and cancer, according to church officials and his lawyers, and his death was widely assumed to be from natural causes.

Montgomery County Coroner Walter Hofman told The Philadelphia Inquirer that prosecutors want to "make sure there were no intervening events that could have speeded up that demise."

Neither Hofman nor the district attorney would comment on whether they are looking into the possibility of suicide or euthanasia – both of which are considered grave sins by the Catholic Church.

Hofman said he is conducting toxicology tests on fluid and tissue that his office took from Bevilacqua's body after it had already been embalmed but before it was entombed.

He said he believes he has enough material for an examination, despite the embalming, and hopes to issue a cause of death by the end of the month.

"The most likely cause of death is death due to natural causes," the coroner said. "Those illnesses were very well-documented by his private physician."

Just before Bevilacqua died, a Philadelphia judge ruled him competent to testify at the child endangerment trial next month of Monsignor William Lynn, who is accused of quietly shuffling priests suspected of molesting children to unwitting parishes while he was a high-ranking archdiocesan official from 1992 to 2004.

In a grand jury report on the case last year, prosecutors accused Bevilacqua himself of presiding over the alleged cover-up of sexual abuse by priests. But he was not charged with a crime.

Ferman said she learned about the cardinal's death on the news and was surprised her office hadn't been notified, given that he died in her county.

The timing "struck many of us as odd, as peculiar," the district attorney said. She said she suggested the coroner investigate "so we could hopefully put to bed any rumors and speculation."

Archdiocese spokeswoman Donna Farrell said a representative of the coroner's office had released the cardinal's body to a funeral home shortly after his death. The day after Bevilacqua died, Farrell said, the coroner's office contacted the funeral home and asked for the body.

"It is our understanding that someone who is a public figure – and certainly Cardinal Bevilacqua was a public figure – that it's not out of the question that tests would be done just so that the record is completely clear," she said.

"We understand that law enforcement and civil agencies have their role and responsibilities. We do hope that this can be concluded quickly."

One churchgoer Friday at Philadelphia's Cathedral Basilica of Saints Peter and Paul said there was nothing surprising to her about the timing of Bevilacqua's death.

"The man was frail, and he was under stress, and they're surprised?" Patricia Janoski said. "He was ill for a long time, and he probably just gave up."

___

Associated Press writers Matt Moore and JoAnn Loviglio contributed to this report.

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PHILADELPHIA — The child-molestation scandal in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia has taken a mysterious new turn, with prosecutors asking a coroner to examine the body of Cardinal Anthony Bevilac...
PHILADELPHIA — The child-molestation scandal in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia has taken a mysterious new turn, with prosecutors asking a coroner to examine the body of Cardinal Anthony Bevilac...
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05:38 PM on 02/22/2012
Can I ask a question? What on earth do you need a "summit" for regarding sexual abuse by priests? You just DON"T DO IT or your DE-FROCKED. What in God's name is there to "discuss" or maybe they just want to trade stories? Am I wrong?
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midwestblues
03:25 PM on 02/14/2012
Davinci Code anyone?
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darter22
Very funny, Scotty. Now beam down my clothes.
04:00 AM on 02/14/2012
The Catholic Church has a long history of murder, coverup, and intrigue. Anything is possible.
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socmed superman
09:59 PM on 02/20/2012
Its probable, but the coroner gave n to Catholic pressure and didn't do an autopsy. The criminal cover-up continues.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
xenubarb
Nebulon V
03:02 PM on 02/13/2012
Suffered from dementia, yet a judge determined he was "competent to testify?"

Odd...
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LintLass
"When you can balance a tackhammer on your head...
12:50 PM on 02/14/2012
Not all forms or degrees of dementia mean someone can't testify.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
xenubarb
Nebulon V
01:19 PM on 02/14/2012
de·men·tia
   [dih-men-shuh, -shee-uh] Show IPA
noun Psychiatry .
severe impairment or loss of intellectual capacity and personality integration, due to the loss of or damage to neurons in the brain.
Origin:
1800–10; < Latin dēmentia madness, equivalent to dēment- out of one's mind ( see dement) + -ia noun suffix

Yeah, right. I'd put 'em on the stand.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
"Joe The Nerd Ferraro"
Group IQ is inversely proportional to group size.
10:48 PM on 02/12/2012
Could the Contraception flap be a deflection for this investigation?
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socmed superman
10:00 PM on 02/20/2012
It also distracted from 10,000-20,000 reported cases of child sex abuse by Catholic priests in the Netherlands, and 8,000 cases in Archbishop Dolan's old diocse of Milwaukee, and on and on..
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amadeus617
01:46 PM on 02/11/2012
This is anticatholic bias at its best. A conspiracy theory is just another way to demonize this man and works very well the man is dead. Misplaced anger is not pretty.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ferdinand Berkhof
09:07 AM on 02/13/2012
Looking at the history of the Catholic cult, I don;t think anger can ever be misplaced.
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socmed superman
10:01 PM on 02/20/2012
You're afraid to show us that you follow a church that hid the world's largest pedophile protection cult.
12:09 PM on 02/11/2012
It is seriously about time that the Philadelphia arm of this beast was taken head-on. Higher powers, NOT IN HEAVEN have shielded that group far too long. Strike Six, Mitt...You're Out, Again! Thoughts at 3 A.M. http://thoughtsatthreeam.blogspot.com/?spref=tw
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mcmutter
A Groover has to expect a few setbacks .....
11:05 AM on 02/11/2012
top church lawyer - which he was - knew all about all the church settlements for sexual abuse plus what they were covering up .....
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socmed superman
10:02 PM on 02/20/2012
plus he undoubtedly heard the confessions of dozens of priests after they raped children
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10:58 AM on 02/11/2012
This is insane. Investigating his death? What a sham. And what kind of a name is Risa Vetri Ferman anyway? Would you trust someone named Risa Vetri Ferman?
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Joebudgie
04:27 PM on 02/12/2012
I would trust her before I would trust someone named Thom Nickels who advertises his prejudice and childishness so proudly. Still in 2nd or 3rd grade making fun of kids names are we? Grow up.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
"Joe The Nerd Ferraro"
Group IQ is inversely proportional to group size.
10:49 PM on 02/12/2012
The local Democrats did not even bother running anyone against her last year.
09:09 AM on 02/11/2012
"The most likely cause of death is death due to natural causes," the coroner said. "Those illnesses were very well-documented by his private physician." I thought the purpose of having a coroner and/or autopsy was to certify the cause of death wih unbiased facts. Not using "most likley" and "widely assumed" and certainly not taking the word of "private physicians" when convenient.
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jjtm562
08:30 AM on 02/11/2012
Where's Cardinal-designate Dolan when he's really needed?
07:29 AM on 02/11/2012
The Cardinal was 88 years old and suffered from dementia......he wouldn't have been a very reliable witness. I can't believe they are investigating this death. Even in death a body can not be at peace. Why doesn't Ferman just continue to investigate the child molestation scandal!!
10:34 AM on 02/11/2012
As I am sure you know, Cardinal Bevilacqua was a key figure in that child sexual abuse scandal.

As a Philadelphian, I can assure that law enforcement here has had ample evidence that Bevilacqua covered up the sexual abuse of children and failed to protect children. The Archdiocese at one point was even prepared to enter a plea agreement.

I am sure Bevilacqua knows, as a Catholic, that his body is irrelevant and cannot be disturbed by an autopsy.

I am also sure it is a comfort to Bevilacqua to know that the autopsy will confirm the cause of death of a key witness, just one day after a judge rules that witness IS competent to testify in a criminal trial about his own high-level aid and the clergy under Bevilacqua's control.

As a Philadelphian, I can tell you that Bevilacqua was a scoundrel who escaped human justice, but perhaps won't escape divine justice.
09:12 AM on 02/12/2012
Let's not lose sight of the fact that Bevilacqua was following protocol. He was operating under a program orchestrated by the Vatican. How else do you explain the uniformity of dealing with pedophilia by bishops and cardinals, not just in the US, but in the entire world? They all went about it the same, exact way. Hats off to the Irish government which recently lambasted the Vatican for the disgusting way the Church in Ireland hid the problem for years.
07:25 AM on 02/11/2012
a judge ruled him competent to testify at the trial of his longtime aide.

The man was dying of caner and just because a Judge finds him "competent", is no reason to exhume the body. The man was old, frail and deathly ill. Funny that they would "believe" a judge and not the man's physicians.
09:48 PM on 02/15/2012
Who is paying the doctor? If it is the church I'm all for digging him up.
07:20 AM on 02/11/2012
It's all about "do what I say, not what I do" and money
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chasborg
The truth is the truth, no spin
02:39 AM on 02/11/2012
There are sex offenders among the leaders of almost all religions. The Evangelical leaders who get caught have a great excuse. "I was being tested by God and I failed". What garbage. What these leaders of any faith prove, is that they don't believe what they preach to their followers. If they believed and really feared God, they would never do what they did and spend all eternity in Hell. Most of them are in it for the money. There are many good people of faith, but they would have been good people without faith.
06:34 AM on 02/11/2012
Have you considered the possibility that they do believe what they preach but are enslaved to a particular sin? Would you say a gambler who speaks out to warn others about the dangers of gambling while continuing his struggle with the same vice does not believe what he preaches? He is willing to be called a hypocrite while attempting to spare others from the same sorrow and pain he knows too well. It could be argued that it would be much worse for our gambler to promote gambling or say nothing at all. Although he would not then be viewed as a hypocrite, he would be leading others or allowing others to suffer as he has suffered.
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chasborg
The truth is the truth, no spin
09:20 PM on 02/11/2012
Not a good analogy. Gamblers aren't getting rich preaching anything. These so called religious leaders are in many cases making a fortune, all tax free. Big difference.
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