The Tragedy of Gilbert
Gauthe
Part II
By Jason Berry
The Times of Acadiana
May 30, 1985
Note from BishopAccountability.org: This groundbreaking
two-part article on the Gauthe case is as immediate and relevant now as
it was in 1985. Berry would later develop his account in Lead Us Not
into Temptation (1992). See also The
Tragedy of Gilbert Gauthe: Part I and two related articles on Gauthe
that take the story further: The
Other Trial and Anatomy
of a Cover-Up. "The Tragedy of Gilbert Gauthe" was scanned
by BishopAccountability.org from a xerox of The Times of Acadiana newspaper, and was proofread against
the original. Textual notes are set in { }. A {?} is placed after words
and phrases that are difficult to read in the xerox copy.
{Brief note from the editors} Last week The Times reported on
the crimes of pedophile priest Gilbert Gauthe, committed over a decade
in Acadiana church parishes. The second part of this series explores the
personal and legal dramas unfolding as a result of those crimes.
When Ted Campbell became an altar boy in the early 1960s, St. John The
Evangelist Church in Henry was a world removed from the councils of Rome.
Priests stressed the moral code handed down through centuries, and Campbell’s
faith grew. A strapping man in his late 30s, he became a pillar of his
church: president of the parish council, a lay reader of scripture at
Sunday Mass.
In July 1983, the sins of Gilbert Gauthe, pedophile priest, reached into
his home, and the church Ted Campbell loved began to crumble in his heart.
The Campbells were among the first families represented by lawyers Paul
Hebert and Raul Bencomo in financial negotiations with the Lafayette diocese
concerning Gauthe’s sexual molestation of their children (as reported
last week in The Times). From the beginning, Campbell wanted
Gauthe put behind bars. The lawyers stressed the need for patience and
discretion: Getting a criminal indictment of Gauthe hinged on the victims’
testimony, for which the youngsters needed psychological counseling.
Campbell quit going to church; he brooded about his faith—and about
justice. He made several attempts to tell other families, with sons who
were altar boys, to seek professional help. He was rebuffed, sometimes
rudely. “I had one guy come in my house and tell me to my face:
‘It takes a low down son of a bitch to sue the Church.’”
When Msgr. Richard Mouton of Abbeville called, asking Campbell to come
by the rectory, he knew it had something to do with Gauthe. Campbell says
the priest told him: “You ought not to talk about [Gauthe]. It’s
none of your business.” Campbell replied, “What about the
rest of the kids who were altar boys?” Mouton, Campbell says, answered,
“You don’t need to talk about that. We’ll tend to it;
just tend to your son.” Mouton also suggested that troubled youngsters
come to him for confession—which Campbell took as a sincere, if
naive, offer of help.
|
Attorney Minos Simon’s
suit on behalf of the Gastals rests on the premise that Church officials
not only had prior knowledge of Gauthe’s crimes but also had
long tolerated homosexuality among other clerics in the sprawling
diocese. |
Defense attorney F.
Ray Mouton has entered an insanity plea to Gauthe’s
criminal indictment. The jury will have to decide if the priest was
capable of telling right from wrong at the time he molested his victims. |
|
One weekend in New Orleans, Campbell wandered into Mass at St. Louis
Cathedral. “I looked at the priests on the altar,” he recalls,
“and I was judgin’ ’em. I wondered if this bastard screws
women, if this one was gay, if this one’s a pedophile. And it’s
an injustice I feel. I can’t help it. I can’t deal with it.
Every time I see a priest, it clicks in my mind: I wonder what kind of
sicko this one is. I know there are good priests. It’s a shame these
good priests have to suffer for the weirdos they have in there. I have
to accept what Gauthe did, but there’s no way my God would condone
that activity. I had to [sue] as a moral obligation. I’m thinking
of God. I don’t need the Church for salvation.”
The hunger for justice gnawed away. And the idea of other families out
there, eschewing him while avoiding their own sons’ suffering, increased
his pain. By February 1984, with therapy sessions reknitting threads of
the family cloth, Campbell paid a visit to Glenn Gastal, who owned a feed
store in Perry.
Remembering his own rage the day he learned what Gauthe had done, he
spoke gently to his friend, suggesting he have a heart-to-heart talk with
his boy. In a matter of days, Gastal went to Paul Hebert’s office
to sue the Catholic Church.
“This whole neighborhood has a doubt in their minds.” says
Gastal, “as to the ones who don’t really know [what Gauthe
did] and won’t face it. I’m talkin’ about people I wouldn’t
want to hurt. The ones that settled tried to explain to others, and some
of ’em have been kicked out of homes [for broaching the subject.]
The people don’t want to face those that’s seen the problem.
And we’re not talkin’ about parents, either: maybe a grandchild
was involved, maybe a nephew. It’s like a black cloud hanging over
you that’s just going to fall on you any damn minute.”
Like Campbell, Gastal lost friends over his decision to sue. It cost
both men in other ways as well. Campbell has a crop dusting business.
“I can’t prove I lost customers because of my suit,”
he says, “but there’s no other way to explain it.” Gastal
got hit harder. Customers at the feed store drained to a trickle. He finally
lost the business.
To Sue or Not to Sue
On June 4, 1984, the Campbells drove to Paul Hebert’s office in
Abbeville to sign settlement papers. En route, Campbell told his wife:
“I just don’t want to sign. We lose our right to sue for damages
to us, as parents.” But the months of waiting, the emotional ride,
had drained his wife, who wanted to put the lawsuits behind them. “Ted,”
she said, “let’s just sign.”
At the lawyers’ office Campbell insisted on retaining his right
to separate legal redress. Attorneys Hebert and Raul Bencomo explained
that, as part of the settlement agreement, he no longer had that right.
Reluctantly, Campbell signed. Of the $405,000 settlement to the Campbells,
$270,000 was earmarked for their son’s treatment, $30,000 for the
parents, and the remainder went to attorneys’ fees and professional
or medical expenses.
Campbell says the $30,000 “was taken out of my son’s settlement”
and claims the lawyers misled him as to his own right to sue the Church
separately. Hebert sharply disputes this, adding, “I wouldn’t
have included the $30,000 [to the parents] if I had told him they had
no redress.”
While Ted Campbell brooded about his settlement, Glenn and Faye Gastal
had their own change of heart. “I felt that for what Gauthe had
done to my son, he had to be punished,” says Gastal. “As far
as having to sign a piece of paper that was releasing the church, saying
they were not liable in no kinda way and there was gonna be no further
litigation, I didn’t feel I was doing the right thing.”
“There was confusion between the civil and criminal matters,”
Hebert now says. “Our strategy was to settle the civil suits to
our clients’ best financial advantage and let [District Attorney]
Nathan Stansbury move forward with the criminal charges. It was difficult
for some parties to understand the pace by which we had to proceed. But
there was never any question about getting Gauthe indicted. The only question
was, when would the kids be ready to give testimony to the grand jury?”
Containing the Media
During the long months of negotiations over settlements, no one outside
of those involved knew what was taking place. No news of Gauthe, his crimes,
the victimized children or Church responsibility had yet surfaced.
When the settlement papers were signed June 4, KLFY-TV (Channel 10) reporter
Dee Stanley received a tip from an Abbeville source about the agreement.
He called D.A. Nathan Stansbury, who, Stanley says, told him, “The
problem is all worked out. The kids won’t [have to] talk for the
civil cases.” Stansbury, playing his cards close to the vest, refused
to discuss criminal proceedings.
The reporter called Hebert, who, he says, told him: “Everything
has been settled. There really is no story.” Jim Baronet, Channel
10 news director reflects: “We knew something was going on, but
we were cut off. Neither party would talk, the Church for liability reasons,
and Hebert because he was bargaining an out-of-court, secret settlement.”
The station’s first report—some three months before other
media would report the Gauthe story—was a cautious assessment, mentioning
neither names of victims nor Gauthe. Since the settlements had been out
of court, little information was publicly available. Then, two weeks later,
on June 27, Hebert and Bencomo filed four suits on behalf of new clients
in the Abbeville courthouse. These suits marked the first on-record documentation
of the Gauthe civil damages proceedings.
Again, a source in the Abbeville courthouse called Stanley: “The
thing you’re looking for has just been filed,” the reporter
was told. But when Stanley arrived to review documents, the docket—which
lists names of plaintiffs and defendants—read: “Not Available
vs. Not Available.” Who was suing whom?
Stanley asked Clerk of Court Russell Gaspard where the papers were: A
suit is a suit, publicly available under the law. “They’re
not available,” Gaspard told him, adding that District Court Judge
Allen Babineaux had sealed them. “I want a copy of the order that
seals the suits,” Stanley said. “I can’t give you that,”
Gaspard replied. “I don’t have it. Paul Hebert has it.”
“We’re entitled to that document,” Stanley said, “it’s
our First Amendment right.” Gaspard called Hebert. An hour later
Gaspard gave Stanley a copy of the seal order. News director Baronet called
Judge Babineaux, who refused to discuss the matter. The result was a shut-out:
No names would be revealed. Babineaux’s ruling meant the station
would have to file suit to find out who was suing whom. But breaking the
seal, Baronet felt, could jeopardize the victims’ privacy even though
his news policy was to preserve their anonymity. “Legally,”
says Baronet, “we found it difficult to divide the two sides.”
KATC-TV (Channel 3) had similar leads, but would not air a story, even
after obtaining Gauthe’s name, until many weeks later, long after
Stanley’s follow-up reports had identified Gauthe by name. The
Daily Advertiser, AP and UPI did not report the events covered by
Channel 10 that June. “We were out there alone,” Baronet reflects,
“and I must admit it didn’t feel good.”
Victim’s father Ted Campbell has been rebuffed in his attempts
to talk to other families about Gauthe’s crimes. Says Campbell:
“I had one guy come in my house and tell me to my face: ‘It
takes a low down son of a bitch to sue the Church.’” |
Bolting the Traces
The sparse news coverage and long wait for an indictment frustrated the
Gastals. In mid-summer they met with Lafayette attorney J. Minos Simon,
who agreed to represent them. Simon inherited the $12.8 million pleadings
filed by Bencomo and Hebert in the Gastals’ behalf. Glenn Gastal,
angry and restless, wanted to publicly {?}cize the Church, which was precluded
by Hebert’s strategy.
Gastal’s defection was a bitter pill to Hebert and Bencomo, who
had, over many months, negotiated large settlements and preserved victims’
anonymity while moving toward the day when Nathan Stansbury would formally
question the youngsters in order to try for a criminal indictment.
At 62 J. Minos Simon has cultivated a lucrative law practice and garnered
no small reputation for controversy along the way. In the 1960s he sued
then-Gov. John McKeithen to limit state investigatory powers over labor
unions, a case he won in the U.S. Supreme Court. More recently, he successfully
defended Placquemines Parish political boss Chalin Perez on a maze of
charges stemming from the family’s control of the parish.
Simon’s approach to the Gastal suit was driven by a philosophy
dramatically different from that of the other settlement attorneys. The
latter held to a narrow definition of their clients’ best interests:
preserve anonymity and go for the insurance companies’ deep pocket.
Simon was going for the same pocket, only many fathoms deeper. His representation
of Gastal rested on a startling premise: Church officials not only had
prior knowledge of Gauthe’s sexual transgressions but also had long
tolerated homosexuality among other clerics in the sprawling diocese.
They, in addition to Gauthe, were responsible for damages to the children,
Simon held.
“My clients came to me,” Simon says, “complaining that
their attorneys were putting a tight lid of secrecy not only on the victims
but also on everything the Church did. Here were Church officials, not
only guilty, but protected—shielded—by confidentiality placed
by their lawyers and Church lawyers. It was easy to protect the children:
All you had to do was delete their names but otherwise let all the documents
be part of the public record. There were so many children involved, from
what [the Gastals] told me. You can’t have the whole community and
the Church not be aware. That was self-evident. I started an investigative
procedure whose goal was to find the facts beyond Gauthe.”
In sexual molestation cases, it is common for courts to bar all reporting
of minor’s {sic} names and to delete them from court records, which
are otherwise made public as prescribed by law. In response to such a
motion by Simon, Judge Marcus Broussard, on Sept. 4, lifted the seal on
the Gastal suit, and the allegations against Gilbert Gauthe became a matter
of public record for the first time—15 months after his suspension
from priestly duties. With facts now known, other media began reporting
the story broken by Channel 10 three months earlier. And for the first
time, the diocese spoke publicly about Gilbert Gauthe’s crimes.
Bishop Frey issued a prepared statement. “From the beginning, I
have reached out and offered assistance to those who have been harmed
or hurt . . . . We should not be shaken in our faith,” the statement
concluded, “for we know that the spirit helps us in our weakness.”
To attorney Paul Hebert, the bishop’s statement was too little,
too late. The diocese, having balked at his request to canvas altar boy
families in July 1983, had, in his view, shirked responsibility. In response
to the bishop’s statement, the lawyer drafted a letter on behalf
of his clients, which ran in The Daily Advertiser. It characterized
the bishop’s statement as “not an accurate and true reflection
of what has occurred.” The letter continued:
“In fact, although Church leaders were told of this matter over
one year and three months ago, this statement from the Bishop is the first
expression by the Church as to this tragic and unfortunate situation involving
our children, and those of many others. The extent of the sexual abuse
by this priest and the fact that there were minor children involved was
never told to the parents of the victims or the parishioners . . . . It
is inaccurate and misleading to attempt to portray to the public that
the Church leaders have always made themselves available, as it is more
an obligation of going to the parents of all victims and giving them the
true information about what happened to their children.”
The once-improbable idea of Catholics suing their church had now taken
root. Abbeville attorney Anthony Fontana, who declined to be interviewed,
filed suits on behalf of four plaintiffs on Oct. 11, 1984. Like Hebert
and Bencomo, Fontana is a Roman Catholic. Soon thereafter, Fontana filed
two more suits.
Meanwhile, the legal drama shifted to the criminal stage. District Attorney
Nathan Stansbury drove to Abbeville, and in a room at the Hebert Sonnier
law offices, he sat with a video cameraman, asking questions of 11 young
victims. There was no one else present. Stansbury used videotape so that
the boys would not have to be questioned directly by the grand jury: He
wanted straight answers to painful questions and was dead set against
exposing the victims to the ordeal of revealing their terrible injuries
to a group of strangers.
After seeing the videotaped testimony, the grand jury returned a 34-count
indictment on Oct. 18. Although Gauthe would subsequently admit under
oath to numerous acts of sodomy, the grand jury indicted him on only one
count of this crime (aggravated rape, sodomy of a child under 12). Successful
criminal prosecutions often rest on the corroborating testimony of a witness.
Grand jury testimony produced only one boy able to say he saw Gauthe sodomize
another, and this may be the reason the grand jury indicted him on only
one count of the most serious of his alleged crimes. The penalty for aggravated
rape carries a sentence of life imprisonment at hard labor.
Pictures From a Haunted Past
Eleven of the indictment counts are for pornography involving juveniles.
A common practice among pedophiles is an almost documentary-like taking
of photos and keeping of journals or diaries, which serve as erotic stimulation.
According to Bruce Selcraig, who does research on pedophilia for the U.S.
Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations in Washington: “Most
pedophiles, when confronted with the existence of photographs, deny it.
But in the majority of cases, they’ve hidden them or shipped them
off to another pedophile.”
Several pedophile organizations in America send child pornography through
the mail. When child pornographer Katherine H. Wilson of Los Angeles was
convicted of child pornography, her mailing list numbered 50,000, including
many recipients overseas. Another organization known to mail child pornography
is the North American Man/Boy Love Association, which openly calls for
the abolition of the age of legal sexual consent. Northern law enforcement
sources say Gauthe’s name appears on the mailing lists of neither
of these organizations, but point out that he could have used an alias. The Times did not have access to the mailing lists of the Louis
Carroll Collectors Guild and the Child Sensuality Circle.
“This whole neighborhood has a doubt in their minds,”
says victim’s father Glenn Gastal. “The people don’t
want to face those that’s seen the problem . . . . It’s
like a black cloud hanging over you that’s just going to fall
on you any damn minute.” |
Gauthe has denied knowledge of such groups but admitted under oath to
receiving child pornography in two “brochures” that came through
the mail, “. . . . but I have no idea where they came from. And
I had no correspondence with them,” he said. But how would he have
received those “brochures” unless he requested them? How many
pornographers would gratuitously send materials to a parish priest in
Henry, La.?
Gauthe admitted to having taken hundreds of photographs of his young
victims; he said he destroyed them. A search of the rectory several days
after Gauthe left did not turn up any pictures. Gauthe may have destroyed
the pictures, but to victims and their parents, they are a haunting memory
of Gauthe’s crimes. Could the photographs still exist? At least
one child asked his parents to find the pictures of him and destroy them.
Another unanswered question is who provided Gauthe with the pornographic
video tapes he showed youngsters in the rectory. In deposition Gauthe
said: “I found out through overhearing that there was a guy in Abbeville,
that if you’d bring him a blank tape, well, then you’d come
back the next week, and he’d have a film for you. He was in a van
in the National food store parking lot. I didn’t get his name at
all. I gave him $20 and a blank tape and he recorded it. I was dressed
in blue jeans and a pullover shirt.” Like the instant snapshots
Gauthe says he took, the video porn has disappeared.
Mouton for the Defense
Until the indictment of Gauthe, the Church’s legal defense had
been limited to the civil damages claims. The diocese had paid for Gauthe’s
treatment, and now it needed a trial lawyer to defend him on criminal
charges. The call went to F. Ray Mouton, 38, a hard-driving man with ample
experience in civil damages suits as well as criminal defense.
A Catholic, Mouton was no stranger to high-profile, big-dollar cases
that draw reporters like steel filings to a magnet. He’d won acquittal
of policemen accused of brutality and had run unsuccessfully for a local
judgeship. Once, while defending an accused drug dealer, Mouton found
himself and his client pursued by TV cameras across a parking lot. The
attorney hated pictures of people hiding their faces from the media; they
suggested guilt. So, lawyer and client cheerfully waved to the cameramen,
as if playing a game. Mouton won: The pictures never aired.
Mouton flew to Massachusetts to meet Gauthe for the first time, advising
him to return to Lafayette for arraignment and agree to depositions with
plaintiffs’ lawyers in the civil suits. “My philosophy was
that he should not hide behind the Fifth Amendment,” Mouton says.
“To do otherwise would have suggested a cover-up of some sort, which
made no sense.”
News of Gauthe’s impending return created a volatile atmosphere
in Lafayette. There were telephone death threats to Mouton’s office
in his absence; other anonymous callers threatened to kill Gauthe.
Mouton and Gauthe flew from Boston to Houston on a late-night flight,
accompanied by two Vermilion Parish sheriff’s deputies. From Houston
they drove in an unmarked car to Lafayette, arriving at 3:45 a.m. on Oct.
24. Gauthe went to a cell in parish prison. At 9 a.m., Mouton brought
his client down a back elevator from the cell block and, flanked by police,
they entered the courtroom. Gauthe stood before Judge Lucien Bertrand.
Mouton entered a plea of not guilty by reason of insanity. The hearing
lasted less than three minutes. Gauthe left for the cell block, again
by the rear elevator.
Under Louisiana law, the insanity defense revolves around the M’Naghten
Rule, under which the test for legal responsibility is restricted to the
sole question of whether the defendant, at the time the offense was committed,
could discern the difference between right and wrong.
On Oct. 31, police cars arrived at Minos Simon’s law offices where
Gauthe, accompanied by Mouton, answered questions posed by Simon. The
process was repeated several days later with Raul Bencomo. Insurance lawyers
were present at both depositions.
In his civil pleadings, Bencomo alleged Gauthe seduced his victims in
an initiation ring wedded to ritual instruction of the youngsters as altar
boys. Mouton filed a written response denying the existence of sex initiation-rings,
adding: “No sexual conduct of Gilbert Gauthe was ever associated
with his occupation as a parish priest.” “Initiation ring,”
however, was in Bencomo’s parlance a psychological, not a religious,
term.
While Mouton’s denial of the initiation rings seems to serve the
Church’s arguments, in civil proceedings (as well as in news accounts),
that it is not responsible for Gauthe’s actions, it is a straightforward
criminal defense having little bearing on the damages suits. In essence,
Mouton argues that although he was a priest, Gauthe’s pedophilia
was an addictive illness blurring his mental and moral capabilities: His
crimes, in Mouton’s defense logic, were those of a man apart from
his priestly role. Whether jurors will buy that remains to be seen.
Things were not going well for Gilbert Gauthe. After a year of cloistered
treatment in the House of Affirmation, he was in the Lafayette parish
prison. An Abbeville woman whose family maintained close ties with Gauthe
visited him there, and he asked her for cotton. He wanted to swallow it
to commit suicide. He was now face-to-face with the cruel code of prison
life, under which murder is pardonable but child molestation is not. Inmates
shrieked at him, and at one point the threats caused him to shrivel up
in a corner of his cell, scared witless.
Thirty miles away in Vermilion Parish, the child of one aggrieved family
slept soundly every night, for the first time in months, secure in the
knowledge that Gauthe was behind bars.
Shortly before dawn on Tuesday, Nov. 8, Gauthe left Lafayette for Connecticut
on $250,000 bond—traveling, under court order, with two law enforcement
officers to an institution approved by Judge Bertrand. He will remain
at the secular psychiatric facility until the criminal trial begins. Mouton
agreed to waive extradition and voluntarily return Gauthe on request of
the court. When one youngster heard news reports of Gauthe’s departure,
he became frightened and asked his parents: “How do you know where
he is? How do you know he won’t come back?”
Media coverage intensified after Simon’s depositions with Gauthe
and Msgr. Richard Mouton of Abbeville who discussed the 1976 incident
in that town, when Gauthe was sent for psychiatric counseling after two
parents complained he licked their sons on the cheeks. On Nov. 4, the New Orleans Times-Picayune/States Item ran {?} a story whose
lead paragraph read: “Catholic Church officials knew for almost
seven years about the Rev. Gilbert Gauthe’s sexual activities with
boys at churches in southwest Louisiana, according to two depositions
filed this week in a court case.”
The report brought a prompt denial from Ray Mouton: “There is absolutely
no evidence which indicates that anyone in the Catholic Church had knowledge
that Gilbert Gauthe was sexually involved with any child or children,”
he contended. He went beyond mere denial, threatening the Picayune with a $40 million libel suit. No suit was filed, but the threat may have
had a chilling impact. The New Orleans paper ran mainly wire service copy
on the case from then on.
The Times asked attorney Mouton about the libel suit threat.
“The evidence,” said the lawyer, “quoted in [The
Picayune] article did not exist when he wrote it.” Asked about
such evidence now, Mouton replied: “I have nothing to say about
that.”
Although the Daily Advertiser covered legal developments as
they occurred, there was no investigative attempt. The Times ran two stories on the case, but ceased continuing coverage and began
preparing its in-depth report. Channel 10, and to a lesser degree other
broadcast media, followed the legal hearings in the civil cases.
Crusade or Persecution?
When Minos Simon took over the Campbell’s suit, he added as defendants
Pope John Paul II, Archbishop Philip Hannan of New Orleans, Bishop Frey
and various insurers. Suing the pope wins few admirers in a Catholic region,
but Simon calls the action “merely a legal technicality,”
related to being able to set aside Campbell’s original settlement
agreement in which he agreed to take no further action against the Church.
The pontiff has since been dropped from the suit.
In January, things got even hotter in the civil litigation. Simon filed
a contempt motion against attorney Hebert for not providing him with sealed
records from his settlements. Judge Bradford Ware dismissed the charges,
saying Hebert had not been properly served notice, and ordered Simon to
pay Raul Bencomo $1,500 in attorney’s fees for Hebert’s defense.
Two weeks ago, Judge Byron Hebert (no relation) dismissed Simon’s
attempt to revoke Campbell’s portion of his settlement.
As part of the legal skirmishing, Simon has also filed malpractice charges
against the Hebert Sonnier firm, alleging that Hebert misled the Campbells
regarding their right to individual redress. “We worked diligently
for the Campbells,” says Hebert. “I think the malpractice
claim is inappropriate and misguided.”
But the brunt of Simon’s legal charge was borne by the Church. He
gave television interviews accusing the diocese of engaging in a cover-up.
These statements, coupled with suing the pope and suing Hebert created
something of a spectacle. In reality, though, Simon had embarked on a
powerful move against the insurance companies in what is known as discovery.
Before damage claims are actually tried in court, lawyers question prospective
witnesses, gathering facts for later use as trial testimony. Gauthe’s
depositions—like those of Church officials—were part of the
discovery process. Discovery questions often result in court hearings
in which a judge will rule on the scope of questions—the limits
to which an attorney may go in his probe for discoverable evidence.
In Simon’s hands, the law is like a foil in the grip of a fencer:
thrust, parry, and push relentlessly until the opponent drops his guard.
When he began his discovery in the Gastal case last January, Simon had
obtained sensitive information from inside the diocese—including
allegations which, if proven true, held potentially disastrous implications
for the Church. Armed with this information, he filed a motion requesting
sensitive personnel documents, records of Immaculata Seminary and private
files on 27 priests, listed by name. These documents, he said, would disclose
conditions “including homosexuality, homosexual tendencies, and
sexual aberrations . . . (from) 1970 through 1985.” The Church showed
marked resistance to Simon’s inquiries.
The Church has apparently agreed to accept legal responsibilities
for damages from Gauthe’s crimes. The question is why did Church
lawyers wait so long to make this move? |
On Jan. 3, Judge Bradford Ware presided over a hearing in Abbeville
aimed at compelling the Church to answer written questions by Simon about
homosexual clergy. At that hearing, no insurance lawyer was present. Ware
issued an order requiring the Church to answer the questions. Simon filed
a motion to hold the Church in contempt of court. He also wrote two letters
to Church insurers attorney Robert Leake, demanding answers. Simon says
Leake never answered the letters. Leake did not return calls from The
Times.
On Jan. 18, Bishop Frey and Msgr. Larroque arrived at Simon’s office,
accompanied by lawyers, to answer Simon’s questions in deposition.
Bishop Frey, who went first, said he had none of the requested documents.
“Is it because they don’t exist?” Simon asked, “or
because they were otherwise produced?” “Well,” stated
the bishop, “I assume that Msgr. Larroque was the one who was asked
to bring the documents, which he did.” But when Msgr. Larroque’s
turn came, he told Simon he assumed “counsel took care of it.”
Attorney Leake, however, did not have the documents either. Simon filed
another contempt motion.
Simon and Leake squared off in the Abbeville courtroom on March 12 over
the disputed Church records. In style and bearing, the two men differed
as vividly as their legal positions—Leake, the courtly New Orleanian
with a stamp of elegance to his cast; Simon, the barrell-chested Cajun,
battling for discovery. “The failure is self-evident,” Simon
charged. Leake called Simon’s demands “a hunting license to
pour {sic} through records that might exist. Whether they exist, I can’t
say. Where is the legitimacy? The inquiry into private lives unrelated
to Gauthe does not seem to us appropriate.”
“We wouldn’t be here today,” the judge said, “if
attorneys for the defendants had been in court in January.” Simon
added, “I submit there can’t be a clearer case of contempt.”
Ware took the matter under advisement.
They were back in Abbeville on April 8, arguing over the files. Leake
said disclosure “would violate separation of Church and state.”
Simon rebutted: “We deal here with a violation of secular law, and
Church immunity does not apply. Once you get into that arena, all parties
stand on equal footing.”
Ware’s response telegraphed a warning to Leake: “I don’t
think the Church is entitled to any privilege. Relevancy is the key word.”
Simon hammered away: “What is the risk involved in this litigation?
The sexual conduct of priests: This is the risk-creating factor resulting
in harm to [the Gastal’s {sic}] minor son. We believe those records
will disclose instances of homosexuality that have gone on for the last
12 to 15 years. We must establish the existence [of homosexuality,] hence
the risk factor. They failed to create a safeguard and let [molestation]
proceed with full knowledge.”
Leake attacked the list of 27 priests on whom Simon was asking information
as “indictment by innuendo,” but Ware was unmoved. The judge
asked Simon for a written brief, a move giving Leake time to ponder his
options. But those were few, and time was running out. “I still
have not heard why [defense lawyers] did not come forth in January regarding
Mr. Simon’s interrogatories,” Ware said. “It rather
aggravates me that the Church has taken this position.”
“Evidently, we had too many lawyers working the case,” Leake
replied. “Some knew about it; others didn’t. Otherwise, I
can only apologize to the court.”
Judge Ware eventually ruled that the Church must turn over documents
relating to sexual molestation of children, but not to homosexuality per
se.
Behind the argument over the disputed files lay serious problems for
Leake’s clients. The real issue was whether or not the Church should
stipulate to liability—that is, should the Church formally admit
that it bore responsibility, through its policies, for damages to children
and families victimized by Gilbert Gauthe?
A source within the Church told The Times that the diocese paid
$500,000 of the $4.2-million settlement to the nine original claimants
last June. But those negotiations were not based on a stipulation of liability.
The parties agreed to pay, without admitting that the Church itself was
at fault for what Gauthe did.
With Simon alleging widespread homosexuality and a cover-up that allowed
Gauthe to continue molesting children, the question of the Church’s
liability advanced to center stage. If, as settlement attorney Paul Hebert
claims, Gauthe’s victims “could well exceed 70 children”
Leake’s clients faced a sizable risk: How many more victims were
out there who could file more suits? If the lawyer turned over Church
files to Simon, would those records divulge information that the Church
failed to take proper safeguards, thereby making the institution more
vulnerable to liability charges?
What if, as Simon alleged, the documents divulged other instances of
pedophilia by priests? Turning over such a stone could create new legal
problems. The disputed files might form the basis for a larger legal thrust,
one resembling a class-action suit. Such an action could mean much higher
damages claims.
The most expedient way to block Simon from getting the sensitive Church
documents the court had ordered released would be to stipulate to liability.
In early April, the defense informed Simon it would do just that. As The
Times went to press, the wording of that agreement had not been worked
out. But Simon said: “I got a call three days ago from a lawyer
in New Orleans telling me everything was on go; they were just waiting
to hear from various entities.”
The Church delay in accepting liability may have cut its potential losses.
Last year a new state law went into effect limiting the time during which
a person may file a civil damages suit to one year after the injury is
sustained. The last of the original settlements negotiated by attorneys
Hebert and Bencomo were signed almost one year ago, June 27, 1984. It
was only after these settlements that the Gauthe matter became public
knowledge.
A crucial question in the application of the new law will be when the
year to which the filing period is limited begins. The question is—would
the year of limitation for Gauthe’s victims begin when the boys
were molested or when the parents learned of the crimes? Would it be too
late, then, for any of Gauthe’s victims who have not yet come forward
to file suit? The new law has yet to be tested in the courts.
Whether or not any of Gauthe’s victims who have turned 18 can seek
legal redress may also be the subject of future legal wrangling. Other
provisions of the new law may be interpreted as making it difficult for
those who have reached the age of majority to sue for injuries sustained
as minors. Whether or not older victims are precluded from suing would
be of great importance to limiting the number of potential claims if the
number of Gauthe’s victims is as great as some suspect.
Legal responsibility to the victims aside, what is the moral responsibility
of the Church? In his letter to The Times quoted last week, diocesan
attorney Bob Wright stated that the Church “will continue to do
all things possible, both legally and morally, to rectify—mitigate
any damages.” Does that mean offering therapy to the older victims?
If so, what steps are underway to locate them and extend the pastoral
hand?
What, finally, does “stipulation of liability” mean on the
human level—to victims who are now plaintiffs, their families and
to Catholics of the diocese? The Church appears to have two legal options
before it. One is to negotiate out-of-court settlements with Simon. Hebert
and Bencomo, and Abbeville lawyer Anthony Fontana in the 11 suits pending.
Settlements would avert jury trials and continuing news coverage damaging
to the diocese. But given the previously negotiated settlements, that
course could well prove more expensive than trials, particularly if Catholic
jurors balk at awarding settlements in the hundreds of thousands of dollars.
By all indications, the decision as to what legal course to pursue is
out of the hands of Bishop Frey. Insurance lawyers have called the shots
to date: Nothing suggests the chain of command will change.
Meanwhile, tentative trial dates have been set for September for the
Hebert and Bencomo cases. Trials will mean testimony by children, or by
psychologists, stating the magnitude of damage to the victims. Whether
the boys will testify is a decision each plaintiffs’ lawyer must
face. Testimony by the young victims may well be a powerful appeal for
monetary damages, but at what price to the boys?
The literature on testimony of pedophilia victims is replete with references
to the potential harm incurred by youngsters forced to relive their haunted
memories in testimony before a jury. Youngsters who have been sexually
molested are in a position of profound vulnerability. Defense lawyers,
faced with an emotionally fragile witness can pound away with one goal
in mind: reduce the amount of dollars a child’s agony is worth.
A Question of Canon Law
Throughout the months of criminal and civil proceedings, a shadow-story
of religious law has flickered on the edge of this tragedy. For centuries,
the Catholic Church has been guided by its own legal system, known as
canon law. In 1983, the first translation from Latin to English appeared.
As the constitution of the Church, canon law has undergone revisions through
the centuries: Its sections define the range of Church administration.
And while much of the code defines the duties of clergy to their superiors,
the standard of stewardship—the obligations incumbent on those in
high office—is also explained in considerable depth.
According to canon law all power devolves from the Pope; however, in
the delegation of authority, each bishop has wide latitude to decide what
he believes best, or in disciplinary questions, deems just.
In his deposition with Minos Simon, Msgr. Larroque, the diocesan vicar
general and a specialist in canon law, discussed Church practice under
the code. A brief passage in Larroque’s deposition raises a curtain
on the inner sanctum of Church judicial policy and a ritual unknown to
laymen. There is, he explained, “a formal [investigative] procedure
. . . a Church court. The membership is composed of [priests who serve
as] judges, defenders, advocates. They determine the facts. The penalty
would usually be determined by statement in the law. The bishop sets up
the court, which acts for the bishop.”
No Church court was convened in the case of Gilbert Gauthe, who was suspended,
Larroque said, “on the basis of two children.” Larroque told
Simon, “I have been in office since 1965, and to the best of my
knowledge there has never been a formal investigation, judicial procedure.”
Larroque’s statement raises hard questions about canonical proceedings
in the Lafayette diocese. Why wasn’t Gauthe called before a Church
court? The Church’s own legal system, rooted in centuries of law,
requires obedience by priests to their superiors and has sweeping discovery
powers of its own. The use of those legal powers under the canonical code
is at issue here, because Gilbert Gauthe was not the only diocesan priest
who molested boys.
End of Part II
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