|
NEW DELHI, (AP, By
RAVI NESSMAN ) — A Roman Catholic priest charged
with sexually assaulting a teenage parishioner in
Minnesota said Tuesday he would willingly leave his
native India and try to clear his name in the courts if
the United States tried to extradite him.
Meanwhile, the bishop who oversees the Rev. Joseph
Palanivel Jeyapaul said he had overruled a Vatican
recommendation that the accused priest be removed from
the priesthood and applied his own lesser punishment.
"Unless guilt is proved, we cannot take any strong
action," said the Most Rev. A. Almaraj of the Diocese of
Ootacamund in southern India.
In a separate case, a church official confirmed Tuesday
that a priest convicted of fondling a 12-year-old altar
girl in New York more than a decade ago had returned
home to India where he still served as a priest.
The Rev. Francis X. Nelson was sentenced to four months
in prison in 2003 in connection with his role as a
visiting priest at a church in Brooklyn. His victim
testified that Nelson showed up at her grandmother's
apartment uninvited and groped her.
In a telephone call with The Associated Press on
Tuesday, Nelson denied he was the same priest who had
served in New York and hung up. However, his bishop, the
Most Rev. Peter Remigius, confirmed that Nelson had
returned to India after serving his jail term and
continued to work as a priest in the bishop's office in
his home diocese of Kottar in southern India.
"His conviction was finished, and he has finished his
term," Remigius said. "He is not in charge of any parish
... he is helping people who are alcoholic."
Remigius said Nelson had already returned to Kottar when
he took over as bishop in 2007. He was not aware of any
correspondence between the Vatican and his predecessor,
the Most Rev. Leon A. Tharmaraj, regarding whether
Nelson should be removed from the priesthood following
his conviction. Tharmaraj died in 2007.
The revelation came a day after critics of the Catholic
Church highlighted Jeyapaul's case as another example of
what they said is a practice of protecting
child-molesting priests from the law.
Jeyapaul, who denied the accusations, 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 in India, he was accused of having an
inappropriate relationship with a 16-year-old girl, and
Bishop Victor Balke of the Diocese of Crookston,
Minnesota, told Jeyapaul not to come back or he would go
to the police. Jeyapaul was later charged with sexually
assaulting a 14-year-old female parishioner.
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.
The Vatican said officials thought Jeyapaul should be
removed from the priesthood, but under church law, the
decision was up to the local bishop in India. Almaraj
held his own canonical trial and sentenced Jeyapaul to
spend a year in a monastery.
"He didn't want to leave the priesthood, so then we took
this administrative process," Almaraj said. "He is
accused. If it is proved he is guilty, then the
necessary action will be taken with the guidelines from
the Vatican."
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."
Vatican officials said they cooperated with efforts to
extradite him to the U.S. — even providing authorities
with his exact location in India.
Almaraj said Monday that there had been no discussion of
Jeyapaul returning to the United States to face the
charges, but he said Tuesday that in light of the very
public criticism of the case he should go back.
"It is his duty to prove his innocence," he said.
In a brief press statement later in the day, Almaraj
said Jeyapaul's case would be referred to the Catholic
Bishops Conference of India for further action.
Jeyapaul, who continues to work in the diocese office
handling paperwork for schools, said he would not put up
a fight if the United States tried to extradite him.
"I am ready to go because I am innocent. I am ready to
prove I did not do any wrong," he said.
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.
"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 available
to discuss whether the U.S. asked for Jeyapaul's
extradition.
Jeyapaul said his accusers falsely targeted him to get
money from the Minnesota diocese, and he fought back
against the Vatican's recommendation that he no longer
be a priest.
"I explained to the Vatican that I am not guilty, so I
do not want to leave the priesthood," he said.
An attorney for the alleged victim in the Minnesota
case, Jeff Anderson, demanded Jeyapaul be suspended and
returned to the U.S.
"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. (With inputs from AP
reporters Patrick Condon, Nirmala George, and Nicole
Winfield)
|