Workers of God : The Holy See\u27s Liability for Clerical Sexual Abuse

Abstract

In the 1970s, no Boston priest was more electrifying than Paul Richard Shanley. Ordained in 1960, he sought and received from his bishop, Boston cardinal Humberto Medeiros, a mission to minister to sexual minorities in 1970 and became a well-known Boston street priest. \u27 Wearing jeans and smoking Kool cigarettes, he gathered about him runaway gay teenagers and advocated fiercely for gay rights. Yet one of the boys drawn to him was the same one Shanley would be convicted of sexually abusing in 2005. In a civil suit seeking damages from the Archdiocese of Boston for its role in hiding Shanley\u27s abuse, the plaintiffs submitted at least twenty affidavits from Shanley\u27s victims detailing abuse from 1961 to 1988, including accounts of child sexual abuse and oral and anal rape. One victim\u27s affidavit states that during the abuse, Father Shanley would explain to me that he was a \u27worker of God\u27 and that the acts of abuse were sanctioned by God. God is not amenable to suit in the United States for the acts of His agents, but many victims have sued American bishops and dioceses in the Catholic Church. These suits have resulted in over $2 billion in settlements. Yet some victims are seeking the even deeper pockets of the Holy See, the ecclesial administrative body of the Catholic Church governed by the pope. The Holy See, an internationally recognized sovereign that maintains formal relations with 176 sovereign states and has permanent observer status at the UN General Assembly, would normally receive immunity from suit through the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act ( FSIA ). However, in two recent cases, O\u27Bryan v. Holy See and Doe v. Holy See, the Sixth and Ninth Circuit Courts of Appeals have held that suits against the Holy See may proceed through the tortious act exception of the FSIA. The plaintiffs alleged that the Holy See was liable through respondeat superior, a common law theory of vicarious liability holding employers liable for their employees\u27 tortious acts within the scope of their employment

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