Roman Catholic Diocese of Albany, New York prefers New York state laws versus Vermont state law.

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    A federal judge in Vermont has rejected a request by the Albany Roman Catholic Diocese to dismiss a lawsuit filed by a Warren County man who, as a young altar boy, was taken across state lines and raped by a priest.

    "The diocese believes the proper forum for the lawsuit is New York state." Kenneth Goldfarb, a spokesman for the Albany diocese, said they disagree with the decision.

    Jerome F. O'Neill, an attorney for the victim, used the diocese's business records, which were turned over under a court order, to show ties between the neighboring dioceses, including documentation that priests from Albany routinely ministered at parishes in Vermont under authorization from Bishop Howard Hubbard.

    O'Neill has said the diocese "has nothing to fear" if its internal files support the diocese's position that church officials, including Hubbard, were not aware of Mercure's predatory activities prior to 2008, when a criminal investigation of Mercure was launched after a referral made by the Albany diocese. The diocese has said it will "vigorously" defend allegations that it shared any responsibility for Mercure's crimes and that church leaders were not aware of any sexual abuse allegations against Mercure in the 1980s or 1990s. The diocese had argued in a fierce court battle that it has no legal ties to the Burlington, Vt., diocese, and therefore could not be sued in that state for the actions of a rogue priest. http://www.timesunion.com/local/article/Judge-rejects-diocese-appeal-4797573.php Judge rejects diocese's request to dismiss Vermont abuse claim Suit against Albany diocese over rape by priest to proceed By Brendan J. Lyons Updated 10:20 am, Monday, September 9, 2013 A federal judge in Vermont has rejected a request by the Albany Roman Catholic Diocese to dismiss a lawsuit filed by a Warren County man who, as a young altar boy, was taken across state lines and raped by a priest. The diocese had argued in a fierce court battle that it has no legal ties to the Burlington, Vt., diocese, and therefore could not be sued in that state for the actions of a rogue priest. But Jerome F. O'Neill, an attorney for the victim, used the diocese's business records, which were turned over under a court order, to show ties between the neighboring dioceses, including documentation that priests from Albany routinely ministered at parishes in Vermont under authorization from Bishop Howard Hubbard.

    Barring an appeal, the ruling by U.S. District Court Judge William K. Sessions III puts the case on track for trial and exposes the Albany diocese to potentially having to disclose its clergy-abuse records for the first time.

    Kenneth Goldfarb, a spokesman for the Albany diocese, said they disagree with the decision. "The Roman Catholic Diocese of Albany is not based in Vermont, owns no real estate in Vermont, has no bank accounts in Vermont, operates no churches, schools or other facilities in Vermont, and has limited contact with Vermont residents," Goldfarb said. "The diocese believes the proper forum for the lawsuit is New York state and is reviewing the determination by the court." The 37-year-old victim said he was raped by the priest, Gary J. Mercure, in New York, Massachusetts and Vermont beginning in the early 1980s when he was about 8 years old.

    The victim filed his lawsuit in Vermont because the statute of limitations there is not as restrictive as New York's, which prevented any claim or criminal action.

    Mercure, 65, a longtime priest for the Albany diocese, is serving 20-plus years in a Massachusetts prison for his 2011 conviction on charges of raping two altar boys — including the alleged victim in the Vermont case — during ski trips to Berkshire County. Mercure is a co-defendant in the Vermont lawsuit, along with the Albany diocese. Mercure has not been removed from priesthood. He was permanently removed from "priestly ministry" following a 2008 diocesan investigation into allegations of sexual abuse filed by a former altar boy at St. Teresa of Avila in Albany, where Mercure was assigned in the early 1980s. Goldfarb said "the diocese has petitioned the Holy See for laicization (of Mercure). We are awaiting a response." He said the application was filed last year but declined to provide a copy to the Times Union, calling it a "personnel matter." As the Vermont case moves toward trial, the diocese has sought to block a request by the plaintiff's attorneys to turn over its internal records regarding priests and other employees accused of sexually abusing children.

    The diocese filed motions requesting that its disclosures be limited to Mercure's files, and that the records be subject to a protective order barring O'Neill or anyone else from making them public, including in court filings. "We're saying no protective order," O'Neill said last week. "They want to hide their dirty linen but they're not going to get any help from us."

    O'Neill filed a motion more than a year ago seeking access to the diocese's clergy-abuse records dating to at least the 1970s. The issue was put on hold as the diocese fought to have the case dismissed on jurisdictional grounds. O'Neill's client is a father of two children who testified at Mercure's criminal trial. He has struggled with drug abuse and still lives in the Glens Falls area, according to people familiar with his background. The Times Union is withholding his name under a policy not to identify alleged rape victims without their consent. (Page 2 of 2) O'Neill has said the diocese "has nothing to fear" if its internal files support the diocese's position that church officials, including Hubbard, were not aware of Mercure's predatory activities prior to 2008, when a criminal investigation of Mercure was launched after a referral made by the Albany diocese. The diocese has said it will "vigorously" defend allegations that it shared any responsibility for Mercure's crimes and that church leaders were not aware of any sexual abuse allegations against Mercure in the 1980s or 1990s. The victim in the Vermont case testified at Mercure's criminal trial that his mother was a church teacher when he began serving as an altar boy and had regular contact with Mercure at Our Lady of Anunciation in Queensbury. He told jurors Mercure took him out regularly for ice cream and other social events and began raping him in the church's rectory when he was 8 or 9 years old. He said Mercure also brought him to Massachusetts and raped him in the back of a car at Brodie Mountain ski lodge, and raped him again during a swimming trip to Lake Saint Catherine in Poultney, Vt. Mercure has been accused of raping, sexually abusing or exposing himself to at least seven boys beginning in the early 1980s, including at a now-closed Albany church and grade school, St. Teresa of Avila. Some of Mercure's other alleged victims, including several who testified at his criminal trial, said the abuse continued after Mercure was transferred from Albany to Queensbury and, later, to St. Mary's in Glens Falls. According to relatives of two of Mercure's alleged victims in Glens Falls, in the mid-1990s the diocese sent Mercure to a church-run hospital near Philadelphia, St. John Vianney, that often provided treatment to pedophile priests. Mercure wrote a letter to parishioners at the time claiming his treatment was due to a nervous breakdown. Mercure returned to ministry after leaving St. John Vianney, where he was driven back to New York by the parents of two of his alleged victims in Glens Falls. The mother of those altar boys — both of whom have alleged sexual encounters with Mercure — said that one of her sons told her Mercure tried to kiss him on the family's front porch. At the time, she said, she was unaware her sons had been raped. The mother said she reported the kissing incident to church officials in 2000, but the diocese has said she did not provide enough information for them to take action. In 2008, the Albany diocese paid $50,000 to the Delmar man whose allegations against Mercure led to his removal from ministry. The victim said he had been sexually abused by Mercure at St. Teresa of Avila in Albany and spoke to the Times Union on the condition he not be identified. He said he was interviewed by a former law enforcement agent hired by the diocese and that a diocesan panel sustained his accusations. He said he was caught off guard when Michael Costello, a longtime attorney for the diocese, offered him about $30,000. "I went back and said take your $30,000 and shove it," the man said. "They came back to me and said: 'We'll give you $40,000.' ... I said, 'Wait a second, these guys are going to keep on going.' I went and consulted one of my good friend's brothers who is an attorney. ... I went back to them and I said $50,000 and I'll sign. They sent the check over in less than 24 hours. ... It was so I can't sue them later." Costello has said he will not comment on his work for the diocese. Goldfarb confirmed the diocese provided "assistance" to the victim. Last year, another alleged victim of Mercure's at St. Teresa of Avila contacted the diocese and alleged the priest had sexually abused him there in the early 1980s. The man, who asked not to be identified, told the Times Union that Mercure had raped him in the rectory, which is where the other victim who came forward in 2008 said the abuse took place. Goldfarb acknowledged receiving a new complaint in May 2012 and said the diocese "is seeking to investigate the allegation, pending the cooperation of the individual." There were other incidents of alleged abuse at St. Teresa of Avila. Several men told the Times Union last year that a janitor at the former school sexually abused them there in the late 1970s. In one of the cases, the diocese "found reasonable grounds to support the ... allegation" after a complaint was filed by one of the victims, who said he was abused by the janitor in 1977, according to a letter written by the diocese's attorney. [email protected] • 518-454-5547 • @blyonswriter

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    http://www.burlingtonfreepress.com/article/20130923/NEWS07/309230025/Albany-NY-diocese-appeals-Vermont-ruling-in-priest-sex-abuse-case?nclick_check=1

    NY diocese appeals Vermont ruling in priest sex abuse case Albany diocese disputes federal judge's decision to allow case to proceed in Vermont Sep. 23, 2013 | 3 Comments Written by SAM HEMINGWAY Vermont The Albany, N.Y., Roman Catholic Diocese is disputing a Vermont federal judge’s decision to allow a case to proceed involving claims a New York priest abused a youth during trips to Vermont in the 1980s. In papers filed at U.S. District Court in Burlington earlier this month, the New York diocese claims that federal court in Vermont lacks authority to preside over the case. The lawsuit was filed in 2011 by a New York man who claims he was molested repeatedly as a young boy by the Rev. Gary J. Mercure of Albany, N.Y., during visits to Vermont. The Burlington Free Press does not publish the names of victims of alleged sex crimes without their permission. Mercure is serving a 20-year sentence in Massachusetts for sexually assaulting two former altar boys, including the victim in the Vermont case, during ski trips. He has been banished from priestly duties by the diocese but has not been defrocked. U.S. District Court Judge William K. Sessions III, in a Sept. 3 decision, wrote that there was enough overlap between Vermont parishioners and priests from Albany who provided religious services in Vermont to rule that the court had jurisdiction in the current lawsuit. “When a priest travels outside of the Albany diocese to perform a service, he remains an officer of the diocese and is ultimately responsible to it,” Sessions ruled. The diocese has requested permission from Sessions to appeal the ruling. Church lawyers contend the diocese was not responsible for Mercure’s alleged conduct, and federal court in Vermont was the wrong place for the case to be heard. “The diocese of Albany lacks knowledge as to whether Mercure traveled to Vermont with plaintiff,” lawyers for the diocese wrote. “Mercure’s trip is not alleged to have been sanctioned, sponsored or authorized by the diocese.” In his ruling, Sessions acknowledged his decision represented a “close call,” and the diocese seized on that point in its appeal request. “There is ‘substantial ground for difference of opinion’ on the permissibility of general jurisdiction here,” the diocese’s filing stated, quoting a portion of Sessions’ decision.

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    http://www.timesunion.com/local/article/Albany-diocese-ordered-to-turn-over-clergy-abuse-4948332.php

    Albany diocese ordered to turn over clergy abuse files

    Albany diocese must surrender information, but judge seals it

    By Brendan J. Lyons Updated 11:23 am, Saturday, November 2, 2013 1 of 6 View: Larger | Hide Gary Mercure, an Albany priest, is serving more than 25 years in a Massachusetts prison on a conviction of raping altar boys from the Albany Roman Catholic Diocese. (Skip Dickstein / Times Union archive)

    The Roman Catholic Diocese of Albany has been ordered by a federal judge to turn over nearly 40 years worth of clergy abuse files to a Warren County man who is suing the diocese and a priest who raped him as a young boy. It's the first time the Albany diocese has been ordered by a court to fully disclose its confidential files on priests and other employees accused of sexual abuse.

    But the ruling by U.S. District Judge William K. Sessions III includes a sealing order that, for now, will keep the records from being made public. The sealing order was requested by the diocese and Gary J. Mercure, an imprisoned Albany priest who is accused of systematically raping and abusing altar boys for years. The order requires the diocese to turn over its internal records on sexual abuse by priests and other employees dating to 1975.

    "This is the first time the diocese has been ordered to turn over 38 years of records involving individuals — current and former clergy and employees, and even those who have made complaints of sexual abuse — who have absolutely nothing to do with the case at hand," said Kenneth Goldfarb, a spokesman for the diocese.

    "The diocese sought a protective order because, surely, the privacy rights of these individuals warrant the same protection that the federal court already granted to Gary Mercure by issuing a protective order for his files." The decision was handed down in a lawsuit filed by a 37-year-old man who said he was raped by Mercure in New York, Massachusetts and Vermont beginning in the early 1980s when he was about 8 years old.

    The victim filed his lawsuit against the diocese and Mercure in Vermont because New York's statute of limitations prevented any claim or criminal action here. The victim's identity is being withheld by the Times Union under a policy not to identify victims of rape or sexual abuse without their consent. For two years, the diocese waged a fierce legal battle to have the case dismissed on jurisdictional grounds, arguing they had no legal ties to Vermont.

    They lost that argument but have now prevailed on their motion to keep secret, at least for now, possibly thousands of pages of clergy abuse files that will be turned over to the victim's Vermont attorney. "At this point, the court will grant the diocese's request for a protective order so that the disclosures may be used only by litigants and not shared with others,"

    Sessions wrote in his decision. The ruling came three weeks after the Times Union published a story Oct. 13 detailing Mercure's history of sexual abuse, which dates to the late 1970s, that was outlined in 88 pages from his confidential files.

    The records were attached to a motion filed by the victim's attorney, Jerome F. O'Neill of Burlington. O'Neill attached the files to a motion complaining the diocese had heavily redacted the documents before turning them over. The judge, as part of his order this week, directed the diocese to give O'Neill unredacted copies. Mercure's attorneys had filed a separate motion, two days before the Times Union's Oct. 13 story was published, asking the judge to seal Mercure's files.

    "This is the exact reason that defendant Mercure sought a protective order; so that details of his personnel files were not disseminated to the media for the sole purpose of creating a spectacle," wrote Shannon A. Bertrand, a Vermont attorney handling Mercure's case. Sessions ruled the unredacted copies of Mercure's files must also remain sealed from public scrutiny. "The court will review the issue of disclosure of these documents to the public prior to trial," the judge said. The case is scheduled for trial next year unless the diocese, Mercure and the victim reach a settlement.

    In 2007, the Archdiocese of Los Angeles agreed to release more than 12,000 pages of sexual abuse files as part of a settlement that paid about $660 million to more than 500 victims of clergy abuse. Attorneys for the victims in that case said disclosure of the files was a key part of the settlement. O'Neill, who represents the victim in Vermont, said: "If we resolve this case we will make every effort to have the records released.

    However, ultimately, the issue is the client's. If he decides he wants to resolve the case and that resolving it is more important than having the documents made public, we will have no choice but to follow his dictates." Goldfarb said the diocese is still reviewing Session's ruling.

    "The diocese already has complied with the request to turn over more than 50,000 pages of documents in this civil case and earlier cooperated with law enforcement authorities who brought criminal charges against Mercure," he said. "It was the Albany diocese that first alerted law enforcement authorities to Mercure's crimes and barred Mercure from priestly ministry in 2008."

    The 50,000 pages Goldfarb referenced were mostly business records disclosed on the argument over jurisdiction, and not clergy abuse files. Mercure's personnel file was just 563 pages.

    However, the judge this week ordered the diocese to turn over additional records on Mercure, including "all reports, reviews, or other internal or external investigations of misconduct by Mercure ... (and) all demand letters, correspondence, pleadings, or discovery where a person sought compensation as a result of Mercure's conduct."

    O'Neill said the judge's order is unprecedented.

    "The court's order will require that for the first time the diocese produce all documents relating to Mercure," O'Neill said. "Equally important, for what we believe is the first time ever for this diocese, it will have to produce documents going back to 1975 as to sexual abuse of children in the diocese by other priests and employees. This is important information that the public should see."

    Mercure, 65, was a priest for the Albany diocese from 1974 to 2008, when he was removed from ministry. He has been accused of sexually abusing altar boys he met at parishes in Albany, Queensbury and Glens Falls.

    The diocese last year petitioned the Vatican to have Mercure removed from priesthood. He was convicted in Massachusetts in 2011 of raping two altar boys — including the alleged victim in the Vermont case — during ski trips to Berkshire County, and sentenced to up to 25 years in prison. He lost an appeal of his conviction.

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    http://www.timesunion.com/local/article/Diocese-fights-judge-s-ruling-5150728.php

    Diocese fights judge's ruling

    Rape victim of Albany priest seeks 40 years of clergy abuse files

    By Brendan J. Lyons Published 9:03 pm, Thursday, January 16, 2014

    The Albany Roman Catholic Diocese, which was ordered by a Vermont judge to turn over nearly 40 years worth of sexual abuse records to a victim who filed a lawsuit, has filed an unusual petition asking a federal appeals court to strike down the ruling and dismiss the case.

    The diocese argues that U.S. District Court Judge William K. Sessions III made errors and ignored U.S. Supreme Court decisions when he ruled last year that the Albany diocese can be sued in Vermont by a New York man who was taken across state lines and raped by Gary Mercure, a priest serving up to 20 years in prison for raping Albany-area altar boys.

    The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit issued an order this week that will put the Vermont case on hold while the panel considers the diocese's petition, which is known as a writ of mandamus. The petition seeks appellate intervention and challenges whether Sessions improperly ruled that the diocese's limited business ties to Vermont were enough to establish jurisdiction in a state.

    The diocese said the lawsuit was filed in that state because the statute of limitations time-barred any claim being filed in New York. In the petition, the diocese notes that Sessions "has ordered the production of thousands of documents spanning decades—most notably, all allegations of sexual abuse of minors, and the details of all investigations resulting from such allegations, dating back to 1975.

    This will require the collection and review of files on thousands of employees maintained in hundreds of locations, at great effort and expense, and calls for the disclosure of highly sensitive private information relating to employees who are not parties to this lawsuit." The diocese argues that it has no legal ties to the Burlington, Vt., diocese, and therefore cannot be sued in that state for the actions of a rogue priest.

    Jerome F. O'Neill, an attorney for the victim, used the diocese's business records to show ties between the neighboring dioceses, including documentation that priests from Albany ministered at parishes in Vermont under authorization from Bishop Howard Hubbard. Kenneth Goldfarb, a spokesman for the Albany diocese, said: "Bishop Hubbard and the Catholic community are deeply concerned about the well-being of anyone who has suffered abuse at anytime or anywhere."

    "The Albany diocese long ago embraced its moral obligation to assist individuals abused at any time by Albany diocese clergy, and we would welcome the opportunity to offer assistance in this case," Goldfarb added. "Since we have received notice that the Second Circuit Court of Appeals has issued a stay of proceedings in this case, the diocese is abiding by the court's decision." The victim's attorney characterized the petition as a desperate move by the diocese to prevent the release of its clergy abuse records, even though the records would have been kept under seal.

    "The Albany diocese will do almost anything to prevent the records of what it knew about its employees' abuse of children from even going to the attorney for a child who unquestionably was molested by one of its priests, much less being made public," O'Neill said. "What does the diocese have to hide? We can anticipate the answer. The petition for the writ of mandamus is another attempt ... to prevent the truth from ever being known."

    The 37-year-old victim said he was raped by Mercure in New York, Massachusetts and Vermont beginning in the early 1980s when he was about 8 years old. The statute of limitations in Vermont is not as restrictive as New York's, which prevented any claim or criminal action in this case. Mercure, 65, a longtime priest for the Albany diocese, is serving 20-plus years in a Massachusetts prison for his 2011 conviction on charges of raping two altar boys — including the alleged victim in the Vermont case — during ski trips to Berkshire County.

    Mercure is a co-defendant in the Vermont lawsuit along with the Albany diocese. Mercure has been accused of raping, sexually abusing or exposing himself to at least seven boys beginning in the early 1980s.

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    Diocese records stay secret

    http://www.westport-news.com/news/crime/article/Albany-NY-Diocese-won-t-be-part-of-Vt-lawsuit-5214881.php

    Albany, NY Diocese won't be part of Vt. lawsuit By LARRY NEUMEISTER, The Associated Press

    Updated 7:05 pm, Friday, February 7, 2014 NEW YORK (AP)—

    A federal appeals court directed a lower court to dismiss the Roman Catholic Diocese of Albany, N.Y., from a Vermont sex-abuse lawsuit Friday, saying it did not have enough connection to Vermont to subject it to substantial confidentiality interests at stake in the litigation that would likely force the diocese to divulge sensitive documents about sexual abuse investigations.

    The lawsuit was brought by a man who said he was abused by a former priest in Vermont in the late 1980s when the priest transported him from New York to Vermont to sexually abuse him. Gary Mercure of Troy, N.Y., was sentenced in 2011 to 20 to 25 years in state prison after he was convicted of raping two altar boys in western Massachusetts between 1986 and 1989, while he was a priest in the Diocese of Albany.

    He was defrocked in 2008. Mercure had denied the allegations and his lawyers said the complainants were coached into making abuse claims. In ruling, the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said the Diocese of Albany did not have enough ties to Vermont to subject the diocese to the lawsuit. The appeals panel noted that the diocese operates no office or facility in Vermont and its percentage of contacts with Vermont compared to its activities in New York are trivial.

    It said the diocese served a total of 78 parishioners who lived in Vermont from 2002 through 2012, when six of the diocese's more than 100 parishes were located near the Vermont border. The 2nd Circuit said those parishioners constituted 2.2 percent of the six parishes' combined registered parishioners.

    The appeals court said it was proper to dismiss the diocese as a defendant, noting "the irreparable harm caused by a needless foray into prior abuse allegations within the diocese, exposing victims and their families to grueling inquiries that would not be undertaken in the absence of the district court's erroneous ruling."

    The appeals court said a lower court judge had issued an order requiring the diocese to disclose investigations of child sexual abuse involving the diocese's employees, including the identifying names and addresses of investigators and summaries of the oral and written statements taken during the course of the investigation.

    "There is no evidence that this information has previously been disclosed," the appeals court wrote. "The cat is still in the bag, and the ensuing litigation will inevitably let it out." It said the claims brought in Vermont would not be allowed by New York state law because the statute of limitations would have precluded it.

    An attorney for the man who brought the lawsuit did not immediately respond to a message. In a statement, the Albany Diocese said the ruling "speaks for itself." "We would only wish to again stress that sexual abuse of a minor is a crime and an egregious sin, and that this Catholic community is deeply concerned about the well-being of anyone who has suffered abuse at any time or anywhere," it said.

    "The Albany Diocese long ago embraced its moral obligation to assist individuals abused at any time by Albany Diocese clergy, and we again would welcome the opportunity to offer assistance in this case."

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