The bankruptcy filing of the Archdiocese of St. Paul-Minneapolis has halted lawsuits against accused child sex abusers, but it has not stopped the public release of their names.
Seventeen priests, including such high-profile men as the late Catholic Charities leader Jerome Boxleitner and the late Auxiliary Bishop Leonard Cowley, were recently identified by victims' attorney Jeff Anderson. The archdiocese also recently added five more names to its website, including the Rev. Freddy Montero, who returned to Ecuador in 2007 while under investigation for criminal sexual conduct.
The names will keep coming under terms of an agreement reached in October between the church and Anderson, and documentation of the incidents will follow.
Already about 180 people have filed abuse complaints with Anderson's office, served notices of claims, or are in the process of having notices of claims sent on their behalf, said Mike Finnegan, a partner in Anderson's firm.
If other church bankruptcies are a guide, several hundred names could wind up on the hall of shame list as the church reorganizes its finances. The process, in fact, is speeding up because of the halt to litigation and the new era of cooperation between the church and victims' attorneys.
"The bankruptcy itself doesn't affect our investigation … but it has moved us into a more open exchange of information," said Tim O'Malley, the archdiocese's chief investigator.
"We're staying in contact with them on almost a daily basis," added Finnegan, sharing everything from documents to witnesses and sometimes even access to the victims.
Instead of lengthy legal maneuvers, the new process of publicly identifying accused priests is relatively swift. It starts with alleged victims contacting Anderson or other attorneys, who investigate to determine whether the claims are credible.