Church officials in St. Paul and the Vatican embassy in Washington, D.C., may have destroyed evidence that a St. Paul priest possessed child pornography, a St. Paul attorney charged.
Church documents released at a news conference on Nov. 13 describe how the Archdiocese of Minneapolis and St. Paul, as well as the Vatican's top official in Washington, feared a scandal in the case of the Rev. Donald Dummer. The St. Paul priest was accused of possessing pornographic videos when he was at St. Mary's Parish in the late 1990s.
Dummer, 77, was added by the archdiocese to a list of priests with credible accusations of sexual misconduct.
Reached by phone in Tewksbury, Mass., Dummer denied that he had possessed child pornography tapes. "There is absolutely no truth to anything, and I say that in the name of God with my hand on the Bible," he said.
Attorney Mike Finnegan and former priest Patrick Wall, who work with clergy abuse litigator Jeff Anderson, handed out documents that the archdiocese turned over as part of the settlement announced in October between the archdiocese and victims of clergy sex abuse.
They include a copy of a January 2002 letter indicating that in early 1997, a part-time employee at St. Mary's came across a number of VCR movies in Dummer's room. The employee was "shocked" by one of the videos, which depicted 10- to 12-year-old boys playing basketball in the nude.
The employee called the archbishop's office, according to documents, and was referred to then-Vicar General Kevin McDonough. The letter said the employee found more videos depicting child pornography in Dummer's room in early 1998 and delivered them to McDonough's secretary.
Vatican correspondence
Other documents include correspondence between the Vatican embassy and local church officials discussing allegedly pornographic videotapes that were turned in by an employee at St. Mary's.