By BILL DRAPER
Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - The
first American bishop criminally charged in the clergy sex abuse
scandal was found guilty Thursday of a misdemeanor count of failing to
report suspected child abuse, a conviction that extends the struggle of
Roman Catholic leaders to restore trust in the church.
Bishop Robert Finn was
acquitted on a second count. He received two years of probation, but
that sentence was suspended and will be wiped from his record if he
adheres to a set of conditions that include mandatory abuse reporting
training, setting aside $10,000 in diocese money for abuse victim
counseling, and instructing all diocesan agents to report suspected
criminal activity involving minors.
Finn and the Catholic
Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph were each charged with two misdemeanor
counts of failing to report suspected child abuse to the state.
Prosecutors said they dropped charges against the diocese, and the judge
is expected to sign off on that Friday.
The bishop, dressed in his
traditional black garb, sat calmly throughout the hearing, even as he
heard the verdict. He apologized before being sentenced, saying, "I
truly regret and am sorry for the hurt these events have caused."
The charges stemmed from
the child pornography case of the Rev. Shawn Ratigan, in which Finn and
other church officials knew about photos on the priest's computer but
didn't turn him in for six months.
Finn initially was charged
with one misdemeanor count, but a second was added to acknowledge two
separate time periods in which he failed to report suspected abuse. A
charge spanning Dec. 17, 2010, to Feb. 10, 2011, was dismissed because
there was no evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that Finn knew about the
pornographic photos, Jackson County Judge John M. Torrence ruled when
convicting Finn on Thursday.
The charge on which Finn
was convicted involved a period from Feb. 11 to May 11, 2011. Finn sent
Ratigan to stay at a convent in Independence, Mo., during that time and
ordered him to stay away from children and avoid taking photos.
Prosecutors said that showed Finn knew about accusations against
Ratigan, and Judge Torrence agreed.
Finn argued he should not
face charges because he was not the diocese's mandated reporter under
the law. At the time, the responsibility rested mainly with Vicar
General Robert Murphy.
A computer technician found
child pornography on Ratigan's laptop in December 2010 and reported it
to the diocese. Of the hundreds of images found, many focused on the
crotch areas of clothed children and one series showed the exposed
genitals of a girl believed to be 3 or 4 years old.
Finn has acknowledged he
was told in December 2010 about the images. The bishop also has
acknowledged that a parochial school principal had raised concerns about
Ratigan's behavior around children in May 2010.
State law requires that the Division of Family Services be informed of such evidence of abuse.
Murphy confronted Ratigan
about the photos, and the next day, Ratigan was found in his garage with
his motorcycle running and a suicide note that apologized for any harm
he had caused. Ratigan recovered after being hospitalized.
Finn sent Ratigan out of state for a psychological examination, and then ordered him to stay at the convent.
Later, after the diocese
received reports Ratigan had attended a St. Patrick's Day parade and a
child's birthday party, Finn ordered that police be given copies of the
photos recovered from Ratigan's laptop.
Ratigan pleaded guilty last
month to federal charges of producing and attempting to produce child
pornography, admitting to taking photos of children 2 to 9 years old.
Prosecutors said they will request that he spend the rest of his life in
prison. A sentencing date has not been set.
"I think that this is an
amazing outcome, getting a bishop convicted of anything," Kansas City
attorney Rebecca Randles said of Finn's conviction. Randle's is
representing a dozen of Ratigan's victims in civil lawsuits.
"Of course we wish the diocese was also convicted, but we understand the process and how it works," she added.
Since 2002, when the abuse
scandal erupted in the Archdiocese of Boston, the U.S. Conference of
Catholic Bishops has spent tens of millions of dollars on child safety,
including employee background checks and training for teachers and
others on identifying abuse. Dioceses nationwide have removed hundreds
of clergy who had been accused of molestation and barred them from any
church work.
Finn's lack of action to
address Ratigan, even as the larger church moved to implement reforms,
frustrated Missouri parishioners and prompted some to call for Finn's
resignation.
Finn had been scheduled for
a jury trial starting Sept. 24. But prosecutors and Finn's defense team
surprised the court by agreeing to a set of stipulated facts,
negotiated by both sides, that were presented to the judge before
Thursday.
Torrence conducted a bench
trial, hearing brief opening statements Thursday before recessing to
consider his verdict, which came about an hour later.
While still damaging to
Finn and the diocese, the trial and conviction before the judge -
instead of a jury - averted weeks of potentially embarrassing evidence
about what Finn and others did or didn't do to address Ratigan's
problem.
"The advantages of the
process we used was that all of the victims and the victims' families
were spared a very trying process," Jackson County prosecutor Jean
Peters Baker said. "These victims' families - and I've spoken with many,
many of them about today's case - they were all ecstatic that this
could end today, with their child's anonymity protected."
Finn's attorneys, in a
statement given to reporters after the trial, said having the judge hear
and decide the case "avoided the need for live testimony from diocesan
employees, parishioners and others."
"This could have been a lengthy and emotionally difficult trial for all persons affected," they said.