fpb: (Default)
[personal profile] fpb
It only involves one of the protagonists, Stephen Kiesle, the priest whose request for defrocking was discouraged by the then Cardinal Ratzinger. What I read is this: Stephen Kiesle was found out having sex with minors when he was a parish priest. The Church removed him from the parish and the civil authorities put him on probation. Now, I don't know what happens to records of criminal cases in the USA, but that means that there must have been a record of his first conviction somewhere. Some years later, he became a volunteer youth worker in a distant parish. There can be no doubt that he did so in order to get at children, and it is certain that he lied to the local Church - which was very distant from his previous parish - in order to be taken on. He punctually offended again. Nobody can doubt that this is a criminal beyond correction.

So my question is: when Kiesle sought to be laicized, some time after all these events, he did so because he wanted to be married. What kind of a woman would marry a man with two convictions for paedophilia?

This is not about the Pope or about the Church. It is about something really disturbing that has nothing to do with them. Somewhere out there there is a woman who wanted to marry, and maybe did marry, a man with two convictions for paedophilia, the second of which proved to any reasonable person that he was both incorrigible and intent on indulging his criminal tastes. That is not a nice thought.

Date: 2010-04-30 12:32 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fpb.livejournal.com
She may not have. The material I have read has nothing to say about her, but the man was charged again after his conviction - indeed, some accusations that surfaced went back to his seminary years. Well, I hope she left him.

Date: 2010-04-30 12:56 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pathology-doc.livejournal.com
Out of interest: would you, in the event that she did not know and later found out, support an annulment of such a marriage?

Date: 2010-04-30 01:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fpb.livejournal.com
I'd be very surprised if there is no canonic rule against marriage by false pretences. One Vatican sentence a few years ago annulled a marriage because the partners could prove that, having married in the sixties at the height of the sexual revolution, they had never meant for the act to be permanent!

Profile

fpb: (Default)
fpb

February 2019

S M T W T F S
     12
345 6789
10111213141516
17181920212223
2425262728  

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 23rd, 2026 11:39 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios