PHILADELPHIA
(AP) — A Roman Catholic monsignor who became the first U.S. church official
branded a felon for covering up sex abuse claims against priests was sentenced
Tuesday to three to six years in prison.
Monsignor
William Lynn of Philadelphia, the former secretary for clergy at the
Archdiocese of Philadelphia, handled priest assignments and child sexual
assault complaints from 1992 to 2004.
Judge M.
Teresa Sarmina said Lynn enabled "monsters in clerical garb ... to destroy
the souls of children, to whom you turned a hard heart."
She added:
"You knew full well what was right, Monsignor Lynn, but you chose
wrong."
A jury
convicted him last month of felony child endangerment for his oversight of
now-defrocked priest Edward Avery, who is serving a 2½- to five-year sentence
after pleading guilty to sexually assaulting an altar boy in church.
Lynn's
lawyers sought probation, arguing that few Pennsylvanians serve long prison
terms for child endangerment and their client shouldn't serve more time than
abusers. Defense attorneys, who have vowed an appeal of the landmark
conviction, said the seven-year maximum term advocated by the commonwealth
"would merely be cruel and unusual."
The
61-year-old Lynn was acquitted of conspiracy and a second endangerment count
involving a co-defendant, the Rev. James Brennan. The jury deadlocked on a 1996
abuse charge against Brennan, and prosecutors said Monday that they would retry
him.
In 1992, a
doctor told Lynn's office that Avery had abused him years earlier. Lynn met
with the doctor and sent Avery for treatment — but the church-run facility
diagnosed him with an alcohol problem, not a sexual disorder. Avery was
returned to ministry and sent to live at the northeast Philadelphia parish
where the altar boy was assaulted in 1999.
The judge
said Lynn "helped many, but also failed many in his 36 year-church
career."
Lynn said:
"I did not intend any harm to come to (Avery's victim). My best was not
good enough to stop that harm."
Prosecutors
who spent a decade investigating sex abuse complaints kept in secret files at
the archdiocese and issued two damning grand jury reports argue that Lynn and
unindicted co-conspirators in the church hierarchy kept children in danger and
the public in the dark.
Lynn's
attorneys have long argued that the state's child endangerment statute, which
was revised in 2007 to include those who supervise abusers, should not apply to
Lynn since he left office in 2004.
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