ST. LOUIS — A southwestern Illinois diocese's urging that the state's highest court throw out a $5 million jury award in an alleged priest abuse case drew rebukes Thursday from a regional priests' group and a victims' advocacy organization, both of which urged the diocese to pay up.
The Diocese of Belleville last week asked the Illinois Supreme Court for the relief from the 2008 jury verdict, insisting it is not responsible for telling parishioners about sexual misconduct involving priests including the Rev. Raymond Kownacki, the clergyman at the center of the questioned award.
Calling that legal stance "disastrous," the Southern Illinois Association of Priests insisted Thursday the position violates the diocese's child-protection policy, "common moral sense, and the inherent right of everyone to protect themselves from sexual predators."
"(The diocese) has taken the lowest possible moral ground," said Les Himstedt, a Collinsville man no longer in the active ministry but still a member of the roughly 20-member priests' group. "The fact that the church just doesn't seem to want to resolve this issue and move on is really upsetting to us.
"Our priests are just trying to say we understand how people feel about this, and we don't want our ministry diminished because of this."
The diocese's latest appeal, filed Feb. 16, came more than a month after a Mount Vernon-based appellate court upheld the 2008 verdict favoring James Wisniewski of Champaign.
Wisniewski sued in 2002 in St. Clair County, alleging Kownacki sexually abused him dozens of times for five years in the 1970s at St. Theresa's Parish in Salem, Ill., beginning when he was 13. Kownacki, Wisniewski testified, at times showed the then-altar boy a handgun, threatening to kill the child's parents if he ever told.
The lawsuit also claimed the diocese, serving 100,000 Catholics in Illinois' 28 southernmost counties, hid Kownacki's suspected behavior and quietly shuffled him among parishes without notifying the faithful.
Kownacki, 76, was removed from priestly duties in 1995 by a diocesan review board. He has not been charged criminally, was not part of the lawsuit and has not spoken publicly about the case. He has an unlisted telephone number in Dupo, Ill., in suburban St. Louis, and could not be reached for comment Thursday.
After last month's appellate setback, the diocese said it "continues to express regret for any instance of sexual abuse of a minor by a member of its clergy," and that it was committed to adhering to its efforts to protect children from such misconduct.
- Glenn Beck: Living large in Texas, and richer...
- Mitt Romney ready to claim GOP nomination...
- Mitt Romney promises world's strongest...
- The price of freedom: Nearly half of...
- New approach tested for high blood pressure
- Olympic hurdler Lolo Jones says she's a...
- Studies try to find why poorer people are...
- Scholars look anew at Civil War
- News analysis: From confidence to...
56 - Glenn Beck: Living large in Texas, and...
44 - Olympic hurdler Lolo Jones says she's a...
31 - Mitt Romney promises world's strongest...
30 - Maine churches fighting gay marriage
28 - Studies try to find why poorer people...
27 - Can U.S. schools adopt education...
26 - Sarah Palin catches flak over her Orrin...
24







DeseretNews.com encourages a civil dialogue among its readers. We welcome your thoughtful comments.
— About comments