On Monday, August 24, 2009, the Los Angeles Times printed
the following slam in its "California Briefing" section (bold in
body of article mine):
Parish targeted by victims' group
Members of a support group for victims of alleged clergy abuse
distributed leaflets in front of St. Columbkille Catholic Church in
South Los Angeles on Sunday, urging parishioners and church
employees who have information about sex crimes to speak out.
St. Columbkille is the former parish of defrocked priest Michael
Stephen Baker, who in 2007 was sent to prison for sexually abusing
two boys, and who authorities have identified as a prolific child
molester.
Joelle Casteix, southwest regional director of the Survivors Network
of Those Abused by Priests, said the group believes there may be
many more victims of Baker in the parish. St. Columbkille officials
were not available for comment.
Baker was recently questioned by a federal grand jury investigating
how the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles and Cardinal Roger
M. Mahony dealt with priests accused of molestation, according to
sources familiar with the proceedings.
J. Michael Hennigan, an attorney representing Mahony and the
archdiocese, has said the cardinal is not a target of the inquiry.
Casteix alleged that the archdiocese has not aggressively sought
out other victims and witnesses, and said she believes parishioners
could help law enforcement build a case against Catholic higher-ups
and potentially bring new charges against Baker.
-- Carla Rivera
Here is yet another great example of the Times giving an unchallenged
and one-sided voice to SNAP and not questioning their outrageous claims.
Well, at least the Times issued
a correction a few days later (Thursday, August 27, 2009) (bold in
body mine):
Clergy abuse cases: A brief article in Monday's Section A
about a group seeking information on possible victims of sex crimes
at the former parish of defrocked priest Michael Stephen Baker
failed to include the Archdiocese of Los Angeles' response to
allegations by the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests that
Catholic officials weren't doing enough to find victims of clergy
abuse. Attorney J. Michael Hennigan said: "The archdiocese
aggressively investigates every allegation or suspected incident,
and in those cases looks for other victims. If SNAP has other
information, they should deliver it to us and we will pursue it as
we have done in the past."
How come the Times couldn't get it right the first time?