The day is long past in which most people can feel insulated from the tyranny of false witness. It could happen to you or someone you love just as easily as it happened four years ago to three Duke University lacrosse players. Three young men were indicted and faced trial - and nearly lost their freedom - when an accuser's false accusations set in motion a trial-by-media that condemned them.
Catholics especially have a lesson to learn from the Duke case. For too long, Catholics have abdicated the well being and rights of accused priests to groups with an agenda, like S.N.A.P. and Voice of the Faithful. It's time to reclaim the rights and dignity of the falsely accused in our own Church. Click here to arm yourself with the truth - a truth told powerfully by Father Gordon J. MacRae, the voice in the wilderness behind These Stone Walls.
A blog by Ryan A. MacDonald about civil liberties, false witness and wrongful conviction in the American justice system.
Thursday, June 16, 2011
Wednesday, June 15, 2011
Fr. John Corapi and the State of Due Process for Accused Priests
Unlike many cases of accused Catholic priests, accusations against Father John Corapi have focused a spotlight on due process in the Catholic Church. I am deeply troubled, like Father Corapi himself, by a zero tolerance policy that treats accused priests as though they are guilty unless they can manage to prove their innocence. As Father pointed out in his statement, "The damage to the accused is immediate, irreparable, and serious," and the procedure for addressing it "has little regard for any form of meaningful due process."
This must not be the last word in a Church built upon the truth of the Gospel. Read more by Ryan A. MacDonald writing for Catholic Lane.
This must not be the last word in a Church built upon the truth of the Gospel. Read more by Ryan A. MacDonald writing for Catholic Lane.
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