On Tuesday (10/9/07), the Los Angeles Times published
this story about four women reaching a $6.8 million settlement in
molestation lawsuits against the Catholic Church's diocese of Orange
County, California.
The article, by
Christine
Hanley, exhibits the paper's continuing lack of fairness in coverage
of the Church abuse narrative. Hanley's piece omits much important
information.
1. Wrote Hanley,
The deal came about a week before [Christina] Ruiz's lawsuit was
scheduled to go to trial in a case that had already exposed [Orange
County Bishop Tod] Brown to a contempt-of-court order, and rekindled
the anger leveled at the church. Ruiz accused former Mater Dei
assistant basketball coach Jeff Andrade of molesting her for more
than a year, starting when she was 15. In a deposition taken as part
of the lawsuit, Andrade admitted to having had sex with the
then-teenager.
Although she had reported it before, Hanley conveniently omitted the
fact that Andrade was dismissed by the school in April of 1997
after the school suspected a relationship. (A
September 12 article by Hanley reported that the two "had sex over a
period of about 18 months, possibly hundreds of times, in the gymnasium,
classrooms, his house and several times in a Las Vegas hotel room,
according to the lawsuit." Simply awful abuse by Andrade.) Police also investigated the case the same
year, but they did not file charges.
More notably, Bishop Brown did not arrive as bishop of Orange County
until September of 1998, nearly a year-and-a-half after Andrade
was dismissed. In 1997, Brown would have been approaching a decade
serving as bishop in Boise, Idaho. So why was Bishop Brown even
deposed for this lawsuit? Hanley doesn't tell us, neither does it appear
that she cares to know. Hanley has never candidly reported that
Brown's arrival to Orange County came well after Andrade's dismissal.
(Only a very alert reader-detective intimately familiar with the totality of
Hanley's articles in the last month might be able to piece all of
the facts together.)
2. Hanley also added,
Brown revealed during his deposition that he had been accused 10
years ago of molesting a boy in his years as a priest in
Bakersfield, a claim that he and church officials said was found to
be unsubstantiated.
Why is this passage even included in the article? What does it have
to do with the news of the settlement? Well, Hanley also omitted
the fact that Brown's accuser has publicly admitted that his accusation
against Brown comes as a result of "a recovered memory pieced
together after years of therapy" (source).
The accuser's lawyer also said the man "says he has had multiple
abusers" but "would not identify who they are." The mere mention of the
names
"McMartin" and
"Bernardin" should raise serious questions about some forms of
therapy as they relate to abuse charges. A well-known social
psychologist once told Time magazine, "Recovered-memory therapy will
come to be recognized as the quackery of the 20th century" (source).
Yet none of these facts are included in Hanley's article, nor
have they been reported at all by her or her paper.
Again - the abuse committed by trusted clergy and other individuals
is simply wretched and reprehensible. But that is not an excuse for the
unfair and unbalanced reporting that has become
par for the course at the Times.