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== 2006 - ==
== 2006 - ==
The film finishes with telling us that O'Grady is still roaming free in Ireland, but that an American priest is making efforts to see that he and people like him are being monitored. Has viewing the film affected him? At the time the film was made he clearly has difficult fully accepting what he did. This is seen in his insertion of words like "a little too far" and when he says, "I want them to know that it never should have happened" he doesn't seem to have any sadness about "it." Does he have any more clarity now, in 2009, than he had when the film was being made? As far as scripture is concerned, if a person does what O'Grady did to children, "it would be better for them to have a millstone tied around their neck and be thrown into the sea." I think it would be very hard to go on living for Oliver O'Grady - I would think that sincere sorrow would pour out of him from the core of his being if he were any where near real remorse or understanding of the evil he has done. I couldn't live with myself if I impacted so many lives in the way O'Grady has. I can't imagine committing to being a member of clergy and then spending most of my efforts on giving everyone I encounter very solid reasons for wanting nothing to do with the religion I represent - If he ever believed in it to begin with, I think that would be heart breaking for him. He doesn't seem heart broken in the film. As he is seen walking around the city and sitting in a pub he seems to be a happy and satisfied man. He clearly states in the documentary that he is not sexually drawn to women or men, but is only sexually attracted to children. Is his pedophilia continuing in Ireland?


The film finishes with telling us that O'Grady is still roaming free in Ireland, but that an American priest is making efforts to see that he and people like him are being monitored. At the time the film was made he clearly has difficult fully accepting what he did. He clearly states in the documentary that he is not sexually drawn to women or men, but is only sexually attracted to children.
The film also leaves us wondering if, how or when justice will be done. Will the Catholic church actually do something to take a stand for the victims? Will O'Grady every come to a real understanding of the evil he has done? Since the release of the film people all over the western world know what O'Grady looks like - Will mob justice step in and punish O'Grady? Will O'Grady's victims ever have peace, or has he lead them into a lasting hell on earth (instead of leading them closer to heaven as he was charged to do in the first place).


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 21:24, 14 April 2009

Oliver O'Grady (born 1946) is a former Irish Roman Catholic priest who has raped, molested and abused many children in California from 1973 onwards. He wrote a letter of confession to parents in 1976 and a copy was given to the Bishop of Stockton at that time.

Early life

Born in Limerick, Ireland, O'Grady was ordained into the priesthood at seminary in Thurles, County Tipperary during the late 1960s. He emigrated to the United States in 1971.[1] He served as a priest at St. Anne's Catholic Church in Lodi, California from 1971 to 1978. He later served at Church of the Presentation in Stockton, California, Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Turlock, California, St. Andrew's Parish San Andreas, California, and St. Anthony's Catholic Church in Hughson, California.[2] He later claimed to having been himself molested by a priest at the age of 10, and that he was involved in sexual abuse in his own family, both as perpetrator and victim. [3]

Crimes

In 1993 he was convicted on four counts of "lewd and lascivious acts" on two minors, the brothers John and James Howard, and was sentenced to 14 years in prison. Attorney Jeff Anderson said the Howard brothers were repeatedly molested between 1978 and 1991, from age three to 13. Anderson argued that church officials knew that O'Grady had abused children as early as 1976 and 1984, but had done nothing. In 1998 a civil jury ordered the Catholic Diocese of Stockton to pay US$30 million in damages to the brothers. A judge later reduced the amount to $7 million.[4] O'Grady was paroled from prison in 2000 after serving seven years, and went to live in Ireland after being deported from the United States.

In a 2005 video taped deposition, O'Grady revealed that he had abused as many as 25 children in and around Northern California.[5] Recently, there have been lawsuits filed accusing O'Grady of abusing children while even in the seminary in Ireland.

Deliver Us From Evil

O'Grady is the subject of the 2006 Academy Award-nominated documentary, Deliver Us From Evil. In the film, O'Grady states, "I want to promise myself this is going to be the most honest confession of my life." He then details how he preyed on children, and claims that church officials knew about his abuses, but protected him by moving him from parish to parish.[6][7] When questioned whether his bishop knew that he had abused children in 1976 and before, O'Grady confirmed this was true, and despite that he was made pastor of another parish.[8]

2006 -

The film finishes with telling us that O'Grady is still roaming free in Ireland, but that an American priest is making efforts to see that he and people like him are being monitored. At the time the film was made he clearly has difficult fully accepting what he did. He clearly states in the documentary that he is not sexually drawn to women or men, but is only sexually attracted to children.

See also

References

  1. ^ Doyle, Paddy (2006-05-13). "Holy Crusader". Irish Independent.
  2. ^ Farrow, Ross (2006-12-04). "O'Grady Victim from St. Anne's Sues Irish Archdiocese". Lodi News-Sentinel. {{cite web}}: External link in |publisher= (help)
  3. ^ A Glimpse at the Mind of a Pedophile
  4. ^ Lattin, Don (1998-07-16). "$30 Million Awarded to Men Molested by Priest". San Francisco Chronicle.
  5. ^ Guccione, Jean (2005-05-11). "A Glimpse at the Mind of a Pedophile". Los Angeles Times.
  6. ^ Griffin, Drew. "Priest makes 'most honest confession' of his life". CNN.com. Retrieved 2006-11-25. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |coauthor= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  7. ^ Piccalo, Gina (2006-06-26). "Abuser Becomes Church's Accuser". Los Angeles Times.
  8. ^ "Sex crimes and the Vatican:Transcript of BBC TV Panorama Programme". BBC. 2006-10-01.