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Ex-Oswego Priest Ousted
Retired in '98 After Allegation

By Mike McAndrew
[Syracuse NY] Post-Standard
July 1, 2002

Four years ago, the Syracuse Diocese's newspaper, The Catholic Sun, reported that the Rev. Chester Misercola had suffered a heart attack and was resigning for health reasons as pastor of St. John Church.

Misercola, who did have a heart attack in 1997, told his parishioners the same story when he announced his retirement from the pulpit in January 1998.

[Photo caption: The Rev. Chester Misercola sits outside St. Pius X , a home for retired priests at 714 E. Brighton Ave., on June 25. John Berry/Staff photographer.]

But a former altar boy said he was told by a key diocesan official that there was another reason. That reason: Bishop James Moynihan had removed Misercola from the Oswego church because the altar boy had accused Misercola of sexually abusing him as a minor. The diocese recently removed Misercola from all active ministry because of a credible allegation made five years ago, shortly before he was pulled from St. John Church.

Former altar boy Sean Lyons, 29, told The Post-Standard that Misercola performed oral sex on him once or twice a week in the church rectory when Lyons was 14 to 18 years old.

Lyons' family belonged to St. John Church and Misercola also taught Lyons at Oswego's Catholic High School, Lyons said.

Misercola frequently gave him money while urging him to keep their sexual contact a secret, Lyons alleged.

"He'd say, "I'll give you $30 or $50 to keep quiet,"' Lyons said.

When he was about 17, Lyons said, he watched Misercola take about $700 from the Sunday collection at St. John and give it to him.

Misercola photographed and videotaped Lyons in the nude engaged in sexual acts on more than one occasion, Lyons said.

On one instance in 1993, when Lyons was about 20, Misercola paid a prostitute $400 to let him videotape her having sex with Lyons in the upscale Adolphus Hotel in Dallas, where rooms cost up to $455 per night, Lyons said. Misercola also paid for their hotel room for two nights, Lyons said.

Lyons claimed Misercola also gave him money to purchase marijuana from a street dealer during a 1994 trip to San Antonio and that the priest was with him when he acquired the drug.

Even after Lyons moved to Tennessee in 1995 and married, Misercola continued to telephone him and send him cards in an attempt to revive their relationship, Lyons said.

Lyons said his wife found out about the relationship by opening a card from Misercola in which the priest wrote he wanted to see Lyons naked.

"Yeah, (the molestation) affected my life. It's pretty embarrassing," said Lyons, who was an Eagle Scout and four-sport athlete in high school.

"When you're young like that ... He more or less started out as somebody I could talk to when I wasn't getting along with my parents. He took advantage of it. And I didn't know any better at the time," Lyons said.

"When you're raised in the Catholic church, you respect priests. You don't know better, basically. That's the best way I can explain it," Lyons said, explaining why he allowed the abuse to continue.

Syracuse diocese spokeswoman Danielle Cummings issued a brief statement Thursday acknowledging that Bishop James M. Moynihan officially removed Misercola from all ministry 1 1/2 weeks ago because of a credible allegation that Misercola sexually abused a minor.

The diocese received the allegation in late 1997, according to the statement.

The tapes

Lyons said he lodged his complaint with the diocese in late 1997 after unsuccessfully trying to recover from Misercola the compromising videotapes and photographs.

Lyons said he sent Misercola a letter in January 1997 demanding the tapes and photos.

Lyons said Misercola did not respond to the letter. Lyons said he called Misercola two weeks later, and tape-recorded their conversation.

Lyons played a copy of the tape for The Post-Standard.

It includes this dialogue:

Lyons: "I was just calling to ask you why you never sent that stuff down here, the tapes from when I was younger, and everything else."

Misercola: "Nothing's here."

Lyons: "Were they destroyed?"

Misercola: "Nothing's here."

Lyons: "If something were to happen to you, they'd go in and find all that."

Misercola: "Nothing's here ... nothing's here ... nothing's here."

Later in the conversation, Lyons said: "I was just calling to see how you're doing, I guess. I just hope everything was destroyed, or whatever."

Misercola: "Oh yeah. Oh yeah."

Lyons: "I don't want nobody hurt."

Misercola: "Oh yeah."

Lyons said he mailed the tape recording to the Rev. J. Robert Yeazel, who was then the diocese's vicar for priests, in November 1997.

Shortly after that, Yeazel called Lyons and told him Bishop Moynihan had removed Misercola from his parish because of the allegation, Lyons said.

Yeazel told him the diocese would pay for counseling if he needed it, Lyons said. He declined the offer. Lyons said he hasn't heard from the diocese since.

Lyons said he has not received any money from the diocese.

Policies followed

Yeazel declined to comment on the Misercola case. Misercola declined twice this month to comment on the allegations, referring questions to his attorney, Emil Rossi. Rossi said he would not comment on the allegations because the conduct allegedly occurred beyond the state's statute of limitations on sex crimes.

Bishop Moynihan declined last week to be interviewed about Lyons' allegations.

"The diocese does not comment on specific details of allegations as it is difficult to verify the validity of the various claims," the diocese's statement issued Thursday said.

It noted, "The diocese received an allegation in late 1997 against Father Chester Misercola. The diocese of Syracuse followed its policy at that time. Father Misercola was sent for an evaluation at St. Luke's Institute in Maryland. He was admitted for treatment and was discharged in July 1998."

St. Luke Institute is a psychiatric hospital for the clergy.

Since his discharge from St. Luke, the diocese noted that Misercola, who is 64, has resided at the St. Pius X, a home for retired priests at 714 E. Brighton Ave.

The diocese said that in keeping with the provisions of the sexual abuse policy adopted June 14 by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, Misercola was officially removed from all ministry 1 1/2 weeks ago.

The national policy calls on bishops to remove priests from ministry for any credible allegations of sexual abuse of a minor in the past, present or future.

Removal from ministry means that Misercola will not be permitted to celebrate Mass publicly, to wear clerical garb or to present himself publicly as a priest, the statement said.

But he will remain a priest.

That doesn't satisfy Lyons.

"I haven't been to church since I left Oswego," Lyons said. "It ruined my whole respect for the church."

Misercola "should go to jail," Lyons said. "He should be tossed from the priesthood."

The Misercola file

The Rev. Chester Misercola served in six parishes in the Syracuse Diocese and on the faculty of the former Oswego Catholic High School. He was removed from ministry last week because of a sexual abuse allegation.

1964: ordained

1964-65: Our Lady of Pompei, Syracuse

1965: Our Lady of the Rosary, New Hartford

1965: Our Lady of Pompei, Syracuse

1965-1968: St. Anthony Church, Utica

1968-1969: St. Anthony Church, Cortland

1969-1970: Immaculate Conception Church, Fulton

1970-1992: On faculty at the former Oswego Catholic High School, renamed Bishop Cunningham High School in 1976

1978-1998: St. John Church, Oswego

1997: Sean Lyons tells the diocese Misercola sexually abused him as a minor

1998: Sent to St. Luke Institute, a psychiatric hospital for clergy

1998: Becomes resident of Pius X home for retired priests, Syracuse

2002: Officially removed from ministry because of sexual abuse allegation

GRAPHIC: PHOTO; John Berry/Staff photographer; THE REV. CHESTER MISERCOLA sits outside St. Pius X , a home for; retired priests at 714 E. Brighton Ave., on June 25. Color;



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2006-07-06 04:47:20 · 12 answers · asked by anseru 2 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

12 answers

No I don't trust Catholic priests but more so, the Catholic instutition to protect children. Their 'god's image' is more important to them that our children.

2006-07-06 04:51:42 · answer #1 · answered by American Spirit 7 · 3 6

You won't go to hell but rightfully so you should be skeptical of catholic priests! They've set a name for themselves. Not all of them are bad, I will give them that, but you can't expect the world to be so forgiving and stupid and forget all about the fact that the church they look up to was caughting molesting little boys. You're not going to hell for being worried about something and it's not mean for you to think that you don't want him looking at you. Practically all Catholics are just going to say that oh, there's so little priests that do that or oh, do you just believe everything you see in the news? but this is because they know it's true. Catholic priests in their highest church have molested children- period, end of story. This sets a bad precedent for priests to follow and Catholics seem to be shameful of that. Sorry, I said it...

2016-03-27 06:25:13 · answer #2 · answered by Leigh 4 · 0 0

Shocking and disgusting. But would you impugne ALL priests because of the actions of a few? Why trust a Kiwanis member after John Wayne Gacy? Why trust anyone that had anything to do with any organization in which a deviant took part? This is guilt by association, and is both unfair and illogical.

A CNN report in February, 2004 estimated 4,500 of the 110,000 priests included in 52 years of survey, or about 4%, were accused of sexual molestation. Accusation doesn't mean it is true (especially given the recent moral panic), but at the same time sexual deviance is less likely to be reported. So we'll say 4% is a rough estimate.

Whether that's higher than the national average is hard to say since I couldn't find figures anywhere on accusations of sexual molestation (or likewise, figures on number of priests found guilty of sexual molestation), but I'd wager some of that number is owing to the high proportion of men in the priesthood as compared to the national average (roughly double), and that 90% of sexual offenders tend to be men, while 95% of child victims are assaulted by someone known to them.

So I ask you, do you distrust anyone connected in some way to children, or only those who the media do stories on?

I stand by our priests. Those who have committed crimes should be punished, but I stand by our priests.

2006-07-06 05:32:57 · answer #3 · answered by Veritatum17 6 · 3 1

Catholic Sun Syracuse

2016-11-14 08:57:17 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

First I trust my Parish Priest wholeheartedly. My sons have also been taught how to protect themselves against anyone. I truly feel that much of this is made up. I was molested as a child by a relative and I can tell you you do not forget and suddenly remember 30 years later. No one should get to blame some one for something that the person can not speak to defend themselves for. Also why accept money for the abuse? That is as bad as prostitution. Justice is not about money. This may have happened but no where near as much as you think. By the way other ministers are guilty of this too just you hear more about this from the Catholic faith. I guess Satan is smiling about this persecution.
Peace of Christ,
Debra

2006-07-06 04:55:14 · answer #5 · answered by Debra M. Wishing Peace To All 7 · 4 2

Yes, I know hundreds of priests and I trust them.
To trust someone simply because they are a priest is a mistake. Being a priest doesn't make a person any better or holier than anyone, but it doesn't make them less trustworthy or more sinful either. Priests are humans who has answered the call to service to God and His Church.
The vast majority of priests are good, holy men trying to live good lives in service of God and His Church.

2006-07-06 05:15:21 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

Not as much as I trust Jesus Christ.

Where as uh.........Why some of you guys only find the bad and not the good is beyond me. Man is fallible, that has already been established over and over again. So why not just chill and deal with your own failings before you find yourself on here in a question.

Deal with the wooden beam in your own eye, first. Then deal with the speck of dust in someone elses.

2006-07-06 06:57:07 · answer #7 · answered by caedmonscall99 3 · 2 1

I trust priests just as you trust anyone you know. We are all humans, we all make mistakes. Think of all the teachers that sexually abused children yet we still trust teachers.

2006-07-07 09:43:37 · answer #8 · answered by Candice H 4 · 1 0

I trust no priest reguardless of which sect of christianity they are

Do not believe something simply because you have heard it. Do not believe anything simply because it has been handed down for many generations. Do not believe anything simply because it is spoken and rumored by many. Do not believe anything simply because it is written in Holy Scriptures. Do not believe in anything merely on the authority of teachers, elders, or wise men. Believe only after careful observation and analysis, when you find that it agrees with reason and is conducive to the good and benefit of one and all. Then accept it, and live up to it.

~The Buddha~

2006-07-06 04:51:07 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 4 3

Could you make your question a little longer next time?

2006-07-06 04:52:27 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 6 0

I believe the Catholic Church is a corupt organization and in need of the Grace of God, however they are more interested in money and power. and those sick child molesters should be in prison where they belong.

2006-07-06 04:54:21 · answer #11 · answered by connie h 2 · 4 4

fedest.com, questions and answers