A New York man is suing the Roman Catholic
Archdiocese of Boston for sexual abuse he says he suffered decades ago
at a church-affiliated home for orphaned and foster children.
Andre
Jones, 51, said Monday that he was abused in the 1970s by the disgraced
Brother Edward Anthony Holmes, a supervisor and counselor at the
now-shuttered Nazareth Child Care Center.
Holmes
pleaded guilty to sexual abuse of children and other charges in 2006.
He was sentenced to five years in prison and died in 2011, said one of
Jones' lawyers, Patrick Noaker.
Andre Jones speaks out at the
Suffolk County Courthouse Monday after suing the Archdiocese of Boston
over his allegations that he was sexually abused as child orphan
Edward Anthony Holmes, a former
member of a Roman Catholic religious order, speaks to his attorney
Jeanne Carol during his arraignment in 2005. Holmes died in 2011
Andre Jones says he was sexually abused as a orphan under the care of the Catholic Church
Jones speaking about the suit,
presents a photo of himself as a child to illustrate how his development
was stunted by the sexual abuse he says he endured
The Archdiocese of Boston, the fourth-largest archdiocese in the country, declined to comment on the lawsuit.
The
archdiocese, which calls itself the spiritual home for more than 1.8
million Catholics, became an epicenter of the global Catholic Church sex
abuse scandal that exploded in 2002, ignited by reporting from The
Boston Globe.
Nationwide, the church
has paid roughly $4 billion in settlements since 1950. More than 6,500
clergy members have been accused of abuse, and hundreds have been
removed from church work.
Nazareth was a residential program
for children removed by the state from their homes and awaiting foster
care placement that operated on archdiocese land from the 1800s until
around 1988.
Jones, speaking in front
of Suffolk County Superior Court on Monday, said he was sent to Nazareth
in 1975 at age 8 because his mother was dealing with mental and
emotional problems and his father was an abusive alcoholic.
He
said Brother Holmes, who was his photography teacher and counselor,
sexually assaulted him and other boys multiple times in the center's
photography darkroom, in his home in Fairhaven and on camping trips in
New Hampshire's White Mountains.
In the Catholic church, 'brothers' are men who have taken the vows of a religious order but are not ordained priests.
Jones,
who lived at Nazareth until 1978, said he had been ashamed to step
forward all these years. He said he struggled to hold down a steady job,
dealt with substance abuse issues and attempted suicide as a result.
Jones with his attorney Patrick Noaker (left) after filing a suit against the Catholic Church
'This
was my arrested development,' he said, holding a black and white photo
of himself as a child. 'I'm still looking for this boy.'
Jones,
who is represented by the group Lawyers Helping Survivors of Child Sex
Abuse, said he hopes a jury trial will determine the appropriate
compensation. His lawsuit doesn't specify any monetary damages.
Lawyer
Mitchell Garabedian, who represents church sex abuse victims but isn't
affiliated with Jones' lawsuit, said he's not surprised at the new
allegations.
'Individuals usually can't
come forward and report the sexual abuse until much later in life,'
said Garabedian, who has represented hundreds of accusers in Boston and
elsewhere, including dozens at Nazareth during Holmes' tenure. 'Their
coping mechanisms won't allow them to.'
Source:Dailymail
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