PHILADELPHIA
-- convicted in the church’s decades-long sex abuse scandal, was sentenced on
Tuesday to three to six years in jail for covering up child sex abuse by
priests in Philadelphia.
The
sentence handed down by Judge M. Teresa Sarmina was less than the maximum
penalty of seven years in prison for Lynn's conviction on a single count of
child endangerment.
Sarmina
said the sentence was meant to punish Lynn for protecting "monsters in
clerical garb who molested children … to destroy the souls of children, to whom
you turned a hard heart."
She added:
"You knew full well what was right, Monsignor Lynn, but you chose
wrong."
Philadelphia Archdiocese,
Lynn, 61, was
essentially personnel director for 800 priests from 1992 to 2004. He was convicted last month of covering up the
allegations by transferring predatory priests to unsuspecting parishes.
Lynn was acquitted of
conspiracy and a second endangerment count. The jury deadlocked on a 1996 abuse charge against a co-defendant, the Rev.
James Brennan, and prosecutors said Monday that they would retry him.
"I believe that what Lynn did was done by just
about every diocese," Terence McKiernan, president of
BishopAccountability.org, which tracks priest-abuse cases, told
NBCPhiladelphia.com. "In most cases, I think the vicar general was well
informed, and also the bishop."
More than 500 U.S. priests have now been convicted of abuse,
according to his organization. But Lynn's three-month trial, he said, shows
"just how hard it is to demonstrate collusion."
Bishop Robert Finn and
the Kansas City diocese face a misdemeanor charge of failing to report
suspected child sexual abuse. Both Finn and the diocese have pleaded not
guilty, and are set to go on trial next month.
Lynn has been in prison
since the June 22 jury
verdict, when the trial judge revoked his bail, NBCPhiladelphia.com reported.
Defense lawyers call Lynn
a scapegoat for the Philadelphia archdiocese, and plan an appeal. They will
also ask that he be released while the lengthy appeals process plays out,
NBCPhiladelphia.com reported.
They said the trial was
flawed on many levels, starting with the fact Lynn was charged with child
endangerment under a law revised in 2007 to include those who supervise the caretakers of
children. Lynn had left the archdiocese headquarters in 2004, after serving 12 years as secretary for clergy, and returned to
parish work.
Prosecutors pushed for
the maximum seven-year sentence, NBCPhiladelphia.com reported.
"His
active, even eager execution of archdiocese policies, carried out in the face
of victims' vivid suffering, and employing constant deceit, required a more
amoral character, a striving to please his bosses no matter how sinister the
business," they wrote in a sentencing memo filed Friday. "At any time
during those 12 years, he
could have had a moment of conscience."
Courtesy: NBC
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