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Due Process

Duke University Rape Case, prosecutor Mike Nifong, Duke University lacrosse players, Durham County District Attorney Mike Nifong, Fr. Gordon J. MacRae, Rev. Gordon MacRae, These Stone Walls, Mike Nifong, Duke University rape case, wrongful imprisonment, David Evans, Collin Finnerty, Reade Seligmann, due process, presumption of innocence, exculpatory evidence, court of public opinion, Church sex scandal, Daniel Henninger, Michael Jackson, When Priests Are Falsely Accused, CNN Larry King Live, innocent In prison, Ryan A. MacDonald, truth in Justice, Nathan Thornburgh, DNA exonerations, Innocence Project Attorney Barry Scheck, John Bacon, Johnny Pinchback, the Eighth Commandment, National Center for reason and Justice, Opus Bono Sacerdotii, Scott P. Richert, clerical sexual abuse, Father John Corapi, Bill Donohue, the Catholic League, Labor Secretary Raymond Donovan

. . . dded to that uproar were the tactics of a now disgraced and disbarred state prosecutor. Former Durham County District Attorney Mike Nifong was more interested in throwing “gasoline on the fire,” according to USA Today, than gathering evidence. He ignored the complete lack of evidence, not to mention the accuser’s constantly changing story, and vowed to continue his prosecution even after the case fell apart. This prosecutor suppressed exculpatory evidence, hid it from defense lawyers, and held repeated news conferences to keep the momentum of judgment going in the court of public opinion. Co-opting some Duke faculty into pre-trial condemnation of the accused was a tactical advantage for prosecutor, Mike Nifong. The result was a trial-by-media that should sound hauntingly familiar to Catholics reeling from the Church’s own sex scandal. . . .

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Breaking News: I Got Stoned with the Pope!

by Fr. Gordon J. MacRae on April 14, 2010 · 9 comments

A Priest's Story, Bill Donohue, blood guilt, Catalyst, Dorothy Rabinowitz, Dred Scott, Due Process, Easter, Elizabeth Lev, Father Gordon MacRae, Fr Gordon MacRae, fraud, Holy Week, Homiletic & Pastoral Review, HPR, lynch mob, Mark Sargent, Obama health care bill, Pope Benedict XVI, Roe v Wade, Ryan A. MacDonald, Saint Stephen, Scribes and Pharisees, sex abuse, sexual abuse, stoning, the Catholic Church, The Eighth Commandment, the Holy Father, the news media, These Stone Walls, Truth in Justice, TSW,      catholic church, holy week, stones, catholic, stone walls, news media, pope benedict, catholic priest, pope benedict xvi, catholic league, the news, easter, stoning, the catholic church, benedict, gordon macrae, benedict xvi, roman catholic church sex abuse scandal, pedophilia, ethics, catholic sexual abuse scandal in the united states, religion, heads of state, catholic sex abuse cases

. . . Perhaps NBC sensed the line of decency was breached a few weeks ago when it apologized to The Catholic League and the world for a scandalous and libelous smear against Pope Benedict XVI on its affiliate news channel, MSNBC. We owe a debt of gratitude to Bill Donohue and The Catholic League for not letting this one pass. It is also no coincidence that the lurid stories of priestly sex abuse and papal complicity rose to a frenzy in the U.S. in the same weeks that tax-payer funded abortion was being argued in the Obama health care bill. Writer and art historian Elizabeth Lev made this same point in a brilliant essay on PoliticsDaily.com entitled “In Defense of Catholic Clergy (Or Do We Want Another Reign of Terror?)” Ms. Lev cited English statesman, Edmund Burke’s 1790 commentary on Catholic witch hunts during the French Revolution: “What would Edmund Burke make of the headlines of the past few weeks …? In 1790, Burke answered … ‘It is not with much credulity I listen to any when they speak evil of those they are going to plunder.’ What would he think of the insistent attempt to tie [a] sexual abuser to the Roman pontiff himself through the most tenuous of links … as the present sales of Church property to pay settlements swell the coffers of contingent-fee lawyers and real estate speculators …?” . . .

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The Catholic League just published Due Process for Accused Priests. Please take a moment to read . . .

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