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Michael Jackson

SNAP Judgements Part II: Ground Zero of the Catholic Scandal

by Fr. Gordon J. MacRae on September 14, 2011 · 17 comments

Catholic sex abuse scandal, Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, Catholic league for Religious & Civil Rights, Voice of the Faithful, Fr. Gordon J. MacRae, These Stone Walls, Father John Geoghan, Father Geoghan, SNAP Judgements, VOTF, Catholic abuse scandal, Catholic blogs, Catholic media, Catholic scandal, SNAP and VOTF, Nathaniel Hawthorne~ The Scarlet Letter, zero tolerance, Dallas Charter, Father Geoghan trial, Attorney Donald Steier, witch hunt, civil liberties for priests, post traumatic stress disorder, Catholic Church, Pornchai, Kevin Cullen, Boston Globe, Wendy Murphy, Attorney Timothy O'Neill, Michael Jackson, Baptist Bishop Eddie Long,

. . . So I was not at all surprised when prisoners came one after another to my cell door during “Court TV’s” coverage of the Father Geoghan trial. After some incredible testimony from the accuser, they showed up during commercials to ask, “Are you watching this?” I was watching it, and I heard what they heard. The twenty-something-year-old accuser testified that a dozen years earlier, when he was eleven, he was in a public swimming pool. He said that he recognized Father John Geoghan as someone who had visited his housing project. While trying to climb out of the pool, the young man testified, Father Geoghan came up behind him and, under the guise of helping him to climb out, squeezed his buttocks. Based upon this testimony, the 68-year old priest was convicted of sexual assault and sentenced to nine years in prison. It was a death sentence. . . . Am I defending Father John Geoghan? Not at all. Do I doubt that this accuser told the truth? Not at all. The behavior ascribed to Father Geoghan was consistent with what scores of others said of him, and an egregious example of how much his own reasoning and judgement skills had deteriorated. The Church had a responsibility to protect young people from John Geoghan and a responsibility to protect Father Geoghan from himself. Church officials failed on both counts. I don’t question the truth of any of it. . . .

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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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Walking Tall: The Justice Behind the Eighth Commandment

by Fr. Gordon J. MacRae on January 26, 2011 · 6 comments

The Eighth Commandment, innocent men wrongly imprisoned, claims against Catholic priests, Fr. Gordon J. MacRae, Rev. Gordon MacRae, Joe Don Baker, Walking Tall, Sheriff Buford Pusser, Cornelius Dupree, Innocence Project, Attorney Barry Scheck, Jamie Bain, wrongfully imprisoned, truth in justice, These Stone Walls, U.S. criminal justice system, false convictions, Michael Jackson, Dan Henninger, The Wall Street Journal, accused Catholic priests, David F. Pierre, The Media Report, Media Research Center, Donald H. Steier, polygraph, Michael Gallagher, a measure of truth, Marcia Clark, U.S. Senator Jeanne Shaheen, Catholic abuse scandal, Jack Nicholson, A Few Good Men, National Center for Reason and Justice

. . . 20-year-old Cornelius Dupree was arrested for the crime in 1979, and sentenced to 75 years in prison. In 2004, he was set to be released on parole until he refused it again because it required that he submit to a sex offender treatment program which in turn required an admission of guilt. The 20-year-old turned 51 in prison before being exonerated and released. On a national scale, only two other exonerated men spent more time in prison than Cornelius Dupree. Jamie Bain was one of them. I wrote about Jamie in . . .

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Fr. Gordon J. MacRae, Roman Polanski, Father Maciel, eye of the beholder, McCarthy Era, Catholic Church, Catholic priests, Whoopi Goldberg, American justice system, Mr. Polanski, Swiss government, Los Angeles prosecutors, The Washington Post, European press, The

. . . Since his 1977 conviction for child sexual assault, Roman Polanski has won three Academy Award nominations and a 2002 Oscar for Best Director. Meanwhile in our own backyard, Catholics are now pitted against Catholics. Bishops are bullied into shunning their priests. Cardinals are sniping at each other in public, and the mere taint of association may cost one of the highest ranking Catholic Church officials his reputation and career. There is something wrong with this picture. And there is one ominous figure who is taking it all in from his place in the shadows, having the laugh of his long, dark life. . .

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accused priests, availability bias, Catalyst, Catherine Coy, catholic, catholic priest, Catholic priests, catholic sexual abuse scandal in the united states, child sexual abuse, childhood, d.s., Daniel Henninger, Daniel Kahneman, Dorothy Rabinowitz, Father Edward Arsenault, Father Richard John Neuhaus, jackson, JoAnn Wypijewski, John Jay Report, michael, Michael Jackson, Michael Jackson and sexual abuse, Michael Jackson fans, music, pedophilia, priests, roman catholic church sex abuse scandal, Ryan A. MacDonald, sex abuse, Sex Abuse and Signs of Fraud, sexual abuse, sexual abuse scandal in the catholic archdiocese of boston, singers, The Catholic League, The Eighth Commandment, Truth in Justice

. . . As a result of availability bias, humans tend to replace their beliefs with the crowd’s beliefs simply because a proposition has been repeated in the media and presented as widely believed. We are subjected to subtle cues of social pressure every day in marketing that convince many people to purchase things they don’t really need. We also face subtle cues and social pressure in the daily bombardment of news stories that cause many people to believe something based solely on its prevalence in the media. It is indeed possible that Michael Jackson and many Catholic priests became the subjects of classic, media-fueled availability bias. . . .

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The Whoopi Cushion

by Fr. Gordon J. MacRae on October 14, 2009 · 11 comments

Roman Polanski, Whoopi Goldberg, Zurich Film Festival, SNAP, VOTF, Michael Jackson, Diocese of Manchester, Frederick Mitterrand, Gordon MacRae, Falsely Accused Priest,

. . . Whoopi Goldberg now ridicules the case against Roman Polanski, inferring that it is unjust to impose a penalty in a case from so long go. Moreover, and most shockingly, she minimized the child’s victimization with the astonishing statement, “It wasn’t really rape, rape!” The inference here is that the victim “consented,” despite being drugged, and despite being thirteen years old. If Roman Polanski was a Catholic priest, Whoopi Goldberg would want his head presented to Herod on a platter. . . . As the national priesthood scandal unfolded seven years ago – at which point I had already been wrongly imprisoned for eight years – my bishop wrote the following to a Vatican official: “Whatever the truth is about [Father MacRae’s] guilt or innocence, the Diocese of Manchester was in a difficult situation during his public trial. I do not feel that the Diocese can publicly advocate on his behalf without risking grave public misunderstanding.” . . .

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