U.S priest to admit guilt for child porn

Bishop Robert Finn, of Kansas City, Mo., leaves a meeting at the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops' annual fall assembly in Baltimore, Monday, Nov. 14, 2011. Finn was indicted in October for waiting five months to tell police about hundreds of images of alleged child pornography that were found on a priest's computer. He is the highest-ranking church member in the sex abuse scandal to face criminal charges. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

Bishop Robert Finn, of Kansas City, Mo., leaves a meeting at the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops' annual fall assembly in Baltimore, Monday, Nov. 14, 2011. Finn was indicted in October for waiting five months to tell police about hundreds of images of alleged child pornography that were found on a priest's computer. He is the highest-ranking church member in the sex abuse scandal to face criminal charges. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

Published Aug 2, 2012

Share

Kansas City -

A Roman Catholic priest in the U.S. was expected to plead guilty Thursday in a federal child pornography case that led to charges against the diocese bishop for failing to report suspected child abuse.

The Rev. Shawn Ratigan, 46, was charged with three counts of child pornography in May 2011 after police received a flash drive from the priest's computer that contained hundreds of images of children, most of them clothed, with the focus on their crotch areas. Prosecutors alleged he photographed girls, sometimes under their skirts, in and around churches where he had worked in the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph in Missouri.

Ratigan was indicted last year on 13 counts of producing, possessing and attempting to produce child porn.

The case opened old wounds for the diocese, which in 2008 agreed to pay 47 clergy abuse victims a total of $10 million and promised to train its priests about sexual abuse awareness and to report any suspicions that children were being placed in danger.

The case also led to misdemeanor criminal charges against the diocese and Bishop Robert Finn - the highest-ranking Catholic official in the U.S. to be charged with shielding an abusive priest - for failing to report suspected child abuse to the state. Both have pleaded not guilty and are scheduled to go to trial in September.

Ratigan's behavior was reported to diocese officials in May 2010, seven months before hundreds of disturbing images were found on his laptop and a full year before church officials reported him to police.

Instead of reporting Ratigan to the state Division of Family Services, as required under state law, Finn sent the priest out of state for a psychological examination, then ordered him to stay at the Sisters of St. Francis of the Holy Eucharist, a facility where he wouldn't be around children and could say Mass for the nuns.

Finn also ordered Ratigan to avoid contact with children. Later, after the diocese received reports Ratigan had attended a St. Patrick's Day parade and a child's birthday party at the invitation of the child's parents, Finn ordered that police be given copies of the photos recovered from Ratigan's laptop.

After Ratigan was charged with child pornography, Finn apologized for how he had handled the situation. - Sapa-AP

Related Topics: