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Deal of the Century
The LA-OC Pedophile Priest Swap
By Gustavo Arellano
OC Weekly
March 31, 2005
http://www.ocweekly.com/news/ex-cathedra/deal-of-the-century/18988/
[See also other
articles by Gustavo Arellano.]
The Los Angeles Dodgers and Anaheim Angels have traded with each other
only once: in 1972, when the Halos shipped Andy Messersmith and Ken McMullen
up Interstate 5 for Frank Robinson, Bill Singer, Mike Strahler, Billy
Grabarkewitz and Bobby Valentine. The trade did little to improve each
team: the Angels finished 1973 with a 79-83 record, while the Boys in
Blue placed second behind the Cincinnati Reds in the National League West
Division.
But in 1973, a deacon at St. Barbara's in Santa Ana tongued a boy, setting
into motion one of the best swaps in trading history. The following year,
officials with the Los Angeles Archdiocese elevated the deacon, Theodore
Llanos, into the priesthood and placed him in an LA parish. Llanos went
on to become the most notorious pedo-priest in Los Angeles County history,
violating at least 21 children in various county parishes until he was
placed on the disabled list (a.k.a. put on inactive leave) while at St.
Lucy's in Long Beach in 1991.
But LA archdiocesan officials returned the favor to OC parishioners. Shortly
after Llanos left Santa Ana in 1974, then-LA Cardinal Timothy Manning
moved Eleuterio Ramos from Resurrection Church in Los Angeles to St. Joseph's
in Placentia. In a 16-year career that ended in the Mexican Winter League
(a.k.a. Tijuana) in 1994, Ramos became king of Orange County pedophiles,
admitting to more than 25 victims.
The Llanos-Ramos transaction is reminiscent of the 1999 Marshall Faulk-Edgerrin
James deal between the St. Louis Rams and Indianapolis Colts, in which
both teams exchanged young stars and saw each prosper—if by "prosper,"
you mean chewing up a lot of yardage as NFL running backs for Faulk and
James and chewing up a lot of kiddie trousers as Roman Catholic priests
for Llanos and Ramos.
Indeed, in the annals of the really unsporting life, this was the rare
trade in which both sides benefited equally, and as the following stats
box shows, both priests deserve a hallowed corner of the NAMBLA Hall of
Fame.
To download a .pdf file on Llamos and Ramos click
here.
E-mail: GARELLANO@OCWEEKLY.COM
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