|
'Sickened'
Priest Who Claimed the Catholic Church in Scotland Was
Dominated by a 'Powerful Gay Mafia' Locked out of Home by
Church after Going on Holiday
By Lynn McPherson Daily Record February 2,
2014
http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/real-life/sickened-priest-locked-out-home-3104355
|
Father Matthew Despard of St
John Ogilvie Church in Blantyre
|
FATHER Matthew Despard, 48, was left out of his home
after being told by his laywer that the Church had changed the
locks on his house while he was on holiday to Spain.
THE Catholic Church were yesterday accused by a priest
of forcing him out his home – by changing his locks while he was
on holiday.
Father Matthew Despard, 48, said he was “sickened” by
the move, which came after he had previously changed the locks of
the church-owned property when he was suspended in November.
He had refused to leave the home at St John Ogilvie,
High Blantyre, Lanarkshire, despite being told to by interim
bishop of Motherwell Joseph Toal.
It prompted the church to launch a legal bid against him
to repossess the house in the name of his stand-in, Father
William Nolan.
But Despard, who was alerted by his lawyer to the locks
being changed while he was on holiday, says he had pledged to
hand over the keys on his return from the break tomorrow.
He added: “A team broke in earlier in the week and
changed the locks again. I’m seriously shocked and disgusted by
this behaviour as it’s completely unnecessary.
“They also haven’t supplied me with replacement keys and
I’m concerned if that continues I will be excluded from the
house, which is my home.”
Last weekend, Nolan issued a notice at Mass saying that
the court action was not to evict Despard but to get access to
the chapel house. he said Despard’s lawyer had told the court
he’d left the country.
Despard was suspended after he published a book claiming
the Catholic Church in Scotland was dominated by a “powerful gay
mafia”.
The Church said the locks were changed after they won a
court action to allow Nolan access to an office. They added they
hoped Despard would “allow the priest reasonable access to the
office”.
|