Archbishop
Nienstedt's testimony in clergy abuse case to be released
Minnesota Public Radio April 22, 2014
http://www.mprnews.org/story/2014/04/21/archbishop-nienstedts-sworn-testimony-to-be-released
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Archbishop John Nienstedt,
leader of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, made
his way through downtown St. Paul for a deposition April 2.
The testimony is part of a lawsuit brought by a man who says
he was sexually abused by the Rev. Thomas Adamson in the
mid-1970s. Attorneys for the man who brought the case say they
will release the contents of Nienstedt's deposition Tuesday. |
Archbishop John Nienstedt's sworn testimony
about his handling of sexual abuse allegations in the Twin
Cities Catholic church will be released Tuesday, according to a
St. Paul victims' attorney.
The four-hour deposition
took place April 2. It is part
of a lawsuit brought by a man who says he was sexually abused
by the Rev. Thomas Adamson in the mid-1970s. The lawsuit claims
the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and the Diocese of
Winona created a public nuisance by refusing for decades to
release information about abusive priests. It says that the
actions of top church officials continue to put children at
risk.
Attorney Jeff Anderson, who is representing the plaintiff in the
case and conducted the four-hour deposition, said
questioning ended heatedly when he asked the archbishop to turn
over the files of offending priests to police. Anderson will
release video of the questioning, along with a transcript, at a
Tuesday morning news conference.
The deposition marked the first time Nienstedt has had to
answer questions under oath about clergy sexual abuse in the
Twin Cities since he was appointed to lead the archdiocese six
years ago. In 2006, he testified under oath in a lawsuit
involving the Diocese of New Ulm, where he served as bishop
before coming to the Twin Cities.
Lawyers for the archdiocese tried
for months to block Nienstedt's deposition on the grounds
that it would not be relevant to the Adamson case. But Ramsey
County Judge
John Van de North and the Minnesota Court of Appeals disagreed.
A statement released by the archdiocese after the
deposition was taken said Nienstedt repeatedly stated during
questioning that the safety of children is the archdiocese's
highest priority. The statement added that Nienstedt has assumed
responsibility for mistakes that have been made since he became
archbishop.
Van de North, the judge in the case, ordered the archdiocese to
turn over thousands of documents about accused priests to
lawyers representing the man who filed suit. He also declined
a motion by archdiocese lawyers to seal the contents of
Nienstedt's deposition.
The archdiocese's former vicar general, the Rev.
Kevin McDonough, was also ordered to testify under oath.
McDonough's deposition took place April 16.
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