NEW JERSEY
New Jersey 101.5
By Dino Flammia August 19, 2015
If charges are filed against a former New Jersey priest who reportedly confessed to engaging in sexual conduct with a teenage boy over a decade ago, it can’t be guaranteed that he’ll be returned to American soil to face those charges.
Through online comments and in talks with NJ Advance Media, Rev. Manuel Gallo Espinoza admitted to making a “mistake once” in the rectory of a Plainfield church in 2003. That confession, however, came from Ecuador, the 51-year-old’s native country, where he’s been since February 2014.
The report noted the Union County Prosecutor’s Office reopened its investigation into the priest, who had been accused by the victim days after the alleged incident. Charges have not been filed yet, despite the new information.
In a conversation with New Jersey 101.5 FM, criminal defense attorney Howard W. Bailey in Newark said even if officials do decide to charge Gallo Espinoza, it puts no pressure on his home country to return him to the U.S.
The two countries share an extradition treaty, but it’s up to each country how they interpret it.
“It’s up to that other country to decide whether or not they’re going to be sending the individual back,” Bailey said. “I believe that Ecuador does not have a very high percentage of cases that they send people back on.”
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