MINNESOTA/INDIA
InForum
By Adrian Glass-Moore
CROOKSTON, Minn. – The Catholic Church has lifted its suspension of Father Joseph Jeyapaul, a priest convicted last year of sexually abusing a child in Minnesota.
Jeyapaul is back at his home diocese in Ootacamund, India, but he is banned from ministering in parishes and interacting with children, according to church officials here.
“He’s restricted to living in the priest retirement house,” Monsignor Mike Foltz of the Crookston Diocese said. “While it is true that the suspension was lifted, it is not true that he’s been given an assignment.” The Crookston Diocese is where Jeyapaul was stationed in 2004 and 2005. He was accused of sexually abusing two girls during that time. In 2015, he pleaded guilty to criminal sexual conduct in one of the cases while the second was dropped. Then he was deported to India.
Crookston Diocese Bishop Michael Hoeppner wrote a letter to parishioners, to be published in the church newspaper Friday, assuring them that Jeyapaul’s activities in India are tightly restricted:
“I have been in contact with the Bishop in Father Jeyapaul’s home diocese in India and have been assured that he has ordered that Father Jeyapaul has no ministry in parishes. He has further ordered Father Jeyapaul have no ministry with minors. He has directed Father Jeyapaul to live in a home for retired clergy. At no time after he has served his time in jail and returned to India has Father Jeyapaul been assigned to a public ministry.”
Bishop A. Amalraj of the Diocese of Ootacamund lifted his suspension of Jeyapaul after consulting with the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Foltz said.
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