Rome Newsroom, Aug 11, 2021 / 06:03 am
Recent affidavits in a lawsuit brought by a former seminarian against administrators of Rome’s Pontifical North American College major seminary have resurrected a prior allegation, deemed false in a diocesan investigative report in 2006, that Archbishop George Lucas of Omaha engaged in a homosexual “orgy” with the school’s rector, Fr. Peter Harman. None of the individuals submitting affidavits - which are sworn statements that have not been examined yet in court - come from witnesses to the alleged incident. Rather, the court documents point to a video interview conducted with an alleged eyewitness who initiated the orgy accusation against the two men 17 years ago. The Diocese of Springfield, Illinois, where Archbishop Lucas was the ordinary at the time, denies an orgy took place and stands by the findings of its internal investigation, which deemed the orgy allegation to have “no merit,” according to its final report released in 2006. The chancellor of the Archdiocese of Omaha, Deacon Tim McNeil, referred questions about the allegation to the Springfield diocese. "The allegations are one in the same; however, the lawsuit includes inaccurate information about an incident that was discredited years ago," McNeil told CNA.Fr. Harman did not respond to CNA's requests for comment. Plaintiff Anthony J. Gorgia filed the civil lawsuit in February in New York State Supreme Court in Richmond County (Staten Island), New York. The 58-page complaint names as defendants the North American College, as well as Fr. Harman, vice rector Fr. Adam Park, and NAC lecturer Fr. John G. McDonald, along with New York Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan and the Archdiocese of New York. Gorgia claims in the lawsuit that he was blocked from continuing his studies for the priesthood after he witnessed Park, the vice rector, give an inappropriate back rub to a subordinate seminarian. In another recent development in the case, North American College spokesman Fr. David Schunk confirmed to CNA that Park is not returning to the college for the 2021-2022 academic year. The spokesman declined to comment on the reason for Park’s departure, and the Archdiocese of Washington, where Park is a priest, could not be reached for comment about his current assignment. The defendants deny Gorgia’s claims and have filed a motion to have the lawsuit dismissed. The recent affidavits were filed in late June by the plaintiff to support a motion opposing dismissal of the lawsuit and amending his complaint.
In one of the affidavits, Gorgia claims that the alleged orgy took place “in the presence of vulnerable seminarians, among others.” Gorgia identifies one of those present as Kevin W. Vann, then a priest of the Diocese of Springfield, and now Bishop of Orange, California and a member of the North American College Board of Governors, according to Gorgia’s affidavit. Bishop Vann denies the allegation. Diocese of Orange communications director Tracey Kincaid told CNA in an email: “Regarding the affidavit, Bishop Kevin Vann fully denies its claims. For anyone to allege that an honorable man like Bishop Vann had any involvement with such a thing is so outlandish and untrue that no further remarks are warranted or justified.”
Roberts, the diocese’s investigator, could not be reached for comment. A third recent affidavit in the case is from a Catholic priest and a 2007 graduate of the North American College who was a student at the seminary at the same time as defendants McDonald and Park. Fr. Michael Cassabon states in the affidavit that he was the subject of an “uninvited sexual advance” by Park when Park was a priest-secretary to Cardinal Donald Wuerl of Washington, D.C. in 2008. Cassabon says he also witnessed “uninvited” physical contact from Park toward other seminary students while they were at the North American College together, according to the affidavit. The affidavit states: “He would often approach men from behind and lay his hands on their shoulders, caress and rub their shoulders and upper back, and put his hand on the small of their backs.” Cassabon said he learned about Gorgia’s case in March 2020, then spoke with Gorgia in June, and in July he reported Park’s prior conduct to Harman, whose reply included “ad hominem attacks toward the Plaintiff,” and “avoided any response to the accusations I detailed to him,” according to the affidavit. In a separate filing, Belair states that Cassabon was “physically harassed, groped, and caressed” by Park “both at the NAC … and later in the District of Columbia” in a public restaurant. Gorgia began his seminary studies in 2015 for the Archdiocese of New York. In the summer of 2017, he started at the North American College in Rome, the lawsuit states. According to the lawsuit, he left the NAC in 2018 for a period during the first semester of his second year of formation to undergo an operation on his spine in his home diocese. In the lawsuit, Gorgia accuses Harman, Park, and McDonald of creating “false accusations” about him to prevent his planned return to the seminary after an estimated six-week recovery period. Gorgia claims this was done because of his heterosexual orientation and the defendants’ desire “to protect themselves from exposure of their predatory homosexuality at the NAC.” The lawsuit states that Gorgia submitted a letter of resignation as a seminarian of the archdiocese of New York in January 2019, “under duress.” The suit also claims that Cardinal Dolan did not fulfill his responsibilities toward Gorgia as a seminarian of his archdiocese by refusing to meet with him or hear his side of the story, and by asking him to complete a nine-month parish internship assignment before being considered for a return to the NAC based on, Gorgia claims, three “utterly false” reasons. The Archdiocese of New York has said the claims in the case “are absurd and have no basis in fact or law. We are prepared to defend against it, and are seeking its dismissal in court.” According to the lawsuit, Gorgia is seeking $125 million in damages in civil court on 12 causes of action, including defamation, wrongful discharge, sexual harassment, emotional distress, fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, interference with prospective economic advantage, and Title VII discrimination. The next hearing in the lawsuit is set to take place Oct. 27, when the defendants’ motion to dismiss the case is scheduled to be heard, according to court records. Image Caption: Omaha Archbishop George Lucas in a 2011 photo. First appeared on Catholic News Agency.











