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Rev.
Gerard L. Branconnier
The Rev. Gerard L. Branconnier, who
was removed from ministry after allegations were made
that he sexually abused minors, had a gay marriage
ministry in operation 15 years before it was legal in
this state. However, gay marriage is not “legal” in the
Roman Catholic church, which has opposed gay marriage
and opposes adoption of children to same-sex couples
Paul A. Guries of Auburn, who settled
a suit with the Catholic Worcester diocese, has released
a copy of a video that shows Father Branconnier in 1989
marrying two men in a traditional Catholic marriage
rite. The video is available here through the auspices
of Mr. Guries
What is even more amazing is that Mr.
Guries turned over a copy of the video to Monsignor
Edmond T. Tinsley in 1993 after he settled his lawsuit
with the diocese where he alleged sexual abuse by Father
Branconnier when he was a 16-year-old parishioner at
North American Martyrs Church in Auburn. The diocese has
had the video since then but no public notification of
its existence was ever made by the diocese. Bishop
Timothy J. Harrington was bishop at the time the video
was received by the diocese and no action was taken.
Bishop Daniel P. Reilly came into the diocese in 1994
and still no mention was made of the video.
The diocese is now being served by
Bishop Robert J. McManus, who also has not acknowledged
that it had knowledge that Father Branconnier was
marrying gay couples. Mr. Guries in a letter to Bishop
McManus said he knows or has heard that Father
Branconnier still may be conducting gay marriages
although he was removed from ministry in 1993.
What is even more amazing is that
Bishop McManus has taken an extremely public stand
against the practice of gay marriages, which became
legal in Massachusetts in 2004. He allowed the Catholic
churches of the diocese to be used to gather signatures
to put on the ballot the question of whether the state’s
Constitution should be changed to define marriage as
being between one man and one woman. When two priests in
Westboro declined to endorse the drive, Bishop McManus
went to Westboro and removed Father George Lange and
Father Steven Labaire from the pulpit one weekend and
the Bishop showed up himself to lecture Catholics on why
they needed to oppose gay marriage. During his homily,
the bishop never mentioned that the diocese had a video
and knew that Father Branconnier had been marrying gay
couples at least as far back as 1989.
Since the prohibition against same-sex
marriage was found to be unconstitutional all along,
some legal scholars now contend that the 1989 marriage
shown on the Branconnier video may well have retroactive
legal effect.
Mr. Guries is a former seminarian for
the Worcester diocese and studied at the North American
College in Rome.
March 22, 2006
Bishop asked to start defrocking
proceedings
Diocese settled lawsuit over Auburn abuse
By Kathleen A. Shaw TELEGRAM & GAZETTE
STAFF
WORCESTER— Paul A. Guries has formally
asked Bishop Robert J. McManus to begin proceedings to
remove the Rev. Gerard L. Branconnier from Catholic
priesthood.
The Diocese of Worcester settled a
lawsuit with Mr. Guries in 1993 in which he alleged
sexual abuse by Rev. Branconnier, and he received an
out-of-court settlement of about $35,000. The alleged
incidents happened when Mr. Guries was 16 and a member
of North American Martyrs Parish, Auburn.
Although Rev. Branconnier was removed
from ministry and placed on leave in 1993 by then-Bishop
Timothy J. Harrington, Mr. Guries told Bishop McManus
that Rev. Branconnier continues to function as a
Catholic priest.
He said he had a recent “awkward” situation when he
attended a wake at an Auburn funeral home. He found Rev.
Branconnier there dressed in clerical garb and signing
the guest book as a priest. Mr. Guries listed other
reasons he believes Rev. Branconnier may still be
functioning as a priest.
He sent a copy of his letter outlining
his allegations to Archbishop Pietro Sambi, the
Vatican’s apostolic nuncio of the United States,
Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re at the Vatican
Congregation for Bishops and Cardinal Dario Castrillon
Hoyos at the Vatican Congregation for Clergy.
Mr. Guries mailed and then
hand-delivered a letter to Bishop McManus on Friday in
which he stated his reasons Rev. Branconnier should be
laicized — returned to the lay state; essentially the
same as defrocking.
“If he is defying the mandate of his
administrative leave from ministry, those actions are in
violation and will warrant more serious penalties,” said
Raymond L. Delisle, diocese spokesman.
Mr. Delisle said several priests were
referred to the Vatican for laicization but he does not
know if Rev. Branconnier was among them.
“The Congregation for the Doctrine of
the Faith treats each one individually, and it is
impossible to say how long each one will take,” Mr.
Delisle said.
Mr. Delisle said Bishop McManus left
Monday for Rome but he expects the bishop to answer Mr.
Guries on his return. Archbishop Sean P. O’Malley and
several other archbishops will be elevated to cardinals
by Pope Benedict XVI.
“Father Branconnier does not have
faculties,” Mr. Delisle said. “He may not celebrate Mass
or celebrate any public ministry. He may not present
himself as a cleric (dressed as a priest). This has not
changed since he was removed from his parish in 1993 by
Bishop Harrington.” The term “faculties” means the
permission priests have from their local bishop to
function as priests and administer sacraments.
“If he is presenting himself as a
priest, then he is defying the bishop’s mandate,” Mr.
Delisle said. He added that if Rev. Branconnier is
celebrating weddings or performing Catholic sacraments,
these sacraments and actions are not “valid in the eyes
of the Church, regardless of the couple involved.”
Mr. Delisle added that if a priest on
leave presents himself as a Catholic priest, he most
likely is violating another canon law called “simulation
of a sacrament. This would again warrant further
penalties from the bishop,” he said.
Mr. Guries’ letter mentions a video
that he turned over to the diocese in 1993 that shows
Rev. Branconnier, dressed in clerical garb, officiating
at a 1989 Catholic rite wedding of two men, 15 years
before such marriages became legal in this state.
Same-gender marriage has been legal
here since 2004, but is not permissible in the Catholic
church. Mr. Delisle said he believes the video would
have been turned over when the initial allegations were
made that led to Rev. Branconnier being placed on leave.
The video shows Rev. Branconnier
conducting a Catholic marriage rite that included
blessing the same-gender couple with sign of the cross,
blessing the wedding rings, also with a sign of the
cross, and blessing those assembled at the outdoor
wedding.
When Rev. Branconnier was placed on
administrative leave in August 1993, no reasons were
given, leaving parishioners to speculate that he was
removed because he would not approve diocesan plans to
close one of the two churches of which he was pastor,
St. Thomas Aquinas in West Warren and St. Paul’s in
Warren. Both churches are still open.
The filing of the civil lawsuit had
not been publicly announced, and diocesan officials
declined to state why Rev. Branconnier was placed on
leave. Mr. Guries, now 40 and an Auburn resident, only
recently began discussing what happened.
He was once a diocesan seminarian and
was sent by Bishop Harrington to the North American
College in Rome. He was dismissed from the seminary by
Archbishop Edwin F. O’Brien, then the rector, four
months short of being ordained a transitional deacon.
Mr. Guries said he is gay, and he
believes this might have been part of the reason he was
dismissed, although he maintains he was celibate during
his years in the seminary, but he said indications were
they thought he stayed up too late, was active on the
Rome social circuit and may have had a personality
conflict with a monsignor at the college.
He has since left the Catholic Church
and is now a member of the Episcopal Church.
Attempts to reach Rev. Branconnier
yesterday were not successful. No telephone listing
could be found and he is not listed in the official
diocesan directory.
Mr. Guries is the third known alleged
area victim of clergy sexual abuse to make this request
of the bishop.
A female victim of Monsignor Leo J.
Battista asked Bishop Daniel P. Reilly to laicize
Monsignor Battista.
The monsignor in the 1990s surrendered
his state social worker’s license after acknowledging
sexual relations with a woman he was counseling.
Bishop Reilly said during a 2004
deposition that he sought laicization from the Vatican
at the woman’s request.
The Vatican recently told Bishop
McManus Monsignor Battista would not be defrocked, but
was not to function as a priest and should spend the
rest of his life in prayer and penance.
George “Skip” Shea of Uxbridge has
written to the bishops asking laicization of the Rev.
Thomas H. Teczar and Robert A. Shauris, who he said
sexually abused him as a youngster. Both priests have
been on leave for several years.
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