ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: TUESDAY, December 7, 1993                   TAG: 9312070145
SECTION: NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL                    PAGE: A2   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: Los Angeles Times
DATELINE: NEW BEDFORD, MASS.                                LENGTH: Medium


EX-PRIEST SENTENCED FOR ABUSE

One victim read from Dante, recalling that the final circle of Hell was reserved for perpetrators of the most heinous sin of all, betrayal.

Another called his abuser "a useless piece of human excrement" and insisted that only public castration could suitably punish the onetime priest who molested him as a child.

After hearing 22 men and women describe their pain and anger in similarly impassioned statements Monday, Superior Court Judge Robert Steadman sentenced former Roman Catholic priest James Porter to concurrent sentences of 18 to 20 years at a Massachusetts State prison.

Porter pleaded guilty Oct. 4 to 41 counts of sexual abuse between 1961 and 1967 at five parishes in southeastern Massachusetts. He is expected to serve at least 12 years.

More than 100 victims of the former priest reached a civil agreement with the local archdiocese in 1992. Porter's case offers the largest example of clerical sexual abuse - or abuse by any individual - in American judicial history.

In the courtroom Monday, his accusers confronted Porter with glowers, sneers and memories of sexual molestation that occurred three decades ago.

"We were pals, we were buddies," 42-year-old Peter Calderone said of his days as one of then-Rev. Porter's altar boys - and as one of his sexual-abuse victims.

"And you, James Porter, you made me promise I wouldn't tell. But I lied. I've told everybody. And you need to be punished."

In the same courtroom where, a century earlier, Lizzie Borden was acquitted of murdering her parents, the 58-year-old former priest sat impassively through the unusually long parade of victims' impact statements.

Alternately sinking his head in his hands and twiddling his thumbs, Porter displayed emotion only when the prospect of being separated from his own four children was raised by his attorney, Peter DeGelleke, in a plea for judicial leniency.

"There is no dispute that this defendant caused terrible harm by his actions in the 1960s," DeGelleke said.

But DeGelleke wanted the court to know that in the ensuing 30 years, Porter had raised "a functional, productive and loving family," with one daughter scoring particularly high on recent scholastic aptitude tests.

"That has got to count for something," DeGelleke said.

Porter himself rose and tearfully gestured to his wife sitting nearby. "I fear for my family," he said. "I really believe they need me near them."

He added: "I deserve to be punished, but they don't."

Steadman, however, lambasted Porter for his "outrageous conduct and "complete disregard of the physical, spiritual and psychological impact" he had on his victims. He called Porter "an effigy, representing all the other named and unnamed child abusers."

As part of his 10-year probation, Steadman also ordered Porter to "participate in and follow through programs designed to treat and control his pedophilia."

Porter's case was avidly pursued by victims who for many years had repressed memories of their abuse. Frank Fitzpatrick, now 43, said he was 39 years old before he was able to trace a lifetime of "depression and lack of self-esteem" to the occasion on which he was drugged and raped by then-Father Porter.

Like Fitzpatrick, victim after victim stood up in court Monday to describe symptoms that are widely recognized as signs of childhood sexual abuse.

There was Mary Kennedy, 37, describing a descent down the paths of alcoholism and drug abuse. Thomas Kennedy, her older brother, displayed the golden teardrop he wears around his neck - a symbol of his failed marriage that he made by melting down his wedding ring.

No sentence he could impose would "restore peace" to Porter's victims, Steadman conceded after considering their remarks.

But Mary Kennedy, for one, applauded any prison time served by Porter as "like the closing of a chapter in my life."



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