L.A. Catholic church to pay $13 million to settle 17 sex abuse lawsuits

The Roman Catholic archdiocese settled more than 500 cases in 2007 for a record $660 million. This latest $13 million settlement resolves remaining clergy abuse lawsuits against the largest archdiocese in the US.

During the 2002 dedication ceremony for the new $195 million Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels, Pastor Monsignor Kevin Kostelnick knocks on the doors to signal the opening in Los Angeles. The nation's largest archdioses settled its final sex abuse case on Tuesday.

(AP Photo/Ric Francis)

February 18, 2014

The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles will pay $13 million to settle 17 clergy abuse lawsuits, including 11 that involve a visiting Mexican priest who fled prosecution and remains a fugitive more than 25 years later, plaintiffs' attorneys said Tuesday.

The deal resolves all remaining clergy abuse lawsuits against the nation's largest archdiocese.

"We're happy to have this behind us," said J. Michael Hennigan, an archdiocese attorney.

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The archdiocese settled more than 500 cases in 2007 for a record $660 million and has resolved numerous others since then, individually and in small groups.

Eleven of the plaintiffs in Tuesday's settlement allege abuse by visiting Mexican priest Nicolas Aguilar Rivera, who fled Los Angeles in January 1988 before the church notified police about parent complaints of molestation. The LAPD later determined at least 26 boys had been sexually abused by the priest during his 10-month stay in Los Angeles.

Aguilar Rivera has been a fugitive for more than two decades and was recently defrocked in absentia. He is wanted on warrants issued in the U.S. and Mexico.

The lawsuits involving Aguilar Rivera had been set to go to trial earlier this year, but the date was pushed back to allow settlement talks to proceed.

Cardinal Roger Mahony, who retired as leader of the archdiocese in 2011, would have been a key witness after giving sworn testimony in the case last year during a closed-door proceeding.

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Thousands of pages of confidential files kept on Los Angeles priests accused of abuse were released last year under court order.

Those files show that Mahony and other top archdiocese officials maneuvered behind the scenes to shield accused priests and protect the church from a growing scandal while keeping parishioners in the dark. The cardinal was publicly rebuked by his successor, Archbishop Jose Gomez, after the files were publicized.

In Aguilar Rivera's case, church officials told the priest that parents had complained and that the church would have to notify police but then waited two days to do so, allowing Aguilar Rivera to flee to Mexico, court papers allege.

One memo from the confidential file of the priest shows that Mahony later ordered church officials not to turn over a list of altar boys to police who were investigating.

"We cannot give such a list for no cause whatsoever," Mahony added in a handwritten note on a memo from Jan. 26, 1988.

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