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Defense lawyers paint Lynn as a cog in the wheel of a vast bureaucracy and a scapegoat for the priest sexual-abuse crisis. But prosecutors call him a key figure in policy decisions and the man who knew better than perhaps anyone the harrowing accounts of child sexual abuse
-- some at the hands of priests still in the ministry -- buried in the church vaults. Lynn's decision to take the stand Wednesday was risky, giving prosecutors a chance to interrogate him on cross-examination about his handling of 20 files on accused priests. Friends and relatives, several of them priests, filled several rows of seats behind the defense table. Lynn faces up to 21 years in prison if convicted. He is on leave from the archdiocese, which is paying for his defense. Lynn repeatedly told jurors he was simply following orders in a job he never sought but also refused to quit, unlike a colleague who testified Tuesday that he left after a year. "I never asked for an assignment, and I never asked out of one," Lynn said. "For 12 years, I preached to priests that the will of God works through your bishops as far as assignments go." Blessington pounced on "the will of God" reference, then asked if he hadn't helped priests harm children. "Not that I know of," Lynn responded. "I did my best with what I could do."
[Associated
Press;
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