Fugitive ex-priest to face Arizona child
sex charges
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[June 15, 2019]
By David Schwartz
PHOENIX (Reuters) - A fugitive former
Catholic priest who fled to Italy and vanished after being indicted on
child sex charges in Arizona in 2003 has been found and returned to
Arizona, authorities said on Friday.
Joseph Henn, 70, was arrested in Rome by Italian police late last month
and brought back to Phoenix by U.S. marshals to face charges of child
molestation and sexual conduct with a minor, Arizona prosecutors said.
At the time of his indictment, Henn was the ninth Phoenix-area priest to
face sex abuse charges, part of a sweeping church scandal that began in
Boston in 2002. In its wake, the church saw its public image battered
and its finances hit hard by multimillion-dollar settlements and
judgments.
Henn's alleged sexual abuse against three boys under the age of 15
occurred from 1979 to 1981 while he was a priest in the Salvatorian
order at St. Mark’s Parish in Phoenix, prosecutors said in a statement.
Henn was formally arraigned on the 13 charges on Friday in Maricopa
County Superior Court in Phoenix.
County Attorney Bill Montgomery said in the statement that the pursuit
and prosecution of the long-time fugitive priest showed "neither
position nor title will shield someone who harms children from
accountability.”
Henn’s public defender, Brittany Lamb, could not immediately be reached
for comment late on Friday.
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Henn fled the United States and traveled to Rome 16 years ago in an
attempt to escape prosecution, authorities said. He was found and
arrested by Italian authorities in 2005 and placed under house
arrest at the headquarters of his religious order.
During court proceedings, his attorney at the time told an Italian
court that Henn risked being killed in prison if he returned to
Arizona but he was ordered to be extradited.
But Henn was nowhere to be found in 2006 when authorities arrived at
the religious order’s headquarters with an extradition order from
the Italian Supreme Court.
He was located again in Rome and arrested on May 29 by Italian law
enforcement, prosecutors said.
In a statement, the Catholic Diocese of Phoenix said it was pleased
Henn had been apprehended and it was committed to providing a safe
environment for its youth.
“We will continue to work in close cooperation with law enforcement
to uphold the principals of accountability and justice,” the
statement said.
(Reporting by David Schwartz in Phoenix; Editing by Michael Perry)
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