A Catholic priest in Pennsylvania
has been charged with molesting a teenage boy
after police
said he was found in a car
on a college campus with a 15-year-old who was wearing no pants, according to a
police
criminal complaint filed Friday in Lackawanna County.
The Rev. W. Jeffrey Paulish was
charged with one felony
count of involuntary deviate sexual intercourse and one felony
count of unlawful contact with a minor after Dunmore police say they
found him and the boy
on Thursday in a car
on the Worthington Scranton campus of Penn State University, according to the
complaint.
Paulish, 56, of Scranton, was also
charged with three misdemeanor counts — indecent contact with a person under
16, indecent exposure and corruption of a minor. He is being held at the
Lackawanna County jail on $50,000 bail.
Dunmore police officers say
they discovered Paulish and the boy after responding to a call of a
suspicious vehicle, according to an arrest warrant affidavit filed with the
court.
Allegedly Paulish told police
he was at the campus working on his homily when he met the teen, who he said
was in emotional distress, and began counseling him.
According to the affidavit, he later
admitted to police that he had arranged the meeting with the teen
through the “casual encounters” section of Craigslist. Paulish told
investigators that he had asked the boy three times if he was over the
age of 18, the affidavit said.
A telephone message left by CNN for
Paulish’s attorney, Bernard J. Brown, was not immediately returned Friday.
Paulish has been removed from his
post at the Prince of Peace parish and has been suspended from acting in the
capacity of a priest, according to a statement released by the Diocese of
Scranton.
The diocese pledged its coöperation
with the investigation, and it called on anyone who “may have been sexually
abused by Father Paulish or any member of the clergy” to notify the district
attorney’s office.
“I wish to acknowledge how
unsettling this is to me personally and to countless others, that yet again a
priest has been involved in such inappropriate, immoral and illegal behavior,”
the Bishop of Scranton, the Rev. Joseph Bambera, said in the statement.
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