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Home / Articles / News / News /  Tied up at the moment
. . . .
Thursday, January 3,2013

Tied up at the moment

Cuffed priest granted leave

By Bruce Rushton

The pastor of St. Aloysius church on Springfield’s north end has been granted a leave of absence after he called 911 from the rectory and told a dispatcher that he needed help getting out of handcuffs.

“I’m going to need help getting out before this becomes a medical emergency,” Father Tom Donovan told a dispatcher who sounds a bit incredulous during the Nov. 28 call.

“You’re stuck in a pair of handcuffs?” the dispatcher asks.

“(I was) playing with them and I need help getting out,” Donovan responds.

Donovan told the dispatcher that he was alone in the rectory. It’s not clear exactly how he ended up in handcuffs or why he feared a medical emergency. His voice sounds garbled or muffled on the tape, and sources say that police discovered some sort of gag on the priest when they arrived.

The diocese has been tight-lipped about the matter, saying only that Bishop Thomas Paprocki granted Donovan’s request for a leave of absence at some point before Christmas. The diocese knows about the incident, given that Brad Huff, an attorney for the diocese, has been given a copy of the 911 tape by the Sangamon County Emergency Telephone System Department. Kathie Sass, spokeswoman for the Diocese of Springfield, said that the diocese also has a copy of a police report on the matter.

Sass would not disclose Donovan’s whereabouts or say whether he is staying at a church-affiliated location.

“I wouldn’t be able to tell you where Father Donovan is,” Sass said. “There’s a matter of privacy there.”

Sass said that Donovan approached Paprocki after the incident and asked for help.

“He came to the bishop before anyone was aware of the incident,” Sass said. “He came to the bishop and asked for help and was granted leave.”

Paprocki reviewed the police report after speaking with Donovan, and the police account jibed with what the priest told the bishop, Sass said.

Contact Bruce Rushton at brushton@illinoistimes.com.

 

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Personally, I don't want to live in a world where getting gagged, handcuffed, and sodomized in the rectory is considered "inappropriate."

 

GOTOSLEEP....seems you are already asleep with your assumptions. Your linage from gagging to handcuffs, does not connect to Sodomy It makes an ass(sumption) out of you and me.

 

This is the best comment all day.

 

Ummm...the article said "rectory," not "rectally." Do you even know what a rectory is? Lol...

 

Do you know the whole story?
If no then why are you judging?
If yes, you shouldn't judge him anyway.
I pray for you and me priests and all people who are angry, hateful, and do not yet know the love of God.

Praise be to God's love in Christ.

God I am a sinner and I need your mercy always. amen.

 

Don't judge an entire religion based on one clown. The modern catholic church is rife with a lot garbage priests, but there are still many good priests.

 

Just another one of the "fruits of Vatican II" (no pun intended) and its liberal drivel, watered-down theology and its casual form of worship with all the gimmicks you could ask for.

 

 
it doesn't say anything about him being sodomized. Why would you say that? do you know something we don't?

 

 
The sexually repressed and kinkiest among us are those who are supposed to be celibate. Hilarious. This is what comes from human nature being squashed; psychological damage by religion.

 

 
So many questions. What was he doing and who was he doing it with? Why would this have become a "medical emergency" if left for much longer? Did he not have any friends he could call in lieu of 911? (Guess not.)

@gotosleep - Thanks for your comment. It made me spit my coffee across the room!

 

 
A bishop in New Mexico was beaten up in his residence a while back and his explanation to emergency room staff and police was neither consistent nor credible. Thirty some years ago I attended the funeral of a priest in a rural parish near the Mexican border in SoCal who was tied up and strangled. The priest in this news account was gagged and handcuffed when the police arrived. These incidents are not about random attacks on the clergy, they're about priests engaging in dangerous anonymous sexual encounters with dangerous anonymous men. For fear of being recognized, they don't go to a local motel. The rectory is a popular cover for this activity because it looks like Father is doing priestly work with a young man at 12:30 AM. Bishops and priests who engage in such risky behaviour with "rent boys", as they call them, set themselves up for blackmail with very dangerous individuals who often have prior convictions and outstanding warrants. This clerical sex culture is so secret that it is next to impossible to identify who the "good priests" are unless the police get involved as recounted in this article. These double-life leading yet publicly respected clergymen and their predator blackmailers can get access to our children through parish functions and parochial school activities. To protect our children we have to understand and be aware of the secret world of priests.

 

Seems like a good reason for the Catholic Church to think about ending the celibacy requirement for priests. Maybe if some of the priests mentioned had been allowed to have spouses or partners, they wouldn't have gotten lonely enough to seek out dangerous anonymous sex.