A Franciscan friar accused of sexually abusing students at Catholic
high schools in Ohio and Pennsylvania killed himself at a western
Pennsylvania monastery, police said on Saturday.
Brother Stephen Baker, 62, was found dead of a self-inflicted knife
wound at the St Bernardine Monastery in Hollidaysburg on Saturday
morning, Police Chief Roger White said. He declined to say whether a
note was found.
Baker was named in legal settlements last week involving 11 men who
alleged that he sexually abused them at a Catholic high school in
northeast Ohio three decades ago. The undisclosed financial
settlements announced on 16 January involved his contact with students
at John F Kennedy High School in Warren, Ohio from 1986-90.
The Youngstown diocese previously said it was unaware of the
allegations until nearly 20 years after the alleged abuse.
"Let us continue to pray for all victims of abuse, for Brother Baker's
family and therepose of his soul," Youngstown Bishop George Murray
said in a statement on Saturday.
School hired an investigator
After the settlements were announced, the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese in
central Pennsylvania said it received complaints in 2011 of possible
abuse by Baker at Bishop McCort High School in Johnstown, about 95km
east of Pittsburgh.
Bishop McCort High School hired an attorney to investigate after
several former students alleged they were molested by Baker in the
1990s. Attorney Susan Williams said three former students had talked
to her in detail about the alleged abuse.
Baker taught and coached at John F Kennedy High School in the late
1980s and early 1990s and was at Bishop McCort from 1992-2000.
Bishop Mark Bartchak of the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese said in a
statement that he was saddened by the news of Baker's death, but
declined further comment citing pending legal action involving the
diocese.
A message left for Father Patrick Quinn, the head of Baker's order,
the Third Order Regular Franciscans, was not immediately returned.
Judy Jones, assistant Midwest director of the Survivors Network of
those Abused by Priests, said the organisation still hopes people who
know about other abuse allegations against Baker will continue to come
forward.
"We feel sad for Br Baker's family but even sadder for the dozens of
boys who Baker assaulted," she said in a statement.
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