Welcome Guest - Please Login | Subscribe |FAQ's | Why Register | Privacy Statement |
| Classifieds | Jobs | Cars | Real Estate | Directories | Yellow Pages+ | My Clips | 
     
 Today is August 21, 2008 Current Temperature: 71° in Lewiston, Maine 
Take our quiz


Printer Friendly Version      Email Story     Increase Text    Decrease Text
iPod Friendly
  Comments
Priest facing sex abuse claim commits suicide

Saturday, June 28, 2008
PHOTO GALLERY
« Previous | Next »
thumbnails | gallery

DOVER-FOXCROFT (AP) - A Roman Catholic priest committed suicide after he was informed that he would be suspended pending an investigation of his alleged sexual abuse of a minor 29 years ago, the Diocese of Portland said Friday.

The body of the Rev. James Robichaud, 56, was found Friday morning in the rectory of Our Lady of the Snows in Dover-Foxcroft. He learned of the allegation the day before.

Robichaud died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head, said Sgt. Gary West of the Dover-Foxcroft police. He said an employee at the rectory found the body in a second-floor bathroom, and it was believed that the shooting took place Thursday evening. No suicide note was found, West said.

The abuse allegation came to the diocese from the Oblates, a religious order of men with whom Robichaud was serving in Massachusetts prior to his return to Maine in 2000.

The abuse was alleged to have occurred around the time Robichaud, an Augusta native, was ordained in 1979 and assigned to St. Jean-Baptiste Parish in Lowell, Mass. He later served as chaplain of Lowell General Hospital and pastor of Notre Dame De Lourdes in Lowell.

"Out of pastoral care for Father Robichaud's family and parishes during this time of shock and grief, further details about the case will be released at a later date," the diocese said in its statement.

The diocese said there is not enough information at this point to substantiate or dismiss the allegation. Bishop Richard Malone asked that prayers be said for all involved.

"This is a tragic end to a story that we may never completely understand. It is simply our mission to bring the healing presence of Jesus to this agonizing situation. May His love work through each of us to find compassion for the woman who made the complaint, Father Robichaud's soul, his family, friends and parish community," Malone said.

Robichaud attended the Oblate College and Seminary in Natick, Mass., Framingham State College in Massachusetts and the Weston School of Theology in Cambridge, Mass., where he received a masters of divinity.

On his return to Maine, he was named administrator of St. Thomas Aquinas in Dover-Foxcroft and St. Francis in Brownville Junction. St. Anne Parish in Dexter was added to his responsibilities in 2005. The three parishes joined in 2007 to become Our Lady of the Snows.

CLICK HERE To Show/Hide Discussion Thread - (1 Comment)
Comments
Posted By:paul at June 28, 2008 5:38 PM (Suggest Removal)
May God have mercy on his poor soul, and may He bless and bring peace to the poor unfortunates who are devastated by this event. I would otherwise now make a scholarly case for my contentions below, but instead, I will just state them. Sex in our time has been so commercialized, profaned, desecrated, advertised, promoted, trivialized, masculinized, and exalted as a pleasurable end in itself, without regard to reproduction, greater responsibilities or consequences whatsoever, that we, as a people, have become schizophrenic about it. In the public mind, it is just another innocent commodity to be engaged in, traded, transacted- what have you- without regard to serious, solemn responsibilities and consequences related thereto. On the one hand, it is trivial, morally neutral, harmless, and subject to whim alone; and on the other, we continue to exhibit a certain unease- and harshly judgmental and punitive response- when our residual, traditional sensibilities are otherwise upset. Priests and other religious have to confront and deal with these insane contradictions all the time. On the one hand, the trivial devil-may-care attitude toward sex with ANYONE, under whatever circumstances; on the other, their scriptural and experiential awareness that this is utterly WRONG. So they find themselves caught in the middle: they know what is RIGHT, but society and their congregations behave in an utterly deviant way, and one which priests and other religious are now powerless to stop or change. Why is anyone surprised- let alone outraged- that our spiritual leaders are thus caught up in the very behavior society promotes, engages in, and tongue-in-cheek, endorses? As much as I deplore the conduct in question, aren't we all, the press especially, hypocritical in our professed "outrage" and "condemnation" of these priests-- and other religious who may be caught up in this insanity? The defunct Walt Kelly comic strip" Pogo" once announced "We have found the enemy, and he is US". Us, indeed. Paul Corrao

| Add your comments
Advertisement
CMMC Wellness Solutions
lists program offerings beginning on July 21.
read more >>
CMMC Volunteers Honored
Eileen Danforth of Lewiston, who has given more than 19,000 hours of voluntary service to Central Maine Medical Center, was one of nearly 150 adult volunteers recognized recently for their work at the medical center.
read more >>
Central Maine Medical Center College of Nursing and Health Professions
will offer five general education courses during its fall session.
read more >>
“Accordion Scrapbooking Workshop II
will be held from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. at the Patrick Dempsey Center for Cancer Hope and Healing, 10 High Street, Lewiston.
read more >>
Contents of this site © 2008 Sun Journal
| Forgot Password |Blog Policy | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Advertise With Us | Contact Us | About Us | Faq's | Help |