My article on Phil Jacobs


Former Catholic priest arrested for child molesting

By Steve Weatherbe

 When Philp Jacobs, a former priest of the Victoria diocese, arrived at Victoria International Airport on August 4, there was a reception party waiting for him, but not the one he was expecting.

Acting on an arrest warrant issued a month before and a fresh tip, Saanich police investigators and airport security took Jacobs into custody to face charges of sexual assault, sexual interference and sexual exploitation of children under the age of 14.

“It’s very sad and disappointing situation,” Victoria Bishop Richard Gagnon told the B.C. Christian News. “We are very much aware of the effects of abuse on individuals and their families. It is totally inappropriate and directly contradictory to what the priesthood stands for.”

Jacobs was released after a Victoria-area friend stood as surety for him to the tune of $25,000. Jacobs return ticket to the U.S. and his passport were seized, and he was required to stay away from children and his two former parishes, St. Rose of Lima in Sooke and St. Joseph the Worker in Victoria.

Jacobs was ordained into the Columbus, Ohio diocese, but after allegations surfaced there about sexual abuse of boys in his parish, he was dismissed and found work three years later in Victoria that lasted from 1996 to 2002.

Though Victoria didn’t know about the allegations when they hired him, they were soon informed.

When Bishop Ray Roussin took over the diocese in 1998, he wasn’t told about Jacobs, but two years later found out about him from the Ministry of Children and Families, who had been tipped by one of his American victims.

Bishop Roussin (later archbishop of Vancouver) told the newsmedia in 2002 that  both the diocese and the ministry hired psychiatrists to assess him and both said he was not a risk. (the ministry now says it has no record of the assessment).

Bishop Roussin assigned two priests and two laymen to monitor Jacobs’s activities.

In 2002, however, his Columbus victim went to the press, and in the ensuing media heat, he agreed with the diocese to leave its employ. Since then he has not, reportedly, served as a priest.

According to Sergeant Dean Jantzen, the Saanich Police investigated complaints against Jacobs at that time but without turning up enough evidence to file charges.

However, the file on Jacobs was reopened in 2009 after another complaint was made, and this investigation produced the all-Canada arrest warrant issued in July.

Jacobs was by all accounts a popular and successful parish priest.

Bishop Gagnon released a statement to the effect that tighter vetting of job applicants had been put in place in 2005 that would have prevented Jacobs getting a position in diocese, including an automatic criminal record check and psychological assessment.

He offered counseling to any alleged victims and urged anyone with further allegations to come forward.

The last time a priest of the Victoria diocese had been charged with sexual offences was in the mid-80s, he said, and that resulted in a conviction.

The local daily paper, the Times Colonist, has focused on the diocese’s decision to keep the parishes where Jacobs served in the dark at to the allegations that resulted in his dismissal from Columbus.

This follows the evolution of the Catholic sexual abuse scandal in the U.S., where the focus moved from the abusive priests when the scandal broke in 2002, to the decisions by bishops to move accused priests from parish to parish or diocese to diocese, resulting in some priests molesting more than 100 victims apiece, and also in lawsuits costing the American church upwards of $500 million.

But the Catholic church, according to experts in sexual abuse, acted no better nor worse than other large institutions. David Finkelfor, executive director of the Crimes Against Children Research Center at the University of New Hampshire, says the public schools behaved the same way until the Catholic scandal persuaded them to treat abusive teachers any differently.

“Before that, it was a case of passing the trash,” says Finkelfor. “If the teacher would agree to resign without a fuss, the administration wouldn’t blackball him with other school districts.”

In a famous British Columbia case of “passing the trash,” public school teacher Robert Noyes is believed to have molested hundreds of male and female primary school students in a succession of schools and districts during the 1970s and 1980s. He pled guilty to 19 assaults in 1985. The case resulted in a Royal Commission, and the creation of the College of Teachers to discipline the profession.

But Finkelhor believes abuse by priests is more damaging to victims than that by teachers, because priests hold positions of much great trust.

Having adequate disciplinary bodies has been crucial to cracking down on sexual misconduct in the health professions and the clergy of many denominations, says Dr. John Gonsiorek, a professor of clinical psychology at  Minnesota’s Argosy University Twin Cities.

His own profession of psychotherapy was typical of the health field in the 1970s, Gonsiorek says.
”The licensing boards and for psychologists and doctors were insensitive to the issue of sexual misconduct. Some boards did not even respond to complaints at all.”

But after facing lawsuits for negligence from victims, disciplinary boards began to use the power they had to suspendd of delicence practitioners, and the professions began to draw up new and tighter ethics codes around sexual misconduct.

The same process took place later among the clergy, he says. The more democratic was the church’s governance model, says Gonsiorek, “ the better it has been at cracking down in a systemic way. “I’m pessimistic about the Roman [Catholic] church because it doesn’t have a mechanism for accountability. Unless you can fire a bishop or put him in jail for criminal negligence I don’t have a lot of hope.”

However Thomas Plante, a psychology professor at Santa Clara University, says  believes the preventive measures now in place by the Catholic church are the standard setters in the U.S. “Since 2002, I firmly believe that policies and procedures are in place to protect kids in the USA. I think that due to the confluence of factors such as the screening of applicants to religious life, zero tolerance for misbehavior, safe environment training for all and the Dallas Charter, kids and families are safer in the Catholic Church than just about anywhere else in the U.S.A today. So, in terms of keeping kids safe I am very optimistic.”

But Plante, too, believes the clergy-only hierarchy in the Catholic church makes accountability more difficult, and “without true accountability and the ability to have some reasonable checks and balances in the church structure, it will continue to get them in trouble in the future about all sorts of matters.”

About faithvictoria

Steve Weatherbe is a journalist with 30 years experience, specializing in religion and public issues, a conservative Catholic Christian, a supporter of Evangelicals and Catholics Together, living in Victoria, British Columbia. Canada
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6 Responses to My article on Phil Jacobs

  1. goyodelarosa says:

    Were you not able to get in touch with bishops De Roo, Roussin and Gagnon?

    As Roman Catholic prelates that give lip-service to ecumenism, they should all have been professional in returning your calls, as after all you are a fellow Catholic and as you wrote this for the Protestant B. C. Christian News.

    De Roo is so far silent on his part in this mess, having initially hired Jacobs knowing something of his history, one would presume. What was he thinking?

    By his silence he thus betrays himself as part of the infamous cabal of cowardly bishops who shuffled problem priests from one diocese to another, instead of confronting them and turning them over to the police.

    Effectively, he cut a scandalous and shameful secret deal with the Archbishop of Columbus, who washed his hands of Jacobs the first opportunity he could get.

    Roussin says that Jacobs was given a provincial government psychiatric evaluation, but the government’s Children’s Ministry spokeswoman denies it.

    Weren’t you able to get him to address the discrepancy?

    Gagnon said to A Channel’s Stephen Andrew on the news broadcast that he had not informed the Vatican ‘as Father Jacobs is facing charges and the investigation is ongoing,’ or some such cop-out.

    Don’t you think that the Pope and Cardinal Levada, not to mention the nuncio in Ottawa, should all be apprised of this horror show?

    What is the point of trying to hide this tragic story from the Vatican, one wonders?

    I may be wrong, but I thought Benedict ordered his bishops to quit covering things up, and to keep him and the relevant Vatican bureaucrats like Levada informed?

    Speaking of the Vatican, your comparing these crimes to those in other professions is very much in the shop-worn relativistic Vatican spin mode, and is frankly embarrassing and non-relevant to the issue at hand, which is the apprehension at the Victoria airport, charging in the Victoria Court house and release to Sooke of a fugitive foreign priest who continues to haunt this Diocese.

    Peace of Christ

    Gregory Hartnell

    • steve weatherbe says:

      Roussin is “uncontactable” according to Vancouver archdiocese. Though I am trying. De Roo i dont bother with. I have called him Race Track de Roo so many times in print I can’t see him giving me the time of day. I think de Roo was just being kind: this diocese took in all sorts of castoffs back in the day, so I am told.
      But that was being kind to the clergy. Time was, nobody got how difficult it is to “cure” people of perverse sexual appetites after they indulged in it for long. The U.S. scandal didnt get its lid blown off till 2002. Before that the bishops were operating in a self-serving dreamland. Self-serving because if they believed what pyschologists told them about treating the abusers successfully, they got to keep them as priests, when priests were in very short supply.
      What’s missing from Times Colonist coverage is how pervasive this ignorance about the intractable nature of this appetite can become across all professions and institutions.
      There not being a cure doesn’t mean abusers can’t stop: that’s what 12 step groups are about. 12 steppers–and I am one too–say there is no cure: they will always be alcoholics or sexaholics or foodaholics. They can stop acting on it, though.
      But it means staying away from places of temptation: for Jacobs, it should have meant stopping the camping trips. That should have meant all sorts of flares and alarms and red flags.

  2. goyodelarosa says:

    Ah, yes, those still happening Summer Camp Ministries’ as they are somewhat vaguely called by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Victoria in its print-outs left in Saint Patrick’s Church.

    Next one scheduled is for the Senior Session (grades 8 -12), for August 23 – 29, 2010 at Camp Barnard, 3202 Young Lake Rd, in Sooke, of all places.

    One wonders how far the Diocesan Camp 2010 (or “DC’10” as they call it) is from the current domicile of one Father Philip Jacobs who has been ordered by the Court to stay away from children but who apparently now resides again in Sooke?

    The ‘Camp Registartion [sic] and Parental Permission Form’ has a section entitled ‘Appropriate Dress’.

    ‘Sensible, causual, modest, easy wearing summer clothing is the guideline for DC’10,’ it assures parents….

    ‘Clothing that promotes, advertises, or makes reference to the following is considered not appropriate at camp: 1. derogatory racial, religious, or sexist messages; 2. vulgar or abusive language; 3. illegal activities; 4. drugs, alcohol, or tobacco. No revealing clothing such as halter tops, backless shirts, bare midriffs, spaghetti straps or see through clothing. Clothing must cover the entire back, front, shoulders, and mid-section at all times. Swimming suits must be modestly fitting. No undergarments are to be visible at any time.

    ‘Guidelines for modesty apply to all campers, volunteers, and adults involved in the camp event.’

    Any idea how many children are involved in these camps?

    Gregory Hartnell

  3. Greg;
    As for Archbishop Roussin, he is incommunicado,s ays the Vancouver chancery, in a nursing home. This doesn’t sound like he’s in good shape and probably needs our prayers.

  4. goyodelarosa says:

    Thanks for all the work you have been doing on this story, Steve. I complain, and I nitpick, but I never could do the professional job you do, and get paid for it…

    I do hope they pay you at the BC Christian News?

    I may not like what these bishops do or don’t do, but of course I pray for them, that they be given HOLY WISDOM, to let go… and let God, as they say in those fellowships that you mentioned… Amen.

    I also believe in miracles, so maybe one day Bishop De Roo will give you a call and tell you his revised version of the Lacey land fiasco and this clerical sex abuse mess, for which he is at least partially responsible, having given Father Jacobs an unwarranted pass.

    Such ‘kindness’ is misdirected and we can do without.

    Frankly, of the three of them, I like Bishop Roussin the best, and even though he also messed up, I feel he inherited a huge mess from Bishop De Roo, both financially and with this scandal… what a telling legacy of episcopal liberalism, eh?

    As for Bishop Gagnon, I wonder if any of us know him now any better than when he first arrived?

  5. agnes says:

    there is much more to this mess with phil jacobs then anyone can guess. i was at .st. Josephs when all this took place knew via a priest who and what JACOBS was, nobody would believe me.

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