Wirral Catholic priest
Father Peter Hooper with “unhealthy interest in adolescent boys” jailed for
five years
Meanwhile, it is interesting to note that the Rt. Rev. Mark Davies, Bishop of Shrewsbury, who
said today (15 June 2012) that “There can be no place in the priesthood for
those who harm the young.” was previously the vicar general in the Diocese of
Salford where Father Thomas Doherty was never laicised, despite being convicted
in 1998 for five offences of indecency against a child and being sentenced to
six years imprisonment. (Doherty went to his grave in 2010 retaining his
canonical status as a priest.) It remains to be seen whether we can trust Davies’
rhetoric in this more recent case and whether Hooper will actually be laicised.
Given Davies’ history in the Diocese of Salford, it will certainly be necessary
to monitor what actually happens!
A
CATHOLIC priest with “an unhealthy interest in adolescent boys” was locked up
for five years.
Father Peter Hooper, the parish priest at St Luke's the Physician, in
Bebington, was caught performing a sex act on an underage boy in the diocesan
house where he lived.
The 55-year-old pleaded guilty to 10 counts of sexual activity with
a child. At yesterday’s sentencing hearing he was supported at Liverpool
Crown Court by more than a dozen parishioners and two priests.
Robert
Jansen, prosecuting, told the court a social gathering at the diocesan house,
in Church Road, Bebington, was winding down when Hooper was caught out.
He said:
"There was a gentleman called Matthew Howard, who at the time was living
at this defendant's address, and had been for some years.
"As
the social gathering was coming to an end...Mr Howard had cause to walk past
the kitchen window and look inside.”
The
lawyer said Mr Howard saw the boy and the priest perform a sex act on
each other.
Mr Jansen said Hooper was arrested and admitted carrying out sex acts on the
boy though he said they did not have full sex – this was accepted.
The boy,
who cannot be named, was interviewed and said he met Hooper through a band he
was in made up entirely of priests.
The pair
grew close after he told Hooper, a trained counsellor, about problems he
was facing in his life.
He said
at one stage he went to hug the priest who then kissed him on the cheek and
then moved to kiss him on the mouth.
The
sexual contact followed in the boy's family home and then later at the diocese
house.
Judge
David Aubrey QC said: "You have betrayed your religion, you have betrayed
your church, you have betrayed your parishioners.
"More
significantly you have betrayed your victim who was just 14 and 15 years of age
and vulnerable and in truth he was in your care while in your home and you were
in his.
"You
have also betrayed his mother. They are both devout Roman Catholics who are now
in consequence of that which you have done challenging the church.
"In
my judgement you have an unhealthy interest in adolescent boys as this case has
demonstrated.
"You
have failed in your responsibilities and duties as a Catholic priest. You have
abused and failed everybody who has placed their trust in you.
"You
knew when you crossed the boundary. You wished to cross the boundary. Your
actions were a gross breach of trust.
"You
have fallen from grace and lost your ministry. The offences are so serious that
only an immediate custodial sentence is justified for them."
He jailed Hooper for five years – of which he must serve half less 37 days
spent on remand.
Judge Aubrey ordered him to sign on the sex offenders register, made a sexual
offences prevention order and banned him from working with children.
Bespectacled Hooper, wearing a red polo shirt and grey jumper, signalled to
supporters as he was taken to jail.
After the sentencing The Rt Rev. Mark Davies, Bishop of Shrewsbury, said: “I
wish to express today both the sorrow and the horror felt within the Catholic
community at these offences and the betrayal of trust involved.
“There can be no place in the priesthood for those who harm the young.”
Hooper was appointed priest at St Luke’s in 2006 after leaving St Werburgh’s,
in Chester.
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