Andy, two things:
- OK. How do you or your friend know that the further investigation WASN’T done?
Exactly. If someone sends you a letter asking for clarification because of a policy you adopted, then the oness is on you to clarify him has a matter of form and respect, he being a member. You may decide not to, but then it becomes a matter of your personal conscience
for you, and it has nothing to do
with him.
- What is the purpose of the further investigation?
I assume you mean a further analysis of his criminal record by the diocese or parish. It allows for possible suitability in spite of his record. It determines if his case is pertinent to the risk. For instance: If a case shows he was charged with white collar theft of falsifying a cheque, then it is obvious that doesn’t involve children or even violence of any kind.
So if your friend wasn’t sentenced to jail, but something else, that would be apparent from the record and already taken into consideration.
Exactly. This is what I find puzzling with arguments here so far. The obvious question shouts out at us. “If he’s a danger to society, what is he doing on the street.?” We can safely surmise that the magistrate found him not to be at risk to anyone. Of course he has a record, but that instrument was meant for informational purposes of law enforcement to gauge the conduct of a person who has paid his debt to society, not a sentence of it’s own has God sees it and instructed us in Mathew. Has catholics we are not allowed to approve of perpetual sentencing outside of what the court found appropriate.
The magistrate represents the people, the Church, priests,Popes,everyone. The magistrate deems him safe, so he fines him rather than jails him. The issue is no longer with the offender, that has already been satisfied in due process by your reps. If anyone takes offence with this guy being out, they need to take it up with the judicial system.
Restrictions are sentences, because he would not have a restriction if there were no crime. We can clearly verify the cause and the effect. All restrictions need to be across the table and decreed in a trial at sentencing.
People have the democratic system to make changes they disagree with and to implement the desire to lock every offender forever.
Especially in regard crimes against children, the mere fact that they were convicted of that particular crime would be more than enough to disqualify them. No further information is required, and none would be helpful.
The parish is not interested to determine if that is the case by having a sit down with him to discuss it.
Put it this way - a requirement of being President of the US is that you be 35 years old. Let’s assume somewhere
How about this one. Assume that the presidency permitted no more than one minor crime. A document is required to record this information. It comes into existance only when there is a crime. Now we can see that psychologically the document itself is an identifier, a stigma of sorts. It becomes the red/green light at a traffic stop.
Perhaps congress adopts a policy where anyone with a document is not accepted. Then we cannot determine this candidates potential for presidency based on the seriousness and number of crimes. The candidate would probably want to know why the conflicting legislation.
In the subject’s case here, none can get over he has a document(record), and his light will always be red. At least in the priest’s opinion, the result is that it negates the detailed screening policy of the diocese. For him all cases have a red light.
If no doubt, that is,
further scrutiny of his case determines he has child issues, sure, drop him. But at the initial level where we find something is there, this is not justified.
See, a policy of further investigation means that investigation only needs to be done to the point where eligibility or ineligibility is proven, and need not be done beyond.
Not in this case, the priest is to have a meeting with the candidate to clarify details of the conviction.
Thoughtful post, thanks.!

Sorry if it takes me forever to say something.
Andy