The circumstances and motivation for young men to admit homosexual contact, even coerced contact, is, I believe, far different than for other sex abuse accusations. I have no stats, but I suspect that false accusations in such cases are very rare. Here, there are unrelated occurances reported by two men for the same priest.
Well, actually, they do occur. I’ve seen a case in which a “victim” testified very clearly that he had been abused by a particular member of the clergy several times a week for several years; yet, looking at the church records, the clergyman had been transferred across the country shortly after that years-long period began. So the alleged victim clearly was not telling the truth. Couple that with the fact that he said he forgot about the abuse until after he saw news stories about the lawsuits, and you tend to draw an ugly conclusion.
And, of course, once one person has made a public accusation, more are likely to follow.
And, please: a four-figure settlement? That’s $9,999, tops. The average settlement for sexual abuse cases is a million dollars or more; $9,999 wouldn’t even begin to pay the attorneys’ fees for
investigating the case, let alone litigating it. That is clearly a nuisance settlement – and I wouldn’t be surprised to hear that the diocese paid it, not the priest.
All that being said, I see your point about not being legalistic (after all, that’s what got the Pharisees in trouble

), but think about this: after 20 years or more of service, the priest is entitled to some expectation of being protected. We can’t just kick out every priest
accused of wrongdoing (if that were the policy, the athiests would simply accuse every priest; then what would we do?), and in Christian charity we owe it to both sides to treat them the way Christ would (this is why the Church always asks us to pray for the condemned murderer
and his victim, and
both their families). We can’t prove that he committed the acts he’s accused of committing, so we can’t defrock him. That doesn’t mean he’s entitled to be a chaplain at a summer camp, either; it just means that the bishop will find something for him to do that (I’m guessing) won’t involve children (from the article: He appealed his suspension as a priest – i.e., not his removal from teaching – and “His next assignment is under study by the Priest Personnel Board of the archdiocese”).