http://www.newhousenews.com/archive/ewinger041606.html

Priest's Trial in Death of Nun to Include Talk of Dark
Elements

BY JAMES EWINGER
 
TOLEDO, Ohio -- There are no little murders. But
Gerald Robinson is about to go on trial in Toledo for
one that is unusually large, judging by the interest.

He is a Roman Catholic priest. The victim, Sister
Margaret Ann Pahl, was a nun, and the slaying occurred
more than 20 years ago, in the chapel of a hospital
where they worked.

The crime is anchored to Easter Sunday -- the most
sacred, defining day in Christendom. It occurred on
Holy Saturday 1980, the day before Easter and what
would have been the nun's 72nd birthday.

Robinson's murder trial begins Monday, the day after
Easter 2006, when a Lucas County Common Pleas judge
begins empaneling a jury under the glare of national
-- and quite possibly international -- media
attention.

And why wouldn't the media descend?

There are intimations of a ritual killing, satanic
cults, organized sexual abuse and an institutional
cover-up.

Someone strangled and stabbed Pahl at least 30 times
-- the wounds defining an inverted cross. Some of her
clothes were pulled off, suggesting a sexual assault.

The allegations of dark rituals have aroused interest,
and antagonism as well.

"That's just a ... smokescreen," said Dave Davison, a
retired Toledo police officer who was the first to see
the body.

It is one of the few points of agreement between
Davison and retired Deputy Chief Ray Vetter, who was
in charge of detectives at the time.

Davison accuses the city's heavily Roman Catholic
police department of colluding with the diocese.

Robinson was a suspect from the beginning -- probably
the only other point on which the two former cops
agree.

"This officer (Davison), he's come up with an awful
lot of outlandish stuff," Vetter said in a telephone
interview. He agreed there were no signs of any ritual
and that Robinson emerged as the main suspect.

The suspect list narrowed down to Robinson "because we
didn't have anyone else," and because of his close
association with the dead nun, Vetter said. Deception
by the priest also heightened suspicion.

But the case was weak, Vetter said, and officials
didn't want to go to trial and risk an acquittal that
would bar any later prosecution.

The evidence -- and the allegations about rituals --
surfaced only a few years ago, when one woman pressed
complaints about her own sexual abuse onto a diocese
that many think did not want to hear, believe or act
on them.

She identified Robinson as one of her abusers, when
she was a child, and her claims ran to satanic rituals
that involved at least one other Toledo-area priest.

Note that word "ritual," because it is a refrain in
this case, sounded by many voices.

Another Toledo woman and her husband filed suit last
year against the Toledo diocese, alleging the same
kind of abuse and satanic rites.

Catherine Hoolahan is a lawyer representing about two
dozen people, half with lawsuits against the diocese
and the rest pressing their claims through a mediation
process.

Hoolahan had doubts about the satanic and ritual abuse
until three people with no connection were saying
roughly the same things. Two were her clients, and
both linked Robinson to ritualized abuse.

The Rev. Jeffrey Grob is associate vicar for canonical
services with the Chicago Archdiocese. He has been
called as an expert witness in Robinson's trial and is
expected to testify about the significance of ritual
in the case.

Grob, contacted by telephone, would not disclose his
knowledge of the case, except to say that "some kind
of ritual took place." He said that in general, the
possibility of satanic ritual is not far-fetched, even
where priests are involved.

"A priest is just as susceptible as anyone else," Grob
said. "In some ways more susceptible." There is the
allure of power, and "if anyone believes in God, there
is a firm presumption they also believe in the
demonic."

The other component in the Robinson case is the
possibility of an official cover-up in one form or
another.

There has been testimony and extensive reporting about
how the Toledo Police Department had people to whom
the diocese could turn when priests were acting
inappropriately. The goal was to handle the situation
away from public scrutiny, possibly to spare the
reputation of the church.

A spokeswoman for the Toledo diocese said Monday that
officials would not comment about the Robinson case.
The general public posture has been that the diocese
has worked to end abuse and to cooperate with outside
investigations.

But police came to believe that the diocese was less
than honest because it held back documents that were
discovered only after two searches of church offices.

The Rev. Stephen Stanberry, a priest in the Toledo
diocese who has been critical of its conduct in the
abuse scandal, said he asked Bishop Leonard Blair why
he did not give police all the documents they sought.
"He said, in front of a roomful of priests, that `we
gave them what they asked for."'

April 14, 2006

Gargoyle's Occult Services - http://www.angelfire.com/goth/drgargoyle

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