My story in today's editions of the paper give another twist to the Gerald Robinson saga. His appeals attorneys' efforts to implicate the late Father Jerome Swiatecki are not new, but getting a nun to say that Swiatecki kept hard-core porn in his apartment, had a large knife collection, and had a very bad temper really ramped things up.
You can read the story online here, or keep reading this blog entry with the story below.
A couple of interesting things did not make it into the article because of a combination of space and time constraints and a few judgment calls.
First: the court petition includes a letter from Dave Davison, the former Toledo policeman who was the first to arrive at the murder scene in 1980, saying that the hospital's security chief, Robert Shaw, should be looked at as the possible killer because he had access to all areas of the hospital, had "big hands," and arrived quickly at the murder scene.
Second: Father Swiatecki was a recovering alcoholic and taught AA classes, according to a diocesan press release on his retirement and the obituary published in the Blade in 1996.
Third: The motion was filed on a deadline but is not going to be pursued further until the appeals court rules on Robinson's case. No sense putting a lot of time into this motion if it will be moot.
Here's a copy of the article... -- David
Attorneys file to free priest charged with nun's murder
Petition hints deceased cleric had role in her killing
By DAVID YONKE
BLADE STAFF WRITER
Attorneys for Gerald Robinson have filed a court petition seeking to overturn the Toledo priest's 2006 murder conviction and raising suspicions about another Catholic cleric, now deceased, who worked with Robinson as a chaplain at the hospital where the crime occurred in 1980.
The petition, filed in Lucas County Common Pleas Court, quotes Sister Dorothy Marie Balabuch, a Sylvania Franciscan nun, as saying she worked as a housekeeper for the Rev. Jerome Swiatecki and described the priest as an "immoral man" with "a very bad temper" and a fondness for knives and "hard-core pornography."
The court document also quotes a security guard, hired two days after the murder at the former Mercy Hospital, saying that "in my youthful zeal and my desire to catch the perpetrator, I accused Father Swiatecki" of murdering Sister Margaret Ann Pahl.
David Cone said the priest replied, "So what if I did? Who do you think you are? Look around you. You are a nobody. Nobody is going to believe you."
Father Swiatecki, a Toledo native whose hobby was wood carving, was ordained a priest in 1941 and died in 1996 at age 83.
Sally Oberski, a spokesman for the diocese, said yesterday all other priests ordained in Toledo in 1941 are deceased, and she did not know any clerics who were friends with Father Swiatecki. Therefore, she said no one could comment about him.
Retired Deputy Chief Ray
Vetter said he recalls Father Swiatecki as having had "an airtight alibi." Police reports from 1980 said Father Swiatecki was eating breakfast with several nuns in the hospital's dining room at the time of the murder.
Robinson, now 69, was found guilty May 11, 2006, and is serving a 15-years-to-life sentence at Hocking Correctional Facility in southern Ohio.
Sister Margaret Ann, 71, had been strangled to the verge of death, then stabbed 31 times in the sacristy of the Catholic hospital on Holy Saturday, 1980.
Her body was found with her undergarments pulled down around an ankle and her habit pulled up to her chest.
John Donahue, who with attorney Richard Kerger is handling Robinson's appeal, said yesterday the documents attached to the 60-page petition are "very new."
Filed this month and assigned to Judge Gene Zmuda, the document claims Robinson's four-person defense team failed to do its job properly during the three-week murder trial in April and May, 2006, and Robinson's attorneys overlooked, ignored, or were denied key evidence that would have exonerated him.
They said Sister Dorothy Marie had twice called the office of John Thebes, one of Robinson's attorneys, before the 2006 trial began saying she had important information related to case, but Mr. Thebes never returned her call.
Mr. Cone said in the filing he met with Mr. Thebes and Robinson's three other attorneys - Alan Konop, Nicole Khoury, and John Callahan - before the trial but was never called to testify.
Mr. Konop and Mr. Thebes both said they had no comment because the appeal and petition are pending in the case.
Dean Mandros, chief of the criminal division of the Lucas County prosecutor's office, said his office will file "a timely response," and "much of what they've raised is identical to issues raised on their direct appeal."
He added, "We still remain confident in the jury's verdict."
Mr. Donahue and Mr. Kerger in August appealed the case to Ohio's 6th District Court of Appeals.
The state filed its response in December and Mr. Donahue said he hopes the appellate court will issue a ruling by late spring.
In addition to suggesting that Father Swiatecki may have killed Sister Margaret Ann Pahl, the latest filing asserts that the state withheld key evidence from Robinson's defense team.
It includes, for example, copies of police reports from 1980 in which several witnesses said they saw a "mysterious black male" in the hospital's hallways on the morning of the murder.
The documents were not among the 410 pieces of paper given to Robinson's defense team by the state, Mr. Donahue said, and he questioned why they were a part of the initial 1980 investigation but not available for the defense in 2004.
"These reports had to be in the possession of the State of Ohio," he said. "They had to have had them, the question is whether they had them in 2004. … Why they weren't disclosed, I don't know."
The petition also claims many important witnesses who could have testified on Robinson's behalf died in the 24 years between the murder and the priest's indictment, thus denying Robinson a fair trial.
One such deceased witness was Dr. Renate Fazekas, former Lucas County forensic pathologist who performed the autopsy on Sister Margaret Ann on April 5, 1980, and said the nun likely had been strangled by a man with "large hands."
During the trial, Father Swiatecki was described as having been about 6 feet tall and 250 pounds, while Robinson was described as 5 feet, 7 inches and 160 pounds in 1980.
Mr. Donahue twice has requested and been denied motions for Robinson to be released from prison on bond, pending the outcome of his appeal.
Though he had not seen his client in a couple of months, Mr. Donahue said Robinson was "apparently" doing well. He said the priest, who was hospitalized for two weeks in December, 2006, for unspecified kidney ailments, had undergone surgery and is recovered from the illness.
"All things considered, my information is that he is in good health and he's also in good spirits," Mr. Donahue said. "He's a very religious man. He doesn't question God's will."
Blade staff writer Erica Blake contributed to this report.
* * *
Toledo, Ohio
January 16, 2008
Comments (1)
"Sally Oberski, a spokesman for the diocese, said yesterday all other priests ordained in Toledo in 1941 are deceased, and she did not know any clerics who were friends with Father Swiatecki. Therefore, she said no one could comment about him."
Ms. Oberski's comments are almost laughable. It's a big leap of logic to say that 'only' those ordained with Fr. Swiatecki could speak intelligently about him or his disposition.
Fr. Swiatecki passed in 1996, surely someone (religious or secular) has insight into his disposition, don't they?
I write, 'almost laughable' because the stakes are too high to be funny. Ms. Oberski's comments are one more in a long line of desparate comments by Toledo Catholic Diocesan officials that is desperate to distance themselves as an organization from the core issues of this case which I believe are centered around:
THE COVER-UP OF THE MURDER AND THE ROLE OF DIOCESAN OFFICALS IN PROVIDING COVER FOR A MURDERER THEN AND DURING THE ROBINSON INVESTIGATION.
By why wouldn't Ms. Oberski or the Bishop feel emboldened to make such ridiculous statements and pin the murder of Sr. Margaret Ann on a deceased cleric who even the former Deputy Chief concedes had an 'air-tight' alibi?
Because to date, not one Diocesan official or their pricey lawyers have ever been held accountable in a court of law for their role in covering up the murder of Sr. Pahl.
My heart aches for the family of Sr. Margaret Ann. Aren't they still owed explanations by the diocese for why their loved one was so seemingly expendable? Why weren't diocesan officals (then and now) doing everything they could to bring Sr. Pahl justice? Why was her life less important than those who diocesan officials sought to provide cover for?
Maybe Bishop Blair could just simply answer, why in 2004, in the Toledo Catholic Chronicle's May 7th edition on page 5, the diocese loosely implicates Fr. Swiatecki in the murder for Sr. Pahl? Was it to get an early start on swaying public opinion? Was it to put distance between the diocesan officals who hid this case from police and prosecutors for 6 months despite a 'special prosecutor' agreement signed a year earlier that pledged openess, honesty and transparency?
(Editor's Note: Claudia Vercellotti heads the Toledo chapter of SNAP -- Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests)
Posted by Claudia Vercellotti | January 17, 2008 3:20 AM
Posted on January 17, 2008 03:20