At least two priests actively serving Catholic parishes in the East Bay are among hundreds of Bay Area clergy being accused of abusing children in a flood of recent lawsuits.
Tim Stier, the former Oakland priest who was on the bankruptcy call last week, said that “having worked with Fr. Mockel for many years as a priest of the Diocese, and having had no negative opinion of him, I’m very disappointed to hear that he’s accused.
” But he believes accused priests still in ministry, including Mockel, should be sidelined while their lawsuits play out in court.“I categorically deny any allegations of abuse,” Mockel wrote in the statement. “I have never abused anyone in any way at any time. I have never been involved in any disciplinary action, criminal case, or civil matter and have never been accused of assault or any such wrongdoing in my lifetime. I am deeply saddened and distressed by this maligning of my name and reputation.” Oakland Bishop Michael Barber said in a statement he directed a former federal prosecutor to conduct an internal investigation, which found the allegations against Mockel “were not credible.”The civil case accusing Mockel is one of more than 350 lawsuits that drove the Oakland diocese into bankruptcy in May. The legal filings are the result of California’s 2019 Child Victims Act, which temporarily tossed out the statute of limitations on child sexual abuse claims in civil court for a three-year period between 2020 and 2022. The revelation about the Diocese's two active priests comes amid efforts by its attorneys to seal the names of accused clergy during the ongoing bankruptcy proceedings. The attorneys argue the priests are entitled to confidentiality during that legal process to protect them from scandal and harassment. NBC Bay Area’s investigation into the new accusations has already unearthed the names of hundreds of accused Bay Area priests during a multi-year review of state court filings. Many face sexual abuse claims for the very first time. Plaintiff’s attorneys argued in bankruptcy court the identities of accused priests that have already been revealed in previous state court legal filings should remain in the public realm, which helps potential victims come forward. “There are so many people that haven’t even come to terms with their abuse,” said attorney Sandra Ribera Speed. “Practice what you preach. Do the right thing. Do the right thing for these victims.” Ribera Speed represents a plaintiff suing the church under the pseudonym John Doe, who filed a 2021 lawsuit accusing now-deceased Monsignor John McCracken of abusing him as a child. “He would have me come into his office and tell me that I’ve been a very good boy,” Doe said. “And then that turned into taking my clothes off. And then that turned into him having his way with me in every way he wanted to.” He was the first person to file a lawsuit publicly accusing McCracken, one of the East Bay’s longest-serving priests before his death in 2012. Since NBC Bay Area first reported on the allegations, court records show three more plaintiffs have come forward with lawsuits accusing the priest of abuse. Their cases remain pending as well. “I’m very moved and encouraged by [the new lawsuits] because I really felt like I was alone on an island,” Doe said. Attorneys for the Diocese are expected to file a motion next month in the bankruptcy case specifying which names of accused clergy they want sealed and why they believe those priests are entitled to confidentiality.
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