A retired priest who continued to assist in services at a Catholic
church in Farmington was put on administrative leave Friday after
allegations of sexual misconduct with minors prior to becoming a priest,
the Archdiocese of Detroit announced Sunday.
The Rev. Loren
O'Dea, 83, of Waterford retired in 1997, but he continued to assist at
Our Lady of Sorrows and was on the church's mass schedule until Friday,
said Ned McGrath, spokesman for the archdiocese.
O'Dea could not immediately be reached for comment Sunday night.
While on leave, O'Dea can't say mass in public and can't wear a clerical collar, McGrath said.
O'Dea
was ordained in 1993; the allegations of misconduct date to before that
time, McGrath said.
The allegations were for misconduct in Oakland
County, so they have been turned over to the Oakland County Prosecutor's
Office, he said.
O'Dea did not become a priest until he was in
his mid-60s, according to an archdiocese news release. He received
seminary training as a young man but, for unknown reasons, became a
social worker for three decades, "and then he felt the tug again to
become a priest," McGrath said.
The archdiocese received the
complaints in recent weeks, and they were found to be "of sufficient
substance" to ban O'Dea from performing priestly duties in public, he
said.
"If some guy calls and says he was abused and we think it's
credible, we put this person on a leave of absence until everything is
sorted out," McGrath said.
Neither of the two complaints against O'Dea
came from parishioners at Our Lady of Sorrows.
"It didn't happen
there, or at least, the allegations are that it didn't happen there. I
believe he was very well appreciated at that parish," McGrath said.