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| The accused priest, Arthur Perrault, had been on the run for 25 years, mainly in Morocco, according to federal authorities (AFP Photo/SEBASTIEN BOZON) |
Los Angeles (AFP) - A Catholic priest on the run for more than 25 years has been arrested in Morocco and extradited to the United States to face charges that he sexually assaulted a young boy in the 1990s, federal prosecutors in New Mexico said Friday.
Arthur
Perrault, now 80 years old, stands accused of aggravated sexual abuse of a
minor under the age of 12 on several occasions in 1991 and 1992, while he
served as a military chaplain at Kirtland Air Force base outside Albuquerque.
The boy was
assaulted both at the base and at Santa Fe National Cemetery, US prosecutor
John Anderson told reporters.
"The
indictment alleges a profound breach of trust by an individual who was widely
perceived as a mentor to young people and a respected figure in the community,"
Anderson said in a statement handed out by the Justice Department.
The priest
vanished in 1992, shortly before lawsuits were filed against the Archdiocese of
Santa Fe over Perrault's alleged abuse of seven children in his parish,
Anderson said.
According
to investigators, Perrault first fled to Canada and then Morocco, where the
Federal Bureau of Investigation agents eventually tracked him down last year.
He was arrested in October 2017.
If
convicted of the charges covered in the indictment, unsealed on Friday,
Perrault could face up to life in prison.
Local media
reported that Perrault had worked as an English teacher in Morocco, notably at
the American Language Center in Tangier.
Anderson
said he was extradited to the United States on Thursday.
"Perrault
will finally appear in an American courtroom to answer for the charges against
him," said FBI special agent James Langenberg, who is in charge of the
investigation. He thanked Morocco for its cooperation.
"But
this case is not over. The FBI is seeking information from individuals who may
have additional information about Perrault's contacts with minors over the
years," Langenberg added.
Authorities
are concerned that the priest, who worked in New Mexico from 1973 to 1992, may
have abused many others.
The
indictment is the latest development in the roiling abuse scandal that has
rocked the Catholic Church, with shocking revelations of endemic abuse in
Australia, Chile and the United States.

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