Lahey also faces canonical penalties now that the court has reached a verdict. These could include “defrocking” or dismissal from the clerical state.
The former bishop of Antigonish was charged after a Canadian Border Services agent flagged him for an inspection upon his return to Canada aboard an overseas flight in September 2009.
Lahey resigned his See shortly before he was formally charged in early October 2009. He had only a few weeks previously negotiated a $15-million settlement with abuse victims in his diocese, one that was hailed as especially sensitive because it would not force them to testify in court.
Investigators found 588 images and 60 videos depicting sexual acts involving minor boys on the bishop’s laptop and other electronic devices. They also found stories, one as long as 300 pages, on themes of humiliation, degradation, slavery and torture of young boys.
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