Print

Philadelphia priest faces embezzlement charges for $500,000

Monsignor William A. Dombrow, a priest of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, faces federal charges of embezzling more than $500,000. He allegedly siphoned off funds intended for care of retired archdiocesan priests, who are credibly accused of sexual abuse of minors, at Villa St. Joseph where he served as the rector.

Catholic News Service/April 8, 2017

By Matthew Gambino

Philadelphia -- A priest of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia responsible for a retirement home for priests faces federal charges of embezzling more than $535,000 from that same home.

Monsignor William A. Dombrow, 77, was charged by the U.S. District Attorney’s Office in Philadelphia April 5 with four counts of wire fraud in a scheme he is alleged to have devised to siphon off funds intended for care of retired archdiocesan priests at Villa St. Joseph, Darby, where he has served as the rector since 2005.

Catholic Human Services of the archdiocese operates the nursing care and residence for retired and ill priests.

The U.S. district attorney alleges that Dombrow set up an account at Sharon Savings Bank in Darby unbeknownst to the archdiocese, directed money from the estates of retired or deceased priests as well as bequests of lay donors to Villa St. Joseph, and transferred money electronically for his personal use.

The scheme is alleged to have begun in December 2007 and continued through May 2016. The district attorney charges the priest “had sole access” to the bank account, “which was funded by gifts from wills and life insurance proceeds that were intended for the archdiocese.”

The federal charges detail four transactions allegedly directed by Dombrow: a $10,000 check paid from a separate bank in 2013; a $25,000 check paid from an individual’s estate in 2014; a $14,410 check paid from the estate of Father Francis Rogers, a deceased priest, in 2015; and a $10,000 check from a life insurance firm in March 2016.

Rogers, named in the 2005 Philadelphia grand jury report on child sexual abuse by clergy, died in February 2015 after residing at Villa St. Joseph since 1998. For 12 years, he lived under its Prayer and Penance program.

Developed by the Philadelphia Archdiocese in response to the clergy abuse scandal, the program is designed to house archdiocesan priests, stripped of ministerial faculties, who have been found credibly accused of sexual abuse of minors.

In a statement April 6, the Philadelphia Archdiocese said Sharon Savings Bank alerted the archdiocese last summer to “irregularities” about an account connected to the Villa.

“Upon review of information supplied by the bank, this account was immediately frozen,” said archdiocesan spokesman Ken Gavin. “At that time, the matter was referred to law enforcement by the archdiocese and Msgr. William Dombrow’s priestly faculties as well as his administrative responsibilities were restricted. Throughout the investigation, the archdiocese has cooperated fully with law enforcement.”

The FBI and the Darby Police Department cooperated in the investigation into the priest’s alleged actions.

The District Attorney’s Office expects Dombrow to plead guilty to the charges by the end of April. If convicted on all charges, he faces a maximum of 80 years in jail plus fines, and three years of supervised release.

Dombrow was ordained in 1970 for the archdiocese. He has served as pastor and parochial vicar at several archdiocesan parishes, chairman of the Archdiocesan Priests’ Committee on Alcoholism and director of the Matt Talbot-Emmaus Institute in Philadelphia, a former program of the archdiocese.

In a similar case, the Diocese of Manchester in New Hampshire on Friday announced Pope Francis had dismissed  Msgr. Edward J. Arsenault  from the clerical state, meaning he has “no faculties to act, function, or present himself as a priest.”

In 2014, Arsenault plead guilty to charges of embezzling  money from the diocese and Catholic Medical Center, a hospital in New Hampshire. He also stole money from the estate of a deceased priest of the diocese.

To see more documents/articles regarding this group/organization/subject click here.

Disclaimer