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Man says he shot priest he accused of abuse

Maurice Blackwell
Maurice Blackwell  


BALTIMORE, Maryland (CNN) -- Dontee Stokes, who police say has confessed to shooting and seriously wounding Baltimore priest Maurice Blackwell on Monday, went to seek an apology from Blackwell for allegedly molesting him and shot the cleric only after he was "brushed off and laughed at," Stokes' mother said Tuesday.

In an interview with CNN, Tamara Stokes also said her son, who alleged that Blackwell sexually abused him when he was a teen-ager in the early 1990s, had become increasingly agitated by news coverage of the sexual abuse scandal in the Roman Catholic Church.

"He would get very upset, and he would sometimes get out of control," she said. "He was definitely in a different state of mind."

After the shooting, Dontee Stokes, now 26, went to another church, pastored by the Rev. Russell Johnson. He came down to the altar, began to cry and asked for a private meeting to confess his sins, Johnson told CNN.

At that point, Stokes volunteered to go to police and tell them that he had shot Blackwell, Johnson said.

"He was very calm. He was very well within his mind," Johnson said. "He valiantly and courageously said, 'I must give an account for what I have done.'"

CNN NewsPass VIDEO
A Roman Catholic priest was shot by a man who claims the clergyman molested him when he was a teen-ager. CNN's Jeanne Meserve reports (May 15)

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EXTRA INFORMATION
Read the charges: Maryland v. Stokes (FindLaw) (PDF)
 

Police said Stokes confessed to the shooting, which left Blackwell in serious condition at the University of Maryland Shock Trauma Center. A police report said he was shot in his hand and hip.

Although still a priest, Blackwell was removed from his parish assignment in 1998 and suspended because of a separate allegation of abuse from another alleged victim, a minor, according to a spokesman for the Archdiocese of Baltimore.

Cardinal William Keeler, the archbishop of Baltimore, described himself as "appalled" by the shooting and offered his prayers for both Blackwell and Stokes.

"I think it is a tragedy that another episode of violence has occurred in our city. We have too much of that tragedy, and we have too much violence in our world today," he said.

Police gave the following account of the shooting:

While in a car on his way to his girlfriend's home, Stokes said, he drove past Blackwell on the street. He drove back in front of the priest's home and tried to talk to him, but Blackwell refused.

At that point, Stokes -- who had accused Blackwell of molesting him several years ago -- told police he didn't "know what came over him" and he fired three shots at the priest before fleeing the scene.

Stokes
Stokes, in this undated family photo, turned himself in to Baltimore police Monday.  

The shooting happened at about 6 p.m., and Stokes turned himself in several hours later. He also led detectives to where he had placed the weapon, a .357-caliber Magnum handgun, and ammunition.

Stokes was charged with attempted murder, assault in the first and second degrees, and several handgun violations. Police said that Stokes has no prior criminal record with Baltimore police.

The shooting resurrected allegations from 1993 that Blackwell had molested Stokes over a three-year period while Stokes attended Bible study classes at St. Edward's Catholic Church, where he led a youth group.

Investigations into those charges by both police and church officials proved inconclusive, according to Ray Kempisty, a spokesman for the archdiocese. Kempisty did not say publicly that Stokes was the alleged victim in that 1993 investigation, but a police source confirmed that was the case.

Blackwell was allowed to return to his parish duties after the 1993 investigation and after he received mental health treatment, Kempisty said.

Tamara Stokes said that after Blackwell was allowed to return to the church, she personally confronted parishioners at St. Edward's who were supporting him.

"I confronted the parishioners and said, 'This church does not need this priest back in here. People need to look at the facts. People need to come forward,'" she said.

Blackwell was removed from his post in 1998 after a new accusation of "inappropriate activity" with a minor, Kempisty said. That accusation was determined to be "credible" by church officials, although the police investigation did not lead to any criminal charges.

Kempisty rejected suggestions that the archdiocese had improperly handled the investigations of Blackwell. He pointed out that under Maryland law, allegations of child abuse by church officials must be reported to civil authorities, and in both cases they were.

The archdiocese and the Catholic Church (are) saddened as we would be with any act of violence," he said. "Violence is not the proper response to any situation."

There are approximately 1.5 million Catholics in the Archdiocese of Baltimore, which includes the city and nine Maryland counties.

Blackwell was ordained as a priest in 1974.



 
 
 
 







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