The Binge Cases: Scary Terri - Fake Priest | 9. How To Get Away With Fraud
Episode Date: October 8, 2020Until now, Father Ryan has mostly escaped punishment for stealing money from followers under false pretenses. What would it take for him to face a jury of his peers? A Neon Hum Media and Sony Music... Entertainment production. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts to binge all episodes now or listen weekly wherever you get your podcasts. Find more great podcasts from Sony Music Entertainment at sonymusic.com/podcasts Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Father Ryan is under the spotlight. Literally, my spotlight. We've been talking in this conference
room for over an hour now. I brought microphones to our interview, of course, but I also brought
my camera and studio lights. I knew Ryan would like that. He clearly came to perform.
Ryan's freshly cut white hair
makes him look like he's in his 60s,
which falls in line with the two birthdays
I'd found for him.
He set a black plastic storage bin
on a small table next to him.
Files and papers stuck out of it.
Inside, he claimed to have proof of his priesthood.
I have no idea what that could be.
That's one of the things I've been trying to sort out since I began investigating him.
Two years in, I was confident he's not a priest.
At least, not ordained the way he claims to be.
I decided not to immediately go after Ryan with what I'd found.
Instead, I wanted to see what he'd do, see the so-called proof.
This would be my moment to hear Ryan's pitch to his followers.
Let him try to convince me.
Then I'd get to my questions, things I'd wondered about
for years. What does he have to say to his victims? After being caught so many times,
why continue to insist he's done nothing wrong? In this final episode, we'll hear his answers.
episode, we'll hear his answers. From Neon Hum Media, I'm Alex Schumann, and this is Smokescreen,
Fake Priest. The apprehension and hesitation he had at the start of the interview was gone.
Ryan had already told me about his abuse and shared deeply personal things.
It's at this point I ask him about getting ordained. So you were ordained to be a priest in Benedictine order, St. Benedict.
And that, what form of Catholic Church?
Traditional.
Traditional.
Yes.
So it's not the Vatican.
It's the other one.
Pre-Vatican.
It's the pre-Vatican Church.
Okay.
Ryan is at least not pretending to be part of the mainstream Catholic Church.
But then he says the fact he's ordained has already been proven.
Because it was verified through Father Kuntz and Cardinal Gagnon.
Both those people are dead, so there's no way for me to ask them.
Convenient.
But Ryan still has more to say on this subject.
I want to just take a minute here.
He puts on a pair of glasses.
Absolutely.
Because my priesthood has been questioned.
Ryan then pulls an enormous black book out of the bin he brought with him to the interview.
He's got an orange post-it note marking a specific spot.
Canon Law.
Canon 1010.
Section 1.
Ryan's reading to me straight from this big book he brought.
Upon completion of ordination, the names of each of the ordained and of the minister of ordination shall be noted along with the place and day of ordination in a special book diligently maintained in the Curia, Rome,
of the place of ordination and of all the documents of each ordination
shall be accurately preserved.
He is actually reading canon law to me.
Those are the laws within the Catholic Church.
These are the rules Ryan claims to follow.
...be given an authentic certificate of this order received. church. These are the rules Ryan claims to follow. The gist of what he's saying is that once a
priest is ordained, they get a special certificate and it's stored in Rome.
A notation of the ordination can be made in a special book to be preserved in the archives.
He slams the book shut, sets it in the bin,
and picks up a certificate protected by a plastic frame.
I have my parchment from Rome,
signed by ecclesiastical authority.
It has the raised seal.
It's a larger certificate with the picture of Pope John Paul II on the front.
At first, I'm confused why the pope would be on the certificate.
I see the words ordination and the date on the bottom is 1993,
but it's all in this font that looks like it's pretending to be cursive,
sort of medieval. He then turns the certificate around and shows me the back.
Behind the Pope's picture on the original certificate, which this is,
in blue ink is stamped the library, book, volume, chapter, and page number where my ordination
is written and recorded in the Vatican. He's saying this is it. This certificate he's holding
up is the proof. And right there on the back are numbers that are supposed to indicate where it's
located in the Vatican. As he's pointing to the blue ink,
he leans to the side and grins. He wants me to be wowed.
So if you want to call me a liar and you want to call me a phony, then you're calling the church
because this was done under Vatican II rights. My reaction probably isn't what he wanted. And so what's
confusing about that for me is if you were, you had said that this was separate from the Pope
and that you were not a priest of that Catholic church, why would it have... Because at that time,
why would it be in the Vatican? Because at that time,
Because at that time, the split within the church hadn't really taken full effect.
Ryan wasn't making sense.
He claimed to be ordained in 1993.
That was almost 30 years after the split in the church he's talking about.
It hadn't taken effect yet?
And then, let's talk about this certificate he holds up. I'm interested in that blue ink on the back. Ryan challenged everyone to go ahead, look up his ordination in the Vatican
library. I would try to, later. But I also did something else. I googled it. You can too. The back read, Libraria Belardetti.
And then there was a long Italian word followed by 4-A-B-C, then some numbers, and then the city Roma.
This would totally look like it referenced some fancy Vatican Dewey decimal system to your average American.
fancy Vatican Dewey Decimal System to your average American.
But a quick search and anyone can see the number is actually the address of a bookstore.
The store is called Bellardetti Libreria.
It's a short 15-minute walk from the Vatican.
Ryan was using a souvenir from a bookstore
as his proof.
Later, I was so annoyed I didn't think to Google it when I was with Ryan in person.
But I also didn't think it'd be that easy to disprove.
Now, you heard how Ryan described the certificate.
He's making it sound like these are his ordination papers.
He moved his hands in front of them all fast, almost like these are his ordination papers.
He moved his hands in front of them all fast, almost like a magician doing a card trick.
But when you actually look at the front of where the Pope's picture is and really read it,
it's a fake blessing from Pope John Paul II celebrating the day Ryan was ordained.
Anyone can buy this souvenir. I read the form you fill out to get one.
You could have literally bought this thing whenever. But this is what he held up. Two years in and you'd think I couldn't be surprised by anything Ryan does anymore. But I am. The proof
is so flimsy and so brazen. But Ryan said he had one more piece of proof to show me.
That's my first ordination.
This document looks much more real.
The paper is browning with age, but it's from the American Catholic Church,
which I know kicked him out.
I'd seen his excommunication papers.
I emailed Ryan when I found out his certificate was a souvenir, but he never directly addressed it. He kept emailing me, though.
The closest he came to commenting was the day before the first episode of the podcast came out.
The trailer had been out for about two weeks. He didn't explicitly say he'd heard it,
but he started ranting in his email that the Catholic Church has won yet again. It's unclear
if he's accusing me of being in the pocket of the church or not. Ryan wrote,
I simply cannot compete with their money, power, and influence, and therefore,
I am simply a degraded loser. I have talked to and read the accounts of about a dozen of Ryan's victims. Most of them
didn't want to be part of this podcast. They were too embarrassed, too afraid to share their story, or wanted nothing to do with Father
Ryan anymore.
All of those people, every single one, told me they originally believed that he was an
ordained Catholic priest.
They all felt they were helping a man of God.
Instead, Father Ryan had robbed them of their trust.
He'd taken so much more than money.
Ryan had used things familiar to believers, like a Latin mass, to lure them in.
One of the old followers told me a monk who traveled with Ryan
admitted that he and Ryan would rehearse the sermon again and again
until Ryan had the Latin down perfect.
You cannot be sure his Latin's on the up and up if you can't read it.
If you can't read it yourself and hear what he says,
you know, the parts I could hear sounded all right.
Vitabar was someone dedicated enough to her faith to give Ryan's church a try.
Back when she and I went to the abbey where she lived in Pocahontas, Iowa,
I asked Vida how Ryan affected her.
Did living here and everything you went through with Father Ryan change your faith at all?
It didn't change my faith. It was just very disappointing. I mean, God is still God,
even if his people don't act the way they should. And some people aren't his people. For Vida, searching out people like
Ryan would become a mission. She'd been a paralegal, so the research wasn't hard. Ryan
wasn't the only fake she had her sights on, but he was the one who made her realize the best way
to serve her faith may not be as a nun.
Instead, she wanted to get people to look at the evidence,
to see these men and understand the damage they're doing.
She wanted Ryan to be exposed and caught in his lies.
That's why she was so excited when I said I was going to interview him.
You heard him read Cannon Law earlier.
He claims to be an expert. In the interview, it's actually this claim that leads him to make a mistake. He brags to me that he knows
so much more than Catholic bishops about canon law because he got a superior education.
I got a thousand times better education through my mentorship and tutoring that I would have gotten from any seminary.
Matter of fact, I was kicked out of seminary.
Ryan tries to backtrack, but he just admitted that he didn't finish seminary.
As he's speaking, it dawns on him he's made a mistake.
I didn't get kicked out, but I got kicked out of one class there.
Only because I questioned the priest who was teaching it
and what he was trying to shove down my throat that wasn't true.
Skipping the six to eight years of seminary
is not the only requirement of priesthood that Ryan disregarded.
Canon Law, of course, says a priest has to be celibate.
But one of his lawsuits mentioned
him having a companion so I asked about this too I have never hid the fact that I'm a gay priest
but see when you're a priest you're basically asexual has no meaning what your tendencies lead towards.
You're basically asexual.
And I can tell you, and I can look you straight in the eye,
not once did I ever, ever break my vow.
Ever?
Not while I was a priest, no.
And when did you stop being a priest?
I haven't stopped. You can never stop being a priest? I haven't stopped.
You can never stop being a priest.
Did you retire?
I retired.
And does that allow you to?
It gives me more freedom to do what I want, yes.
He is saying things left and right that I'm not sure he realizes
removes any shred of his credibility.
Hi, everyone.
This is Jonathan Van Ness.
Clean water, fresh air, our health. Electricity, honey. We tend to take for granted the things that matter most, like the separation of church and state. Americans United for Separation of
Church and State has been on the front lines defending your freedom to live and believe as
you choose, so long as you don't harm others.
Most folks don't see how church-state separation affects our daily lives until that freedom is
gone. The separation between church and state covers many core freedoms like civil rights for
LGBTQIA plus people, women, and racial slash religious minorities, or reproductive justice
and freedom. But those rights are not a given. Every day,
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protected for every American to enjoy and benefit from. They can't do this alone, though. Join
Americans United for separation of church and state and growing the movement because church
state separation protects everyone. Freedom without favor and equality without exception.
Learn more and get involved at au.org slash curious.
Hi everyone, this is Jonathan Van Ness.
Clean water, fresh air, our health.
Electricity, honey.
We tend to take for granted the things that matter most,
like the separation of church and state.
Americans United for Separation of Church and State
has been on the front lines defending your freedom
to live and believe as you choose,
so long as you don't harm others.
Most folks don't see how church-state separation
affects our daily lives until that freedom is gone.
The separation between church and state
covers many core freedoms,
like civil rights for LGBTQIA plus people,
women, and racial slash religious minorities,
or reproductive justice and freedom. But those rights are not a given. Every day,
Americans United works at the state and federal level to make sure these freedoms and more are
protected for every American to enjoy and benefit from. They can't do this alone, though. Join
Americans United for separation of church and state and growing the movement because church-state separation protects everyone. Freedom without favor and
equality without exception. Learn more and get involved at au.org slash curious.
I grew up in the Midwest. I too wanted to give Ryan the benefit of the doubt.
I assure you, I would have been just fine
making a podcast that uncovered
a massive Catholic conspiracy
against a whistleblowing priest.
I came into this just wanting to know what was real.
And now for me, that was done.
But his victims still had pain.
I wanted to make sure he knew.
What is unbelievable is that when I ask Ryan
about the people he's swindled and defrauded,
he pretends there are no victims.
He doesn't think he did anything wrong.
He's saying people like Fida Barr,
people like Sheila Anderson aren't really mad.
They're just saying that because the Catholic Church told them to.
So you feel that all these people are not actually angry.
You think that that is all the bishops calling these people
and telling them to be angry. Yes.
Does that seem elaborate? That seems like a lot. That seems very far fetched.
What do you mean? Because what would they do? What motivation would they have?
To stop the Abbey. Not the bishops. What motivation would the people that were part of your Abbey have?
I have no idea. I can't answer for them.
I'm sorry they feel that way. So you don't feel anything wrong with them? No, I don't.
I think everybody
that participated in the abbey did it with honorable intentions.
Now if somebody got hurt, I'm sorry. We all get hurt. That's our humanness.
But I don't blame any of them. He doesn't blame any of them. What a thing to say, to talk about humanness and be so cruel. But strangely, when he talked about one of his victims, Sheila Anderson,
who won a civil case against him, he only had nice things to say.
She was the most warm and loving and humble person, and I will say that straight to her face today.
I brought up the bankruptcies that helped him avoid repaying Sheila. Ryan tries to claim
the whole thing was a misunderstanding. He never really owed her money. The only reason that was
done is because we had an attorney that insisted we do it. Ryan also talked about John Brown and
his daughter Maria, the pair of investigators who'd done so much to help Ryan but were now
being sued by him.
Ryan claims John misled him while helping him win the settlement.
This lawsuit has been going on for years.
I'm hurt.
I trusted John.
We trusted John.
And I think that is no different than the rape.
And I think that is no different than the rape.
Because the betrayal and the violation.
Ryan just compared John, the guy who dropped more than $30,000 in a day to help him,
he just compared that guy to his abusers.
He seems genuinely hurt by what the Browns did, but he's not going to admit fault, ever.
I forgive John Brown.
I have to.
It doesn't mean I have to forget, because I won't.
I'm human.
I talked with John and Maria after the interview.
I couldn't see them, but you could feel the eye roll.
Ryan is who he is.
He's a thief, crook, liar.
He takes advantage of people.
They are still fighting Ryan in court.
I also asked Ryan about Vida Barr.
Vida Barr, what a weird,
you want to talk about a whack job?
She was a wacko.
Vida assumed Ryan might say these kinds of things.
It would be what I would expect from a con artist. might say these kinds of things. It would be the type of treatment I would expect. What Ryan didn't realize is he gave me the very thing Vida was after. Proof he's a fake.
There's now a recording of him saying that he did not get trained, that he does not follow
canon law, and the whole world can hear it. He's not an ordained Catholic priest,
but he is still a free man.
The authorities, they're just allowing Ryan
to continue to victimize, victimize, victimize people.
And all along, he pretends to be the victim.
One of the things that caught my attention
early on about Ryan is his ability to
just vanish. His disappearing acts have frustrated John Brown, too. Every time he goes someplace,
sooner or later the law catches up with him and he has to move his monastery from one town to the
next. He's like a nomad And the crimes just keep following him.
When the law catches up to him,
Ryan never ends up convicted of anything related to the church.
Since he usually opens his abbeys in small towns,
the police departments and counties don't have a ton of resources.
They'll give up.
When he goes out of their jurisdiction,
well, he's not in our area anymore and we don't have funds to extradite him. We don't care.
You know, let us know when he moves back in. So that begs the question, will Ryan ever be
held to account for his crimes, for stealing money from people under the guise of being a priest?
Will he even be charged?
Because as of this recording,
Ryan is innocent in the eyes of the law.
He's done his time and finished probation.
John Brown thinks there are some obvious,
albeit smaller, offenses.
He showed me evidence Ryan violated probation
multiple times. Remember,
he got five years probation after pleading guilty to possession of a firearm in 2015.
Ryan's probation doesn't allow him to contact his former church followers or present himself
as a priest without first getting permission. But Ryan's lawsuit against John mentions a former nun, Patricia Baldrige.
She tried to give him money in 2016.
Any contact with her would be a violation.
But at the end of the day, what John hopes is that a prosecutor or investigator somewhere
will come sit down and take a look at all the financial records he's collected.
There was just so many things, so many, many things
during my investigation that surfaced.
He thinks money could be hidden.
He's found receipts for missing gold coins that belonged to Sheila Anderson.
He takes the gold, $17,000 in gold, on July 12, 2011. And I have the post office
receipts. And he sends it, he sends this gold, he mails it to CMIGS Inc. The business John just
named is a gold and silver dealer in Arizona. His point, and my point in bringing these up,
is that John thinks Ryan could still have money out there,
and even could still be collecting it from victims.
That would mean the Abbey's doors are shut,
but the con continues.
I look at his social media pages.
Ryan's online following has grown from a few hundred
to nearly 3,000 since the start of the pandemic.
Multiple religious groups have accused Ryan of using their donor and mailing list to raise money
for himself. When I read Sheila Anderson's case, there were a bunch of people who'd been mailing
him money from all over. Could that still be happening? And is the Abbey still in existence? Do you still operate it?
No.
Their last go-round basically was their last hurrah.
But the Holy Rosary Abbey is still considered an active nonprofit by the state of Illinois.
I also see people living in other countries commenting on his posts, people who refer to him as a priest.
But to truly prove Ryan is committing fraud, a government agency would need to look into his finances to see if people are still donating and dig deeper than public records.
But what's the likelihood that actually happens? I'm not real optimistic
after talking to Professor Richard Kaplan. He teaches elder law at the University of Illinois.
I asked him about Ryan. He probably is a little more unusual in the sense of having a very specific niche in terms of the religious order
and floats around a relatively limited geographic area.
Professor Kaplan focuses on financial exploitation of the elderly.
He said someone like Ryan isn't actually that unique.
Elder abuse is a huge problem that mostly goes unprosecuted. It's been estimated that less
than 10 percent of all frauds are even reported to the authorities, and most of those reports
are not investigated. The biggest reason Professor Kaplan thinks older people won't tell anyone
they've been scammed is because they don't want to lose even more power over their lives. And the biggest fear that keeps them from reporting financial exploitation
is that someone, family or whatever, will use this as evidence
or as a springboard to have them be institutionalized
or at least have someone take over their finances.
Professor Kaplan said fraud cases, like the ones Father Ryan has been accused of,
can be hard to prosecute.
They can easily become he said, she said.
But those older people who tend to be victimized
are oftentimes suffering from certain cognitive deficits,
all of which means that not only does this make them
particularly vulnerable, it also means that not only does this make them particularly vulnerable,
it also means that they may not be the most compelling witness if you brought them into court. So when it comes to catching these guys, anybody from Ryan Scott to any of the other types of scammers out there,
what can be done to catch them?
It has been generally thought that education to let people know about this
is a good idea. Education? All we can do is warn people? Professor Kaplan is saying once the money's
gone, there's no realistic chance of getting it back. The overwhelming circumstance is that the money can't be found or can't be accessed.
So the difference is sometimes the person has bank accounts, they often use several
different names.
So the fact that you're giving the money to Ryan doesn't mean that Ryan puts it in Ryan's
account.
He puts it in somebody else's account, but it's his account. And then the account may be an offshore account, so that even if it's in his name,
it's going to be very difficult to access or try to get any recovery.
He is pretty much saying there's nothing you can do but keep an eye out.
I think the single biggest takeaway is for relatives to be alert so that they can prevent it.
All of the other suggestions about what to do after it happens are not even second best.
Not even second best.
Professor Kaplan seems to believe it's most likely that Ryan and people like him are probably going to get away.
and people like him, are probably going to get away.
Apparently this has worked out for him because despite various attempts by authorities to go after him,
he has not changed his modus operandi.
He continues to portray himself as a religious figure.
Professor Kaplan is right.
Ryan is still playing the part of a priest.
He's created at least two Facebook pages
and some fundraisers over the past year.
His profile says he is a retired Catholic priest.
I thought back on how Ryan ended the interview.
He's always claimed he suffered from PTSD
and health conditions
because of the stress caused by the church.
I'm saddened how I never thought that my dream would come to the closing the way it came to a closing.
But at the same time, I'd do it again.
If I did not have the health conditions that I have now, thanks to them,
I'd be out there doing it again.
One of his new Facebook pages includes a picture of a chapel
he claims he set up in his basement.
Those who have followed him closely for years
don't think Ryan's actually finished.
I asked Vida, the person who'd spent nearly 20 years following Ryan,
if now, after he admitted things on the record, she could move on.
Does this project, do you think, bring you any closure?
If what he has said is true, that he is done, you know, but he is not done.
That is the problem. It does not bring me any closure.
He chose to appear to you in clerics with a giant crucifix.
So he is not done pretending to be a priest.
Therefore, if somebody walks up to him and says, oh, father,
would you say mass for my mother and gives him a hundred dollars or something, he's going to take
it. So you're not done. I can't be done. He's not done. For Vida, Ryan had become a big part of her life. He'd become part of mine too.
But while reporting on this story,
I'd discover he'd actually already been in my orbit for years.
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What was the last thing that filled you with wonder that took you away from your desk or your car in traffic or your sink full of dishes?
As an actor, it's very free being part of these shows.
You can step in the booth and kind of be anything.
Well, for us, and I'm going to guess for some of you, that thing is... Anime!
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I literally, when I saw
it, when I found out about this,
I literally
had, like, a nervous breakdown
in a good way.
With the best celebrity guests.
I've never pirated anything, but I'll steal it if I have to.
That was how I felt when I started to get really hooked on Black Butler.
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It's coming back.
So join us every Friday, wherever you get your podcasts and watch full video episodes
on Crunchyroll or on the Crunchyroll
YouTube channel. I couldn't believe it when I first saw it. I was looking through bankruptcy
filings connected to one of Ryan's cases, and I saw a familiar name, the name of a flooring company
owned by a family friend, a guy named Dean Struenberg. I gave him a call. We sold them some marble tile.
And they never paid, never paid, never paid.
And we wound up taking them to court over the deal.
Which, you know, it's real uncomfortable having to take a priest to court.
At first, Dean's not sure I've got the right guy.
You think it's the same guy?
Oh, yeah, it's definitely the same guy.
If I wasn't confident enough already,
Dean's description only confirmed
this was, in fact, Ryan Scott.
I remember being in court with him
and, you know, how the judge will ask you your name
and he would say father
something something I don't even remember.
I thought he would tell the judge.
The judge got upset with him.
He said, you either tell me your full name or you're going to be in contempt of court
in Huska.
Up until this call, Dean thought he'd taken a priest to court.
I mean, you grew up all your life and you were taught that priests were above everything,
you know, and then to find this out,
and then now to find out that he wasn't even a priest, that's kind of interesting.
Now you don't have to feel bad about taking a priest to court because...
Well, not so much anymore, no.
Dean had even visited Pocahontas to talk about getting paid.
This meant my connection with Ryan was much closer than I ever thought.
I remember thinking when this started,
how have I not heard about this guy?
He had a church near my hometown.
But now I'm learning he was one or two degrees
from being inside my home.
You see, Dean's mother-in-law was my babysitter.
Her name was Judy, and her connection to my family is deep.
She helped raise not just me, but all of my siblings.
Judy was the type of woman who would rollerblade with me in her 60s.
She was a retired teacher.
Judy helped teach me to write, be
responsible, but also
just how to go with things and have fun.
She is the adult
I knew best as a kid, besides
my parents. Because I was like, wow.
I mean, that's such a close
connection. I just
thought that was incredible.
This call with Dean brought me back to why I wanted to tell this story.
Here was someone I knew who Ryan successfully tricked.
It pissed me off how Ryan seemed to use the Midwest against itself.
The kindness of family and friends.
My family and friends.
Judy, the woman who helped raise me,
she could have been a target as an older Catholic woman.
I'm doing this to hopefully protect people like her.
To me, Father Ryan's story is about our blind spots,
how we trust certain institutions and people in power.
Ryan found a way to commit fraud, get caught, and still face almost no consequences.
Ryan essentially took a bet.
A bet on all of us that we won't punish a man dressed like a priest.
That this kind of authority is so revered, people wouldn't dare think a priest is a criminal or point out when something's not making sense. I remember when I was hired to be
an investigative reporter in Iowa. People said, Iowa's too nice. There's nothing to investigate.
My first week, the diocese released a list of clergy accused of sexual abuse,
and not a single person on the list could be held accountable.
All of the men named were dead or no longer serving at a church.
Investigating Ryan has only reinforced why it's important to question real authorities
as much as the fake ones.
What kind of leeway do actual religious institutions get?
Some prosecutors didn't even think some of the accusations against Ryan
had enough jury appeal to go to court.
But we are the jury.
Just us agreeing that something criminal could have happened here
is a step towards justice.
In order to stop these cons,
we have to call them out.
Ryan Scott is going to go about living his life.
He sent me an email on September 19th, 2020.
Ryan wrote to tell me he shredded everything
and sent it to the dump. I have no
idea what he'd be shredding, but I noticed he'd included a Latin phrase that meant,
it is completed. He's trying to end this. Finally, he seems to want out of the spotlight.
But since the podcast has come out, he wrote in another message,
Alex, you obviously have items that I no longer possess. This project, for me, is no longer about me. It's about the thousands of silenced victims. After hearing what we found, it's not surprising
he'd want to change the subject. It's what he wants us to do. We can't let him.
From Neon Home Media, I'm Alex Schumann, and this has been Smokescreen, Fake Priest.
Thank you so much for listening.
He's got old-time religion Buries his cash in a coffee can
And he makes his decisions
Down on his knees
He's a full-grown man
And he...
Fake Priest is a production of Neon Hum Media.
It is reported and hosted by me, Alex Schumann.
The executive producer is Jonathan Hirsch.
Lead producer is Natalie Wren.
Associate producer is Kate Mishkin.
Catherine St. Louis is our editor.
Fact-checking by Laura Bullard.
Thanks to Matt McGinley for our theme music and to Blue Dot Sessions for tracks you hear on this episode.
Sound design and additional composition by Jesse Pearlstein.
And the song you're hearing now is Old Time Religion by Parker Millsap.
Our engineer is Scott Somerville.
Special thanks to Peter Manseau and Vikram Patel. It's good enough for me.