SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) - An Irish-born priest of the Legion of Christ religious order has finished serving a four-year sentence for sexually abusing a minor and may have to leave the country within days, his lawyer said Monday.
Attorney Cristian Murga said the prison system is expected to certify completion of the sentence “within days,” which would trigger an earlier government decree giving the Rev. John O’Reilly 72 hours to leave Chile.
Murga left open, however, the possibility that O’Reilly could take some unspecified legal action before being expelled.
In 2014, O’Reilly was convicted of sexually abusing a minor while he was a chaplain at a prestigious school operated by the Legion in Santiago. The court also banned him from any job near children and ordered that his genetic data be added to a registry for abusers.
The Interior Ministry has ruled that O’Reilly would have to leave within 72 hours of finishing his sentence, and Chile’s Congress revoked the honorary citizenship it had given him.
He had been working in Chile since the mid-1980s.
O’Reilly’s downfall is further evidence that the problems in the Mexican-based Legion of Christ did not end with its founder. The late Rev. Marcial Maciel was found to have been a serial pedophile who fathered at least three children with two women.
While O’Reilly was convicted by Chile’s courts, his canonical case has languished in the Vatican. Victims have cited it as evidence of how the Chilean Church discredited victims in favor of clerics for years.
Meanwhile, an attorney for a victim said Monday that someone had tried to bribe a witness to change the testimony in an attempt to avoid O’Reilly’s expulsion. Lawyer Jose Ignacio Escobar said it wasn’t clear who had made the offer, which was audiotaped.
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