TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - About 50 more people
have come forward to say they were sexually abused at Catholic schools
in Pennsylvania and Ohio by a Franciscan brother who killed himself in
January.
That's according to attorney Mitchell Garabedian, who settled 11 alleged abuse cases against the friar.
Brother
Stephen Baker stabbed himself in the heart at a western Pennsylvania
monastery on Jan. 26. His death came a little over a week after the
disclosure of financial settlements in alleged abuse cases in Warren,
Ohio. A coroner told the Altoona Mirror that Baker left a short note
apologizing for his actions.
Attorney Garabedian says the new
accusers have alleged in recent weeks that they were abused between 1982
and 2007. Some said Baker abused them even after he left teaching in
2000 when he would attend school events in Johnstown, Pa.
The
latest allegations come from people in 12 states who went to school in
Warren or were either middle school or high school students in
Johnstown, where Baker taught and coached.
A spokesman for the
victims' advocacy group SNAP, Survivors Network of those Abused by
Priests, says church officials failed to warn potential victims. SNAP
national director David Clohessy says abuses would likely still be
continuing had it not been for the bravery of accusers who have come
forward.