Synopsis
At centre stage of "Sin, Shame and Secrets" is the media-frenzied murder charge against Reverend Gerald Robinson. In 1980, on Holy Saturday - the day before Easter - an elderly nun was strangled to death in the chapel of a Catholic hospital in Toledo, Ohio. The killer then wrapped the nun's body in an altar cloth and stabbed her 32 times in the face, neck and torso. Police reports described it as a "ceremonial killing". The intense, high-profile police investigation in the months that followed the murder included interviews with more than 600 people, including the slain nun's colleagues in the Sisters of Mercy convent, her relatives, hospital staff, patients, and visitors, and a number of suspects ranging from convicted criminals to Satan worshippers, from co-workers to members of the clergy. No arrests were made. Until now. On April 23 2004, Toledo's cold-case squad arrested a slight, mild-mannered 66-year-old priest, Father Gerald Robinson, and charged him in the 24-year old murder of Sister Margaret Ann Pahl. "Sin, Shame and Secrets" details not only the particular and bizarre circumstances of Sister Margaret Ann's death and the arrest of a local priest decades later, but also the myriad factors that caused local law-enforcement and criminal-justice officials to come up empty-handed, despite the exhaustive investigation and, as some assert, the compelling evidence pointing to Father Robinson as a prime suspect.
À propos de l?auteur
David Yonke is an award-winning journalist whose work as Religion Editor of the Blade frequently lands on the front page. He has worked at the Tampa Tribune and the Blade and taught reporting and editing at the University of Toledo. A native of New York City and a graduate of Duke University.
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