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Unholy Child by Catherine Breslin
Unholy Child by Catherine Breslin








Unholy Child by Catherine Breslin

A story, thrice told The plotline was apparently too good to allow it to remain simply a work of journalism. Judge Maas agreed and found her not guilty on all counts (see “Nun cleared of charges in son’s death,” The Bryan Times, Bryan, OH, March 5, 1977, 10). The defense had conceded that Sister Maureen committed the act, but had also argued that blood loss during childbirth along with the overall trauma of the experience had impaired her judgment, that she may not even have been fully conscious during the episode, and that she had not actually meant to kill the baby. On March 5, newspapers around the country carried United Press International’s account of the judge’s verdict. The fact that Sister Maureen had waived her right to a jury trial only served to heighten the courtroom drama.Įven in the supposedly enlightened days of the late 1970s, some questioned out loud whether a Catholic nun could expect to receive a fair trial from a Jewish judge. magazine dispatched Catherine Breslin to cover the trial, which lasted ten days. She was charged with first- and second-degree manslaughter along with criminally negligent homicide.

Unholy Child by Catherine Breslin

Medical examiners at nearby Genesee Hospital concluded that she had, in fact, recently delivered a baby, and had apparently managed to conceal the pregnancy under a traditional nun’s habit, but Sister Maureen claimed she did not remember it. After the body was found, the 36-year-old member of the Sisters of St.Joseph was questioned, but she denied ever being pregnant. It was alleged that she then shoved a pair of panties into the infant’s mouth, asphyxiating him, and left his remains in a wastebasket. Eleven months earlier, on April 27, 1976, a Roman Catholic nun and school teacher, Sister Maureen Murphy, surreptitiously gave birth to a baby boy at the Our Lady of Lourdes parish convent in Brighton, just outside Rochester. In the winter of 1977, a tragedy was painfully and painstakingly unfurled in the Monroe County, New York courtroom of Judge Hyman Maas.

Unholy Child by Catherine Breslin

Agnes of God – Tragedy in the Monroe County










Unholy Child by Catherine Breslin