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Canon Terrence Grigg, vicar of Cottingham, senior canon of York Minster, former member of the General Synod and sexual predator. |
'Hypocrite' who hid his depraved attacks on vulnerable boys finally unmasked as sick sexual predator - Hull Live
It tells us something when news of yet another child-abusing paedophile priest going to prison doesn't even make the national news any more!
How many people in the UK even heard of Cannon Terrence Grigg and his activities that were described by the judge as 'depraved' and 'perverted' when he was sentenced in Hull Crown Court to 12 years in prison last Thursday? And how many people knew that when one of Grigg's alleged victims went to the then Bishop of Hull, James Jones, in the 1990s to complain, he was threatened and warned that he could go to prison if he didn't drop the allegations?
It was only on the
local news that people in Humberside heard about The Reverend Canon Terrence Grigg, 84, former rector of St Mary's Church, Cottingham, senior canon of York Minster, and former member of the General Synod, who showed "not a shred of remorse", according to Judge Rose.
Grigg had been convicted of 12 charges of indecent assault and 2 charges of serious sexual assault. He was acquitted of one charge of indecent assault. He had pleaded not guilty to all fifteen charges and claimed to be celibate. The judge told Griggs:
You were no doubt the beneficiary of the church's treatment of [the complainant], which not only refused to pursue the complaint to the Bishop of Hull, but turned the complaint against him with threats of litigation and imprisonment so that he withdrew the complaint because he was so fearful of the consequences... [Referring to the claim of celibacy] instead [you] sexually abused vulnerable young men of your parish for your own immoral, illegal, perverted gratification... Each of them and each of your congregants, and those in the higher echelons of the church, the bishops and archbishops, were deceived and misled and fooled by your outward appearance. For nearly ten years, you were in truth a sexual predator, choosing for your victims the vulnerable and unhappy. The trust placed in you as a priest was, as the jury has found, entirely misplaced.
The court heard the police found two videos of homsexual prography at Griggs' home showing he had a sexual interest in young men as recently as 2016. They also found condoms at both his homes, giving the lie to his claim of celibacy. Judge Rose described it as a deplorable case and excused the jury from further jury service for ten years because of what they had had to endure.
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James Jones, former Bishop of Hull
Photo: Rob Stebbing |
The
court also heared how a man who alleged he had been assaulted by Griggs was advised by Bob Goodram, music and choir leader at the church, to put his complaint in writing and take it to James Jones, then Bishop of Hull, which he did. He then described the intimidation and threats to which he had been subjected and which he claimed led to a mental breakdown.
Some days after handing Bishop Jones the letter he was contacted by Bob Goodram and told there was a problem with the letter which contained material which should not have been included. He was then driven to Bishop Jones' house where he was told the matter had gone to the Archbishop of York for investigation, and there was now a risk that he could have action taken against him.
He was told that the only recourse was to engage a solicitor to have the complaint withdrawn and to write a letter of apology to Griggs withdrawing the allegation. He duly wrote the letter and was told that might be the end of the matter but he could still have action taken against him.
Former Bishop James Jones in no stranger to allegations of bullying. He was was from the Evangelical wing of the Anglican Church and was promoted to Bishop of Liverpool in 1998, a post he held until his retirement in 2013. He was also Chair of the Council of Wycliffe Hall, and Anglican college in Oxford. He resigned after a member of the Council resigned in protest at Jones' handling of an allegation of bullying against the college's Principle, and won a case for unfair dismissal. The college admitted breaking the law and had to pay damages.