ALFRED, Maine — A defrocked Massachusetts priest is appealing his conviction of sexually abusing a young boy during trips to Maine in the 1980s.
A judge ordered Ronald Paquin, 77, to serve 16 years in state prison in Maine in May after he was found guilty of 11 counts of gross sexual misconduct in 2018. He had already served more than 10 years in prison in Massachusetts for sexually abusing another alter boy in that state.
In a hearing on Wednesday, Paquin’s attorney argued that the trial judge in the Maine case should have required the prosecutor to disclose the details of the victim’s criminal record, the Portland Press Herald reported.
He also said the judge should have barred an expert witness from testifying that male victims often wait to disclose sexual abuse they’ve experienced.
Paquin was charged with assaulting two boys between 1985 and 1988 in Kennebunkport when the victims were 14 years of age or younger. He was released from prison in 2015 after completing his sentence in Massachusetts and then taken into custody in Maine.
Paquin was portrayed in the movie “Spotlight” about the Boston Globe investigation into abuse by Catholic clergy. His case was a critical piece of a sexual abuse scandal that consumed the Archdiocese of Boston.
Paquin has said he is a victim of sexual abuse himself. His attorneys previously read a statement he wrote in which he said he spent years “pretending that I was living a happy life with no problems,” when he was actually traumatized by the abuse.
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