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Retired priest accused of sexual assault at Manitoba residential school pleads not guilty

Retired priest accused of sexual assault at Manitoba residential school pleads not guilty

CBC
Thursday, August 18, 2022 08:59:29 AM UTC

WARNING: This story contains distressing details.

A retired priest accused of sexually assaulting a 10-year-old girl at a Manitoba residential school more than 50 years ago has pleaded not guilty.

Arthur Masse, now 92, was not in the Powerview, Man., court on Wednesday, but entered his plea through his lawyer. His case will go to a Court of Queen's Bench judge-only trial in Winnipeg, but a trial date has not been set.

Masse was arrested in June after a decade-long investigation and now faces one charge of indecent assault.

RCMP say the victim was a student at Fort Alexander residential school in Sagkeeng First Nation, in eastern Manitoba, where Masse worked. 

Police haven't named the victim, but 63-year-old Victoria McIntosh, of Sagkeeng First Nation, says she was the child at the centre of this case.

"I'll be there every step of the way. I made a commitment, so I'm going to keep that," she said outside the Powerview court on Wednesday. 

"Mr. Masse, come out and speak your truth as well, and I'll speak mine."

At a court hearing in Powerview last month, Sagkeeng Chief Derrick Henderson requested that the courts work with the community to have a sentencing circle for Masse, which would have been contingent on him pleading guilty.

A sentencing circle is a community-directed restorative justice process conducted in partnership with the justice system, based on the belief that a crime is an offence against an entire community, not just a victim.

Marilyn Courchene, who attended day school at Fort Alexander when Masse worked there, stood alongside McIntosh outside the Powerview courthouse on Wednesday. She said she wished the retired priest took part in a sentencing circle.

"Our way would have been in a circle, our way would have been to listen, our way would have been to use the seven teachings," Courchene said.

"Our way would have been, at the end of the day, open with forgiveness, and I think both parties would have benefited."

It's not clear if Masse declined to participate in a sentencing circle, or if that choice wasn't presented to him.

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