Nov 6, 2020

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Eastchester REVIEW THE

November 6, 2020 | Vol. 8, Number 45 | www.eastchesterreview.com

Gaynor held in contempt over sex abuse lawsuits

WARNING!

By MIKE SMITH Sports Editor

The Westchester County Health Department recognized the recent National Lead Poisoning Prevention Week as an opportunity to promote awareness in an effort to reduce childhood exposure to lead. For more, see page 6.

Åsmund Gimre

NPC to hold open meeting On Tuesday, Nov. 10, Bronxville’s Non-Partisan Committee for the Nomination and Election of School Trustees, NPC, will host its annual Open Meeting at 7 p.m. over Zoom. All members of the Bronxville community are invited and encouraged to attend and submit questions. School board trustees, Arleen Thomas, president, and Michael Finley, vice president, as well as School Superintendent Dr. Roy Montesano will provide updates on top issues facing the school and the board. They will also

answer questions from the community, facilitated by the NPC. Topics include: • How Bronxville is handling Covid-19 challenges • Long term and strategic plans • Budget and teacher union updates • Operations and curriculum updates • Facilities and special projects status • Non-Partisan Committee actions for 2020-21 Zoom meeting details will be available on our website at

bronxvillenpc.com. Please submit your questions in advance to bxv_npc@yahoo. com. Attendees will also be able to submit questions live during the Zoom meeting. What does the NPC do? The NPC was formed in 1936 to: • Foster the election of trustees of the Bronxville School on a non-partisan basis. • Seek qualified Bronxville residents who are interested in serving on the school board. Nomination by the

NPC is not a requirement to run for the school board. • Actively solicit community input about all applicants, then nominate a candidate for each open position, being as transparent as possible to the Bronxville community in its process. • Be representative—with 21 elected Bronxville residents, three from each election district. To learn more, visit bronxvillenpc.com, and follow us on Instagram @bronxvillenpc. (Submitted)

After twice announcing his refusal to appear for a deposition, Edwin Gaynor has been held in contempt of court and may be forcibly compelled to comply with a judge’s request, records show. On Oct. 20, New York State Supreme Court Associate Justice Steven M. Jaeger ruled that Gaynor, 86, was in violation of court orders after the former catholic school teacher and coach declined to speak under oath about the litany of sexual assault claims that have been made against him. “The court finds that Plaintiff has satisfied the elements necessary to establish contempt of court,” Jaeger wrote. “Gaynor has not set forth in his letters or statements any reasonable excuse for failing to appear before deposition.” Since last November, 26 accusers have come forward with allegations that Gaynor used his position as a teacher and coach at the Immaculate Heart of Mary School in Scarsdale—as well as at other local parishes including St. Bernard’s in White Plains and Holy Rosary in Hawthorne—to molest underage male students beginning in1959 and continuing through 1986. The lawsuits also name these schools, as well as the Archdiocese of New York, as co-defendants for their refusal to act on credible evidence of Gaynor’s misdeeds which allowed the pattern of alleged abuse to continue, unchecked, for decades. In handwritten letters sent in 2019 to the law firm Lowey Dannenberg P.C.— which represents all but one of Gaynor’s accusers—Gaynor admitted to molesting two of the accusers by name. But attempts by the court to compel a deposition of Gaynor have been unsuccessful, however.

Lawyers for the plaintiffs had initially filed a motion to depose Gaynor on March 9, but the motion was opposed by counsel for the Archdiocese, who sought relief due to the developing COVID-19 pandemic. On June 25, the court ordered that Gaynor’s rescheduled deposition take place no later than Aug. 7. Court records show that Gaynor was subpoenaed on July 2 but he advised the agent who served him with a subpoena that he did not intend to comply with the order. Counsel for the plaintiffs received another letter from Gaynor on Aug. 5 that confirmed his refusal to be deposed, citing that his age and poor health prevented him from doing so. Gaynor’s refusal to appear— either in person or remotely— prompted lawyers for the plaintiffs to petition the court for a contempt charge, as they requested that Gaynor be placed in police custody or confined until he completed his deposition. Despite ruling that Gaynor should be held in contempt, Jaeger declined to order that Gaynor be taken into custody, given the uncertainty surrounding the coronavirus pandemic. “The Court is not now prepared on whether to impose a fine or commit Gaynor to jail until he agrees to comply,” he wrote. “Given Gaynor’s age, and his claimed physical ailments, and the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the Court seeks further detailed information from Plaintiff as to how to satisfy the Court Plaintiff’s request for relief.” Jaeger further ordered that counsel for both sides must consult with the Westchester County Sheriff’s office in order to ensure that Gaynor’s deposition can be safely implemented. The ruling has given a deadline of Nov. 9 for such an agreement to be reached. CONTACT: sports@hometwn.com


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