Man seeks to be removed from Santa Fe archdiocese's list of accused abusers

Oct. 10—Rudy Blea continues to pay a heavy toll for a sexual liaison he had 51 years ago, at age 19, with a 17-year-old boy.

The incident led to his inclusion on the Archdiocese of Santa Fe's list of clergy and other Catholic hierarchy who are considered credibly accused sexual abusers of children. Blea says he shouldn't be on the list.

Records from state District Court and the U.S Bankruptcy Court in New Mexico describe in some detail how he came to be on the list of 80 men — priests, deacons, brothers — who are widely known as pedophiles. The documents also describe Blea's arguments for why he shouldn't be listed among them.

His primary argument is that he never served as a Catholic priest or in any other role in the archdiocese that would qualify him as a member of church hierarchy. The archdiocese said he did, however, study in the 1970s at the Immaculate Heart of Mary Seminary in Santa Fe and later at St. Thomas Seminary in Denver, where men prepare for the priesthood.

Blea also maintained in a recent U.S. Bankruptcy Court hearing the incident involved consensual sex, Judge David Thuma wrote in an opinion. The hearing was held as part of the archdiocese's 3-year-old bankruptcy case, in which about 385 people have claimed abuse, often in their childhood, by clergy tied to the Catholic institution.

But in 1994, about 25 years after the episode, the other man sued Blea and the archdiocese, alleging Blea had raped him at a Catholic retreat during a vulnerable time in his life. The incident occurred in the summer of 1970 when Blea helped lead a group of young Catholics in a retreat at the Pecos Benedictine Monastery.

Blea settled the case with the man, who is now deceased, for $5,000, multiple court records show.

Thuma wrote in his opinion it wasn't clear if the archdiocese had made a payment, too.

In 2018, the same year the archdiocese filed its Chapter 11 bankruptcy, Blea filed a state District Court lawsuit accusing the archdiocese of defamation for including his name on the list of credibly accused sexual abusers. The lawsuit said the archdiocese "announced to the world that ... Blea was a Benedictine priest who was a child molester" and that it failed to conduct a proper investigation.

The suit has remained on hold while the bankruptcy case lumbers on.

Blea, who has been employed by the New Mexico Department of Health for 15 years, declined to be interviewed. He is a staff manager of the agency's dental health program.

His entreaties to the U.S. Bankruptcy Court have gone nowhere.