Of course, anyone of intelligence who carefully reviewed the grand jury report knew it was bullshit right out of the gate, but dupes in the media and internet morons jumped all over the report -- because the intended audience for the report were intellectual lightweights who would later vote Seth Williams into higher office.
While some fools here drooled over the salacious falsities in the grand jury report, I called the report bullshit from the start.
Well, now, as Billy Doe pursues his civil case against the Church (the reason he made up the lies to start with: $$$$), it comes out that he's a bald-faced liar. No brainer. This dude isn't going to collect a dime. Moreover, it is now apparent that the Philly DA, in pursuing criminal cases against Monsignor Lynn, Bernard Shero, and Fr. Charles Englehardt, failed to disclose to the defense material evidence which would have demonstrated that Billy Doe is a liar. Indeed, honest Billy Doe told his first drug counselor that he was never subject to any sexual abuse.
Williams already has taken a beating in an appellate court for his shameful prosecution of Monsignor Lynn (called that one!!
Coming soon. More convictions overturned.
How come I'm always right about these things??
http://www.bigtrial.net/2014/04/a-fanta ... abuse.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Doe, now 25, is the former 10-year-old altar boy who claimed at two historic Philadelphia sex abuse trials that he was raped by two priests as well as Shero, a former Catholic school teacher. It was Doe's testimony that also sent Msgr. William J. Lynn to jail for 18 months before an appeals court overturned Lynn's conviction.
The "newly discovered evidence" surfaced during a civil case that Doe has filed against the Archdiocese of Philadelphia.
Doe, a former drug addict who used marijuana, magic mushrooms, pills, LSD and heroin, has been treated at 23 drug rehabs. He's also been arrested a half-dozen times, including one bust, subsequently dismissed, for possession with intent to distribute 56 bags of heroin. In the civil case, Billy Doe is seeking money from the archdiocese and a host of other defendants for alleged damage to his mental health. So a judge in the civil case has ordered the defendant's lawyers to turn over Billy Doe's medical records from his various drug rehabs.
What did defense lawyers discover when they got a look at those records? That Billy Doe, previously known for making wildly varying allegations to authorities, told his drug counselors four different stories in just one year about allegedly being abused. And none of those stories Billy told his drug counselors match the story he told two Philadelphia juries about being raped by two priests and a school teacher.









