Nigerian priest jailed
for having sex with prison inmates
By Ike Nnamdi with Agency reports
Wednesday, May 7, 2008
A Nigerian Catholic priest, Vincent Inametti, 48, has been
sentenced to four years in prison for having sex with two
female inmates at Federal Medical Centre Carswell, United
States.
U.S. District Judge Terry Means also ordered Inametti to pay
$3,000 in fines and will be on supervised release for two
years after completion of his jail term. Inametti was taken
into custody after he was sentenced, in the city of the Forth
Worth, Texas.
He had pleaded guilty to both counts when the charges were
read to him in November. Also, he apologized to the court,
government, medical centre, inmates, victims and God.
“I’m asking this morning for mercy,” he
told the court.
Inametti’s journey to prison started after the Justice
Department’s Office of Inspector General received a
complaint in March 2007 detailing sexual involvement between
him and an inmate identified in documents as D.D., who was
serving an 11-year sentence for possession with intent to
distribute cocaine.
An investigation revealed another sexual involvement between
Inametti and another inmate identified as E.R., who was serving
a sentence of 12 years, and seven months for conspiracy to
possess with intent to distribute marijuana.
According to reports, both inmates were under the “custodial,
supervision, or disciplinary authority” of Inametti.
On or about February 18, 2006, Inametti invited D.D. to the
chapel library for sex and in June or July 2006; he summoned
E.R. to a classroom in the chapel for sex.
In sentencing Inametti, the judge used more blunt than legal
terminology such as “sex abuse of a ward.”
Means said: “This is rape and this is sodomy.”
Inametti’s lack of criminal history suggested that he
might get a sentence between 10 and 16 months. The statutory
maximum is five years. But the judge said that the priest’s
crimes were “surprisingly heinous” and that he
had violated a twofold trust: as an employee of the federal
prison and as a priest.
“For this, he will face a higher authority than this
one,” Means said.
On Monday, the defence called two witnesses. They include
an inmate at the medical centre, Tammi Allowitz. As a chaplain’s
office worker, she was familiar with both victims. The one
identified in court as E.R. “was in love with Father
Inametti,” Allowitz said.
She described the situation as rival lovers fighting over
one man. Prosecutor John Bradford asked Allowitz to give the
basic information of her own sentence, which was 12 years
and seven months for attempted murder for hire. In court documents,
defence attorneys maintained that the sex was consensual and
that a reasonable sentence would be lower than that suggested
by federal guidelines.
Inametti is not part of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fort
Worth. He was ordained in Nigeria.
He is a member of a Nigeria-based religious order called the
Missionary Society of St. Paul. Before 2000, he served parishes
in Eastland County as well as at Our Mother of Mercy Catholic
Church, in Fort Worth. In 2000, at his request, he was given
limited faculties to hear confessions and offer Mass in the
prison.
These duties were taken away from him when diocesan officials
learned of the federal investigation.
Inametti had many supporters in the audience, including three
who spoke before the court. They said that his crimes were
inconsistent with the majority of his life's work and that
priests are merely men and susceptible to physical temptations.
Means, however, drew a distinction between ordinary mistakes
and moral transgressions. In a classroom, he said, “a
student who makes an error on a test has made a mistake. Someone
who copies off another's paper, however, is cheating and has
made a moral decision that goes beyond a simple mistake. What
I see here is a moral transgression of great magnitude."
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