Crime & Safety
Ex-Naugatuck Priest Found Guilty Of Child Sex Abuse In New Mexico
The former local priest, a CT native, is facing life in prison when he is sentenced. No criminal charges are pending against him in CT.

ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICO β A federal jury sitting in Santa Fe, N.M., returned a guilty verdict against Arthur Perrault, a former priest in Naugatuck at St. Francis Church, on federal child sexual abuse charges today after an eight-day trial, federal authorities announced.
The jury convicted Perrault, 81, a former Catholic priest who served in New Mexico under the Archdiocese of Santa Fe from 1973 to 1992, on an indictment charging him with six counts of aggravated sexual abuse and one count of abusive sexual contact with a minor under the age of 12.
Perrault was found guilty of repeatedly sexually abusing the minor victim in 1991 and 1992 while on federally-protected land, Kirtland Air Force Base in Bernalillo County, N.M., and the Santa Fe National Cemetery in Santa Fe County, N.M, federal authorities announced.
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Perrault, a Connecticut native, who served at parishes in Naugatuck, New Haven, Sharon, and East Hartford does not have a criminal record in Connecticut, according to the Republican-American. Naugatuck Police are currently seeking information from people concerning the βatmosphereβ at St. Francis Parochial School during Perrault's time at St. Francis in 1965, the Rep-Am adds.
In announcing the guilty verdict, U.S. Attorney Anderson said in a news release, βThough the quest for justice can sometimes be long and difficult, todayβs jury verdict makes clear that courageous victims and the relentless efforts of law enforcement can, together, make justice a reality. Despite the passage of many years, and Arthur Perraultβs efforts to evade justice and deny his victims their day in court, he has at long last been held accountable for his crimes. Although todayβs verdict cannot heal the wounds Perrault inflicted on his victims, I am hopeful that it will afford them some measure of validation and closure.β
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βThe FBIβs goal in this case was to make sure justice was served, regardless how long it took or how many miles we had to travel to make it happen,β said FBI Special Agent in Charge Langenberg, in a news release. βAs the defendant faces the consequences of his crimes, we would like to thank the victim and the other witnesses for their courage in coming forward. I appreciate the hard work and cooperation of everyone involved in this case, including the FBI agents and staff, U.S. Attorneyβs Office, Air Force Office of Special Investigations, and the Moroccan government and our Legal AttachΓ© in that nation.β
βThis conviction is a major step on the path to healing and justice for Perraultβs victims,β said Special Agent in Charge Dorval of AFOSI Detachment 814. βAFOSI is dedicated to finding and helping to remove these kinds of predators from the street in order to protect our Airmen, their families and our greater military communities. We would like to express our sincerest thanks for the partnership and assistance of the FBI and the U.S. Attorneyβs office. Without their unwavering assistance, this case would not have come to fruition.β
The evidence at trial established that Perrault, then an ordained Catholic priest, was in New Mexico in the late 1960s and early 1970s, teaching at a private Catholic high school in Albuquerque, officials said. Years later, one of Perraultβs victims revealed being sexually assaulted by Perrault when he was a student at the school, officials said. The trial evidence established that Perrault continued molesting adolescent boys in New Mexico for decades, until the early 1990s, officials said.
Around 1990, Perrault, then a parish priest in an Albuquerque Catholic church, befriended a nine-year-old altar boy and began grooming the child by giving him gifts, taking him on field trips, and making him feel special, officials said. The child, now a grown man identified as the John Doe victim in the indictment, testified about how Perraultβs affectionate hugs and kisses gradually progressed to regular acts of sexual assault and abuse, some of which took place at Kirtland Air Force Base and the Santa Fe National Cemetery, over the next two years, officials said.
Seven other victims testified about being sexually abused by Perrault in 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s when they were children, each describing traumatic experiences similar to those experienced by John Doe, federal officials said. The victims described how Perrault used his position as a priest to gain their trust and their parentsβ trust, and how he abused that trust to sexually assault and abuse them, officials said.
Other witnesses testified about Perraultβs admissions of child molestation, including an FBI Special Agent, a State Department employee, and one of the victimβs parents. The evidence against Perrault included two letters he wrote; one in which he apologized to the mother of another victim, and the other in which he admitted molesting βteens,β officials said.
The jury also learned that Perrault partially was responsible for the delay in bringing him to justice. The evidence established that in 1992, Perrault fled from New Mexico, eventually settling in Morocco, after learning that some of his victims intended publicly to reveal that he had sexually abused them, officials said.
Moroccan law enforcement authorities arrested Perrault on Oct. 12, 2017, in Morocco at the request of the United States on a provisional arrest warrant issued based on the indictment, which was filed on Sept. 21, 2017.
Perrault will remain in federal custody until his sentencing hearing, which has yet to be scheduled.
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