I have to say that the cookie jar was open to all in the
recent Justin “Big Frank” Rigali crime family that ran the Archdiocese of
Philadelphia into the ground and out of the education business for the inner city poor in particular.
I have to say that being witness to embezzlement situations
both in publicly owned and privately owned corporations, that when you need an
outside auditor to catch embezzlement in your organization, you do not run a
tight organization.
That this accused woman in the senior staff of the
archdiocese at 222 N. 17th Street could write archdiocese checks for
gambling debts in Atlantic City Casinos is no shock.
What I find shocking is that only a woman is guilty of
public disgrace and accused of embezzlement.
In an organization as loose as “Big Frank” Rigali’s, believe
me, more than one person in that organization is probably guilty of
embezzlement.
If the culprits were male and clerical, the archdiocese
would have ate the loss and not applied for insurance protection.
In the same light, it is the supposed victim, such as the
archdiocese that has to press charges in the District Attorney’s office.
A female non-clerical thief is the alleged culprit here, but
not alone in crime I am certain.
The world is misogyny. The word is hate of women that motivates
partial disclosure and partial prosecution to some at “222” in Philly.
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