Louis Brouillard

Louis Brouillard (July 27, 1921 – October 10, 2018) was an American Catholic priest[1] involved in high-profile Catholic Church sexual abuse cases.[2]

Sexual abuse

Brouillard was ordained December 17, 1948, and served in priesthood on Guam from 1948 to 1981, and teaching at San Vicente and Father Dueñas Memorial School while he was a priest.[3] After which[4] he was accused of abusing more than 130 boys in sex abuse claims brought against the Catholic Church.[5] A lawsuit was filed against him as recently as six days prior to his death.[6] Lawsuits were also brought against the Boy Scouts of America, because Brouillard was a scoutmaster.[7] Brouillard's victims' accounts ranged from being molested during swimming trips to rape.[8] According to Brouillard, while church members knew about his actions then, they did not tell him to stop, but rather to pray. In 1981, he was sent away to Minnesota,[9] and ended up living in Pine City, Minnesota serving a nearby parish,[10] St. Joseph in Beroun, until he was barred from doing so in 1984.[11] He lived in Pine City, and his legal deposition was held there October 31 through November 3, 2017, when he was 96. He admitted to as many as 20 of the incidents.[12]

gollark: Also also also, the ` ticks_count = 0 # this is supposed to hold the number of ticks we have instanced an object for` on the `Tick` class is not used anywhere.
gollark: Also also, `def __str__(self): pass` doesn't seem to do anything either.
gollark: Also, this function seems to have no valid reason to exist.
gollark: > def indIncreaseCounter(tickInstance):Python convention is to use `snake_case`, not `camelCase`.
gollark: Just looking at this file here: https://github.com/mHappah3019/Tick-Counter/blob/main/TickClass.py> # creates an attribute called identifier and assigns to it> # the value of the "identifier" parameter> # creates an attribute called macro and assigns to it the> # value of the "macro" parameterThese comments are not useful. It is generally assumed that whoever is reading your code is aware of the basics of how the language is used, so your comments should instead describe higher-level stuff like *why* it's doing what it does, what an entire function does, unusual things it might be doing, etc.

References

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