VS an assistant manager at Starbucks?
http://www.pbs.org/n...priest_06-22.html
But having someone like the monsignor be convicted, it's sort of like the assistant manager of the Starbucks, not the manager of the Starbucks, something like that. So, in other words, we often hear that there hasn't been adequate accountability over the many years in terms of the church, in terms of leadership and things of that nature.
And this is the first case, it appears, where someone who is a decision-maker, even though he's not the bishop, is held accountable for decisions that he made.