![]() ![]() ![]() For the first time ever with a media outlet, Tim agreed to open up about it – along with how Sarah and other loved ones helped him survive pressing a case against Wattigny – in hopes that his experience somehow shields others from undergoing a similar ordeal. ![]() Then there’s the lifelong effects of the violation of trust that Gioe endured at the hands of Wattigny, 55. The pair, who met while they were in nursing school, also still believe in their Catholic faith. “And the answer, for me, is no.”Īs the Gioes told it recently to the Guardian, it’s easy to understand why the topic is an urgent one for the couple, who are nurse practitioners and run a psychiatric office together.įor one, despite Tim’s abuse, he and Sarah are sending their boys – ages two, five and seven – to local parochial schools because they often offer better educations than many of their public counterparts in their home state of Louisiana. “Me and Sarah have had some conversations about whether we would ever allow our children to be in or one-on-one with a priest,” Gioe said. The Gioes would also like for it to be required to offer parents the opportunity to at least see into any space where such confessions would be heard, to reduce the chances of anything abusive taking place. ![]()
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