Home Scandal and Gossip Downington priest spends $98K church donations on Grindr hookups

Downington priest spends $98K church donations on Grindr hookups

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Rev. Joseph McLoone Downingtown priest
Pictured, Rev. Joseph McLoone, Downingtown priest.
Rev. Joseph McLoone Downingtown priest
Pictured, Rev. Joseph McLoone, Downingtown priest. Image via social media.

Downington, Pennsylvania priest, Revered Father Joseph McLoone arrested on felony theft after stealing $98K in church donations to pay for hook-ups on Grindr and vacations. 

So much for God repenting. A Pennsylvania priest has been accused of stealing nearly $100,000 in church donations to pay men he met on Grindr for sex acts — along with paying off his personal credit cards, prosecutors said.

The Rev. Joseph McLoone, 56, was arrested on felony theft and ’18 related charges’ Wednesday after investigators revealed the ‘man of God’ opening a secret checking account in 2011 to deposit donations from parishioners at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church in Downingtown, the Chester County District Attorney’s Office announced.

McLoone, of Downingtown, then funneled the donation checks into an unauthorized “St. Joseph Activity Account” at TD Bank for the next six years and stole $98,405 in all, according to Chester County district attorney chief of staff Charles Gaza.

During his tenure at St. Joseph’s, Monsignor Joseph McLoone drew an annual salary of $26,000. He was brought on to take over the parish leadership in 2011 in the wake of the controversy of a former priest charged with aiding a child sex abuse scandal the Daily Local News reported. The ‘popular’ parishioner is understood to have been with the church since 2010.

Funded hook-ups on Grindr: 

‘Father McLoone held a position of leadership and his parishioners trusted him to properly handle their generous donations to the church,’ Gaza said in a statement. ‘Father McLoone violated the trust of the members of St. Joseph’s for his own personal gain.’

McLoone allegedly withdrew roughly $46,000 in cash from the undisclosed account in Ocean City, New Jersey, where he owns a beach house. He also admitted to using some of the funds to pay for his ‘personal relationships’ with other men, including $1,200 McLoone deposited into the commissary account of an inmate in a New York correctional facility, according to a criminal complaint.

The inmate, identified in court documents as Brian Miller, was never a Pennsylvania resident and had no previous connection to McLoone’s church. McLoone told investigators that Miller lived in New York City and that he met the inmate via Grindr for a sexual relationship, the complaint shows. 

McLoone separately made 17 payments totaling $1,720 to men he met on Grindr via the Square online payment app and doubled the fee he collected as a stipend for each Mass, wedding and funeral held at St. Joseph’s Parish, prosecutors claim. He’s also accused of using $3,000 of the stolen funds to pay off personal credit cards.

Rev. Joseph McLoone Downingtown priest
Pictured, Rev. Joseph McLoone Downingtown priest. Police bookings.

Put on administrative leave following 2018 church investigation: 

The man’s arrest follows the Archdiocese of Philadelphia launching an investigation of McLoone in early 2018. He was later put on administrative leave before resigning as pastor of the parish, according to a statement released Wednesday by diocese officials.

‘These charges are serious and disturbing,’ the statement read. ‘The Archdiocese and the parish will continue to cooperate with law enforcement as the criminal matter enters its next phase. Pending the outcome, Monsignor McLoone remains on administrative leave. Information regarding his arrest will be shared with the Saint Joseph Parish community.’

McLoone’s lawyer has since defended his client, saying he was free to use his personal funds as he saw fit.

‘What he did with his own personal money is his business,’ attorney Melissa McCafferty told the nypost. ‘It may be between him and the archdiocese, but it’s not between him and law enforcement.’

Citing McLoone’s ‘private life,’ McCafferty declined to discuss details of the allegations but said he had provided authorities with detailed financial records.

Following his arraignment Wednesday morning by Magisterial District Judge Jeffrey Valocchi, McLooney was released on $50,000 unsecured bail. The Monsignor is ordered to appear for a preliminary hearing on Sept. 18.

Rev. Joseph McLoone
Pictured, St. Joseph Parish where Rev. Joseph McLoone presided.
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