http://www.1010wins.com/Priest-s-Body-Found-in-Rectory/5509478
CHATHAM, N.J. (AP/1010 WINS) — A Catholic priest was found slain Friday morning in his clerical
robes in the rectory of his northern New Jersey parish, and authorities
warned that a killer was on the loose.
Morris County Prosecutor Robert Bianchi would
not say how Father Ed Hinds, 61, was killed but said the body had
wounds "consistent with a homicide.'' No one has been arrested.
"Until a suspect is caught, people should be hypervigilant,'' Bianchi said.
Hinds' body, dressed in vestments, was found around 8 a.m. Friday in
the rectory attached to St. Patrick's Church in the affluent Newark
suburb of Chatham after he didn't show up to preside over morning Mass.
He was last seen alive around 11 p.m. Thursday, following a safety
seminar held by police at the church in which they fingerprinted and
photographed young children.
Roads and intersections around the church and its Catholic school were closed as authorities investigated.
"It makes absolutely no sense. He was certainly a very well-loved
pastor,'' said Bishop Arthur Serratelli of the Roman Catholic Diocese
of Paterson. "We ask that you please pray for him.''
Theresa and Michael Marotta, who live down the street from the
church, were trying to figure out what to tell their 10-year-old son,
who attends the school.
"It's very shocking and very sad,'' Theresa Marotta, 44, said.
Michael Marotta, 47, described Hinds as a gentle and insightful yet quiet person.
He had been at the parish since 2003. Born in Morristown, he
attended high school there and college at Seton Hall University. He was
ordained in 1974.
Following an early stint at St. Patrick's, he went on to become the
vice chancellor of the Diocese of Paterson and secretary to the bishop
from 1978 to 1989.
He previously was pastor of St. Michael Church in Netcong and Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church in Boonton.
Hinds' cousin Jeannette Miller said she was in shock.
"He was just a magnificent man,'' she said. "He had a wonderful life and was a wonderful priest, and everybody loved him.''
Police held a safety seminar at the church Thursday in which they fingerprinted and photographed young children.