Father James Jackson, FSSP, delivers the homily at the funeral Mass for slain Boulder police officer Eric Talley on March 29, 2021, at the Cathedral Basilica of the Immaculate Conception in Denver, Colorado / null
Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Oct 31, 2021 / 14:08 pm (CNA).
Father James Jackson, a priest of the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter (FSSP) and pastor of St. Mary’s Church in Providence, Rhode Island, was arrested at the parish on Oct. 30 and charged with three crimes related to child sexual abuse material.
Jackson, 66, was charged with possession of child pornography, transfer of child pornography, and child erotica prohibited, the Rhode Island State Police announced Sunday.
The arrest stemmed from an investigation by Rhode Island State Police Computer Crimes Units/Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force, which discovered that the internet connection at the rectory at St. Mary’s Church was being used to share child sexual abuse material, the state police said. The state police executed a search warrant on Saturday at the parish and then arrested Jackson after determining that he was the owner of the material, the state police said.
Ordained in 2011, Jackson was formerly pastor of Our Lady of Mount Carmel Catholic Church in Littleton, Colorado. He gave the homily at the March 29 funeral Mass for Eric Talley, a Boulder police officer and Catholic father of seven who was killed in a mass shooting at a Colorado supermarket. Jackson became pastor at St. Mary’s, a Traditional Latin Mass parish, on Aug. 1.
In Rhode Island, the charge of “child erotica prohibited” is defined as the production, possession, display, or distribution of “any visual portrayals of minors who are partially clothed, where the visual portrayals are used for the specific purpose of sexual gratification or sexual arousal from viewing the visual portrayals.”
If convicted of all three charges, Jackson faces up to 21 years in prison.
An Oct. 31 statement from the Diocese of Providence said that Jackson “has been prohibited from the sacred ministry and the exercise of the office of pastor” by Bishop Thomas Tobin of Providence as a result of the arrest. The statement said the diocese had been presented with a letter of suitability for ministry for Jackson prior to his arrival in the state, and that the parish will continue to be entrusted to the care of the FSSP.
“The Diocese of Providence applauds the efforts of the Rhode Island State Police and the other law enforcement bodies involved in making this arrest,” the diocese’s statement said. “We look forward to working with law enforcement and the Attorney General to ensure the safety of children.”
Tobin added “the use of child pornography is a serious crime and a grave sin,” and that the charges against Jackson “are very disturbing to all and must be taken very seriously.”
“At the same time, I renew my pastoral concern and offer my fervent prayers for the good people of St. Mary Parish during this difficult time,” he said.
A statement from the FSSP said the order was “shocked and saddened by news of Father Jackson’s arrest and the serious allegations against him.”
“Before starting his current assignment at the beginning of August, Father underwent a criminal background check and had a sterling record of priestly service,” the FSSP statement said.
“We had no reason to believe Father was engaging in any inappropriate behavior, let alone criminal conduct. Like all those accused of crimes, Father has a natural human right under both civil and canon law to the presumption of innocence and we will fully cooperate with the law enforcement authorities as they investigate this matter.”
The FSSP said it was praying for those involved and that their “hearts go out to all those who have been hurt by sexual misconduct of any kind.”
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A Chase bank building in Wilmington, Delaware. / Credit: Harrison Keely, CC BY 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
CNA Staff, Mar 25, 2025 / 06:00 am (CNA).
Legislators in several states are moving to address the practice of “debanking” as part of an effort to stop what some critics say are anti-conservative measures employed by major U.S. financial institutions.
The Cambridge Dictionary defines debanking as “the act by a bank of closing someone’s account because they are regarded as a risk legally, financially, or to the bank’s reputation.” Critics have claimed that the practice is used by banks to antagonize certain groups, including conservatives and other political activists.
For example, the Trump Organization filed a lawsuit earlier this month against one of the largest banks in the United States. President Donald Trump claims he was a victim of debanking after Capital One allegedly closed hundreds of his organization’s accounts soon after his supporters’ Jan. 6, 2021, storming of the U.S. Capitol.
In her recently-released memoir, Melania Trump alleged that she and her son, Barron, were also debanked.
The Ruth Institute, a global coalition designed to equip Christians to defend the family, alleged it was debanked in 2017. Just two years ago, a Memphis-based Christian charity called the Indigenous Advance Ministries also claimed that it had been debanked by Bank of America.
In another high-profile case, in 2022 former U.S. senator and ambassador Sam Brownback announced that his nonprofit group the National Committee for Religious Freedom had been debanked.
Ambassador Sam Brownback speaks on Feb. 6, 2018. Credit: Jonah McKeown/ CNA
Over the past decade, other high-ranking individuals and grassroots organizations have reportedly faced debanking, including Nigel Farage, who led the Brexit effort in the United Kingdom; evangelist and motivational speaker Nick Vujicic; Moms for Liberty, a parental rights advocacy group; Christian author and preacher Lance Wallnau; and Timothy Two Project International, a Christian ministry.
U.S. bishops ‘monitoring’ debanking; legislators move to address
While it’s unclear to what extent debanking has affected U.S. Catholics, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops acknowledged the phenomenon in its 2025 religious liberty report.
“In recent years, individuals have raised concerns that banks are discriminating on the basis of political and religious viewpoints,” the report read.
“In response to incidents like these, some states have begun passing laws intended to prevent politically motivated debanking,” the bishops noted. “However, the U.S. government argues that these laws hamstring banks, who need to be able to account for potential customers’ exposure to foreign actors. The lack of transparency, though, makes it difficult to ascertain why someone like Ambassador Brownback would be debanked.”
According to the report, the USCCB is “monitoring this issue but has not taken a position on it.”
Taking action against debanking
Some lawmakers are moving to address the controversy via legislation.
An anti-debanking bill in Idaho was sent to the state governor for signature last week.
The Transparency in Financial Services Act would prohibit “large financial institutions from discriminating against customers based on their political or religious views” and would give customers the right to request the reason for denial from an institution.
Montana’s Republican-sponsored Equality in Financial Services Act and South Carolina’s anti-debanking bill — similar to Idaho’s bill — have made some progress in the state Legislature, while Georgia’s Freedom of Speech and Belief Act failed to pass at the beginning of March.
Some see changes in bank policy, or even legal changes, as potential solutions to debanking.
Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) — a legal group committed to protecting religious freedom and freedom of speech — worked with Indigenous Advance Ministries to file a consumer complaint following its alleged debanking in 2022.
“No American should ever fear losing access to their bank account due to their religious or political beliefs,” Lathan Watts, ADF’s vice president of public affairs, told CNA.
In its 2023 Viewpoint Diversity Score Index, ADF found that 7 out of 10 of the largest commercial banks — including Chase — have “hate speech” or “reputational risk” policies that contribute to debanking.
JPMorgan Chase, a top American bank, recently adjusted its policy, agreeing to protect clients against political and religious debanking in its code of conduct after 19 attorneys general petitioned the bank to cease its debanking practices in 2023.
“Chase’s policy change is a significant step by our nation’s largest bank to uphold financial access for all Americans,” Watts said. “This change provides necessary protections for customers like Ambassador Brownback, whose account at the National Committee for Religious Freedom was unexpectedly canceled in 2022.”
Watts shared his hope that other banks will take similar measures.
“Alliance Defending Freedom actively engaged with Chase in these negotiations, and we are hopeful that other banks will follow suit in safeguarding fundamental financial freedoms,” Watts said.
Jennifer Roback Morse, the founder and president of the Ruth Institute — an organization dedicated to combating the effects of the sexual revolution — recalled her own experience allegedly being debanked.
“In 2017, the Ruth Institute was one of the first organizations to be attacked in the banking arena,” Morse told CNA. “In our case, our credit card processor cut us off with no notification, or explanation, except to say that we ‘violated its standards.’”
Ruth Institute President Jennifer Roback Morse speaks on “The World Over with Raymond Arroyo” on June 13, 2019. Credit: “The World Over with Raymond Arroyo/EWTN News screenshot
While there was no clear explanation, Morse believes it was due to a leftist law center labeling the organization as a hate group.
“We surmised this was because we were listed on the Southern Poverty Law Center’s ‘Hate Map’ for our opposition to the redefinition of marriage and other LGBT-issues,” Morse said. “Thankfully, we were able to secure another credit card processor fairly quickly.”
Morse told CNA that banking “is a highly regulated, semi-monopolistic industry, comparable in some respects to public utilities such as electricity and water.”
“I am in favor of banks being legally required to be transparent and even-handed in their standards,” she said.
“Alternatively, if banks are permitted to engage in viewpoint discrimination,” she argued, “I would urge that bakers, florists, therapists, and other professionals also be permitted to refuse service to potential customers for any reason they choose.”
“A disappointed customer can find an alternative photographer a lot easier than they can find an alternative bank,” Morse noted. “And it is a lot easier to participate in the business world without a photographer or florist than to survive without banking services.”
‘A balanced approach’
While conservative legislators are pushing these anti-debanking bills, support for this legislation is not entirely united within the conservative movement.
A recent poll found that while a majority of conservatives are concerned about debanking, nearly three-quarters of conservatives expressed support for banks having the right to choose their own clients.
The poll by the Tyson Group found that conservatives “do not support broad government intervention that prevents financial institutions from making risk-based assessments when determining their customers.”
“When informed that legislation could force businesses to provide services to customers at odds with their values and the conservative movement, many expressed hesitations,” the study noted.
“As conservatives push for greater accountability from regulators, they also seek a balanced approach to debanking that avoids unintended consequences and protects the rights of both consumers and businesses.”
Some opponents of anti-debanking laws maintain that restrictions against debanking could have unintended consequences.
In South Carolina, for example, an anti-debanking bill under consideration, the Equality in Financial Services Act, would prevent financial institutions from discriminating when providing financial services.
But a Republican executive committeeman from Richland, South Carolina, is concerned that such an anti-debanking law could require pro-life banks to work with abortionists.
“Stopping abortion and protecting children requires winning hearts and minds but also cutting off the financial pipeline that enables these activities,” Eaddy Roe Willard, Richland GOP executive committeeman, told CNA. “Misguided legislation at the state level will only make it harder to do that.”
I hope this priest is found to be innocent. However, some people hate our good Pope so much that they blame him for the work done by the State Police Computer Crimes Units/Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force. Very sad indeed.
Anything’s possible & we’re all innocent until proven guilty but we should exhibit the same caution for any priest arrested whether they’re from a traditional order or not.
Our parish had a well loved pastor convicted of the same crime several years ago & he gave out no warning signals or red flags. In over 2 decades he’d never had a complaint filed & to this day he still has had no other charges filed beyond the child porn he admitted to or any victims to come forward.
Pornography’s a terrible vice that can lead men further & further into darkness.
Francis’ Curia cares not a whit for the TLM, which drives the charism, constitution and canonical status of the FSSP.
The ‘inn’ of a new synodal way may not have room for a community whose mission is to sanctify priests through the traditional liturgy of the Roman Rite and to place them at the service of the Church.
Francis has said and shown that he likes a mess. He’s clearly master of the sandbox and of dirt. So here we all are, reading the dirty little ditty on the computer of an FSSP priest in Provincetown, no less.
Fr. Jackson was not ordained in 2011 as the article says. He was ordained in 1985 for the Diocese of Wichita. I should know… I was at his ordination and was the Deacon at his first Mass.
Wildly improbable prosecution based on prosecution, the state can always manufacture a crime for the undesirable and out of step. Rhode Island’s State Police are the most corrupt force in New England which has some of the worse State Police in the Country.
Pope Francis is neither good (as someone referred to him) nor involved in this injustice because he is too busy protecting the delicate consciences of Democrats who support Abortion Rights and the Environment. Remember Father Rutler.
Sounds like a set up by the USCCB and Francis combined to discredit a good priest. The sick wicked lot of them
I hope this priest is found to be innocent. However, some people hate our good Pope so much that they blame him for the work done by the State Police Computer Crimes Units/Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force. Very sad indeed.
Anything’s possible & we’re all innocent until proven guilty but we should exhibit the same caution for any priest arrested whether they’re from a traditional order or not.
Our parish had a well loved pastor convicted of the same crime several years ago & he gave out no warning signals or red flags. In over 2 decades he’d never had a complaint filed & to this day he still has had no other charges filed beyond the child porn he admitted to or any victims to come forward.
Pornography’s a terrible vice that can lead men further & further into darkness.
Francis’ Curia cares not a whit for the TLM, which drives the charism, constitution and canonical status of the FSSP.
The ‘inn’ of a new synodal way may not have room for a community whose mission is to sanctify priests through the traditional liturgy of the Roman Rite and to place them at the service of the Church.
Francis has said and shown that he likes a mess. He’s clearly master of the sandbox and of dirt. So here we all are, reading the dirty little ditty on the computer of an FSSP priest in Provincetown, no less.
Edit: Providence RI (not Provincetown MA).
Fr. Jackson was not ordained in 2011 as the article says. He was ordained in 1985 for the Diocese of Wichita. I should know… I was at his ordination and was the Deacon at his first Mass.
Wildly improbable prosecution based on prosecution, the state can always manufacture a crime for the undesirable and out of step. Rhode Island’s State Police are the most corrupt force in New England which has some of the worse State Police in the Country.
Pope Francis is neither good (as someone referred to him) nor involved in this injustice because he is too busy protecting the delicate consciences of Democrats who support Abortion Rights and the Environment. Remember Father Rutler.