Peter Laird, the former vicar general of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis during the controversial tenure of Archbishop John Nienstedt, has left the priesthood.
Laird spent nearly 20 years in high-profile roles in the archdiocese. He abruptly resigned as second-in-command in October 2013, a day following courtroom allegations that the archdiocese had mishandled the case of a priest found to possess pornography.
It was the start of a clergy abuse scandal that rocked the diocese for the next three years.
Laird, who later said he urged Nienstedt to resign as well, was among a handful of clergy in Nienstedt's inner circle, evaluating church responses to clergy abuse allegations and other matters. He petitioned the Vatican for removal from the priesthood in January 2014.
"I have recently been informed that the Holy Father has granted Peter's request," wrote Archbishop Bernard Hebda in a March 10 letter to archdiocese priests. "That means that Peter, who had withdrawn from public priestly ministry in 2013, will live as a lay person and will not be able to return to ordinary public ministry without permission of the Holy Father."
Laird was a rising star in the archdiocese, promoted to be the archbishop's top deputy in 2009 when he was 43. He is a former theology professor at the University of St. Thomas, a nine-year vice rector at the St. Paul Seminary, former vicar at St. Olaf Church in downtown Minneapolis and former co-chairman of the Archdiocese's Strategic Planning Committee.
His parents, Stewart and Kathy Laird of St. Paul, also held prominent archdiocese leadership positions over the years.
The Star Tribune was not able to reach Laird for comment. In 2013, after his sudden resignation, he issued this statement: