Priest found murdered in church

CHATHAM, New Jersey Preliminary autopsy results confirmed that the Rev. Ed Hinds was a homicide victim, said Morris County Prosecutor Robert Bianchi. No one has been arrested, and authorities said they would not discuss possible motives.

"Until a suspect is caught, people should be hypervigilant," Bianchi said, noting a "significant amount of injuries" to Hinds.

"The fact is that this was a community leader whose arms were wide open to downtrodden," he said. "Maybe one of those individuals was involved. That kind of generosity is preyed upon."

Hinds, dressed in vestments, was found around 8 a.m. Friday in the kitchen of the rectory attached to St. Patrick's Church in the affluent community of Chatham, west of Newark, after he didn't show up to preside over morning Mass.

Monsignor Kenneth Lasch, a retired priest who knew Hinds for four decades, told The Star-Ledger that he learned of the killing from parish workers who knew Hinds had left instructions for Lasch to deliver the eulogy in the event of his death.

"The parish called me and said they found him in the kitchen on the floor," Lasch told the newspaper. "He had his dog with him, and apparently he was making a cup of coffee."

The 61-year-old Hinds 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.

The killing sent shock waves through the New York City bedroom community of 10,000 residents, where families make a median $132,000 a year and deadly violence hasn't visited since a 1990 manslaughter case.

John Polanin Jr., a church trustee, said he knew of no disturbances or similar troubles at the church. He said Hinds was "very happy" to be there and had sought approval to serve another six years with the parish, a request that was recently approved by church leaders.

"He was the hardest working priest I've ever met, and he will be greatly missed. Numb is a good word to describe how I feel right now," Polanin said Friday night. "He was very humble, very supportive of lay people and always urged people to get involved.

He hoped people would share his vision of being community-oriented."

Janet Gilmartin stood on the front porch of her single-family home across from the church as uniformed police officers searched through the bushes in her yard and leaves in the street gutter.

"It's frightening to think that the person who did this thing might have been running across the street this morning when my daughter was stepping outside to take my grandson to school," said Gilmartin, 69.

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.

"And he was a warm person," he said.

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 1985.

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."

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