Massachusetts

Ex-Winthrop police lt. pleads not guilty to new child rape charges

New details about the alleged sexual assaults were revealed in Suffolk Superior Court

James Feeley, a former Winthrop, Massachusetts, police lieutenant, in Suffolk Superior Court Thursday, March 28, 2024, to face new charges over a series of alleged sexual assaults of a child.
NBC10 Boston via pool

A former police lieutenant from Winthrop, Massachusetts, arrested in December on suspicion of raping a child at his home pleaded not guilty to new charges Thursday.

Prosecutors shared some new information on the case against former Winthrop Police Lt. James Feeley in Suffolk Superior Court, and the timeline for the trial was set.

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Feeley was initially charged with rape of a child and indecent assault and battery on a child, but now, after being indicted by a grand jury this month, faces seven counts of indecent assault and battery on a child, along with the child rape charge. He pleaded not guilty at Thursday's hearing.

The sexual assaults of the child allegedly took place at Feeley's home, where he and his family lived, between August 2022 and December 2023, when she was between 10 and 11, said Audrey Mark, who leads the Suffolk County District Attorney's Office Child Protection Unit. The girl disclosed the alleged abuse to an adult on Christmas Day; prosecutors have previously said that the victim was taken to Boston Children's Hospital after being sexually assaulted by Feeley around Christmas, after about a year of the sexual abuse.

"The defendant's wife learned of the abuse and confronted the defendant, at which time, he did not deny the abuse," Mark said, going on to say that Feeley admitted sexually assaulting the girl to other members of the Winthrop Police Department at a charged encounter at a cemetery, then to state police investigators.

Feeley "admitted in a recorded interview that he sexually assaulted the child on five or six occasions. He stated that he orally raped the child and indecently touched the child," Mark said.

She noted the seriousness of the allegations, which carry a mandatory minimum penalty of 10 years in prison, in asking to maintain the terms of Feeley's bail, including putting up $200,000 cash or a $2 million bond, staying away from the alleged victim and wearing a GPS tracker.

A longtime officer with the Winthrop Police Department is accused of raping a child.

Feeley's lawyer agreed to the conditions in court.

The judge gave a trial date of March 3, 2025, and laid out a timeline for the run-up to the trial, for which the next hearing is June 5.

Suffolk District Attorney Kevin Hayden called the case troubling on Thursday and said the alleged victim and her family will be provided with "support, guidance and assistance."

"Our prosecutors and victim witness advocates are acutely aware of the challenges victims and families face in such cases and are well-equipped to help from start to finish," he said in a statement.

Feeley served in the Winthrop Police Department for 21 years and was promoted to lieutenant in 2020. After his arrest, he was initially placed on administrative leave, but by January he was no longer with the department.

A state police arrest narrative released previously depicted a dramatic confession Feeley made at Belle Isle Cemetery, where his parents are buried, to Winthrop Police Chief Terence Delehanty; his brother, Winthrop Sgt. Sean Delahanty; and members of his family on the night of Christmas.

Winthrop police found out about the allegations after Feeley's brother called Sean Delahanty that night to tell him he "was really in a bad way," Delahanty recalled, according to the report. He relayed a request to his brother, the chief, to meet Feeley at the cemetery and traveled there himself.

When he arrived, Sgt. Delahanty was told the nature of the allegations against Feeley, he recalled to the state police investigator. Delahanty told Feeley, "whatever is happening the answer is not on his hip," referring to the gun Feeley had on him. Feeley allegedly replied, "wait until I tell you what I've done."

Chief Delahanty arrived, and recalled hearing the extent of the allegations from Feeley, who apologized to the chief and the sergeant, according to the report — Feeley and the chief had known each other for decades. Believing Feeley was suicidal, the chief took Feeley's gun, and the man was taken to Massachusetts General Hospital to have a psychiatric evaluation.

Sgt. Delahanty recalled, according to the report, that Feeley couldn't explain why he had sexually assaulted the child.

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