Saints’ involvement in clergy abuse case may disrupt their head coach search

Once other teams hired their coaches, all the Saints had to do was stay out of their own way. But they just couldn’t. Will Kellen Moore balk at this new controversy?

Super Bowl week hasn’t started off how the New Orleans Saints expected. Hours after team owner Gayle Benson stepped into a spotlight at the historic St. Louis Cathedral to kick off festivities, new reporting from multiple major news outlets revealed the contents of hundreds of emails sent between the team’s chief PR man and the New Orleans archdiocese. It’s a crisis of poor leadership on Airline Drive.

The Guardian’s Ramon Antonio Vargas and WWL TV’s David Hammer, the Associated Press’ Jim Mustian and Brett Martel, plus Jenny Vrentas at the New York Times each shared enlightening information to the “crisis communications” that Saints vice president of communications Greg Bensel volunteered for. With Benson’s blessing, he spent months advising archbishop Gregory Aymond on how to release information, interact with the media, and work on damage control in messages to the community.

It’s a big mess the Saints made for themselves, and now the Saints are asking a new head coach to step into the middle of it. As fate would have it, that coach appears to be Kellen Moore. The Philadelphia Eagles offensive coordinator has a busy week ahead preparing his team for their Super Bowl LIX matchup with the Kansas City Chiefs. He’ll have multiple media availabilities this week and, as the nominal home team, his Eagles squad will be using the Saints’ team headquarters in Metairie as their daily practice facility.

You can expect Moore is going to be asked about this scandal even though he hasn’t signed anything or been officially hired by the Saints. As one of the faces of an organization the head coach has to answer for a lot of things that don’t have to do with football. With the entire football media world converging on New Orleans before the biggest game of the year, Moore is about to get a taste of that. And he could find it doesn’t agree with him.

Don’t be shocked if Moore decides this is too much. The Saints are already asking a lot of him (or any other coach candidate) with a talent-poor roster, a messy salary cap accounting sheet, and the NFL’s longest-tenured general manager stubbornly clinging to power. Take all that and add a very public connection to a child sex abuse scandal? Many people would decide they’re better off not associating themselves with that.

For what it’s worth, Moore does not keep the Catholic faith like many of the people involved in this crisis (Benson and Bensel both are). He’s reportedly a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

When the Saints were left as the last team searching for a head coach in 2025, we wrote that all they had to do was stay out of their own way to get their guy. They couldn’t do that. The state of the roster and organizational disfunction convinced Joe Brady and Kliff Kingsbury to stay with their playoff teams. Moore may have been willing to overlook that, but will he be as eager to sidestep this very real, non-football controversy? That remains to be seen. And if the Saints miss out on their top candidate (again), they’ll have no one to blame but themselves.

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New reporting uncovers emails from Saints’ involvement in Catholic clergy abuse scandal

Could Gayle Benson be forced to sell the Saints? New reporting uncovers the team’s involvement in ‘crisis communications’ in the New Orleans Catholic clergy abuse scandal:

New reporting from multiple major news outlets has uncovered hundreds of emails documenting the New Orleans Saints’ involvement in an ongoing clergy abuse crisis within the Catholic archdiocese — a scandal that has led archbishop Gregory Michael Aymond to fire the board and CEO of Second Harvest food bank after they balked at using the nonprofit’s resources to pay for tens of millions of dollars the archdiocese owes to hundreds of child sex abuse survivors. Donors have voiced their outrage at this move while Aymond has defended his actions as being misrepresented by the leadership he ousted.

But that’s all beside the point. The Guardian’s Ramon Antonio Vargas, a former Saints beat writer, shared extensive reporting with his colleague at WWL TV, David Hammer, that brought to light just how the Saints became entangled in this mess. So did the Associated Press’ Jim Mustian and New Orleans-based Brett Martel, as well as Jenny Vrentas for the New York Times.

Their reporting found that Greg Bensel, the Saints and Pelicans’ chief PR man and vice president of communications since 2006, emailed team owner Gayle Benson in July 2018 asking permission to assist Aymond in “crisis communications.” She gave him her blessing in a response: “Thank you Greg … I am certain he will appreciate it.” Benson has maintained a close friendship with Aymond for years and considers him a confidant. She met her late husband Tom Benson at the St. Louis Cathedral where Aymond offers Mass. Bensel is also a member of the Catholic Church.

An attorney for the Saints told the Guardian that Bensel sought this permission on the urging of federal judge Jay Zainey, another devout Catholic based from New Orleans, as well as “other local civic leaders.” Bensel then spent months using his team email account to correspond with Aymond and team president Dennis Lauscha. On Nov. 1, 2018, a day before the list of credibly accused clergy was made public, Bensel emailed Lauscha that he had held a conference call with the New Orleans district attorney at the time: “Leon Cannizzaro last night that allowed us to take certain people off the list.”

That runs against a statement the Saints and Pelicans published in 2020 which Bensel likely wrote in his capacity as the team’s VP of communications, or at least rubber-stamped before going to the public: “No one associated our organizations made recommendations or had input on the individual names of those disclosed on the list.” The Saints have continued to deny suggestions that any team employees were involved with this. Cannizzaro retired in 2020 and has, through a spokesperson to the Associated Press, also denied the claim he was consulted about the list or that anyone from his office had input on it.

These connections run deep. Aymond served as a signing witness on the late Tom Benson’s testamentary will which put Gayle Benson in position to inherit the teams upon his passing. That will also included Lauscha, Bensel, and general manager Mickey Loomis as executors of the Benson estate, in that order.

Bensel continued to assist Aymond with managing communications for months after the Nov. 2018 list was released. These emails show he prepared Aymond for interviews with reporters, wrote letters to local papers like the Advocate and Times-Picayune (prior to their merger), and corresponded with the archdiocese’s general counsel, all the while using his official Saints team email account. Frustration mounted by July 2019 when he confided to his ex-wife that “I don’t get paid enough – Helping the Archbishop prep for his 9 am meeting.” A subpoena shortly thereafter requested all of these emails be brought before the courts, and at that point Bensel ceased email correspondence.

So what’s next? Will the NFL punish the Saints for their role in this scandal? Will Gayle Benson be forced to sell the team? At this point we just don’t know. But Bensel’s error in judgment to use his professional email account (and thus team resources) for a personal pursuit was clearly a massive error in judgement. So was Benson green-lighting it. If Bensel wanted to offer his assistance as an individual member of the congregation and community and corresponded from a private email address, the team could have protected itself. Instead the Saints have been tied to one of the most reprehensible scandals our region has seen in recent memory. That’s embarrassing at best. As one of my former colleagues once put it, “The Saints need a PR guy for their PR guy.”

The NFL doesn’t have much history of forcing owners to sell their teams. Former Philadelphia Eagles owner Leonard Tose bought the team in 1969 and was effectively forced to sell it in 1985 to pay off gambling debts, though not by demand of his fellow owners. Dan Snyder recently sold the Washington Commanders after an investigation detailed a toxic workplace environment, and allegations came to light accusing Snyder of underreporting ticket revenue to other teams. He was pressured to sell, but not forced. Facing his own accusations of sexual harassment and using a racial slur towards an employee, former Carolina Panthers owner Jerry Richardson chose to sell the team in 2017 rather than be voted out following an NFL investigation into his behavior and organization.

So Benson could certainly be pressured into selling, too. That just feels unlikely given how much water she draws in Louisiana. Maybe the answer is to make Bensel a public scapegoat and let him go, despite his place in the Benson will and decades of service in her business interests (he has also overseen her horseracing venture and works with the car dealerships, corporate realty, and other pursuits). It’s obvious that organizational changes are needed. The question is whether they’ll come to fruition. With all eyes on New Orleans ahead of Super Bowl LIX and Benson quite literally stepping into the spotlight, she and the Saints can’t ignore this problem they’ve created for themselves much longer.

We’ve only summarized the findings of this reporting from the Guardian, the New York Times, and the Associated Press here. These reporters have done tremendous work in bringing this evidence to light and you owe it to them to get the full story. We’ve linked to them earlier, but here they are again for reference.

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Gayle Benson presents Pope Francis with personalized Saints jersey

New Orleans Saints owner Gayle Benson presented Pope Francis with a personalized Saints jersey while visiting Rome:

There aren’t many New Orleans Saints jerseys to be found in Vatican City, and one of the few you’ll see there is personalized for the Pope himself. Saints owner Gayle Benson received a personal audience with Pope Francis this week, in which she gifted him a custom No. 1 jersey emblazoned with “Papa Francesco,” as seen a photo shared by WDSU’s Fletcher Mackel.

Mackel reports that this was just one stop on Benson’s 10-day trip in Europe. She also petitioned the Papal Foundation and other business and tourism groups for investments in New Orleans and renovations to the iconic St. Louis Cathedral. She’ll visit Italy and Germany as part of this tour before returning to Louisiana.

Benson has deep ties to the Catholic Church and the Archdiocese in New Orleans; it’s where she met her late husband Tom Benson, and she maintains a close friendship with Archbishop Gregory Aymond. But that relationship has drawn scrutiny between Benson donating tens of millions of dollars to the archdiocese and the involvement of Saints executives in assisting the church with damage control during its clergy abuse crisis.

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