Kevin Reynolds (priest)
Kevin Reynolds is an Irish Roman Catholic priest who was falsely accused of raping and impregnating a Kenyan teenager in a 2011 RTÉ documentary titled "Mission to Prey", broadcast on the Prime Time programme. The baseless allegations, made by journalist Aoife Kavanagh, led to controversy in Ireland, leading to RTÉ’s apology, a libel settlement, and a government inquiry into the broadcaster’s editorial practices.
Early life and priesthood
Born around 1947 in County Galway, Ireland, Kevin Reynolds grew up in a rural community with strong Catholic traditions. He studied for the priesthood at St. Patrick’s College, Maynooth, and was ordained a priest on 7 June 1971 for the Diocese of Galway, Kilmacduagh and Kilfenora. Reynolds later joined the Kiltegan Fathers, serving as a missionary in Kenya's Diocese of Kakamega during the 1980s, focusing on education and pastoral care.False allegations and RTÉ controversy
In May 2011, RTÉ's Prime Time aired "Mission to Prey", a documentary produced by journalist Aoife Kavanagh, which alleged that Reynolds, during his missionary work in Kenya, had raped a minor named Veneranda, impregnating her and fathering a child named Sheila. The programme claimed Reynolds had secretly provided financial support to Sheila for years, with Veneranda and Sheila appearing on air to support the allegations.Reynolds, then serving as parish priest in Ahascragh, County Galway, had offered to undergo DNA testing to prove his innocence before the broadcast, but RTÉ reportedly declined. After the programme aired, Reynolds was suspended from his parish duties and faced significant public stigma. Subsequent independent DNA tests, conducted by both RTÉ and Reynolds' legal team, confirmed he was not Sheila's father, proving the allegations were false.
The revelation of the false accusations sparked controversy. RTÉ issued a public apology to Reynolds on 19 November 2011, and Prime Time Investigates was suspended. RTÉ’s Director-General, Noel Curran, described the broadcast as "one of the gravest editorial mistakes" in the broadcaster's history. Prominent RTÉ figures, including Mike Murphy, John Bowman, and Sean O’Rourke, publicly condemned the libel. The Irish Missionary Union criticised RTÉ for retaining Kavanagh on its Morning Ireland programme, citing "double standards".
In November 2011, Reynolds reached an undisclosed out-of-court libel settlement with RTÉ. His solicitor also requested that Justice Minister Alan Shatter, who had initially endorsed the documentary, publicly clarify Reynolds' innocence, which Shatter did. The Irish government ordered an inquiry by the Broadcasting Authority of Ireland, which found that RTÉ had breached broadcasting standards, leading to reforms in editorial oversight.