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Heather Cook

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Church
  
Episcopal Church

Ordination
  
1987

Successor
  
Chilton R. Knudsen

Role
  
Bishop

Name
  
Heather Cook



In office
  
September 2014–May 1, 2015

Consecration
  
September 6, 2014 by Katharine Jefferts Schori, Presiding Bishop

Diocese
  
Episcopal Diocese of Maryland

Episcopal diocese of maryland answers questions about bishop heather cook s arrest


Heather Elizabeth Cook (born September 21, 1956) is a former bishop of the Episcopal Church in the United States. She was a suffragan bishop in the Diocese of Maryland until her resignation from the position in 2015. In September 2015, she pleaded guilty to vehicular manslaughter and was sentenced a month later to seven years in prison.

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In 2014, Cook was the first woman elected by the diocese to become a bishop and she was consecrated as suffragan to Eugene Sutton. Cook was one of four finalists for the office of suffragan bishop and was elected on the fourth ballot. She was the 1,081st bishop consecrated in the Episcopal Church.

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Cook was placed on administrative leave at the end of 2014 after involvement in a traffic fatality in north Baltimore. She was charged with drunk driving, texting while driving, and leaving the scene of the crime, in addition to vehicular manslaughter in the death of cyclist Thomas Palermo. On January 22, 2015, the standing committee of the diocese requested that Cook resign her position. This was followed by the Presiding Bishop, Katharine Jefferts Schori, placing formal restrictions on Cook preventing her from presenting herself as an ordained minister of the Episcopal Church.

Heather Cook Former Episcopal Bishop Heather Cook sentenced to seven years in

Cook was arraigned on more than a dozen charges—including manslaughter, DUI, and leaving the scene of an accident. At the arraignment hearing on April 2, 2015, she entered a plea of not guilty and a trial date was set for June 4, 2015.

On June 4, 2015, the trial was postponed to September 9, 2015.

On May 1, 2015, Katharine Jefferts Schori, the Presiding Bishop, announced that both she and the Diocese of Maryland had accepted Cook's resignation as a bishop and as an employee of the diocese. Moreover, it was announced that Cook and the church had reached an accord where Cook received a "Sentence of Deposition" which stripped her of her right to exercise any ordained ministry within the Episcopal Church. Following Cook's resignation Sutton and the standing committee named Chilton R. Knudsen as Assistant Bishop for the Diocese of Maryland.

On September 8, 2015, state prosecutors and Cook agreed to a plea bargain. Cook pleaded guilty, and the prosecutors asked for a twenty-year sentence (with ten years suspended). On October 27, 2015, she was sentenced to seven years in prison, and was taken into custody immediately afterwards.

Cook requested early release in 2017. At a hearing on May 9, 2017 the parole board denied outright her request. The board cited her not taking responsibility for her actions nor showing any remorse as the reasons for ruling the way they did. As a result she is no longer eligible for parole and will be in prison until at least 2019. Her mandatory release date is now October 21, 2022.

References

Heather Cook Wikipedia


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