Robert Lynch was born on May 27, 1941, in Charleston, West Virginia.[1] He grew up in Montgomery, West Virginia, to an Irish-American family that expected him to become a priest. Lynch soon entered the Pontifical College Josephinum. However, he found the College to be a dark, rigid place with strict rules and limited communication with his family. Eventually, Lynch dropped out and started working as an English teacher.[2]
On June 6, 1998, Lynch was appointed as apostolic administrator of the Diocese of Palm Beach, while remaining the bishop of St. Petersburg. He took over after John Paul II removed the existing bishop, Bishop Joseph Symons, for sexual abuse crimes. Lynch remained as administrator in Palm Beach until November 12, 1998, when Bishop Anthony O'Connell was installed there as bishop.[3]
Lynch continued the reorganization and management of the Diocese of St. Petersburg begun under Bishop Favalora. He commissioned the building of the Bishop W. Thomas Larkin Pastoral Center in St. Petersburg, which was dedicated on March 31, 2000 He also took an active role in planning for the future construction of new Catholic high schools, and improvements to the existing schools.[citation needed]
On June 2, 2011, Lynch published a letter detailing how the diocese had spent $4.7 million since 1990 to settle sexual misconduct cases.[4][5] In 2001, Bill Urbanski, the diocese spokesman, accused Lynch of inappropriate behavior during a business trip. Urbanski said Lynch bought him lavish gifts, forced to him to share a hotel room, grabbed his thigh, and asked Urbanski to photograph him topless for a gag picture. The diocese denied any wrongdoing and paid Urbanski $100,000 severance. Lynch apologized for his actions.[2]
Retirement and legacy
Pope Francis accepted Lynch's resignation as bishop of the Diocese of St. Petersburg on November 28, 2016, and named Gregory Parkes as his successor.[3]