George Hecker
George Hecker
George Hecker is a level three sexual offender who was released from prison last week and now resides in Alexandria. As part of an Intensive Supervised Release program, the Department of Corrections will monitor and track his activities.
Hecker, driven by a deep desire to serve humanity, became frustrated by the absence of social service or political action that met his personal needs. His European travel and pastoral experience had sharpened him; now, he sought God’s will for how he should spend his remaining years.
Early Life and Education
George Hecker had an exceptional educational journey. He graduated from both Marion Military Institute in Alabama and The Citadel in Charleston, South Carolina.
He earned a master’s degree from George Washington University in DC and served on the Advisory Committee to the President of Marion Military Institute and Citadel Foundation’s Board of Directors.
Hecker had a long and illustrious career. His artworks were featured at numerous major exhibitions, earning him many accolades. Additionally, he authored numerous books.
Professional Career
George Hecker began his professional life as a metallurgical engineer at General Motors Research Laboratory. In 1986, he returned to Los Alamos National Laboratory as technical staff member and later rose through the ranks to become director from 1986 until 1997 and senior fellow until July 2005.
Hecker’s research interests range from plutonium science and technology, through nuclear weapon policy and international security to cooperative nuclear threat reduction. Furthermore, he has established relationships with Russian nuclear laboratories to secure and safeguard their vast stockpile of ex-Soviet fissile materials.
Hecker is an affiliated faculty member of both the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies (FSI) and Stanford University’s Center for International Security and Cooperation, as well as professor emeritus in the Department of Management Science and Engineering. He earned his B.S. in metallurgy from Case Western Reserve University before receiving his Ph.D. from Stanford University.
Achievements and Honors
George Hecker was a professor emeritus in the Department of Management Science and Engineering at Stanford University, Senior Fellow Emeritus of the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies and Center for International Security and Cooperation at Stanford University, as well as director emeritus of Los Alamos National Laboratory. His research interests ranged from plutonium science to nuclear weapon policy issues to cooperative nuclear threat reduction initiatives.
He began his career at Los Alamos National Laboratory as a graduate research assistant and postdoctoral fellow in 1973, followed by technical staff positions there and at General Motors Research. From there he led the Laboratory’s Materials Science and Technology Division as well as its Center for Materials Science until his retirement in July 2005.
Hecker made numerous contributions to Catholicism throughout his lifetime, such as writing three books: Questions of the Soul (1852), Aspirations of Nature (1857) and The Church and the Age (1987). Furthermore, he established Paulist Fathers – a papal institute with houses across North America, Canada, Italy and South Africa – which remain influential today.
Personal Life
George Hecker was born in Brooklyn, New York and passed away on December 14, 2022 at 98 years of age.
After failing in his political pursuits, he returned to his family’s bakery business with his brothers. But neither baking nor politics could quench the spiritual hunger in his heart.
He sought to fill the void by becoming involved in causes for working class people. Additionally, he hoped to be ordained as a priest but was unsuccessful in this pursuit.
He became an enthusiastic parish missioner, and Catholics responded fervently to his efforts. He wrote a prophetic essay for the First Vatican Council which presciently predicted the Second. A member of the Redemptorist order, he and his confreres conducted missions across America.
Net Worth
Ivory Hecker boasts a net worth of $1 million dollars. Her primary sources of income come from journalism and involvement in charitable causes. Additionally, she teaches students how to become reporters.
Hecker is not currently in the clergy, but he served as an assistant pastor in New Orleans for many decades. His name appears on a list of accused clergy abusers published by the city’s archbishop.
Hecker’s alleged molestation of a minor boy in 1968 occurred while serving as assistant pastor at a Catholic school near New Orleans. Last year, the church released a list of nearly 80 accused clerics; Hecker was included. Additionally, His name was removed from their pension plan in 2020 – something victim advocacy groups believed was indicative of their mishandling of allegations against both Hecker and other sexually exploitive clergy members.