ABUSE TRACKER

A digest of links to media coverage of clergy abuse. For recent coverage listed in this blog, read the full article in the newspaper or other media source by clicking “Read original article.” For earlier coverage, click the title to read the original article.

June 13, 2013

“Regarding the ICC, chin up!”

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

POSTED BY DAVID CLOHESSY ON JUNE 13, 2013

Two words of advice to anyone who might feel down about the news about our International Criminal Court complaint: “Chin up.”

This is a bump in the road. It’s far, far, far from the end of the road.

The ICC isn’t like US courts. We can, have and will go back to the ICC, submitting more and more proof, for however long it takes. At any point, the prosecutor can say “Now, we’re opening an investigation.” We are still very confident that, at some point, this will happen.

At the beginning of this historic, uphill struggle, when we filed the case (along with the superb attorneys from the Center for Constitutional Rights), we said over and over again that this would be a long-term effort, that we’d be back time and time again with more and more evidence, that the court couldn’t take action on crimes before 2002, that much of our documentation is designed to show a long-standing pattern of protecting predators and hurting children. . . .

The Associated Press notes that “the odds against the court opening an investigation have been enormous. (The ICC) prosecutor has received more than 9,700 independent proposals for inquiries since 2002, when the court was created as the world’s only permanent war crimes tribunal, and has never opened a formal investigation based solely on such a request.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Hague Court Declines Inquiry Into Church Abuse Cover-Up

UNITED STATES
The New York Times

By LAURIE GOODSTEIN
Published: June 13, 2013

The International Criminal Court in The Hague has decided not to investigate or prosecute the former pope and other leaders of the Roman Catholic Church on allegations of covering up the sexual abuse of children by priests.

Victims of sexual abuse filed a complaint in 2011 asking the court to prosecute Benedict XVI, then the pope, and three other Vatican officials for what they called an international and systemic cover-up of sexual abuse that amounted to “crimes against humanity.”

The court responded in a letter dated May 31 that after analyzing the complaint, it determined that the matters “do not appear to fall within the jurisdiction of the Court.” The letter said that “some of the allegations” fell outside the court’s jurisdiction, which is to prosecute genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes.

In addition, the case did not appear to meet the court’s time limits. For the most part, the court may prosecute only crimes committed after it was constituted in July 2002, and even though the cases submitted by the victims involved more recent allegations, some of the supporting material the victims submitted predated 2002.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

“The Vatican lobby threat goes beyond sexual orientation”

NEW YORK
Vatican Insider

In an interview with “Vatican Insider”, American Vaticanista John Allen weighs in on Pope Francis’ comments about the “gay lobby” in the Vatican

PAOLO MASTROLILLI
NEW YORK

What do you think the Pope meant?

“It’s important to remember that the “gay lobby” phrase came up in the context of the Vatileaks scandal, when the big question was who’s behind it. The theory was that maybe gays were involved, not because they’re gay, but because somebody with a secret to keep could be vulnerable to pressure and blackmail. The concern isn’t really sexual orientation, but whether somebody is working against the pope’s interests.”

How is this lobby functioning inside the Vatican?

“I’m not sure it’s really a “lobby” … I doubt they have meetings or a secret handshake. However, people leading a double life – whether it’s about sex, money or anything else – often feel a natural affinity with one another.”

Is this comment related to the Pope’s effort to reform the Curia, to the sexual abuses, or both?

“It’s related to reform of the Roman Curia, in that Francis wants to make sure decisions are being made for the right reasons and not because of hidden pressures.”

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Francis sends out smoke signal for Vatican reform

NEW YORK
Vatican Insider

“Vatican Insider” interviews philosopher Michael Novak, one of America’s top Catholic thinkers

PAOLO MASTROLILLI
NEW YORK

“The U.S. Church has done a great deal to end the sex abuse plague; possibly too much. So I don’t think Pope Francis’ comment about the existence of a gay lobby was in reference to this problem. The key point here is the reform of the Curia. This is probably what his pontificate will be judged on.”

The philosopher Michael Novak is one of America’s most authoritative Catholic scholars and is currently in Italy to attend a celebration for the former U.S. Ambassador to the Holy See, Mary Ann Glendon. …

In recent days, however, he spoke about internal problems in the Curia, including the existence of a “gay lobby”.

“The reform of the Holy See’s government is undoubtedly the toughest challenge the Pope faces and this is what his pontificate will be judged on. I think Francis wants to eliminate the risk of pressure groups of any kind, standing in the way of his plans.”

How did the U.S. react to his comments, bearing in mind that it is the country that has suffered the most as a result of the sex abuse scandal?

“I don’t think his mention of a gay lobby was in reference to this. The U.S. Church has done a great deal to put an end to the abuse, so much in fact, that some priests have been unfairly accused. We need to be watchful, but the Pope’s message was intended for the Curia.”

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Blue Earth priest charged with sexual assault worked in Rochester

MINNESOTA
KTTC

[with video]

ROCHESTER, Minn. (KTTC) — The Blue Earth priest charged with sexually assaulting a 12-year old girl once also worked in Rochester.

Reverend Leo Koppala was a missionary from India who worked at Resurrection Parish in Rochester before joining the Blue Earth church in 2009. He worked in Rochester for a year.

The 47-year-old priest was serving the Catholic Church of Saints Peter and Paul in Blue Earth.

The Diocese of Winona said in a statement that Koppala has been placed on administrative leave, and will not be allowed to minister in the Winona diocese while the investigation continues.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

How to Spot a Pastor or Priest Stealing Church Funds

UNITED STATES
Christian Post

By Barry Bowen

One of the dirty secrets of Christianity is that there are numerous crooked pastors, priests and church financial secretaries embezzling funds. The International Bulletin of Missionary Research projected that $37 billion would be stolen by Christian religious leaders in 2013 and this fraud will reach $60 billion annually by 2025.

Here are four possible signs that money is being embezzled by religious leaders.

*The pastor or priest lives an extravagant lifestyle.

*The church leader regularly fails to turn in receipts when using the church or ministry credit card.

*The church sends you a receipt for donations and the amount listed doesn’t match your own records of what you have given. (Anonymously given cash offerings will not be tracked.)

*The church suddenly starts showing large unexplained debts.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Radical Reform Looms for Vatican Bank

VATICAN CITY
Corriere della Sera

Pope Francis looks set to intervene at the Institute for Works of Religion (IOR) before summer. Action is likely to come before 31 July, when IOR will complete its internal investigation of customers’ accounts. At this stage, the question is not so much “if” as “when”. And as rumours mount of an upcoming court order against the Vatican bank’s executives, the pace could quicken rapidly. Some of the facts are well established. The first is that Californian lawyer Jeff Lena, the man who in the past few years has become a key figure and string-puller for IOR reform, broke off relations a couple of months ago with Ernst Von Freyberg, the IOR chairman and ally of managing director Paolo Cipriani. Rumours say Mr Lena, who in the recent struggle to eject former chair Ettore Gotti Tedeschi worked in harness with the IOR board and Mr Cipriani himself, now misses the clashes he had with the Piacenza-based Gotti Tedeschi, who was unceremoniously turfed out just over a year ago.

At the time, Mr Gotti Tedeschi’s finger-pointing at the Vatican Secretariat of State and IOR management’s attempts to water down money-laundering regulations was dismissed as baseless. Demography expert Gotti Tedeschi was said to have been removed because he did not know IOR and failed to defend it, criticisms that circulated, and were in part subscribed, but were also tendentious. After three months in office, Jorge Mario Bergoglio is said to be firmly convinced that IOR taketh from the Church much more than it giveth in terms of image, international credibility and suspicion over the modus operandi of the only institution that reports directly to the Vatican. For weeks, the issue has been bouncing back and forward from the Secretariat of State to the Vatican City Governorate and APSA (Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See), the nerve ends of the Curia’s economic power.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Mid-Mo Pastor Facing New Sex Crime Charges

MISSOURI
Ozarks First

CALIFORNIA, Mo. — Prosecutors file new charges against a Missouri pastor already facing several sex crime accusations.

CBS affiliate KRCG reports the Moniteau County prosecutor filed two more statutory sodomy charges Monday against Travis Smith, 42, from an alleged incident in 1999.

Court documents show charges against Smith were filed on September 28, 2012 for second degree statutory rape and second degree statutory sodomy from incidents dating back to January 2005.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

San Diego Domestic Violence Victim Fired From Teaching

CALIFORNIA
NBC San Diego

By Steven Luke | Thursday, Jun 13, 2013

A San Diego teacher was fired by Holy Trinity School following a domestic violence incident involving her ex-husband.

Second-grade teacher Carie Charlesworth is out of a job, but not for anything she did in the classroom. Her school district considers her a liability and too unsafe to have around following a domestic violence dispute that happened earlier this year.

A letter sent to Charlesworth said that school officials are concerned about her ex-husband’s “threatening and menacing behavior,” and as a result they “cannot allow” her to continue teaching at the Holy Trinity School.

“They’ve taken away my ability to care for my kids,” said Charlesworth. “It’s not like I can go out and find a teaching job anywhere.”

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Teacher Fired Because Her Ex-Husband Is Abusive

CALIFORNIA
Newser

By Evann Gastaldo, Newser Staff
Posted Jun 13, 2013

(NEWSER) – It’s bad enough that Carie Charlesworth is dealing with an abusive ex-husband—but now she’s also out of a job due to the situation. After a “very bad weekend” involving her ex in January, Charlesworth warned the principal at San Diego’s Holy Trinity School to watch out for him. He did indeed show up in the school parking lot, forcing a lockdown. Charlesworth was immediately put on “indefinite leave,” as were her four kids, who attended the school. Despite the fact that her ex is now in jail, three months later she was fired after 14 years with the Diocese of San Diego, NBC San Diego reports.

The termination letter from the diocese notes that, though school officials “feel deeply” for Charlesworth and are praying for her, her ex has a 22-year history of documented violence and has not been deterred by restraining orders. Out of fear that he may cause problems upon his release from prison (which they note could happen as soon as “next fall”), “we simply cannot allow you to return to work [at Holy Trinity] or, unfortunately, at any other school in the diocese,” the letter states, adding that Charlesworth will continue to be paid through Aug. 9

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Taoiseach says he is hopeful of speedy decision on redress for Magdalenes

IRELAND
Irish Times

Michael O’Regan

Taoiseach Enda Kenny has said he hopes for a quick Cabinet decision after it discusses the report on redress for the survivors of the Magdalene laundries within the next two weeks.

He said that the report, from retired judge Mr Justice Quirke, had been sent to Minister for Justice Alan Shatter and his views and the report’s recommendations would be considered by the Cabinet before it makes a decision.

“It is only fair to say that after so many years of nothing having been done about this, the Government put in place a structure and process by which a conclusion could be brought to the issue of the Magdalene survivors and the sensitivity, hurt and trauma associated with it.”

Just 3 per cent of homeowners have sought property tax deferral, says Noonan

Heated exchanges as FF Senator accuses Taoiseach of ‘acting the clown’

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Call to expand abuse inquiry remit

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

13 JUNE 2013

Hundreds of victims of clerical and Magdalene laundry abuse in Northern Ireland have been left out of a new public inquiry designed to probe past wrongdoing, campaigners said.

Some women had their babies taken off them, were forced to scrub floors or locked in their rooms for hours in institutions for women like single mothers. Other men and women who claim they suffered years of sex abuse at the hands of predatory priests cannot tell their stories or seek redress under existing arrangements established by the Stormont Executive.

The Historical Abuse Inquiry chaired by a retired senior judge is investigating cases involving children in residential institutions in Northern Ireland since 1922.

Amnesty International Northern Ireland director Patrick Corrigan led a delegation to meet with Stormont ministers to press for its expansion.

He said: “Many victims are being left behind and what we delivered to the ministers today was a very clear message to say that there should be no second-class abuse victims in Northern Ireland. All deserve justice, all deserve truth, all deserve the state to respond to them. The state let them down then, it should not let them down again.”

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Abuse victims call for fresh inquiry

NORTHERN IRELAND
UTV

Residents of Magdalene Laundries have met with Northern Ireland’s Junior Ministers, to call for a new inquiry into their allegations of abuse.

Neither group is included in the current Historic Institutional Abuse inquiry, which is investigating claims of mistreatment at 35 sites across Northern Ireland.

The campaigners, along with Amnesty International, discussed their calls for a new inquiry with Jonathan Bell and Jennifer McCann.

Michael Connolly is part of the Clerical Abuse NI campaign. As a child, was abused by a priest in Co Fermanagh.

He said: “I would not want to raise the expectations of clerical abuse victims throughout Northern Ireland, but I did take away from that meeting quite a positive response.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

For now, Vatican officials will not face criminal charges

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For now, Vatican officials will not face criminal charges
ICC prosecutor may reconsider with ‘new facts or information’
SNAP: “We’ll keep bringing forward proof of church complicity”

A prosecutor at the International Criminal Court has determined that, for now, no charges will be filed against top Catholic officials for “crimes against humanity.” But victims of clergy sex abuse say they’ll continue to collect evidence and “build the record” of “ongoing child sex crimes and cover ups” by bishops across the globe and are confident the ICC will eventually investigate and prosecute the church hierarchy.

In September 2011, leaders of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, and CCR, the Center for Constitutional Rights, filed a formal, 71 page complaint –– supported by more than more than 22,000 pages of supporting materials – with the ICC.

The complaint charges four Vatican prelates – Secretary of State Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, former Secretary of State Cardinal Angelo Sodano, former Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith head Cardinal William Levada and the now-retired Pope Benedict – with “enabling and concealing sexual violence worldwide.”

In April 2012, in a separate filing, the groups submitted several thousand more pages of documentation to the ICC.

But in a two page letter, dated May 31, the prosecutor’s office says some of the alleged (offenses) do not meet the “preconditions of the court” and thus “do not appear to fall within the (court’s) jurisdiction,” though the office may reconsider this decision in light of “new facts or information.” In the letter, the prosecutor suggests that SNAP also consider approaching courts in individual countries.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Pueblo bishop resigns due to poor health

COLORADO
Catholic News Agency

Pueblo, Colo., Jun 13, 2013 / 06:33 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Pope Francis announced on June 13 that he has accepted the early resignation of Bishop Fernando Isern of Pueblo, Colo., due to poor health and for the good of the local Church.

“In a spirit of prayerful reflection, the bishop recognized that his health may be an obstacle for the growth of the diocese,” a source within the Diocese of Pueblo told CNA.

“He chose to resign in order to entrust his flock to a man with the strength and energy necessary to be an effective shepherd.”

Bishop Isern was the fourth bishop of Pueblo, and has shepherded the diocese since December 2009. He is 54 years old.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

“Monströse Unkeuschheit”

DEUTSCHLAND
Zeit

Machtmissbrauch durch sexualisierte Gewalt ist der monströse Fall, der zwei Themen unübersehbar auf die Tagesordnung der Kirche setzt: Macht und Sexualität. Da es bei sexualisierter Gewalt im Kern um den Missbrauch von Macht geht, kann man sogar zuspitzen: Die Schlüsselfrage ist die nach dem Umgang mit Macht in der Kirche.

Wenn über Macht in der Kirche gesprochen wird, kommt schnell der Hinweis, Kirche habe heute doch gar keine Macht mehr. In den Ohren der Opfer klingt das wie Hohn. Sie haben die missbrauchende und missbrauchte Macht der Kirche kennengelernt. Die geistliche Macht, welche die Kirche innehat, wirkt in die Welt hinein. Sie ist auch Macht. Schließlich geht es der Kirche ja um das Heil der Welt, nicht nur um das Heil der Kirche.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Missbrauchs-Vorwurf: Bistum suspendiert Pfarrer

DEUTSCHLAND
Augsburger Allgemeine

Das Bischöfliche Ordinariat in Augsburg hat den Seelsorger der Pfarreiengemeinschaft in Unterthürheim (Landkreis Dillingen) beurlaubt. Der Grund sind Missbrauchs-Vorwürfe. Von Günther Herdin

Die katholische Kirche hatte in den vergangenen Jahren verschiedene sexuelle Missbrauchsfälle aufzuarbeiten. Auch im Bistum Augsburg. Jetzt könnte ein neuer hinzukommen. Am vergangenen Wochenende wurde Priester Thomas Schilling, der Seelsorger der Pfarreiengemeinschaft in Unterthürheim (Gemeinde Buttenwiesen/Landkreis Dillingen), mit Wirkung zum 8. Juni beurlaubt.
Dem 65-Jährigen wird vorgeworfen, Anfang der 1980er Jahre sexuellen Missbrauch begangen zu haben. Schilling war damals als Ordensmann der Benediktiner auch im Ausland tätig. Das vermeintliche männliche Opfer war nach Aussage der Augsburger Rechtsanwältin Brigitte Ketterle-Faber – sie ist die Beauftragte der Diözese für Fälle sexuellen Missbrauchs – damals noch nicht volljährig und lebt in einem europäischen Nachbarland.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Ehemalige entsetzt über Diakonie

DEUTSCHLAND
Bergische Landeszeitung

Die ehemaligen Heimkinder von Moitzfeld, die im früheren Knabenheim „Gut an der Linde“ in Moitzfeld missbraucht wurden, sind entsetzt. Sie sollen keine Entschädigung von der Bergischen Diakonie Aprath erhalten. Von Walter K. Schulz

Die ehemaligen Heimkinder von Moitzfeld, die im früheren Knabenheim „Gut an der Linde“ in Moitzfeld missbraucht wurden, sind entsetzt. Sie sollen keine Entschädigung von der Bergischen Diakonie Aprath, die in Moitzfeld Kinderheime unterhielt, erhalten.

Das hat ein Sprecher der Bergischen Diakonie auf Medienanfragen mitgeteilt. Demnach seien die Entschädigungen, die die Evangelische Kirche im Rheinland am Montag angekündigt hat, nur für Opfer sexueller Gewalt gedacht.

Im Knabenheim seien solche Übergriffe aber die Ausnahme gewesen. Die fraglichen Fälle seien schon damals aufgeklärt und geahndet worden, hieß es vom theologischen Vorstand der Bergischen Diakonie in Wülfrath. Am häufigsten seien „Misshandlungen durch unangemessene Erziehungsmethoden“ gewesen.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Gelobt und gescholten: Die Klasnic-Kommission

OSTERREICH
der Standard

12. Juni 2013, 18:46

Kirche hat bisher freiwillig 12, 2 Millionen Euro an Missbrauchsopfer ausbezahlt, mehrere Prozesse laufen

Graz/Wien – Um Misshandlungs- und sexuelle Missbrauchsfälle innerhalb der katholischen Kirche aufzuarbeiten, wurde vor drei Jahren die Unabhängige Opferschutzkommission (UOK) gegründet. Als deren Leiterin hat Kardinal Christoph Schönborn die frühere Landeshauptfrau der Steiermark, Waltraud Klasnic (ÖVP), eingesetzt. 1422 Personen haben sich gemeldet, 1289 davon erhielten Entschädigungen von 5000 Euro bis 25.000 pro Einzelfall.

Bisher hat die Kommission 12,2 Millionen Euro an finanziellen und 34.000 Stunden an therapeutischen Hilfestellungen zuerkannt. In zwanzig Fällen wurden Schadenersatz und Wiedergutmachung abgelehnt. In 75 Fällen kam die Kommission zur Erkenntnis, dass die Kirche in die behaupteten Verbrechen nicht involviert sei.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 13 June 2013 (VIS) – Today, the Holy Father: …

– accepted the resignation from the pastoral care of the Diocese of Pueblo, Colorado, USA presented by Bishop Fernando Isern, in accordance with canon 401 para. 2 of the Code of Canon Law.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Charlton Boys Home (Or: A Good Family Man)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

Lewis Blayse

The Charlton Boy’s Home was operated by the Anglican Church. It comprises one of a continuing series on children’s homes deserving of being revisited by the Royal Commission for a variety of reasons. Affected people should contact an organisation such as Broken Rites or CLAN. (A link to a former resident who has indicated a desire to get in touch with others from the Charlton Home is given below).

Peter Watson, the former Anglican Archbishop of Melbourne, was a regular visitor to the Home at one stage, but appears not to have noticed anything untoward there.

A fund-raising article for the Home in the 1970s mentions that the boys receive “love and acceptance” which helps them “turn away from crime.”

In February of this year, a former worker at the Home, Albert John Abel, was convicted of sexual assault of a boy at the Home. He had pleaded guilty to similar offences in the late 1960s. Nevertheless, Judge Anthony Blackmore stated that Abel “was rehabilitated” and that he had “spent more than 40 years living in the community as a church-going family man.” He got 3 years.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Judge Ceisler Puts Away Engelhardt And Shero

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Big Trial

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 2013

By Ralph Cipriano
for Bigtrial.net

Judge Ellen Ceisler today gave onetime Catholic school teacher Bernard Shero a jail sentence of 8 to 16 years for raping a former altar boy dubbed “Billy Doe.” The judge threw out one charge against Father Charles Engelhardt, a bogus conspiracy rap, as unproven, but still hit the priest with 6 to 12 years in jail for sexually abusing the former altar boy.

The judged handed out the sentences even though a mandatory Commonwealth psychological exam had determined that neither defendant was a sexually violent predator. The judge tacked on five years of probation to each defendant’s jail sentence.

It was a bizarre day in court. The proceedings featured defendant Shero rising in an unsuccessful attempt to debate Assistant District Attorney Enangelia Manos. Billy Doe didn’t show, but his brother finally did, via a letter to the judge read aloud by the prosecutor. [During the trial, the jury had sent a note to the judge inquiring about the whereabouts of Billy’s older brother].

But the low light of the day came when prosecutor Manos began testifying about a decades-old unproven allegation against Father Engelhardt that never made it before the jury, and was not in evidence in the case. That didn’t deter prosecutor Manos from using the sentencing hearing to charge Father Engelhardt with a new crime. The prosecutor shouted out what she claimed the priest had allegedly said decades ago to a male relative, namely, “I want to fuck you up the ass!”

Classy. No wonder the proceedings left several female relatives of both defendants sobbing in court. That came to the attention the court crier, who ordered the sobbing relatives to leave, thereby calling even more attention to the situation.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Ridsdale’s bid for parole thwarted

AUSTRALIA
The Border Mail

By Jared Lynch June 13, 2013

Serial child rapist Gerald Ridsdale has his bid for freedom delayed indefinitely after more people have come forward with allegations of abuse.

The former Catholic priest, convicted of raping or molesting more than 30 children across three decades, is serving a maximum 13-year jail sentence, which expires in 2019. His earliest possible release date was June 29 this year.

But earlier this month police interviewed the 79-year-old at Ararat Prison in relation to fresh child abuse allegations dating back to the the 1960s and ’70s.

The Adult Parole Board has considered Ridsdale’s parole application, and a board spokesman said it decided it would defer any decision until the police finish its fresh investigation.

“The board has no obligation to consider an offender’s eligibility if their is an investigation pending,” the spokesman said.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Fresh claims of child abuse will keep Catholic priest Gerald Risdale behind bars

AUSTRALIA
Adelaide Now

Erin Marie
Herald Sun
June 13, 2013

ONE of Australia’s most notorious paedophiles – Catholic priest Gerald Risdale – will not walk free from prison later this month after fresh child abuse claims emerged.

The serial child rapist had applied to be granted parole on June 29 – the earliest possible date – but a Victoria Police probe triggered by new allegations of abuse has indefinitely delayed his release.

In March the Herald Sun revealed Risdale, who is serving a maximum 13-year sentence after he was convicted of raping or molesting 30 children between the 1960s and 1987, could have been released this month despite his jail sentence expiring in 2019.

His application for parole was rejected by the Adult Parole Board earlier this month after more people spoke out on allegations of abuse, causing a new investigation.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Catholic priest pleads guilty to molestations

CANADA
EMC News

Posted Jun 13, 2013 By Patricia Leboeuf

EMC news – An Arnprior Catholic priest has pleaded guilty to five counts of sexually molesting young boys in incidents that occurred about 40 years ago.

Father Daniel Miller made the plea during a court appearance in Pembroke on June 3. The retired priest was accompanied by Msgr. Douglas Bridge of the Pembroke Diocese.

The victims, who ranged from 9 to 13 years old, were from the Arnprior, Deep River and Eganville areas.

Court heard that Miller treated the boys with outings to the movies and the Renfrew Fair, bought them gifts such as clothing and treated them to meals at restaurants and fast food outlets.

Most of the indecent incidents, which occurred between 1969 and 1978, happened in Miller’s mother’s home in Renfrew during overnight stays.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Cracks in the Celebrity-Driven Church

HOUSTON (TX)
kinnon.tv

Today, Messengers (the term used for those sent from their SBC churches) at the Southern Baptist Church Convention gathering in Houston, SBC 2013,

passed a resolution calling on all Southern Baptists to report allegations of child abuse to authorities.

Commenting on this, Christianity Today’s Gleanings blog noted,

The resolution, filed more or less in response to the high-profile lawsuit against Sovereign Grace Ministries (SGM), was amended to ask that “SBC leaders and employees practice the highest level of discernment in affiliating with groups or individuals that possess ‘questionable’ policies and practices in protecting children against sexual abuse,” according to Baptist Press (BP), which live-blogged the morning’s votes. [emphasis added]

As much of a no-brainer as this really should have been, it is rather a strong slap in the face to Southern Baptist Celebrity leaders, Al Mohler and Mark Dever — who less than three weeks ago, along with PCA Celeb, Ligon Duncan were busy strongly supporting their buddy, C.J. Mahaney — SGM controlling stakeholder during the multiple alleged abuse cases at Sovereign Grace Ministries’ churches including the one where Mahaney pastored. Dever going so far as to preach at Mahaney’s fledgling new church plant on June 2nd, 2013 in Louisville, KY — telling the gathered few how wonderful Mahaney is,

“So you all who are here in this church, and particularly if you’re visiting or if you’re sort of new to Sovereign Grace, you have a privilege in having this man as your pastor that you don’t fully grasp, and that’s absolutely fine,” Dever said. “Just thank God for him and enjoy the word of God as he brings it from a life and a heart full of the gospel, and know that I am delighted to be here. It’s a privilege to address you brothers and sisters.” [emphasis added]

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Southern Baptists: Take care with ties to those accused of mishandling abuse

UNITED STATES
Courier-Journal

Posted on June 12, 2013 by Peter Smith

With controversy over a Louisville pastor in the backdrop, Southern Baptist messengers today voted Wednesday to call on their leaders to use the “highest sense of discernment” in affiliating with anyone with “questionable” practices or policies on sexual abuse.

The vote comes in the wake of statements by Albert Mohler, president of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, and others on behalf of pastor C.J. Mahaney of Sovereign Grace Church of Louisville.

The resolution does not mention the controversy explicitly, but its sponsor did in an interview.

Mahaney and others were accused in a recent lawsuit against Sovereign Grace Ministries of allegedly conspiring to cover up sexual abuse in congregations in the denomination, which was based in Maryland until it moved to Louisville last year. Mahaney served as its president until recently and was formerly pastor at the Maryland congregation where some of the claims of cover-up are alleged to have occurred.

A Maryland judge recently dismissed much of the the lawsuit on the grounds that the plaintiffs waited too long to sue. The 11 plaintiffs now have a pending motion for reconsideration.

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Claims of abuse in lawsuit against St. Francis Prep

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

The suit claims St. Francis Prep officials had received numerous complaints that assistant football coach Robert Stenger, who also taught social studies, had sexually and physically abused boys by 1985 but was permitted to continue to work closely with students.

BY MICHAEL O’KEEFFE / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 2013

Officials at St. Francis Prep ignored sexual and physical abuse by a longtime assistant football coach, according to a lawsuit filed against the Queens school on behalf of a former teacher and two ex-students in Brooklyn federal court on Wednesday.

The suit claims St. Francis Prep officials had received numerous complaints that assistant football coach Robert Stenger, who also taught social studies, had sexually and physically abused boys by 1985 but was permitted to continue to work closely with students. Plaintiff Mark Evangelista claims Stenger hit him in the face “with great force” without provocation before a history class in 1985.

Evangelista, who says he graduated from St. Francis Prep in 1986, told the Daily News that teachers would joke about how Stenger — who died in 2006 — would leer at freshman football players in the locker room.

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Bergoglio, the “Black Pope” Dressed in White

VATICAN CITY
Chiesa

He governs the Church like a superior general of the Jesuits. He listens, but decides on his own. Even a McKinsey man has been called in to study the reform of the curia. Which Francis wants to purify from corruption and from the “gay lobby”

by Sandro Magister

ROME, June 13, 2013 – All that was lacking was a guru from McKinsey to design that reform of the curia which everyone expects from Pope Francis. And here he comes.

His name is Thomas von Mitschke-Collande, he is German and was the manager of the Munich branch of the most famous and mysterious company of managerial consulting in the world.

In matters of the Church, he knows his stuff. Last year he published a book with a title that was hardly reassuring: “Does the Church want to destroy itself? Facts and analyses presented by a business consultant.” The diocese of Berlin turned to him to get its accounts back in order, and the German episcopal conference asked him to draw up a plan to save on costs and personnel.

The idea of putting him to work for the reform of the Roman curia as well came from Reinhard Marx, the archbishop of Munich, one of the eight cardinals called by pope Jorge Mario Bergoglio to act as his advisor.

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Pope Is Quoted Referring to a Vatican ‘Gay Lobby’

VATICAN CITY
The New York Times

By RACHEL DONADIO
Published: June 12, 2013

ROME — For years, perhaps even centuries, it has been an open secret in Rome: That some prelates in the Vatican hierarchy are gay. But the whispers were amplified this week when Pope Francis himself, in a private audience, appears to have acknowledged what he called a “gay lobby” operating inside the Vatican, vying for power and influence.
Related

The remarks — which the Vatican spokesman did not deny and the participants at the private audience confirmed — appeared to be part of an effort by the pope to take on the entrenched interests in the Vatican that many believe were a factor in why the previous pope, Benedict XVI, resigned unexpectedly. They appear to underscore numerous reports in the prelude to the election of the pope, that corruption, blackmail and violation of one of the highest codes of Catholic conduct were part of the intrigue that scandalized the Vatican in recent years.

Francis, who portrays himself as a simple pope of the people, has made it clear that one of his highest priorities is to put the Vatican’s house in order. He has appointed a group of eight cardinals to advise him on how to overhaul the Vatican, and the head of the Vatican Bank has recently given a series of interviews to journalists — an openness unheard of under his predecessors.

“It’s pretty incredible that the pope said these things,” said Sandro Magister, a Vatican expert at the Italian weekly L’Espresso. “I don’t think there’s any doubt on the foundation of the phrases attributed to him. Otherwise they would have denied it.”

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Andres Oppenheimer: Pope Francis’ first 100 days give signs of hope

UNITED STATES
Miami Herald

BY ANDRES OPPENHEIMER
AOPPENHEIMER@MIAMIHERALD.COM

As Argentine-born Pope Francis nears his first 100 days in office, there is little question that he has brought about a change in style at the Vatican with his daily gestures of humility. But there are also signs that he may bring about a change in substance.

In recent days, a leak of private comments Francis made to a group of Latin American Catholics has garnered big headlines, the Catholic world, and is giving us the best insight so far into whether — and how — the pope intends to carry out much-needed reforms in the Church.

The leak, published in the website of the left-of-center Chilean Catholic magazine Reflexion y Liberacion, quotes Francis as having told a delegation of the Latin American and Caribbean Confederation of Religious, known by its acronym CLAR, that he is confronting a network of “corruption’’ and a “gay lobby” within the Vatican that are allegedly resisting reforms.

His remarks at a June 6 private audience with CLAR were apparently referring to the Vatican’s financial scandals and cover-ups of sexual abuses by pedophile priests.

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New Vatican bank head says mission is total transparency

VATICAN CITY
euronews

By Philip Pullella

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) – Don’t even think of calling Ernst von Freyberg, the president of the Vatican bank, God’s New Banker.

“I don’t appreciate incorrect and silly descriptions,” he said with a smile in his Vatican office, shrugging off a nickname that some have given him since he assumed his post four months ago.

Still, von Freyberg talks like he is on a mission from God: to clean up the murky image of the bank and steer it to total transparency and compliance with international standards on fighting terrorism financing, money laundering and tax evasion.

The European anti-money laundering committee, Moneyval, said in a July report that the bank, formally known as the Institute for Works of Religion (IOR), still had some way to go and von Freyberg said he is taking the challenge very personally.

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Saving the children

PENNSYLVANIA
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

If anything positive has come out of Penn State University’s harrowing sex abuse scandal, it is the uptick in government attention to child abuse prevention.

In response to the recommendations of a task force on child protection convened after Jerry Sandusky’s conviction of child molestation last year, a package of six sweeping bills was voted out of the state House Children and Youth Committee on Tuesday. The legislation is likely to reach the House floor this summer. The bills aim to strengthen child abuse law by broadening the definition of abuse, requiring additional background checks for workers interacting with children and mandating more people, such as lawyers and clergy, to report suspected abuse.

If the Senate and House agree, Pennsylvania may see much-needed, far-reaching reform that could go a long way toward preventing and trying child abuse.

Pennsylvania currently lags behind other states in child abuse convictions, but that doesn’t mean the state has a disproportionately low incidence of abuse. Experts believe that Pennsylvania’s unreasonably high threshold for what constitutes child abuse is to blame.

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Behind the Holy See’s credit card debacle: ‘a long story’

VATICAN CITY
Macleans

by The Associated Press on Thursday, June 13, 2013

VATICAN CITY – The Vatican put a new coin on sale last week to commemorate its historic papal transition. Too bad overseas collectors won’t be able to buy it for months.

The Associated Press has learned that the Vatican still hasn’t fully resolved an embarrassing shutdown in credit card services, despite announcing four months ago that systems were back up. The impact has been far worse than the Vatican ever let on, costing the Holy See lost sales at a time when Pope Benedict XVI’s shock resignation and Pope Francis’ surprise election laid the groundwork for a bonanza in Vatican-minted papal memorabilia.

It’s all emblematic of the continued troubles plaguing the Holy See’s financial system, rocked by allegations of incompetence and corruption. But the new president of the Vatican bank, while acknowledging the delays and losses stemming from the credit card shutdown, is brushing off the fiasco.

“So sales will be up in the second half of the year,” Ernst von Freyberg told the AP in an interview, laughing.

The truth is, however, that the credit card woes represent yet another headache for the Vatican as it works to improve its reputation internationally through a painful transition to financial transparency in the fight against money laundering.

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Former Rockford church trustee sentenced for sexual abuse

ROCKFORD (IL)
WREX

By Katie Nilsson

ROCKFORD (WREX) –
A man, who admitted to sexually abusing at least one teenager, is sentenced.

Terry R. Carlson pleaded guilty to aggravated criminal sexual abuse in March. He was arrested back in 2010 after police say he had sex with a 17 and 15 year old. Carlson was a trustee for and worked at Kishwaukee Baptist Church. Prosecutors say he was an advisor and counselor, plus a bus driver and he even taught Sunday School there. Shortly after Carlson’s arrest, church leaders denied that he worked there, and say the allegations didn’t happen anywhere near church property.

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Victim canvasses neighborhood about sex abuse

HAWAII
Hawaii News Now

[with video]

By Tim Sakahara

KAILUA, OAHU (HawaiiNewsNow) –
Having been abused as a young girl by a Catholic priest Joelle Casteix has walked in the victim’s shoes. Now she’s walking neighborhoods to help others.

One door at a time, one flier in a mailbox at a time, Joelle Casteix canvassed the Kailua neighborhood near St. Anthony’s Church.

“I’m here telling people about Father Henry who worked right here at St. Anthony’s,” said Casteix to a neighbor.

“Just down the street here?” the man replied.

“Yes,” responded Casteix.

“Phew. That’s some heavy stuff,” said the unidentified neighbor.

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Shefford priest John Ryan, accused of abuse, arrested in 2003

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC news

By Nic Rigby
BBC News

A priest at the centre of allegations of sexual and physical abuse at a Catholic orphanage was arrested in 2003, it has been revealed.

Former residents have alleged they were abused by Father John Ryan at St Francis Boys Home in Shefford, near Bedford, in the 1950s and 1960s.

The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said Fr Ryan was released without charge. He died in 2008.

The CPS said it was trying to find out whether evidence was presented to it.

Bedfordshire Police started a new investigation after a former resident alleged he was sexually abused by Fr Ryan.

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Sexual-abuse lawsuits / Unseemly battle

NEW JERSEY
Press of Atlantic City

Posted: Thursday, June 13, 2013

Catholic Church leaders are sparing no expense to try to stop legislation that would make it easier for victims of sexual abuse to seek damages in court – a move that sends a strange message at a time when many Catholics are calling for reform within the church bureaucracy and an honest accounting of past actions.

The New Jersey Catholic Conference has hired the most expensive lobbying group in the state, Princeton Public Affairs Group, to help represent church officials in Trenton. The church takes positions on many issues, but its biggest battle lately has been to stop a bill that would extend the rights of abuse victims to sue.

Sen. Joseph Vitale, D-Middlesex, has been trying for years to get a bill through the Legislature to give abuse victims more time to file civil suits. Currently, suits must be filed within two years after an abuse victim turns 18 or discovers the abuse. Vitale’s bill, which came close to passage before stalling last year, would eliminate the two-year limit.

The church’s opposition to this bill shows it is tone deaf to the rising call for justice for people who were abused as children.

It is natural for large organizations to act to protect themselves, and the Catholic Church has already paid billions of dollars nationally to victims of abuse by priests. But that impulse to protect the organization at all costs is what led to one of the worst aspects of the worldwide child sex-abuse scandal – the fact that some church officials failed to report criminal activity and, instead, transferred sexual predators to new assignments, where they were often still in contact with children.

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2 priests sentenced to long prison terms in abuse case

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Daily News

DANA DIFILIPPO, DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER DIFILID@PHILLYNEWS.COM, 215-854-5934
POSTED: Thursday, June 13, 2013

THEY’D BEEN convicted and stood before their judge yesterday for sentencing.

And still, the Rev. Charles Engelhardt and Bernard Shero – a Catholic priest and former parochial- school teacher convicted in January of sexually abusing a 10-year-old altar boy – avowed their innocence.

“I denied even knowing the accuser,” said Engelhardt, 66, remembering his arrest. “Even after he appeared in this courthouse, I have no recollection of him.”

Shero, 50, said he was equally mystified by the student’s claims, and Shero’s mother told Common Pleas Judge Ellen Ceisler that Shero’s thick eyeglasses and awkward appearance made him an easy target for troublemakers.

But Ceisler didn’t buy it.

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June 12, 2013

Priest, teacher get prison in sex abuse case

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

JOSEPH A. SLOBODZIAN, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
POSTED: Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Even as they professed their innocence, a Catholic priest and an ex-parochial schoolteacher got long prison terms Wednesday in the serial sexual assault of a 10-year-old altar boy in the late 1990s.

Common Pleas Court Judge Ellen Ceisler exceeded sentencing guidelines in handing out punishment to the Rev. Charles Engelhardt, 66 and Bernard Shero, 50, saying their crimes called for long terms. She sentenced Engelhardt to six to 12 years in prison and Shero to eight to 16.

The sentences stunned the stand-room-only crowd that filled her courtroom.

Engelhardt’s frown grew longer as it became clear that Ceisler would not impose probation – served in a Maryland home for old, ailing priests – as urged by lawyer Michael McGovern.

Shero, who knew he faced a mandatory minimum five-year term, stood in shock, and lawyer Burton A. Rose put a hand on his arm to steady him.

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Priest kept silent about accusations against Storheim, court hears

CANADA
Winnipeg Free Press

By: Aldo Santin

A priest of the Orthodox Church in America told court this morning he kept quiet about allegations another priest had abused two young boys for more than 20 years.

Father Steven Kostoff said the mother of the alleged victims of sexual assault by Seraphim Storheim told him in 1987 that Storheim had wronged her boys two years earlier but he did nothing about her concerns.

“I was quite stunned, quite dumbfounded,” by the allegations, Kostoff said, but added that he decided to stay quiet about the matter.

Storheim is charged with two counts of sexual assault involving two 11-year-old brothers in his home in Winnipeg during the summer of 1985. He pleaded not guilty to the charges when the trial began Monday.

Storheim was the parish priest at Holy Trinity Sobor Orthodox church on Manitoba Avenue at the time. Storheim had befriended the boys’ family while he served at another parish in another community and the boys visited him separately that summer.

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Pope’s remarks on religious orders confirmed ‘in a general sense’

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Jun. 12, 2013 NCR Today

Pope Francis’ purported remarks to a group of nuns and priests from Latin America that they should not worry if they found themselves under doctrinal scrutiny were confirmed “in a general sense” by the group Tuesday.

The remarks, made during a June 6 meeting with top officials of the Latin American Conference of Religious (CLAR), have led some to speculate that the pope may be downplaying the role of the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

They also came just weeks after doctrinal congregation officials said the pope “reaffirmed” the congregation’s controversial takeover of the main representative group of some 57,000 U.S. sisters, the Leadership Conference of Women Religious.

During the meeting, Francis seemed to refer to the Vatican’s move against the U.S. sisters while telling the Latin American delegates not to worry should they find themselves the target of a similar investigation.

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Truth and Justice Council supports call for victims to come forward

AUSTRALIA
CathNews

Mr Francis Sullivan, CEO of the Truth Justice and Council, has supported the call yesterday by the CEO of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, Ms Janette Dines, for victims to come forward and tell their stories to Commissioners, the TJH Council said in a media release.

Ms Dines, speaking on national radio yesterday morning, encouraged victims to meet face-to-face in private sessions with Commissioners as they travel around Australia. The Commissioners were in Brisbane yesterday.

Mr Sullivan said it is vital that victims get to tell their stories. “The Royal Commission is an opportunity for victims and survivors of sexual abuse to come forward and be heard in an environment of support and safety,” Mr Sullivan said.

Around the nation some 1,400 people are scheduled to come forward to talk about their experiences in different institutions across Australia.

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Catholic officials sentenced to prison for sexually abusing young boy

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Raw Story

By Eric W. Dolan
Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Two Catholic officials in Philadelphia were sentenced to prison on Wednesday for sexually abusing a young boy more than a decade ago.

“This prison sentence sends a clear message to sexual assault victims in Philadelphia. If you come forward, you will be heard,” said District Attorney Seth Williams in a statement. “I would also like to compliment the jury for its hard work in carefully sifting through the evidence, and coming up with a just verdict.”

Rev. Charles Engelhardt, a Roman Catholic priest and a former teacher, was sentenced to 6 to 12 years in prison for sexually abusing the young boy.

As the result of a Philadelphia District Attorney’s investigation, the Oblate priest was accused in 2011 of orally sodomizing and molesting the 10-year-old altar boy. The incident occured in 1998 at St. Jerome Parish in Philadelphia.

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New Jersey Catholic Church spending big to keep abuse victims silent

NEW JERSEY
Newsworks

June 12, 2013
By Rob Tornoe for NewsWorks

This is commentary from political blogger and cartoonist Rob Tornoe.

Rev. Michael Fugee is a New Jersey priest who was put on trial for sexually assaulting a 14-year-old boy, and later confessed to fondling the child while he was under his care… twice.

Fugee was convicted, but that conviction was later overturned by an appeals court. Instead of a retrial, Fugee was allowed to sign a binding agreement not to work with or around children. Unsurprisingly, he was arrested last month after it was revealed he attended weekend youth retreats on behalf of St. Mary’s Parish in Colts Neck.

Now, there’s no indication Fugee engaged in this type of behavior this time around, but what if he did? And what if those victims, traumatized by shame and humiliation, weren’t able to muster the strength to come forward for many years?

Well, they’d be out of luck in New Jersey, and the Catholic Church is spending lots of money to keep it that way.

Currently, the statute of limitations for a victim of child-abuse in the state isn’t ten years or even five years. It’s two years. If abuse victims don’t come forward within two years of their 18th birthday, they’re out of luck, which puts us way out of step with neighboring states. In New York, victims have until they turn 23 to file suit. In Pennsylvania and Connecticut, they have until they’re 30. Delaware doesn’t even have a limit.

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WEDNESDAY SBC MEETING BLOG

HOUSTON (TX)
Baptist Press

HOUSTON (BP) — Baptist Press is live blogging the SBC annual meeting in Houston. Up-to-the-minute updates can be read here, at our Twitter account (Twitter.com/BaptistPress), or Facebook account (Facebook.com/BaptistPress). Want more updates? Follow our SBC annual meeting feed at Twitter.com/SBCMeeting. A schedule of the Wednesday meeting can be found at http://sbcannualmeeting.net/sbc13/program/default.asp. Watch the SBC annual meeting live at http://sbcannualmeeting.net/sbc13/default.asp.

All times Central

Wednesday

4:53 p.m. — The 2013 SBC annual meeting has been gaveled to a close. Next year’s meeting will take place in Baltimore, Md.

4:48 p.m. — Luter thanks Southern Baptists for re-electing him. He leads messengers saying in unison, three times, “Lord send the revival and let it begin with me.”

4:47 p.m. — Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary President Daniel Akin delivered the Convention Sermon, preaching from Romans 15:14-24 and referencing the debate last year over the descriptor “Great Commission Baptists” and the close vote that ensued. Not giving an opinion on the issue, Akin said the real issue is not what Southern Baptists will be called, but if they “will we be Great Commission Baptists”

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Southern Baptists urge reporting of abuse claims

HOUSTON (TX)
KMPH

HOUSTON (AP) – The Southern Baptist Convention has passed a resolution calling on all Southern Baptists to report allegations of child abuse to authorities.

The nation’s largest Protestant denomination has resisted implementing some type of database of ministers accused of abuse, saying that all churches are independent and the denomination does not have the authority to order local churches to submit that information.

The denomination, meeting in Houston on Wednesday, voted to amend the resolution to urge denominational leaders to use caution affiliating with groups or individuals with questionable practices to protecting children.

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Three Interesting Decisions Made Today by Southern Baptist Leaders

HOUSTON (TX)
Christianity Today

Melissa Steffan

Within an hour, leaders of the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) approved three interesting resolutions today at the denomination’s annual meeting in Houston, Texas.

Just after 10 a.m., convention attendees approved a resolution that calls “on all Southern Baptists to report allegations of child abuse to authorities.” The resolution, filed more or less in response to the high-profile lawsuit against Sovereign Grace Ministries (SGM), was amended to ask that “SBC leaders and employees practice the highest level of discernment in affiliating with groups or individuals that possess ‘questionable’ policies and practices in protecting children against sexual abuse,” according to Baptist Press (BP), which live-blogged the morning’s votes.

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SBC critiques Scout policy but no call for mass exodus

HOUSTON (TX)
The Baptist Standard

June 12, 2013
By BOB ALLEN / ASSOCIATED BAPTIST PRESS

HOUSTON (ABP)—The Southern Baptist Convention stopped short of urging churches to sever ties with the Boy Scouts of America in a resolution condemning the organization’s recent decision to drop its ban on gay Scouts.

The nonbinding resolution at the SBC annual meeting in Houston expresses “continued opposition to and disappointment in the decision of the Boy Scouts of America to change its membership policy” and called for the removal of Scout leaders who pushed for the policy change. …

Reporting sex abuse

In other action, the convention also adopted a resolution calling on church members to be diligent in reporting alleged child sex abuse to legal authorities.

The nonbinding resolution stresses the “legal and moral responsibility to report any accusation of child abuse to authorities in addition to implementing any appropriate church discipline or internal restoration process.”

It calls on Southern Baptists to “cooperate fully with law enforcement officials in exposing and bringing to justice all perpetrators, sexual or otherwise, who criminally harm children placed in our trust.”

Safeguard children

Messengers approved an amendment from the floor by Georgia pastor Peter Lumpkins, who proposed the original resolution behind the committee’s statement encouraging denominational leaders and employees to “utilize the highest sense of discernment in affiliation with groups and/or individuals” that have questionable policies or practices to safeguard children from criminal abuse.

The resolution comes amid recent reports of high-profile Baptist leaders voicing support for a pastor named in a lawsuit alleging a massive abuse cover up, failing to report an admitted child molester to police and refusing to share findings of internal investigations into abuse allegations with police.

“There’s no greater time in the history of evangelicalism, and Southern Baptists particularly, that we need a strong resolution about child abuse,” Lumpkins said. “This resolution speaks strongly to that. However, I think it needs to be stronger.”

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Southern Baptists approve anti-gay Boy Scout resolution

HOUSTON (TX)
CBS News

HOUSTON
The Southern Baptist Convention approved a resolution Wednesday expressing its opposition to and disappointment in the Boy Scouts of America’s new policy allowing gay Scouts.

The resolution was voted on by members at the denomination’s annual meeting in Houston. It also calls on the Boy Scouts to remove executive and board leaders who tried to allow gays as both members and leaders without consulting the many religious groups that sponsor Scout troops. …

In other resolutions introduced Wednesday, the membership passed a resolution calling on all Southern Baptists to report allegations of child abuse to authorities.

The nation’s largest Protestant denomination has resisted implementing some type of database of ministers accused of abuse, saying that all churches are independent and the denomination does not have the authority to order local churches to submit that information.

Members amended the resolution to urge denominational leaders to use caution affiliating with groups or individuals with questionable practices for protecting children.

It is unclear whether the amendment was aimed at any specific person or practice, but it comes after some Southern Baptist leaders expressed support for Sovereign Grace Ministries. That group faces accusations that church officials covered up child sexual abuse.

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Priest, St. Jerome’s teacher get prison for sex abuse

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Newsworks

June 12, 2013
By Aaron Moselle, @awmoselle

A Philadelphia judge Wednesday sentenced a Catholic priest and a former parochial school teacher to prison for the sexual assault of a young boy that took place nearly 15 years ago.

Before a packed courtroom, Common Pleas Court Judge Ellen Ceisler handed Rev. Charles Engelhardt six to 12 years in jail.

Bernard Shero, a former teacher at St. Jerome’s parish school in Northeast Philadelphia, received eight to 16 years behind bars.

Both men addressed Ceisler before being sentenced. Each maintained their innocence.
Engelhardt, 66, choked up at times as he reviewed his four-plus decades of service as a priest and said he had “no recollection” of the victim, who was abused when he was 10 and an altar boy at St. Jerome’s.

“I had no interaction with him that would lead to this accusation,” said Engelhardt.
“I believe that [this injustice] will be righted,” he added.

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Orthodox cleric’s sex-assault case hears from priest

CANADA
CBC

An Orthodox priest who testified in a sex-assault case against Kenneth (Seraphim) Storheim, who is now the top Canadian cleric in the Orthodox Church in America, said his moral principles drove him to contact the family of the two alleged victims.

However, it took Rev. Steven Kostoff, who was the family’s parish priest in London, Ont., 21 years to make that call, court was told in Winnipeg on Wednesday.

Storheim has pleaded not guilty to two counts of sexual assault involving two brothers, who at the time were pre-teen members of the church, more than 25 years ago. Neither complainant can be identified under a publication ban.

Storheim was a priest in Winnipeg at the time of the alleged assaults. He had also worked as a parish priest in Alberta, North Carolina, London, Ont., and other areas before becoming an auxiliary bishop in Edmonton in 1987.

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Father Sam is officially retired

OHIO
Akron Beacon Journal

Published: June 12, 2013

The Rev. Samuel R. Ciccolini is now a retired priest in the Catholic Diocese of Cleveland.

The popular priest from Akron, known as “Father Sam,” requested retirement for health reasons in a letter dated May 10 to Bishop Richard G. Lennon. Lennon granted Ciccolini’s request on May 20, according to Robert Tayek, spokesman for the diocese.

Ciccolini, 70, was released from federal prison in April, after serving a six-month sentence for cheating on his taxes and committing bank fraud in 2003.

Ciccolini could not be reached for comment.

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INJUSTICE IN PHILADELPHIA

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Catholic League

Bill Donohue comments on the sentencing today of Father Charles Engelhardt and Bernard Shero:
When we at the Catholic League first heard that a boy was allegedly raped by three different persons, two of whom were priests, we were immediately suspicious. After all, how many times in American history has anyone been raped three times by three different persons? The more we learned, the more we were convinced that “Billy Doe” was a congenital liar, school dropout, thief, and drug addict, a punk who sought to cash in on the prevailing animus against priests.

Fr. Engelhardt, whom no one has ever proved even met “Billy Doe,” was sentenced to 6 to 12 years in prison; Shero was hit with 8 to 16.

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Southern Baptists urge abuse reporting

HOUSTON (TX)
Associated Baptist Press

An amended SBC resolution passed Wednesday calls on denominational leaders and workers to exercise “discernment” about identifying with groups or individuals tainted by lawsuits or arrest involving alleged child abuse.

By Bob Allen

The Southern Baptist Convention adopted a resolution June 12 in Houston calling on church members to be diligent in reporting alleged child sex abuse to legal authorities.

The non-binding resolution reminds of the “legal and moral responsibility to report any accusation of child abuse to authorities in addition to implementing any appropriate church discipline or internal restoration process.”

It calls on Southern Baptists to “cooperate fully with law enforcement officials in exposing and bringing to justice all perpetrators, sexual or otherwise, who criminally harm children placed in our trust.”

Messengers approved an amendment from the floor by Georgia pastor Peter Lumpkins, who proposed the original resolution behind the resolutions committee’s statement to encourage denominational leaders and employees to “utilize the highest sense of discernment in affiliation with groups and/or individuals” that have questionable policies or practices to safeguard children from criminal abuse.

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TX- Baptists adopt abuse resolution, SNAP responds

HOUSTON (TX)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

The Southern Baptist Convection has passed a resolution urging people to report child sex crimes to law enforcement. Big deal.

This is a virtually worthless ‘feel good’ public relations move that basically protects no one. Brave action, not vague resolutions, stops crimes against kids.

Read the full story

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The Vatican’s ‘gay lobby,’ round two

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

John L. Allen Jr. | Jun. 12, 2013 NCR Today

Reports that Pope Francis allegedly referred to a “gay lobby” in the Vatican during a private session with Latin American religious have revived interest in a storyline that first erupted in February, following the surprise resignation announcement by Pope Benedict XVI and at the peak of the furor over the Vatican leaks affair.

Back then, Italian news outlets created a sensation by claiming that a commission of three cardinals empaneled by Benedict to investigate the leaks scandal identified a “gay lobby” potentially involved in airing the Vatican’s dirty laundry. The reports also hinted that this lobby may have been behind Benedict’s decision to step down.

Although the Vatican insisted the pope quit for his stated reasons, meaning age and exhaustion, the Italian contretemps nevertheless turbo-charged frustration about how the Vatican was being run and probably contributed to the election of a complete outsider to the papacy with a track record of good governance in just five ballots.

It should be stressed that the reports in the air today are based on leaked notes from the meeting with Francis, and the Vatican has refused to confirm or deny their content, so we don’t actually know what the pope said. Nonetheless, because the “gay lobby” business is back in the headlines, I’ll repeat here what I said in February.

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Priest, ex-teacher sentenced to years in prison in Philadelphia sex-abuse case

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Grand Forks Herald

By MARYCLAIRE DALE Associated Press

PHILADELPHIA
Exceeding sentencing guidelines, a judge on Wednesday handed down prison terms of at least six years to a Roman Catholic priest and a former teacher in a sex-abuse case that brought down a Philadelphia church official.

The Rev. Charles Engelhardt of Wynnewood and Bernard Shero of Levittown maintained their innocence, and the judge threw out the most serious conviction against Engelhardt for lack of evidence.

Still, Engelhardt, a 66-year-old Oblate who had not previously been accused of abusing children, was sentenced to six to 12 years in prison. And Shero, convicted of rape, was sentenced to eight to 16 years.

“I’ve accepted this injustice and I will continue to do so until it is righted, because I believe it will be righted,” said Engelhardt, who has lost 50 pounds since the accusation surfaced in 2009. “I had no interaction with (the accuser) in any way.”

Shero, also speaking in court for the first time, said his visual impairments and awkwardness made him an easy target. He said he never had any problems with his accuser in his sixth-grade class at St. Jerome’s Parish school in the late 1990s. The accuser was not in court but was represented by his parents _ a nurse and policeman who struggled for years with their son’s severe heroin addiction.

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Philly priest, teacher get prison time for boy’s sexual assault

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
CNN

(CNN) — A Philadelphia Catholic priest was sentenced Wednesday to six to 12 years in prison, and a teacher at the same parish was sentenced to eight to 16 years in prison in a case involving the sexual assault of an elementary school student.

The Rev. Charles Engelhardt, who was a priest at St. Jerome Parish in northeast Philadelphia, was convicted in January for the indecent assault of a 10-year-old boy in the late 1990s.

The parochial teacher, Bernard Shero, who authorities said raped the same boy in 2000, was convicted of rape, attempted rape, involuntary deviant sexual intercourse, indecent sexual assault and other charges.

Both men also must serve five years of probation after prison, the judge ordered at Wednesday’s sentencing.

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«Francisco no se las tiene con los “gays”»

NUEVA YORK
Vatican Insider

Habla el reportero estadounidense Michael Winters: «El Pontífice quiere anular a los grupos que dividen a la Iglesia. A menudo los homosexuales son los más conservadores»

PAOLO MASTROLILLI
NUEVA YORK

«El mensaje más importante que contienen las palabras del Papa sobre el “lobby gay” tiene que ver con su determinación para reformar la Curia y la Iglesia. No quería lanzarse contra los homosexuales, sino con todos los que se organizan en grupos o corrientes para influir e la vida y en las decisiones del Vaticano».

Michael Sean Winters, periodista y escritor del National Catholic Reporter, sigue esta información con mirada estadounidense, tal vez el país más afectado por los escándalos sexuales que durante los últimos años sacudieron a la Iglesia.

¿Qué le parecieron las palabras de Francisco durante el encuentro con la Confederación Latinoamericana de Religiosos?

Lo primero que me sorprendió fue el lugar y la forma en la que fueron pronunciadas. Una verdadera conversación, en círculo, en donde él se puso en el mismo nivel que el de sus interlocutores para escucharlos. Esto confirma su cercanía y su determinación para escuchar el parecer de todos a la hora de llevar a cabo la reforma.

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Francis, Ratzinger and the Pelagianism risk

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

The two concerns Chilean website “Reflexión y Liberación” claims Francis expressed in his conversation with Latin American clerics echo the words of his predecessor

ANDREA TORNIELLI
VATICAN CITY

Although it was Pope Francis’ comments on the existence of a gay lobby and corruption in the Vatican and the fact that clerics should not be discouraged when they end up in the cross-hairs of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, that attracted the media’s attention, the summary of the conversation which took place between Francis and CLAR’s clerics last 6 June, contains some interesting passages relating to today’s Church. CLAR’s leaders made it clear they had nothing to do with the publication of the text, which is essentially a reconstruction of what was said, based on participants’ recollections.

The two concerns the Pope apparently expressed in his conversation with Latin American clerics are to do with the risk of “Pelagianism” and “pantheist” gnosis. The first was regarding the doctrines of the Irish monk Pelagius, which were contested by St. Augustine and condemned by the Council of Ephesus in 451. According to Pelagian heresy, original sin did not really contaminate human nature and so humans are apparently able to choose the path of goodness and avoid sin without the help of mercy. In recent decades some were averse to a return to Pelagianism because hyperactivism in the Church, trusting in human plans and projects and believing that human action is what makes the Church what it is, ends up nullifies the action of mercy and reduces everything to human ability.

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Long Prison Sentences For Priest, Teacher in Philadelphia Child Abuse Scandal

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
CBS Philly

By Steve Tawa

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — A Roman Catholic priest and a former Catholic school lay teacher were sentenced today to long prison terms for sexually assaulting a schoolboy a decade and a half ago.

Judge Ellen Ceisler today sentenced Father Charles Engelhardt to 6-12 years in prison, and former lay teacher Bernard Shero to 8-16 years in prison. Both were convicted last January of sexually abusing the same grade-school student.

Defense attorneys for both men immediately popped up in the courtroom to say they would appeal.

Before sentencing, the standing-room-only courtroom heard the defense lawyers argue unsuccessfully for a new trial for their clients.

The prosecutor read a victim impact statement from the key witness in the case, and family members and friends of the defendants said they believed the pair were innocent.

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Priest applauded over vow to fight sex ‘slur’

SCOTLAND
Motherwell Times

Published on 12/06/2013

A PRIEST got a standing ovation in church when he threatened legal action against a fellow cleric over claims of homosexuality and theft.

Fr Robert Kane, parish priest at St Teresa’s in Newarthill, is angry at allegations made in a controversial book which has caused uproar in the Roman Catholic community.

Its author, Fr Matthew Despard, claimed in ‘Priesthood in Crisis’ there is a culture of sexual bullying in the church in Scotland.

He made allegations about a number of individuals and, although people have not been named, some believe it’s clear whom Fr Despard is referring to and are planning to sue for defamation.

Fr Kane told parishioners from his pulpit that he denies the claims which he believes relate to him and is considering legal action.

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Paedophile priest James Donaghy admits molesting a fourth victim

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

12 JUNE 2013

Disgraced paedophile priest James Donaghy has admitted sexually molesting a fourth young victim.

Donaghy is already serving a ten-year jail sentence in Magilligan for sex crimes against three victims.

He had been due to go on trial at Belfast Crown Court on Wednesday, but instead defence QC Eugene Grant asked for the charges to be put to the sexual predator again.

Speaking in a calm, clear voice Donaghy, wearing a blue suit, white shirt and blue striped tie, entered guilty pleas to four charges of indecently assaulting a male child and a further charge of committing common assault against the same boy on dates between January and May 1989.

As he entered his guilty pleas, his victim’s mother wept quietly in the public gallery before fleeing the court in tears.

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Ex-priest James Donaghy admits more sex abuse charges

NORTHERN IRELAND
BBC News

A former priest who is already serving a ten year jail sentence for sex crimes against three teenagers has admitted sexually abusing a fourth young victim.

James Martin Donaghy had been due to go on trial at Belfast Crown Court but instead, a defence lawyer asked for the charges to be put to his client again.

Donaghy then pleaded guilty to four charges of indecently assaulting a boy and a further charge of common assault against the same child 24 years ago.

He is due to be sentenced next month.

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Priest, ex-teacher get prison in Philly abuse case

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
The Daily Times

The Associated Press
Updated: 06/12/2013

PHILADELPHIA—A judge has sentenced a Roman Catholic priest to six to 12 years in prison and a former teacher to eight to 16 years in a sex-abuse case that brought down a Philadelphia church official.

The Rev. Charles Engelhardt of Wynnewood and Bernard Shero of Levittown maintained their innocence at sentencing Wednesday.

Shero says he believes he was targeted because his visual impairments make him an easy target. He says he never had any problems with his accuser in class in the 1990s.

Engelhardt says he doesn’t remember the accuser, who has long struggled with heroin addiction and related legal problems.

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Priest, teacher get time in Philly sex abuse case

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

INQUIRER STAFF
POSTED: Wednesday, June 12, 2013

UPDATE: Rev. Charles Engelhardt sentenced 6-12 years in prison; Bernard Shero sentenced 8-16 years in prison

Earlier Story:

Sentencing is scheduled for Wednesday for a priest and former Catholic schoolteacher in the sexual assault of a 10-year-old altar boy in the late 1990s.

In a case that has already put a Philadelphia Catholic Church official behind bars for covering up child sexual abuse, a jury in January convicted the Rev. Charles Engelhardt and Bernard Shero for the serial sexual assault of a St. Jerome’s pupil in 1998 and 1999.

Prosecutors say Shero faces up to 57 years in prison and Engelhardt up to 37 years at their sentencing.

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Priest Criminal Arrests and Suicides

UNITED STATES
Patrick J. Wall

One of the key lessons we were taught as priests is that bishops are the Episkopos, or, the Overseer of their Dioceses. As the Episkopos, a bishop oversees all Roman Catholic Priests to whom he has granted faculties.

A bishop’s ability to oversee or supervise the clergy is reaching a new low. The criminal conduct by priests in 2013 has not abated. Rather, priest arrests are increasing. See the most recent arrests of Fathers Koppala, Guarin-Sosa, Medina-Cruz and Wehmeyer.

Worse yet, even though the Dallas 2002 Charter prohibited Episcokopos from having criminally convicted priests in ministry, Archbishops have chosen to continue placing such priests like Father Michael Fugee in control over children.

Two recent priest suicides are another sign the Bishops are not supervising the Priests. Father David Anderson in Los Angeles and Father Jamie Medina-Cruz chose to end their lives. I do not fault them—we must hear their cries of deep desperation.

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Honolulu Star Advertiser: Victims of church sexual abuse need criminal lawyers, not therapy

HAWAII
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on June 12, 2013

From today’s Honolulu Star Advertiser:

Victims of church sexual abuse need criminal lawyers, not therapy

By Marilyn Wong

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Hawaii, via a newspaper ad that ran Monday, is offering therapy treatment and reconciliation for the victims of sex abuse.

Directing victims to go to the diocese for help is like sending the sheep back to the wolves. The diocese had the chance years ago to help victims, but did not act because, at the time, the statute of limitations protected the church. Instead, people claiming abuse were vilified, accused of seeking money, and told that the limitations had expired on their cases. Now that the two-year window has been opened, the church is scurrying to connect with the victims.

The problem is that the diocese makes it seem like the abused have an illness in need of therapy when in actuality they are victims of a crime in need of justice. What these people really need is an attorney who will take their case to court and fight the good fight all the way to a conviction where the abusers will be listed as sex-offenders for life and prevented from ever being around children again. This is what the victims really want.

And they also want the hierarchy cleaned up of its cover-ups. Be it pedophilia (sexual attraction to pre-pubescent children) or efebophelia (sexual attraction to adolescents aged 13-19), the fact that priests and religious could get away with this for so many years, and that ordinary people would scramble to protect and hide or cover-up the facts so as not to bring “scandal” on the church is mind-boggling. In the end, not only do the victims suffer more, oftentimes for life, but the laity end up seeing their donations used to pay for the abuser’s crimes rather than used to do God’s work.

A word of caution about these so-called therapeutic services: One Oahu man who brought a priest up on charges of abuse (who later admitted guilt), was sent by the diocese to a Franciscan sister (who had a private practice) for therapy. She questioned his memory of the event. He turned around and sued for a monetary sum and won.

Do not be naive. In the 1960s, Pope Paul VI, coming out of a spiritual ecstasy while praying stated, “The smoke of Satan has entered the sanctuary.”

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Puerto Rico: el Vaticano exonera al arzobispo de San Juan

VATICANO
Vatican Insider

Según la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe las acciones de Roberto González Nieves no contradicen la ortodoxia católica

ANDRÉS BELTRAMO ÁLVAREZ
CIUDAD DEL VATICANO

Exonerado de toda culpa. El Vaticano confirmó que el arzobispo de San Juan de Puerto Rico, Roberto González Nieves, no es rebelde y que las denuncias en su contra nunca tuvieron fundamento. Lo confirmó él mismo, hace unos días durante una conferencia de prensa en su país. Ahora sus seguidores piden que se limpie su nombre.

Más de 19 meses duró la visita apostólica ordenada por dos dicasterios de la Santa Sede. El 25 de octubre de 2011 dos congregaciones vaticanas, la de Obispos y la del Clero, comisionaron al arzobispo ecuatoriano de Guayaquil, Antonio Arregui Yarza, una exhaustiva auditoría a la gestión episcopal de su par puertorriqueño.

Arregui envió sus resultados a Roma y confirmó lo anticipado por el Vatican Insider días atrás. González Nieves no encubrió sacerdotes pedófilos, no se extralimitó en sus funciones, no robó dinero y ni vendió colegios católicos sin permiso. Sin importar las denuncias internas promovidas por Josef Wesolowski, embajador vaticano en República Dominicana y delegado apostólico en territorio puertorriqueño.

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Great News for San Juan

PUERTO RICO
National Catholic Reporter

Michael Sean Winters | Jun. 12, 2013 Distinctly Catholic

Vatican Insider has the story — alas, not in English — about the complete exoneration of Archbishop Roberto Gonzalez Nieves of San Juan, Puerto Rico. This is very good news for the people of San Juan and for those of us lucky enough to consider Gonzalez a friend. Because of that friendship, I have not written about this issue previously, nor will I do so now, except to express relief that the Holy See finally figured out what was going on and reached the correct conclusions.

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NJ- Ex Catholic official blasts Newark archbishop

NEW JERSEY
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

A prominent Catholic canon lawyer who once headed the American Catholic bishops’ top sex abuse panel is harshly criticizing, in a rare and stunningly candid manner, Newark Archbishop John Myers.

[Commonweal]

Nicholas Cafardi is a civil and canon lawyer and Dean Emeritus and Professor of Law at Duquesne University School of Law. He is the former chair of the National Review Board, a lay panel created by America’s bishops in 2002 to oversee how the prelates deal with clergy sex crimes.

In a new, 2400 word article in the Catholic magazine Commonweal, Cafardi writes that Myers, in the Fr. Michael Fugee case,

— “was less than forthcoming.”

–“has yet to take any personal responsibility for the failures of his own archdiocese.”

“If Myers failed to ask” for “updates (about Fr. Fugee), he is grossly negligent,” Cafardi says. “If he did and knew about Fugee’s violations of the agreement, then he is complicit.”

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Victims of church sexual abuse need criminal lawyers, not therapy

HAWAII
Star-Advertiser

By Marilyn Wong

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Jun 12, 2013

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Hawaii, via a newspaper ad that ran Monday, is offering therapy treatment and reconciliation for the victims of sex abuse.

Directing victims to go to the diocese for help is like sending the sheep back to the wolves. The diocese had the chance years ago to help victims, but did not act because, at the time, the statute of limitations protected the church. Instead, people claiming abuse were vilified, accused of seeking money, and told that the limitations had expired on their cases. Now that the two-year window has been opened, the church is scurrying to connect with the victims.

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What Did Pope Francis Mean by ‘Gay Lobby?’

UNITED STATES
Huffington Post

Janet Tavakoli

Before Pope Benedict XVI resigned and before Pope Francis I became the first Jesuit pope in the history of the Catholic Church, I published a fiction thriller, Archangels: Rise of the Jesuits. The Jesuits reject the church’s financial and sexual corruption, blackmail the pope with secret documents, and take control of the Vatican to reform the church. It’s a fiction murder mystery, but it is also includes history and well-researched facts.

In my novel, the Jesuits insist that all priests in the Catholic Church–whether they are homosexual or heterosexual–must reaffirm their vows of celibacy. A very small part of the plot references an affair between consenting adult priests. Both ceased the affair and renewed their vows.

One reviewer of Catholic books read an advance copy and wrote me: “…I got to the part where [a priest] explains his affair with [another priest]…I cannot possubly [sic] do a review of a book that includes a homosexual affair between two priests….” Murder and embezzlement — including true crimes — apparently didn’t bother this reviewer, but the mention (in passing) of the adult affair did.

Heterosexuals, Homosexuals, and (a Separate Issue) Predatory Pedophiles

Catholics acknowledge that priests have had mistresses. The Borgias is Showtime’s historical fiction series about the conspiracies and love affairs of the famous family led by Pope Alexander VI. It’s part of documented church history that even popes have had mistresses.

Many Catholics refuse to acknowledge that homosexual men that are not pedophiles are a part of the priesthood, and some of them have affairs with each other. In the early 11th century, Pope Urban II knew Archbishop Ralph of Tours pulled strings so that his lover would be made the Bishop of Orléans. This means they broke their vows of celibacy, just as Pope Alexander VI did. Today, gay priests are part of the top leadership in the Vatican.

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WHERE IS THE ACCOUNTABILITY?: YET ANOTHER PRIEST ARRESTED FOR CHILD SEX ABUSE

MINNESOTA
Jeff Anderson & Associates

JEFFREY R. ANDERSON

This week yet another Minnesota priest was arrested for sexually abusing a child. Father Leo Charles Koppala, of Blue Earth, Minnesota, has been charged with the sexual abuse of an 11-year old girl. Father Koppala is a priest at Saints Peter and Paul Catholic Church. His arrest is a stark reminder of the continued vulnerability of our youth to child predators, including clergy.

American Catholic Bishops are fond of categorizing the sexual abuse of children by clergy as a historic problem. The much-criticized 2011 John Jay Report commissioned by the United States Catholic Conference of Bishops takes this position. But the crimes of Fr. Koppala and St. Paul priest, Father Curtis Wehmeyer believe this stance.

At the moment, according to the Bishop of Winona, Fr. Koppala is on administrative leave. The priest is not allowed to live on parish property or conduct ministry. The Bishop represented that there were no previous abuse allegations regarding Fr. Koppala.

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HI- Victims to leaflet Kailua neighborhood where accused priest lived, worked

HAWAII
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Victims to leaflet Kailua neighborhood where accused priest lived, worked
A least six kids have charged cleric with abuse
Neighbors may know witnesses, other victims
It is safe and right to talk about abuse, leaflet says
New law gives victims rights to expose abuse, get justice

What: Victims of sexual abuse and their supporters will leaflet a Kailua neighborhood where a six-time accused priest worked and lived. The leaflets will:

– Alert neighbors about accusations and lawsuits against the Diocese of Honolulu and Fr. J. Michael Henry,
– Let people know that it is safe and right to talk about abuse,
– Ask people to come forward if they have information or are witnesses to abuse, and
– Urge victims to report abuse to law enforcement and get help and healing.

Where: The neighborhood surrounding St. Anthony’s Parish in Kailua.
148 Makawao St in Kailua

Leafleting will start at the SW corner of Kalaheo and Makawao

For exact location, call (949) 322-7434

When: Wednesday, June 12, 11 am to 1 pm

Who: Two to three men and women who are members of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAPNetwork.org), including a California woman who the group’s Western Regional Director.

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Progress, What Crimes Are Committed in Thy Name!

GERMANY
Leon J. Podles: Dialogue

June 12th, 2013

The European has a long interview (in German) by reporter Sebastian Pfeffer with the psychotherapist Jürgen Lemke. He brings to light a very recent era which has disappeared down the memory hole. In the generation of the revolutionaries of 1968 and among the Greens pedophilia was almost “fashionable.”

Lemke: These groups maintained that “Children also have the right to sex with adults and desire it.”

The pedophiles saw themselves as doing children a favor. The revolutionaries who were not themselves pedophiles wanted to get rid of all taboos and restrictions, and did not want to impose any on pedophiles. Children were the victims of the sexual revolution.

Lemke: Eine Mutter, deren Sohn lange bei mir in Therapie war, war in den Siebzigern darauf stolz, dass ein Lehrer sich in ihren Sohn „verliebte“ und Sexualität einforderte. „Mein Unwohlsein darüber“, das sagt sie heute, „habe ich damals verdrängt, weil ich keine rückständige Mutter sein wollte.“ Im Grunde opferte sie den eigenen Sohn für eine Ideologie, die im Namen des Fortschritts das Zusammenleben neu regeln wollte.

“A mother, whose son was in therapy with me a long time, in the 1970s was proud that a teacher ‘loved’ her son and called for sex. She now says ‘At that time I suppressed my discomfort about that because I didn’t want to be an old-fashioned mother.’ Basically she sacrificed her own son for an ideology that in the name of progress desired to order anew the ways of living together.”

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Papa Francisco Dialoga como un Hermano más con la CLAR

VATICAN
Reflexion y Liberacion (Chile)

En un gesto sin precedentes, el Papa Francisco recibió y dialogó durante una hora con la directiva de la Confederación Latinoamericana y Caribeña de Religiosas y Religiosos (CLAR). Conversaron ubicados en círculo, entre iguales, como era en las primeras Comunidades fundadas por Jesús…

En un ambiente de confianza y sencillez, Francisco instó a los líderes de la CLAR a que no tengan miedo de continuar llevando su misión a los límites y las fronteras… “¡Coraje! ¡Avanzad para nuevos horizontes! No tengan miedo de correr riesgos yendo a los pobres y los nuevos sujetos emergentes en el continente”, señaló el Papa Bergoglio, quien al final del encuentro agradeció enfáticamente a la vida religiosa ser “señal y testimonio del Evangelio” en muchos lugares de América Latina y Caribe.

Ofrecemos a nuestros lectores -en exclusiva- esta breve síntesis de este histórico encuentro celebrado en la Santa Sede.

Audiencia con el Papa Francisco

CLAR, 06.06.13

· Abran puertas… ¡abran puertas!

Se van a equivocar, van a meter la pata, ¡eso pasa! Quizá hasta les va a llegar una carta de la Congregación para la Doctrina (de la Fe) diciendo que dijeron tal o cual cosa… Pero no se preocupen. Expliquen lo que tengan que explicar, pero sigan adelante… Abran puertas, hagan algo ahí donde la vida clama. Prefiero una Iglesia que se equivoca por hacer algo que una que se enferma por quedarse encerrada …

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Pope Francis Said To Reveal Existence Of ‘Gay Lobby’

VATICAN CITY
NPR

by EYDER PERALTA
June 12, 2013

In an audience with The Latin American and Caribbean Confederation of Religious, Pope Francis is said to have revealed the existence of a gay lobby.

The organization of priests and nuns posted notes of their private meeting with the pope on its website.

“Truthfully, there are saintly people in the curia, but there is also a current of corruption, it’s true,” he said according to the Confederation. “There’s talk of the ‘gay lobby’ and it’s true it’s there. We have to see what we can do about it.”

As The New York Times reports, this is apparent confirmation of reports in Italian media that the Vatican denied in February.

The Times explains:

“In the days leading up to Pope Benedict XVI’s resignation in February, the Italian news media were rife with reports of a ‘gay lobby’ influencing papal decision-making and Vatican policy through blackmail, and suggestions that the scandal had contributed to his decision to resign.

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Leaked Report Says Pope Francis Laments Vatican’s ‘Gay Lobby’

VATICAN CITY
Fox News Latino

VATICAN CITY – In a stunning acknowledgment that appears to confirm earlier reports about corruption and dysfunction in the Holy See, Pope Francis lamented that a “gay lobby” was at work inside the Vatican in private remarks to the leadership of a key Latin American church group.

The Latin American and Caribbean Confederation of Religious — the regional organization for priests and nuns of religious orders — confirmed Tuesday that its leaders had written a synthesis of Francis’ remarks after their June 6 audience.

The group, known by its Spanish acronym CLAR, said it was greatly distressed that the document had been published and apologized to the pope.

In the document, Francis is quoted as saying that while there were many holy people in the Vatican, there was also corruption: “The ‘gay lobby’ is mentioned, and it is true, it is there … We need to see what we can do …” the synthesis reads.

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The Thing About White Horses: The Spiritual Dangers of Fighting Child Abuse

UNITED STATES
O’Donnell Clark and Crew

Kelly Clark

I am a spiritual man. Now, don’t misunderstand me: I did not say I am a virtuous man, or a good man, or—God knows this and so do all my friends—a Far from it on all counts. I am a deeply flawed and broken guy. But, in spite of all that—or, more precisely, because of all that—I am a spiritual person, by which I mean that I see and understand the world and my life primarily in spiritual terms, brokenness and healing, death and resurrection, darkness and light. Both my religious faith and my program of recovery from addiction teach me how to do this, and there is a lot to be said for it as a way of life. Trying to live according to spiritual principles gives me hope and joy in the everyday, in family and friends, in sunsets and snowstorms. But there is a downside as well, which is that my spiritual program requires that I regularly check myself and my motives: in personal relationships, in lifestyle, in professional endeavors. My life and my faith teach me that there is some darkness in the best of us, some light in the worst of us, and that I am not fit to be a judge of anyone but me, and often not even that.

All of which can be really inconvenient when I go to work. For I fight child sexual abuse for a living. For nearly two decades now, most of my law practice has been dedicated to pursuing justice on behalf of men and women who as children were sexually abused by trusted adults: teachers, priests, pastors, Scout leaders, coaches, relatives. We file lawsuits against child abusers and the institutions that enabled it; we often work with law enforcement to try to prosecute the offenders; we work with educators, regulators and legislators to try to improve policies and laws in institutions of trust where we expect our children to be safe. This is what I do, 50 hours a week, 50 weeks a year. It is meaningful work and I believe in it and I hope that it makes a difference in keeping kids safer than they otherwise would be.

But this work can be difficult at times, with tragic stories of pain and suffering, cowardice and cover-up, dishonesty and disingenuity. The survivors I work with are often in a lot of pain—depression and disorientation, drugs and or alcohol abuse, relationship or vocational struggles. We have lost three men to suicide in the last decade and had another dozen scares. Some days I get so sad, other days so angry, and yet other days I get to a place of despair—which, for me, is a kind of numbness that can paralyze me into inaction. When that happens I find that I have gradually taken on too much of the pain of others, I have forgotten to take care of myself, and so I slowly sink beneath the quicksand. When these times approach, I have to be especially conscious and aware, and check myself and my motives often. I have to tap into the spiritual resources inside me.

For the truth of the challenge is that my soul does not want long to endure such emotions as overwhelming sadness or despair, loss or futility, and so, almost inevitably after a few minutes or hours of such feelings, anger comes rushing in, deep anger. Soon after the deep anger comes the emotions that are, at least for me, truly toxic, poisonous, self-defeating. Emotions like rage—which is different from anger in both degree and purpose, and revenge—which is wholly different from justice, and, worst of all, righteousness and self-righteousness—which says that I am, we are, qualitatively different, nay, even better than those on the other side of our work.

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Archbishop Chama suspends 6 priests

ZAMBIA
The Post

By Staff Reporter
Wed 12 June 2013

SIX Catholic priests from Mpika Catholic Diocese have been suspended indefinitely for teaching Religious Education and other subjects in secondary schools.

Some priests only received the suspension letters dated June 7, 2013 and signed by Kasama Archbishop Ignatius Chama last Sunday after conducting Mass, while others have not yet received them because they are still in the pigeonhole at Saint Andrew’s Catholic Church in Mpika awaiting delivery.
The suspended priests are Fr Benjamin Chisulo of Chilonga Parish, Fr Lawrence Chibwe of Chalabesa Parish, Fr Mark Chitamaluka of Mulanga, Fr Teddy Chilufya of Kopa, Fr Morgan Chikwale of Isoka and Fr Vito Milandile of Nabwalya.

The suspension of the six priests has been received with mixed feelings among members of the clergy and Christians in the diocese.

The source disclosed that the suspension of the priests had not been well received by most Christians who have accused Archbishop Chama of taking a firm stand on insignificant matters, while remaining ambivalent on serious matters such as sex scandals involving priests, some of whom have children.

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Paedophile priest admits assaulting fourth victim

NORTHERN IRELAND
News Letter

A disgraced paedophile priest, already serving a 10-year jail sentence for sex crimes against three victims has admitted sexually molesting a fourth young victim.

James Martin Donaghy had been due to go on trial at Belfast Crown Court on Wednesday but instead, defence QC Eugene Grant asked for the charges to be put to the sexual predator again.

Speaking in a calm, clear voice Donaghy, wearing a blue suit, white shirt and blue striped tie, entered guilty pleas to four charges of indecently assaulting a male child and a further charge of committing common assault against the same boy on dates between January and May 1989.

As he entered his guilty pleas, his victim’s mother wept quietly in the public gallery before fleeing the court in tears.

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Pope slams child exploitation

VATICAN CITY
Perth Now

AAP JUNE 12, 2013

POPE Francis has railed against the “deplorable” exploitation of children in domestic work, saying cases of child labour were on the rise in poor countries and affect young girls in particular.

“There are millions of minors, mostly young girls, who are victims of this form of hidden exploitation which often includes sexual abuse, poor treatment and discrimination,” he said in a message to mark World Day Against Child Labour.

Francis called on the international community “to take ever more effective measures to fight this plague,” which he said was “a deplorable phenomenon constantly on the increase.”

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Abuse group responds to pope’s alleged ‘gay lobby’ remarks

ITALY
Gazzetta del Sud

(see related) Rome, June 12 – A leading group supporting victims of priest sex abuse responded Wednesday to reports of Pope Francis complaining of a gay lobby in the Vatican and a “stream of corruption” in the Roman Curia. “Sexual orientation isn’t the real problem. Sexually active and thus compromised clerics are the real problem,” said Barbara Dorris, outreach director of the US-based Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP). “Allegedly celibate men (gay or straight) can, and often do, take advantage of their status and power. “It’s highly unlikely there will be a thorough ‘clean sweep’ of Curia personnel. But if that were to happen, it still won’t make much of a difference. “Structure, not sexuality, is the real issue. The church is a monarchy. Monarchs are unaccountable. So many monarchs are corrupt”.

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2013-01-22 Meine Schulzeit am AKO Klaus Mertes

DEUTSCHLAND
Unheilige Macht

Lieber Christian,

du hast mich gefragt, ob ich für den Blog etwas über meine Geschichte mit dem Aloisiuskolleg schreiben kann. Ich will das gerne versuchen – ohne Anspruch auf Vollständigkeit. Ich versuche mich kurz zu fassen, damit es lesbar bleibt. Und mir ist zunächst einmal wichtig, dass ich hier als ehemaliger Schüler spreche. Ich kann mich, was das Ako betrifft, nicht so einfach der „Täterseite“ zuordnen, wie ich es am Canisius-Kolleg konnte, das ich ja erst 1994 kennenlernte.

Als ich im Januar 2010 meinen Brief an die ehemaligen Schüler des Canisius-Kollegs in Berlin schrieb, hatte ich das Ako gar nicht im Blick. Darüber nachher mehr. Aber ich war – zu meiner nachträglichen Überraschung – nicht überrascht, als ich schon bald Post von ehemaligen Schülern und von Eltern ehemaliger Schüler aus dem Ako mit Opferberichten bekam. In meinen Antworten bestätigte ich spontan die Glaubwürdigkeit der Berichte vor dem Hintergrund meiner eigenen Erinnerungen.

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„Viele Pädophile halten sich für Wohltäter“

DEUTSCHLAND
The European

Jürgen Lemke therapiert seit Jahren Pädophile und Missbrauchsopfer. Mit Sebastian Pfeffer spricht er darüber, wie der Zeitgeist unter 68ern und Grünen die Pädophilie fast salonfähig machte. Der Psychotherapeut gibt Einblick in eine verstörende Welt, deren Existenz von der Gesellschaft auch heute noch mehrheitlich ignoriert wird.

The European: Herr Lemke, wie kann man heute verstehen, dass in den 70er- und 80er-Jahren verschiedene Gruppen für den legalen Kindesmissbrauch eintreten konnten und es keinen Aufschrei gab?

Lemke: Diese Gruppen propagierten ja nicht dezidiert „Kindesmissbrauch“, sie verkehrten die Sache ins Gegenteil und behaupteten: „Auch Kinder haben ein Recht auf Sexualität mit Erwachsenen und wollen das.“ Selbstbewusst erklärten sie sich zu Befreiern der unterdrückten Kinder, und ernannten sich zu „wahren Kinderfreunden“.

The European: Und im Zeitgeist der 68er-Bewegung hat das verfangen?
Lemke: Viele sexuelle Tabus wurden gekippt, und die Pädophilie gleich mit. So einen radikalen Bruch mit dem Althergebrachten gab es davor noch nicht. So dass die Pädophilen sich als „Revolutionäre“ erlebten und dementsprechend auftraten. Nicht nur in der Bundesrepublik, auch in anderen Ländern wurde das Kind mit dem Bade ausgeschüttet. Außer in ominösen Geschichten über die alten Griechen, bei denen Pädophilie angeblich gang und gäbe war, wurde Sex mit Kindern in allen Epochen der Menschheit mit Strafen belegt. Den Umbruch 1968 nutzten die Pädophilen und sprangen im Windschatten der sexuellen Revolution auf den fahrenden Zug. Trittbrettfahrer – wenn man so will.

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Papst Franziskus über Netzwerk im Vatikan: “Die Schwulen-Lobby ist da”

VATIKAN
Spiegel

Gemunkelt wird über die Existenz eines schwulen Netzwerkes im Vatikan seit langem. Benedikt XVI. soll gar wegen der mächtigen Strippenzieher aus dem Amt geschieden sein. Jetzt bestätigte Papst Franziskus dies unerwartet: “Wir müssen sehen, was wir tun können.”

Rom – Die Versammlung sollte eigentlich hinter geschlossenen Türen stattfinden, über das Gesagte Stillschweigen bewahrt werden. Am 6. Juni empfing Papst Franziskus Vorstandsmitglieder der Lateinamerikanischen und Karibischen Konferenz der Ordensleute (Clar). Man sprach über dies und das, offenbar auch über brisante Inhalte.

Irgendjemand aus der Gruppe erstellte eine Zusammenfassung der Anmerkungen des Papstes. Und eben die gelangte an die Öffentlichkeit. Die chilenische Internetseite “Reflexión y Liberación” publizierte den Wortlaut der Mitschrift.

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Priest to sue fellow cleric after sexual bullying book allegations

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

Wednesday 12 June 2013

Gerry Braiden
Senior reporter

THE priest behind a book alleging a culture of sexual bullying within the Catholic Church in Scotland is being threatened with legal action from another serving cleric.

Father Robert Kane, a priest in the Diocese of Motherwell, announced to his congregation his intention to pursue Father Matthew Despard through the courts.

It is understood he was given a standing ovation by parishioners.

Father Despard’s book claims sexual misconduct has been rife for decades in junior seminaries where teenagers train for the priesthood.

The self-published Priesthood In Crisis, which came in the wake of the sex scandal and allegations facing shamed Cardinal Keith O’Brien, was recently withdrawn by Amazon.

While he is not named in the book, it is understood Father Kane, who serves St Teresa of Lisieux in Newarthill, believes he is referred to several times. It is understood he denies any wrongdoing.

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Fr Matt Wallace suicide ‘shows pressure on priests’

NORTHERN IRELAND
BBC News

A Catholic priest has said the death of a colleague at the weekend has highlighted the growing pressures they face.

Father Matt Wallace, from the parish of the Holy Trinity in west Belfast, took his own life.

The funeral of the County Wexford-born priest was held in Belfast on Tuesday.

It was told that the growing demand on a diminishing number of priests is physically and mentally challenging and for some it is become intolerable

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Catholic Priest, Teacher Face Prison for Sex Abuse

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
NBC 10

A Roman Catholic priest and former teacher face long prison terms when they are sentenced in a priest-abuse case that brought down a Philadelphia church official.

The Rev. Charles Engelhardt of Wynnewood, Pa. and Bernard Shero of Levittown, Pa. are due in court Wednesday to learn their fates.

A troubled policeman’s son accused Engelhardt, Shero and now-defrocked priest Edward Avery of raping him as a child in the 1990s.

All three men deny the allegations, even though Avery took a plea offer and the others were convicted of most charges at trial.

The 49-year-old Shero is being sentenced on rape, indecent assault and other charges.

The 66-year-old Engelhardt faces sentencing on indecent assault, corruption of a minor and conspiracy.

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Suspended parish priest ‘forced to move out’

NORTHERN IRELAND
Tyrone Times

Published on 12/06/2013

CONTROVERSIAL priest Father Sean McEvoy is headed back to his home parish in Newry by mutual agreement with the Church authorities.

Fr McEvoy, who was suspended from his duties three years ago, had been residing in Aughnacloy’s parochial house, but in a statement read out at last Sunday’s Masses, it was revealed that he is moving to Killeavy Parish, in Co Armagh.

The statement added that the move carried no implication of guilt on the part of Fr McEvoy.

However, a parishioner revealed to the Tyrone Times that the priest had been ‘forced out’.

“People in Aughnacloy are disappointed that it has come to this”, she said.

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Pope Francis: `Gay lobby’ exists inside Vatican

VATICAN CITY
CNN

By Daniel Burke, CNN Belief Blog Co-Editor

(CNN) – Pope Francis said a “gay lobby” exists inside the Vatican, a surprising disclosure from a pope who has already delivered his share of stunners, and a resurrection of church conflicts that had bedeviled his predecessor’s papacy.

“In the Curia,” Francis said, referring to Catholicism’s central bureaucracy, “there are holy people. But there is also a stream of corruption.”

“The ‘gay lobby’ is mentioned, and it is true, it is there,” Francis continued. “We need to see what we can do.”

Hints that the Holy See contained a network of gay clergy surfaced last year in reports about a series of embarrassing leaks to Italian journalists.

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Archbishop Seraphim’s Trial Begins

CANADA
Fr. Ted’s Blog

Posted on June 11, 2013 by Fr. Ted

Winnipeg news outlets are reporting that the sexual abuse trial of the OCA’s former Archbishop of Canada, Seraphim (Storheim) has begun. The Winnipeg Sun reports, “Sex abuse trial for former Orthodox archbishop Seraphim Storheim begins.” The Winnipeg Free Press said, “Ex-altar boy tells archbishop’s Winnipeg sex assault trial he felt ‘disgusted’”.

It is only with the trial’s beginning that some details about the allegation are coming forth. A court ordered publication ban prevents certain details from being released since those making the allegations were minors at the time the events were claimed to have occurred. Archbishop Seraphim was still a parish priest when the alleged abuse occurred between 1984-1987. He became a bishop in 1987.

We will soon learn what the Crown is able to prove regarding the case and how Archbishop Seraphim will be judged by the court. Whatever is proven in court, the Orthodox Church in America will still and also have to render a judgment on Archbishop Seraphim and whether anything he did violated church canons and requires a church court or church discipline. The OCA has chosen to let the Crown make its case and judgment first before dealing with the case in the church. This was partly necessary perhaps because the OCA did not have all of the details of the case which are only now being revealed. Still the OCA needs to review its own inner culture that allowed the events to be ignored for so long without opening an investigation into the allegations.

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Editorial on the First Anniversary of Scott Nevins’ Suicide

UNITED STATES
Pokrov

Date Published: 6/11/2013
Publication: Pokrov.org

Today is the first anniversary of Scott Nevin’s tragic death. We here at Pokrov.org ask what has been done in the past year by the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese, the Metropolis of San Francisco and the other dioceses to ensure that this tragedy will not be repeated?

The answer?

NOTHING.

Archbishop Demetrios Trakatellis, Metropolitan Gerasimos Michaleas and all the other Greek hierarchs are accountable for what happens at the monasteries founded by Archimandrite Ephraim Moraitis. Scott’s blood is on their hands. What more will it take for these leaders to take decisive ACTION against what appears to be a sect within their church that acts like a destructive cult?

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ROC grants former pastor severance

VIRGINIA
Richmond Times-Dispatch

Posted: Wednesday, June 12, 2013

BY LOUIS LLOVIO Richmond Times-Dispatch

The Richmond Outreach Center will continue to pay its former senior pastor his $115,000 annual salary and will allow him to live in the church’s parsonage for the next six months.

The church’s board of directors agreed on the severance package for Geronimo Aguilar, who faces child sexual abuse charges in Texas, “after much discussion and taking his family into consideration.”
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Stephen C. Lewis, the South Richmond megachurch’s attorney, said the board felt that Aguilar’s years of service as the founder and head of the ROC merited the severance package.

“He was under an employment agreement, but I don’t think that was the reason for the severance. The reason was (because) people appreciate what he’s done and with what he’s got going on, people want to make sure his family was taken care of,” Lewis said.

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DECLARACIÓN DE LA PRESIDENCIA DE LA CLAR

COLOMBIA
Confederacion Latinoamericana y Caribena de Religiosos y Religiosas

Bogotá, Colombia, 11 de junio de 2013

DECLARACIÓN DE LA PRESIDENCIA DE LA CLAR

La Presidencia de la CLAR lamenta profundamente la publicación de un texto que se refiere a la conversación tenida con el Santo Padre Francisco durante el encuentro del pasado 6 de junio. Conversación que se desarrolló a partir de las preguntas hechas al Papa por los presentes.

En tal ocasión no se hizo grabación alguna de la conversación pero poco después se elaboró una síntesis de la misma con base en los recuerdos de los participantes. Esta síntesis, que no contiene las preguntas hechas al Santo Padre, estaba destinada a la memoria personal de los mismos participantes y de ninguna manera a la publicación para la cual, de hecho, no se había pedido autorización alguna.

Es claro que sobre esta base no se pueden atribuir al Santo Padre, con seguridad, las expresiones singulares contenidas en el texto, sino solo su sentido general.

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Stockton bishop addresses sexual abuse, diocese bankruptcy

CALIFORNIA
The Record

By The Record
June 12, 2013

STOCKTON – The Diocese of Stockton’s Bishop Stephen Blaire wrote a letter that was read to congregations over the weekend addressing speculation on the diocese filing for bankruptcy and settlements on sexual abuse lawsuits.

A recent settlement brought the total the diocese has paid in judgments, legal costs and settlements to $15 million over the past 20 years, Blaire said in the letter. And of that, $6 million has been paid in the past three years.

The latest settlement is with a victim of defrocked priest Oliver O’Grady. The victim was 10 or 11 years old in the 1980s when he was molested by O’Grady, according to the letter.

“It is my hope that this settlement helps him continue to heal,” Blaire said. “He, and all victims of sexual abuse, must be in our prayers always.”

Blaire said that since his arrival to the diocese 14 years ago, he has tried to settle the cases and heal the “wounds” caused to the Church “by the evil of sexual abuse.”

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Paus erkent ‘homolobby’ en corruptie binnen de kerk.

VATICAAN
Holebi

Paus Franciscus erkent het bestaan van een ‘homolobby’ bestaat binnen het bestuur van de kerk en van een stroom van corruptie, hierdoor is het volgens de kerkvader niet eenvoudig op de Romeinse curie (het bestuur van de Kerk), te hervormen.

De hervorming die bijna alle kardinalen willen is moeilijk volgens de Paus. “Er zijn veel goede mensen, maar er is ook een stroom van corruptie. En men spreekt ook over een ‘homolobby’, en het is zo dat die echt bestaat. Ik kan de hervormingen niet leiden omdat hij heel ongeorganiseerd is”, aldus nog paus Franciscus. De hervorming in gang zetten is de taak van de Commissie van acht kardinalen die hij heeft benoemd en die in oktober voor de eerste keer een officiële bijeenkomst heeft in Rome.

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