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.

August 17, 2013

Deceased clergy files to be reviewed following child abuse concerns

UNITED KINGDOM
The Press

By Mike Laycock, Chief reporter

THE Archbishop of York has appointed an independent reviewer to examine the files of deceased clergy, following growing concerns about child abuse in the Church.

Dr John Sentamu said all the files of deceased clergy who served in the York Diocese from before 1950 to the present day were being recalled from the archives.

A spokesman for the Archbishop said the protocol for the Church of England’s National Review of Past Cases of Child Abuse, which took place in 2008/9, did not include the files of such people, but it was now recognised it was important to review those files as well.

“Where relevant material is found, this will help to inform the response of the Church and of relevant statutory agencies to any reports which may surface in relation to those who have since died,” he 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.

Dr John Sentamu gives blessing to trawl of church archives in search for paedophile priests

UNITED KINGDOM
The Times

Sean O’Neill Crime Editor
Published at 12:01AM, August 17 2013

A trawl of Church of England archives has begun in an effort to find paedophile priests, dead or alive, who may have escaped justice. The Archbishop of York, Dr John Sentamu, has ordered all files on clergy in his diocese to be retrieved and examined by an independent child protection expert.

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.

Diocese of York abuse inquiry opens clergy files

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

Church files on deceased clergy who served in the Diocese of York are to be opened as part of an investigation into alleged cases of child abuse.

The Archbishop of York, Dr John Sentamu, has ordered all the relevant files from before 1950 until the present day to be scrutinised.

An independent reviewer will examine the batch of files.

Dr Sentamu said the passage of time “did not bring healing to those who may have been abused”.

In July the General Synod voted to acknowledge and apologise for past safeguarding wrongs in the Church of England, and to ensure “that steps were taken to make sure that victims of abuse are always actively listened to and offered appropriate support”

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.

Paedophile priests: church re-examines files dating back 60 years

UNITED KINGDOM
Telegraph

Church of England files dating back more than 60 years are to be reopened in search of evidence of child abuse by clergy who have since died.

By John Bingham, Religious Affairs Editor 17 Aug 2013

The Archbishop of York, the Most Rev John Sentamu, ordered the review as he acknowledged that previous inquiries could have missed important evidence because only files relating to those still living were examined.

It comes after an independent inquiry, overseen by Judge Sally Cahill QC, into the Church’s handling of evidence that the late Robert Waddington, a former Dean of Manchester, abused choirboys and school pupils, got under way.

It will investigate claims that the Province of York effectively covered the case up by failing to alert the police while Waddington was still alive.

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 in Scotland: amid more revelations, is the Church making any progress?

SCOTLAND
The Tablet

Elena Curti, deputy editor
16 August 2013

Peter Stanford can’t be alone in sometimes wishing that the endless flow of revelations of clerical sex abuse would just stop. It’s natural for Catholics to feel dispirited that all the good the Church does is continually being drowned out by revelations of what happened to children many decades ago.

Investigative journalists who have turned their attention to Church have, without too much difficulty, been unearthing historic abuse allegations for more than a decade.

The latest case in point is Fort Augustus Abbey in the Scottish Highlands where a BBC investigative team aired one television programme, Reporting Scotland: Sins of Our Fathers, on 29 July, and will transmit a follow-up with more revelations on Monday. The school, which was run by monks of the English Benedictine Congregation, was closed 20 years ago and the abbey community was suppressed not long after that.

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.

Faith & Works | Evangelical churches urged to confront abuse, cover-ups

UNITED STATES
The Courier-Journal

Written by
Peter Smith
The Courier-Journal

Evangelical churches need to confront sexual abuse and cover-ups within their own ranks, according to a statement signed by more than 1,500 people worldwide and promoted by a former sex-crimes prosecutor.

The “Public Statement Concerning Sexual Abuse in the Church of Jesus Christ” was prompted in part by a Maryland lawsuit filed by 11 people against Sovereign Grace Ministries, a denomination now based in Louisville, alleging a cover-up of abuse within its churches.

But Boz Tchividjian — a former Florida prosecutor and founder of GRACE, an organization that consults with Christian groups on preventing abuse and investigating past cases — said the lawsuit underscores larger issues. “We make public statements about so many issues in the American evangelical world, whether it’s Obamacare, gays in the Boy Scouts,” said Tchividjian, now a law professor at Liberty University in Virginia and a grandson of evangelist Billy Graham. “But here’s a huge issue that’s facing the church, and there’s nothing but silence.”

The statement alludes to the Sovereign Grace cases as well as to those who have defended the denomination and its former longtime president, C.J. Mahaney, including Southern Baptist Theological Seminary President Albert Mohler.

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.

Archbishop of York orders files to be examined on members of deceased clergy as part of child abuse investigation

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

By JENNIFER SMITH
17 August 2013

The Diocese of York will open files on deceased members of its clergy in a bid to address alleged cases of child abuse.

The Archbishop of York, Dr John Semantu,has ordered that files dating back more than 60 years be scrutinised and examined by an independent reviewer as part of an investigation into clerical sex abuse.
Dr Semantu told the BBC: ‘The damage done by the sexual abuse of children is immense and the passage of time does not in itself bring healing’.

‘Where young people are shown to have been betrayed by individuals in a position of trust and by the institution’s failure to protect them, it is for the church to acknowledge the hurt which has been done.’

Dr Semantu said it is the church’s responsibility to ensure that ‘policies and practices are improved such that the same systematic failure could never be repeated.’

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.

Archbishop of York orders review of dead clergy files in child abuse inquiry

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Sam Jones
The Guardian, Friday 16 August 2013

The archbishop of York, Dr John Sentamu, has ordered a review of all the files on dead clergy who served in the diocese from 1950 to the present so that an independent investigator can determine whether they may have sexually abused children.

The move comes five weeks after the Church of England’s General Synod apologised for its failure to listen to abuse victims, and a month after Sentamu launched an independent inquiry into the church’s handling of reports of alleged child abuse by the late Robert Waddington, a former dean of Manchester.

Announcing the review, Sentamu acknowledged the “immense damage” done to children who are sexually abused and said the passage of time did not automatically bring healing.

He said: “Where young people are shown to have been betrayed by individuals in a position of trust and by the institution’s failure to protect them, it is for the church to acknowledge the hurt which has been done, to offer a full apology, and to prove, so far as is possible, that policies and practices are improved such that the same systemic failure could never be repeated.”

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.

Archbishop launches major probe into deceased clergy

UNITED KINGDOM
Darlingon & Stockton Times

THE Archbishop of York has launched an independent inquiry into hundreds of deceased clergymen to run alongside another investigation into a former dean who died after being accused of child sex abuse.

Dr John Sentamu has appealed for people from across North Yorkshire and the North-East to come forward with information about deceased clergy who served in the Diocese of York dating back more than 65 years.

The diocese, which includes 608 churches and 127 schools in 468 parishes stretching from the Humber to the Tees and the A1 to the coast, said it believes there may be numerous historic issues relating to safeguarding vulnerable adults and children that have not been reported.

The Archbishop of York said: “The damage done by the sexual abuse of children is immense, and the passage of time does not in itself bring healing.

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.

Request for Information – The Late Robert Waddington, formerly Dean of Manchester

UNITED KINGDOM
Anglican Archbishop of York

Thursday 8th August 2013

The Inquiry set up by the Archbishop of York and Chaired by Her Honour Judge Sally Cahill QC is currently gathering evidence in relation to what complaints were made about alleged abuse by the late Dean of Manchester, Robert Waddington, and the Church’s response to those complaints.

Ordained Deacon in 1953, Waddington began his career as curate at St John’s, Bethnal Green 1953-56. Afterwards he was Chaplain at Slade School in Warwick, Queensland, 1956-59. After 18 months as curate of St Luke’s Chesterton, in the Ely Diocese, he returned to Australia to become Headmaster of St. Barnabas School, Ravenshoe, where he remained until 1971. Returning to England he became a Canon Residentiary at Carlisle Cathedral and Bishop’s Adviser for Education 1972-77, then General Secretary of the Church of England’s General Synod Board of Education and General Secretary of the National Society from 1977-84 until becoming Dean of Manchester Cathedral in 1984. He retired to York in 1993 and died in 2007.

The Chair to the Inquiry asks that anyone who may have relevant information should contact the Clerk to The Inquiry Mrs Nicola Harding at Cathedral Chambers, 4 Kirkgate, Ripon, North Yorkshire, HG4 1PA. njh@tunnardsolicitors.com

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.

Archbishop Announces Independent Review Of Deceased Clergy Files

UNITED KINGDOM
Anglican Archbishop of York

Saturday 17th August 2013

The Archbishop of York Dr John Sentamu has today announced that there will be an independent review of all files relating to deceased clergy who served in the Diocese of York from before 1950 to the present.

On July 22nd 2013 the Archbishop of York, Dr John Sentamu, announced the launch of an Independent Inquiry, led by HH Judge Sally Cahill QC, into the Church’s handling of reports of alleged child abuse by the late Robert Waddington, a former Dean of Manchester.

The Inquiry has now begun its work, and HH Judge Cahill has appealed for those with relevant information to contact the Secretary of the Inquiry, Mrs Nicola Harding, at Cathedral Chambers, 4 Kirkgate, Ripon, North Yorkshire, HG4 1PA. njh@tunnardsolicitors.com

Prior to this, in July the General Synod had voted to acknowledge and apologise for past safeguarding wrongs in the Church of England, and to ensure that steps are taken to make sure that victims of abuse are always actively listened to and offered appropriate support.

In the light of this, the Archbishop has recalled from the archive all files of deceased clergy who served in the Diocese of York from before 1950 to the present, and has appointed an Independent Reviewer to examine these files thoroughly. The protocol for the Church of England’s National Review of Past Cases of Child Abuse which took place in 2008/9 did not include the files of deceased clergy, but it is now recognised that it is important to review these files as well. Where relevant material is found, this will help to inform the response of the Church and of relevant statutory agencies to any reports which may surface in relation to those who have since died.

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’ probe to cover dead clergy

UNITED KINGDOM
ic Solihull

Aug 17 2013

The Diocese of York is to open files on deceased members of its clergy dating back more than six decades as part of an investigation into alleged cases of child abuse, it has been reported.

The Archbishop of York, Dr John Sentamu, has ordered that all relevant files from before 1950 to the present day be scrutinised and examined by an independent reviewer, the BBC said.

The archbishop said: “The damage done by the sexual abuse of children is immense and the passage of time does not in itself bring healing.

“Where young people are shown to have been betrayed by individuals in a position of trust and by the institution’s failure to protect them, it is for the church to acknowledge the hurt which has been done, to offer a full apology, and to prove, so far as is possible, that policies and practices are improved such that the same systemic failure could never be repeated.”

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.

A message of hope

MINNESOTA
Independent

August 17, 2013
Steve Browne , Marshall Independent

GREEN VALLEY – For Bob Schwiderski, the nightmare began again in his 40s when he saw his son dressed in his altar boy attire.

Schwiderski said the memories of being abused by a parish priest in Hector came flooding back. What followed was a long period of self-destructive behavior, promiscuity and binge drinking.

“My wife divorced me, and I don’t blame her a bit,” Schwiderski said. “I didn’t know the negative dynamic, I didn’t have a boundary.”

Schwiderski’s parents discovered their sons’ abuse in 1962 when his older brother told them about being touched by the late Father William J. Marks. They reported this to the trustees of the church.

Marks was subsequently transferred to St. Clotilde in Green Valley and to St. Dionysius in Tyler.

“Three weeks later the bishops dropped Marks on the unsuspecting people of this church,” Schwiderski said. “What the folks around here need to know is the bishop knew Marks was a child molester and dropped him here.”

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.

Uriel Ojeda to join few Catholic clergy in California prisons for child sex abuse

CALIFORNIA
Merced Sun-Star

Published: August 17, 2013

By Cynthia Hubert — chubert@sacbee.com

Some time during the next week or so, the Rev. Uriel Ojeda will leave Sacramento County’s Main Jail and join other inmates for a long bus ride to state prison.

Once a rising star in the Sacramento Roman Catholic Diocese, lauded by parishioners for his compassion and faith, the young priest likely will spend at least seven years in the harsh confines of an institution where security cameras and uniformed guards will monitor his every movement.

He will be treated “no differently than any other inmate,” said California Department of Corrections spokesman Bill Sessa.

But Ojeda, 33, is no ordinary convict.

Only a few Catholic priests are currently imprisoned in California for child sexual abuse, said Patrick Wall, a former priest and canon lawyer who advocates for victims of clergy abuse from his office in St. Paul, Minn.

“I am aware of only five,” said Wall. He documents such cases along with the nonprofit BishopAccountability.org.

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August 16, 2013

Class-action accusing Montreal clerics of sexually abusing deaf and mute children can go ahead, judge rules

CANADA
Sun News

GIUSEPPE VALIANTE | QMI AGENCY

MONTREAL – A Quebec judge rejected a motion to delay a multi-million-dollar class-action lawsuit against a religious order accused of sexually abusing deaf and mute children.

The Clerics of Saint Viator wanted the judge to force the members of the class-action to prove – before the trial started – that they were legally allowed to sue.

Lawyer Pierre Boivin, who represents the alleged victims, said Canadian law gives victims a three-year window after a crime was committed in order to come forward.

However, in sexual abuse cases, jurisprudence allows victims a larger window, due to the trauma associated with molestation, Boivin said.

Boivin said that if the clerics got their way, members of the class-action would have had to prove that victims were abused significantly enough to be granted a larger prescribed time.

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‘Ruthless con man’ from Margate man gets 18 years …

NEW JERSEY
Press of Atlantic City

By LYNDA COHEN Staff Writer

A Margate man has been sentenced to 18 years in prison for bilking about 50 people out of more than $1.3 million — including a nun and two priests.

Adriano Sotomayor, 55, is “a ruthless con man” who — after his scheme caused at least one person to commit suicide — continued to defraud the man’s widow, even after his arrest on the charges,

“He not only took my money but he wanted to drive me to despair,” one of the priests, identified only as “Father D,” said in a statement submitted to the court. “Adriano Sotomayor did more than deprive me of my money, he tried to deprive me of my very will to live.”

Sotomayor’s schemes were apparently used to feed a gambling habit that included about $1.6 million in chip buy-ins at Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino alone in 2010, records shows. IRS records also show he reported no source of income.

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Priest who once taught at St. Francis High gets prison for possessing child porn

NEW YORK
The Buffalo News

By Jay Tokasz | News Staff Reporter
on August 16, 2013

A Franciscan priest who once taught at St. Francis High School in Athol Springs received a 20-year prison term, to be suspended after five years, on charges of possessing child pornography and risking injury to a minor in Connecticut.

The sentence on Thursday in New Britain, Conn., Superior Court stems from the 2011 arrest of the Rev. Michael Miller, who at the time was serving as assistant pastor of St. Paul Church in Kensington, Conn.

Police charged him with five felony counts of risking injury or impairing the morals of a minor.

The Hartford Courant reported Miller engaged in inappropriate Facebook chats with seven teenagers and wrote to a boy in graphic detail about sex acts he wanted to perform on the boy.

No illegal physical contact was alleged against Miller, 43, who pleaded guilty in May.

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Director of MN SNAP Encourages Sexual Abuse Victims to Come Forward

MINNESOTA
KEYC

By Brittany Larson, News Reporter

This past legislative session the Minnesota Child Victims Act passed 60-0 in the senate. The law allows victims of sexual abuse to sue in cases that are old. Those cases used to be barred under the statute of limitations.

Bob Schwiderski was 7 years old when he says he was sexually abused by Father William Joseph Marks at St. John’s Catholic Church in Hector. Today, he’s director of Minnesota SNAP Survivors Network Abused by Priests.

Bob Schwiderski says, “I personally have met over 1,000 people that were sexually abused by religious people.”

Bob stopped by his hometown today in Hector, Minnesota.

Schwiderski says, “This journey is to prevent this sexual abuse of children and this is something I will continue to do until the day I die.”

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The Need for Citizen Ombudsmen (Or: Bugger Off! I Don’t Work for You.)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

The Royal Commission will make a lot of findings on how organisations can improve their processes in tackling abusers within their ranks. The problem may well be that there will be an emphasis on people who are professionals or otherwise have no link to victims’ concerns.

The general approach from government to deal with problems has been to set up an “Ombudsman”. This is fine in principle, if the right person is appointed. Too often, however, this has not been the case. Eventually, the Ombudsman becomes merely an extension of the government which appointed him or her.

Sometimes, the appointment becomes simply a cushy job for some politically-connected hack. At other times, the position itself is not given any teeth. The Ombudsman makes a lot of good-sounding noises, but little change occurs. This may appear to be a bit of a cynical view, but a quick review of the many instances where an Ombudsman has been installed tends to reinforce this view.

Government will always tend to support a professional in such positions, because they can be counted upon to be “responsible”, or, to put it another way, not to be too critical of their employer, the government.

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Abused and experimented on, survivors of Canadian Indian school receive apology from church

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY DEBORAH HASTINGS / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

FRIDAY, AUGUST 16, 2013

Survivors of an infamous dormitory school who were abused, subjected to medical experiments and put on starvation diets for several years after World War II, received a personal apology this week from the Presbyterian Church of Canada.

A recent study revealed that children at the Cecilia Jeffrey Indian Residential School, and five other institutions, were unwitting subjects in medical and nutritional experiments.

In the 1940s and 1950s, researchers at Cecilia Jeffrey Indian Reisdential School, as well as five other dormitory schools, kept students on severely low diets, administering vitamins only to some to gauge the effectiveness of the supplements.

Vitamins and mineral supplements were new medical products at the time and scientists were keen to track their benefits to humans.

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State Debate: Journal Sentinel questions judge…

WISCONSIN
The Cap Times

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel criticizes U.S. District Judge Rudolph Randa for failing to disclose that he has family connections to the Milwaukee Archdiocese as he sits in judgment of the church’s bankruptcy petition. Randa has relatives buried in the archdiocese’s cemetery and has ruled that the church’s cemetery funds are apart from the bankruptcy. The least he should have done, the paper says, is to reveal that information.

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Scarano e la sua missione nel “gregge”

CITTA DEL VATICANO
Il Mattino

Era il 2005 quando monsignor Nunzio Scarano lasciò il «gregge» sostenendo la dichiarazione di obbedienza alla Curia di Salerno, che l’allora vescovo Gerardo Pierro, impose a tutti i «pascoliani».

Scarano, che già allora era in Vaticano, in servizio presso l’Apsa, si dichiarò subito dalla parte del vescovo, pronto a fare da intermediario per ricucire lo strappo con la chiesa salernitana. Il presule, ora in carcere a Regina Coeli con l’accusa di corruzione e indagato a Salerno per riciclaggio, faceva parte di quel gruppo di sacerdoti, di età compresa tra i 40 e i 50 anni, in un primo momento destinatari della fiducia dell’allora capo della Chiesa salernitana, ritenuti i punti nevralgici del governo curiale.

Portabandiera del «gregge», l’allora responsabile della Caritas diocesana, Franco Fedullo, il quale (invece) non firmò alcuna dichiarazione di obbedienza a Pierro.

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Suspended Vatican accountant linked to suspect spiritual group

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Agency

By Andrea Gagliarducci

Vatican City, Aug 15, 2013 / 02:02 am (CNA).- The Vatican accountant who was recently suspended for allegedly trying to smuggle $26 million had been part of a group known as “The Flock,” which has supposed Mafia connections.

Monsignor Nunzio Scarano is currently under arrest in Italy for an alleged plan to transfer 20 million Euro from Switzerland to Italy aboard an Italian government airplane.

Italian newspaper “Il Mattino” reports that Msgr. Scarano was entrusted with the management of a network of real estate activities for the spiritual family “L’opera del gregge del Bamin Gesù,” or “The works of the flock of the infant Jesus.”

“The Flock,” as it is known, was a sort of spiritual family formed in Salerno by a group of priests aged 40-50 who gathered around a visionary known by his first name, Caterina.

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Sartain offers LCWR few details, some sisters say

FLORIDA
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Aug. 16, 2013

ORLANDO, FLA.
In his first address to representatives of U.S. Catholic sisters since his appointment in April 2012, the archbishop tasked by the Vatican to oversee their leadership group reportedly had little to offer regarding the reason for Vatican concern or how the process goes forward.

Leaving Thursday’s closed-door meeting between Seattle Archbishop J. Peter Sartain and the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR), several sisters said they felt frustration at the lack of detail given by the prelate nearly 19 months into his mandate.

Sartain met Thursday afternoon with some 825 LCWR members, who are representatives of orders of Catholic sisters around the county. The Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith has named the prelate the group’s “apostolic delegate” and given him wide power to revise its statutes and programs.

LCWR members were asked by the group’s leaders not to discuss Thursday’s meetings with members of the press. The doors into the convention hall where Sartain was speaking were locked with uniformed guards placed near them to prevent unauthorized entry.

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Apelaron sobreseimiento de cura acusado de abusar de 50 menores en Paraná

ARGENTINA
La Voz

Justo José Ilarraz está acusado de abusar sexualmente de al menos 50 seminaristas, de entre 10 y 14 años, entre l984 y l992. Para la Justicia, la causa está prescripta por el paso del tiempo.

Los abogados querellantes y los fiscales presentaron recursos de casación para apelar el fallo que sobreseyó al ex prefecto del Seminario Menor de Paraná Justo José Ilarraz, quien está acusado de abusar sexualmente de al menos 50 seminaristas, de entre 10 y 14 años, entre l984 y l992. Voceros judiciales confirmaron que el planteo presentado anoche cuestiona la decisión de la Sala I de la Cámara del Crimen de Paraná, que concluyó a principios de este mes que la causa contra el sacerdote está prescripta por el paso del tiempo.

El pedido de casación fue presentando por los abogados de los siete ex seminaristas que denunciaron ante el juez de Instrucción Alejandro Grippo los supuestos abusos cometidos por el sacerdote cuando ellos eran niños.

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Apelarán el fallo que sobreseyó al cura, Justo José Ilarraz, acusado de violar a 50 niños

ARGENTINA
Primera Fuente

El procurador general de Entre Ríos, Jorge García, anticipó que apelará el fallo que sobreseyó al ex prefecto del Seminario Menor de Paraná, Justo José Ilarraz, acusado de abusar de 50 seminaristas

Al llegar a los tribunales locales, el funcionario remarcó que apelará la decisión de la Sala I de la Cámara del Crimen, que concluyó que la causa contra el sacerdote está prescripta por el paso del tiempo.

“Vamos a agotar hasta las últimas instancias para que esto se investigue y este señor, no solamente no vuelva a la capilla, sino que vaya con sus huesos a la cárcel” Jorge García, procurador general de Entre Ríos “Vamos a agotar hasta las últimas instancias para que esto se investigue penalmente y este señor, no solamente no vuelva a la capilla, sino que vaya con sus huesos a la cárcel”, sostuvo García.

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El Superior Tribunal resolverá el caso Ilarraz

ARGENTINA
Uno

El caso Justo José Ilarraz, el cura denunciado por abuso sexual de menores que iniciaban la carrera religiosa en el Seminario Arquidiocesano de Paraná entre 1984 y 1993 sumará un nuevo capítulo. Ayer los querellantes y la Fiscalía terminaron de presentar los recursos de Casación ante la Sala I de la Cámara del Crimen que serán elevados ante el Superior Tribunal de Justicia.

Los abogados que representan a los siete denunciantes entienden que la investigación debe seguir, a pesar del paso del tiempo. Por eso cuestionan la resolución de los camaristas Hugo Perotti y Miguel Giorgio, quienes declararon prescripta la causa y dictaron el sobreseimiento del sacerdote, que en la actualidad vive en San Miguel de Tucumán.

En primera instancia, el juez de Instrucción Alejandro Grippo consideró que no correspondía la prescripción, rechazó el pedido de la defensa y siguió investigando. Pero en segunda instancia la Justicia le dio la razón al cura.

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Child Assault Prevention sessions in September

NEW JERSEY
Catholic Star Herald

The Office of Child and Youth Protection is announcing CAP (Child Assault Prevention) sessions. CAP is the safe environment training program for adults who have regular contact with minors.

Attendance is required in order to comply with the USCCB’s Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People. The policy of the Diocese of Camden is that adults will attend CAP once every five years.

CAP 1 teaches attendees to recognize child abuse and neglect and how to report to the proper authorities. Adults are taught that children have the right to be safe, strong and free. CAP 1 is for new volunteers and employees.

CAP 2 is called No More Bullies, No More Victims and is a workshop addressing bullying awareness and bullying prevention. Cyber-bullying is also presented.

CAP 3 is called Cyber-Empowerment and is a workshop which promotes adult understanding of cyber activity of youth while teaching them realistic ways to help children keep their own rights and guard the rights of others in the cyber-sphere.

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Court hears new case arising from Poly Prep sex scandal

NEW YORK
Brooklyn Daily Eagle

By Charisma L. Miller, Esq.
Brooklyn Daily Eagle

An elite Brooklyn school is in court again on an issue related to a well-publicized sex scandal case that was settled.

The plaintiffs in the original case against Poly Prep Country Day School are now suing the school’s attorneys, Manhattan law firm O’Melveny & Myers, alleging that the lawyers fraudulently misrepresented facts in an attempt to deceive the court into reaching a decision in Poly Prep’s favor.

Ten alumni and two former students brought suit against Poly Prep in 2009, charging that the school concealed 25 years of sexual abuse by Peter Foglietta, its football coach for since the 1960s.

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Outside Counsel Sued in Poly Prep Sex Abuse Case

NEW YORK
Corporate Counsel

By Andrew Keshner
New York Law Journal
August 16, 2013

Former students who settled a lawsuit alleging a prestigious private school in Brooklyn covered up a football coach’s years of sexual abuse are now suing the school’s outside counsel at O’Melveny & Myers for allegedly trying to “deceive” the court with “fraudulent evidence” and “materially false and fraudulent statements.”

Naming O’Melveny and Jeffrey Kohn, managing partner of the firm’s New York office, as defendants, the action argues they “should not be allowed to escape sanction for their grievous and oft-repeated falsehoods.”

The lawsuit, Zimmerman v. Kohn, 652826/2013, was filed Aug. 11 in Manhattan Supreme Court (See Complaint). It demands that, in addition to other things, O’Melveny reimburse the plaintiffs for $2 million in legal fees expended to achieve a confidential settlement. In addition, the plaintiffs are seeking that all fees paid to O’Melveny by Poly Prep Country Day School be turned over to the plaintiffs.

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Judge’s Ruling Is Big Victory to Y.U. in $380M Sex Abuse Suit, Experts Say

NEW YORK
Jewish Daily Forward

By Anne Cohen
Published August 16, 2013

A federal judge’s recent decision barring discovery to 31 adults who say they were sexually abused as students at Yeshiva University High School for Boys years ago bodes poorly for the plaintiffs’ case, say two legal experts who have been following the case.

The August 6 decision by United States District Judge John G. Koeltl will effectively deny the plaintiffs’ attorney, Kevin Mulhearn, access to internal records from Y.U. as he seeks to counter a motion by Y.U. attorneys to dismiss the case.

That was a crucial tool in his surprise success in overcoming the state’s statute of limitations in a similar child sexual abuse case against Poly Prep Country Day School.

“You know what I would say [to Y.U.] … I’d say, ‘Let’s not do anything,’” to settle the case, said Karen Burstein, a former judge. “Let’s make the strongest motion [to dismiss the case] that we can.’”

Indeed, in an accompanying ruling, Koeltl agreed to consider a motion from Y.U. to dismiss the case on the grounds that the plaintiffs had filed their suit long after the state’s statute of limitations for such misconduct had passed. He ordered Y.U. attorneys to submit written arguments supporting their motion by September 13, after which he will hear counterarguments from the plaintiffs before issuing a decision.

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LCWR leader hopes assembly a contemplative experience for attendees

FLORIDA
Catholic News Service

By Laura Dodson
Catholic News Service

ORLANDO, Fla. (CNS) — The president of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious said organizers of this year’s assembly hope attendees would find it to be a contemplative experience because “it is imperative to view religious life within the context of our faith and in an evolving world.”

“We have included an hour and a half of contemplative prayer at all meetings to determine what the signs of today are calling us to and we hope that the entire experience of this assembly will be an act of contemplation,” said Franciscan Sister Florence Deacon.

A sense of quiet and expectation seemed to permeate the assembly as 825 women religious gathered at the Caribe Royal Hotel and Convention Center in Orlando Aug. 12-16.

Representing the majority of 57,000 religious sisters in the U.S., the attendees undertook an agenda that included: discussions on the doctrinal assessment of LCWR by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith as well as a focus on immigration issues; a resolution on nonviolence; presentation of the 2013 Outstanding Leadership Award; and the election of a new president-elect and secretary.

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Former St. Paul Priest Michael Miller Sentenced to Five Years

CONNECTICUT
Patch

Posted by Robert Mayer (Editor) , August 16, 2013

St. Paul Priest Father Michael Miller pled guilty last month to possession of child pornography, publishing an obscenity, and three counts of risk of injury to a minor in in GA 15 Courthouse and as part of the deal he made he was sentenced to five years in prison, 10 years on the sex offender registry and 20 years probation.

Miller stood in court and listened to the mother of one of his victims as she told the court her son completely trusted “Father Michael.”

In a statement from the Hartford Archdiocese, Maria Zone said. “Michael Miller’s guilty plea to possession of child pornography, publishing an obscenity, and three counts of risk of injury to a minor comes after many months of personal deliberation, reflection and prayer. During this time, Miller has received medical treatment and undergone therapy.

“Two years ago, when the Berlin Police Department contacted the Archdiocese of Hartford and Miller’s Order, the Franciscan Friars Conventual, about the charges, Miller was immediately suspended from performing any priestly duties. Now that Miller has pled guilty, he will never function as a priest again. We hope that Miller’s plea will give some solace and closure to the minors he violated — and their families.

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Former priest admits to molesting but goes free

UNITED KINGDOM
This is Kent

By Matthew Young matthew.young@courier.co.uk

A FORMER Tunbridge Wells catholic priest who preyed on boys in the 1980s has avoided jail after being found guilty of molesting an altar boy at another church.

Malcolm McLennan, 69, committed sex crimes against church boys in 1985 and 1986, when he was priest at St Augustine’s Roman Catholic Church in Crescent Road.

In 2009 the pervert was jailed for the offences for 18 months – but has now avoided a further sentence after admitting he molested another boy in a church in Chatham, also in the 1980s.

He was handed a three-year community order at Maidstone Crown Court on Friday.

After the sentence, the victim, now in his 30s, said: “I am devastated. Justice has not been served.”

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18-year term for man who bilked Catholic order

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

John P. Martin, Inquirer Staff Writer
POSTED: Friday, August 16, 2013

When her cellphone rang in May 2009, Sister Celeste Ortiz thought God had answered her prayers. On the line was Samuel Alvarado, who said he was a priest in New Jersey with wonderful news.

A parishioner had bequeathed $1 million to Ortiz’s order, the Dominican Sisters of Our Lady of the Rosary of Fatima. A fee was needed to process the inheritance, Alvarado said, but it would be reimbursed.

He would personally deliver the papers. Then 67, Ortiz was the superior for her order, which is based in Puerto Rico and has 130 nuns working in impoverished spots worldwide, including, at the time, Philadelphia.

The call came as she was struggling to find funds for a mission in Haiti and to pay for an international gathering the order was holding that summer. God’s handiwork, she thought. Weeks later, she wired $3,792 to New Jersey. Requests for more money followed.

Then pleadings, demands, and, finally, threats. By 2011, the nun, two priests, their friends, relatives, and parishioners had handed more than $1 million to the fake priest, a con man named Adriano Sotomayor who gambled it away in casinos. …

Breaking what he said had been a decades-long silence, Sotomayor told the judge he had targeted the clergy because he was raped by a priest in Puerto Rico when he was 13. He claimed other members of the church community – including Ortiz – knew about the attack but ignored his allegations and conspired to protect the abusive priest.

“Nobody knows what I’ve suffered inside for 40 years,” Sotomayor said in Spanish through an interpreter, his voice rising and choking. “They molded me, they created me. If they would have listened to me, I wouldn’t be here today, I wouldn’t be here.” Ortiz denied the claim.

“He’s lying,” she later said.

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Catholic priest regularly rubbed himself against altar boy as he changed robes

UNITED KINGDOM
SWNS

A former Catholic priest who regularly rubbed himself against an altar boy while he was changing his robes has walked free from court.

Malcolm McLennan, 69, targeted the victim at his church – groping and putting his hands in the his pants between 1987 and 1989.

But when the victim raised the abuse with a dicoses bishop at the time, the high-ranking clergyman dismissed it by saying: “We’ll have no more of your silly talk.”

The victim later reported the attacks to police in the wake of the Jimmy Savile scandal and McLennan was arrested and charged.

He admitted one charge of indecent assault at Magistrate’s Court last month and was sent to Maidstone Crown Court for sentence.

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Former priest gets 5-year sentence for luring kids

CONNECTICUT
New Britain Herald

Thursday, August 15, 2013

By LISA BACKUS
STAFF WRITER

NEW BRITAIN — A former Berlin priest, who court officials said used his position “as a man of God” to attempt to lure young boys into having sex, was sentenced Thursday to five years in prison followed by 20 years probation, including a decade as a registered sex offender.

Michael Miller, 43, once affectionately called by parishioners “Father Michael” or “Father Mike,” stood quietly as the mother of one of his victims explained to the court that he had taken advantage of her son at a time when the family was struggling with a prolonged illness.

“He befriended my son with the primary reason of having a sexual relationship with him,” said the woman, only identified in court as “Pat.”

“My son completely trusted Father Michael with his thoughts and feelings.”
Miller’s activities came to light in June 2011 when the woman became uncomfortable with some of the comments her son made about the Franciscan Friar who was serving as a priest at St. Paul Catholic Church.

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Predator priest worked in MN

MINNESOTA
SNAP Minnesota

News Release
August 14, 2013

Serial child molesting priest worked at churches in Tyler, Hector, & Green Valley
Victims are visiting his parish assignments to reach out to “others he’s hurt”
Self-help group urges anyone who ‘saw, suspected, or suffered clergy crimes’ to get help

WHAT
At sidewalk news conferences, a clergy sex abuse victim will:

– disclose that a serial child molesting Catholic priest, Fr William Marks, worked at local churches,
– publicly urge anyone who saw, suspected or suffered his child sex crimes to step forward, and
– identify why a new law, Minnesota Child Victims Act, opens courthouse doors to victims and
their loving families previously denied healing, recovery and civil justice.

WHERE / WHEN
a) Hector Community Center, 130 S Main Street, Hector, MN
Thursday, August 15th at 10:00 a.m.

b) Outside the front entrance of St Dionysus, Tyler, MN
Thursday, August 15th at 3:00 p.m.

c) Outside the front entrance of St Clotilde, Green Valley, MN
Thursday, August 15th at 6:30 p.m.

WHO
A local man and long time Minnesota Director of a national support group called SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAPnetwork.org),

WHY
In 1992-1994, four former altar boys filed civil lawsuits in Minnesota for their molestation as prepubescent kids. The notorious abusive priest, Fr. William “Bill” Marks, was the assigned priest at St. Dionysus, St. John’s and St. Clotilde. The lawsuits accused Marks’s supervisors of knowing about Mark’s crimes, yet warning no one and putting children in harm’s way at parishes and church events.

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Dubious Dealings Are Revealed by Audit of Greek Churches in UT

Salt Lake City (UT)
The National Herald

Theodore Kalmoukos

August 15, 2013

Salt Lake City, UT – Alarming situations have been created at the parish of Holy Trinity Cathedral in Salt lake City and also at the headquarters of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America because a financial audit at the parish discovered strange financial activities by two priests which may implicate the parish and the Archdiocese with the Internal Revenue Service.

Confidential documents acquired by TNH show that priests Mathew Gilbert and Mike Kouremetis had open benevolent funds accounts supposedly to assist discreetly and confidently people in need, but instead Gilbert wrote checks to his sons and Kouremetis paid his secretary’s house rent. He had also authorized her as a cosigner on the account.

The Salt Lake City Greek Orthodox Community has two churches: the Holy Trinity Cathedral where Gilbert is pastoring and the Prophet Elias where Kouremetis is the priest.

According to the documents sent to Archbishop Demetrios of America and Metropolitan Isaiah of Denver, 11 checks were paid to Gilbert’s sons over 9 months totaling $4,637.18 for car repairs, assisting with church services, schoolbooks, and undetailed reasons. Also a check of $ 75.13 was issued payable to Gilbert for a lunch with another cleric named Maximos.

On December 20, 2011 Fr. Gilbert wrote a check payable to his son, Andrew, at the amount of $350.00 for car repair. On February 17 he wrote a check to his other son Christopher Gilbert for $1,000.00 with the description Deacon Chrysostomos. On the same date Gilbert wrote a check to his other son, Aaron, for $300.00 with the description Seminarian.

Gilbert opened the benevolent account in February 2006 and he closed in May 2013 after the parish council had started auditing the finances of the parish and requested to examine all the accounts that use the church’s tax ID number.

From Kouremetis’ benevolent account 14 payments were made for household rent for the Church secretary’s benefit totaling $12,835.00 ($600 of this was a cash payment – says for rent).

Also, the records show that 4 cash payments to the Church secretary totaling $1,337 plus $ 215.49 in other miscellaneous payments.

The documents show that $13,787.49 expenditures from the benevolent account went to the Church secretary.

According to the records sent to Demetrios and Isaiah, another $7,212.70 or another 25% of the total contributions made to the benevolent account were unidentified, including a $2,000 payment to law firm Scally&Reeding.

On August 20, 2009 Kouremetis issued a check for $1,010.00 payable to H.C. Moody & Associates (Rental Mgt Company for Elizabeth Michaelson rent (Church secretary).

The audit committee wrote that “because of tax reporting problems it must be determined if any of these amounts went to the Church secretary or any other person receiving “income” from the church.”

Parishioners, donors, and also the parish were contributing to the benevolent accounts of the two priests trusting that their contributions would be used for philanthropic purposes assisting people in need. Tom McGrath, chairman of the audit committee declined to speak to TNH stating that “we have not yet informed
the members of the parish in detail and I don’t think isn’t right to be
published first in the press.”

Gilbert, Kouremetis, Demetrios, and Isaiah all failed to respond to TNH’s request for comment.

On July 24, Prophet Elias Parish Council President Dimitrios Tsagaris informed Isaiah in writing, attaching a number of revealing documents of Gilbert’s and Kouremetis’ benevolent accounts, including copies of checks. Isaiah not only did nothing but he closed the churches as TNH wrote last week because the Parish
Council was forced to reduce the salaries of the priests by 40% due to lack of funds at the parish.

Isaiah in a letter dated February 4, 2013 sent to Gilbert, who had complained to him that the Parish Council was requesting to audit his benevolent account instructed him no to give any information the audit committee while calling the benevolent account “extension of the Sacrament of Confession.” Isaiah stated among other things that “as I mentioned to you previously, the Benevolent Fund
is an extension of the Sacrament of Confession. You could be defrocked from the holy priesthood, if you were known to divulge such confidential information. Moreover, you would be going against the words of the Lord when He says, `take heed that you do not do your charitable deeds before men, to be seen by them (Matt. 6:2).’ Our Lord continues on to say, `but when you do a charitable deed,
do not let your left hand know what your right hand is doing that your
charitable deed may be in secret…(Matt. 6:3).’ What our Lord is saying is that you, also, must forget the good that you do for others.”

Isaiah went on to instruct Gilbert not to keep records: “If this is the case, and it is, you must not keep lasting records of the good deeds which are being done with the funds you receive for this purpose. These words of our Lord can also be explained as the left hand, which is the Audit Committee and the right hand, which is you.”

He also wrote to Gilbert that “if the Audit Committee continues to be insistent in this matter, it should communicate with me, since I ratified the current Parish Council. You are not to have any more dialogue on this matter with anyone in the parish.”

In an August 4 letter to Demetrios, the Parish Council wrote that “We, the Parish Council, feel it is imperative to inform you about a serious issue our community is faced with and ask for your timely guidance and help. This is in regards to the benevolent funds of our community in Salt Lake City, Utah.”

They also wrote that “one of the administrative priorities of this Parish Council was to look into all accounts that were using Church tax ID to better understand their qualification of a tax exempt status. Our audit committee was assisting us during this process by providing findings and recommendations.

“As a result, we were made aware earlier this year that some accounts appear to be potentially problematic. The auditors chose to continue the process of gathering and analyzing all information prior to disclosing more specific findings to the Parish Council. At the conclusion of the regularly scheduled July 15, 2013 Parish Council meeting, the audit committee invited us to attend their scheduled meeting where they presented the above mentioned more specific
findings.

“Attached please find what was presented to the Parish Council on July 15, 2013 by the auditors. This information has also been mailed to our Metropolitan.”

They also wrote to the archbishop that “Rest assured that our Community’s concern is not that of divulging the sources that funded the Benevolent Fund accounts; the concern is appropriateness of the expenditures of the funds, and the Parish’s liability under the IRS laws.

“Items for your consideration that merit further investigation should include but not limited to the following:

• Why does the “Prophet Elias Greek Orthodox Church Benevolent Fund” Zions Bank Account No.: 0041-45001, contain the name of “Elizabeth Michaelsen” as an owner and signatory party to the account, in addition to “Michael A. Kouremetis.

• In view of the fact that Elizabeth Michaelsen has been a long time employee of and acted as the secretary to Fr. Kouremetis, she became the primary dollar amount beneficiary of the Benevolent Fund. Please note the payment of rents, attorney’s fees, etc ..

• Who authorized her to write checks for her own benefit, and to sign the name of Fr. Michael Kouremetis

• Who informed/authorized the payee bank to accept and pay the checks signed by someone other than Michael Kouremetis, as it is evident by some of the signatures on the sample checks?

• What are the IRS implications of paying an employee additional funds without issuing an IRS 1099 Form. We have been advised that this affects both Ms. Michaelsen and the underage family members of an employee. There are additional serious IRS concerns raised by the auditors as set forth therein.

Tsagaris said “what can I say about the benevolent fund? It’s a philanthropic fund from which the priests give money to people in need.” He declined to say who contributed to this fund and if the parish was included. Tsagaris said “the priests must give this information” and her added “you should get all these answers from the audit committee which have all the details.”

In regards if the Parish Council has confronted the two priests, Tsagaris said “this is a very sensitive issue and our Archdiocese and Metropolis are looking into it and I want them to examine it and tell us what to do, but we haven’t heard anything up to now from them.”

About the concerns the Parish Council has raised in its letter to the archbishop about possible IRS implications, Tsagaris said “we have sent everything to Archbishop Demetrios and Metropolitan Isaiah and I can’t say anything more and they should help us to see the legal implications.”

He declined to say if the two priests attempted to communicate with him the last few days about the benevolent accounts issue, he said “I don’t wish to go into details on this issue.”

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Jaharis Spoke about Monasteries-Church, a Year Ago…

UNITED STATES
The National Herald

By A.P. Cromidas

August 15, 2013

Last year the top layman of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America issued an unprecedented statement about problems in the archdiocese. In perhaps his strongest point, he spoke about “a regrettable and most distasteful subject, i.e. the current state of monasteries in their relationship with the U.S. Church.” Has anything been done about this matter? Not that one would know about. (And, yes, we the laypeople should know about it.)

The layman was Michael Jaharis, who is Vice-Chairman of the Archdiocesan Council. He was speaking at last fall’s Council meeting. He used some rather strong terms about his concerns. And, though details were lacking, he said that “If we are to `bear fruit’ as a faith, we have to make certain to guard our garden from disease.” One can assume that he was referring to an undue influence the monasteries are having among some parishes, and that they are overstepping their “obligations” under the terms of the Charter of the Archdiocese.

These monasteries are the ones directed by the “Elder” Ephraim, a monk who has established some 18 monasteries in the United States and Canada. Jaharis said that the work of an Archdiocese committee charged with examining the problems was being obstructed. He said “severe” action may be required in the case of the young monk who apparently took his own life at the gates of the Arizona monastery that is headquarters for Ephraim in America.

And so, where are we? Take a guess. At the end of this May the next meeting of the council was held in Boston. It is understood that most of the metropolitans (bishops) did not even attend this meeting, and that not much, if anything, was accomplished regarding the problems that Jaharis had spoken about with such urgency at the previous meeting.

Not all that long ago, the metropolitans lobbied to be included in the deliberations of the archdiocesan council. Now, it appears they are quite willing to thumb their noses at meetings of the council. When the committee was set up to look into the Ephraim situation, it was headed by a layman. Since then, a metropolitan has become chairman and not much has happened – he was one of the absent members at this last meeting. At a session of the Synod of Bishops earlier this year, it was reported in the Orthodox Observer, the official paper of the archdiocese, that the matter of the monasteries was “discussed” by the metropolitans, but not surprisingly, no details were given. So the bishops discuss the matter but don’t tell us what they said, and then they are largely absent from the next archdiocese council session where presumably the “distasteful” monastery problems were to be dealt with.

Is this the best we can expect from the council? The only report so far of the May meeting was in the June issue of the Orthodox Observer, and no mention was made of any report or discussion of the monasteries.

One is reminded of the current situation in the American military where the commanders are saying to the country: “Not to worry, we’ll handle the sexual misconduct problem within our chain of command.” Likewise, our bishops seem to be saying: “Don’t worry, we’ll handle the monastery situation, you laypeople don’t have to.”

Well, it is obvious that they are not dealing with it in a forthright, open and timely manner. And, aside from Mr. Jaharis’ serious comments, the laypeople of the council are also failing at the job. TNH, the main Greek-American newspaper, is also letting us down by not providing timely follow-up reporting.

While most of the faithful may only just be learning that there are concerns about the Ephraim monasteries, the matter is not new. It was written about more than 10 years ago by this writer and by TNH.

More recently, two concerned websites have emerged: “weareorthodox” and “gotruthreform”, But, in what seems to be the usual mode of operation by the Church, the matter is being dealt with, as the Greek expression goes, “avrio – avrio” –” tomorrow, tomorrow”.

But that is not good enough. The body of the Church is being hurt and the people deserve better treatment from their leadership, today, not “tomorrow.”

A.P. Cromidas is a retired social agency executive and has served as a parish council president. He lives in Dallas, Texas

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Fort Augustus school abuse claims: Commissioner calls for inquiry

SCOTLAND
BBC News

Scotland’s Children’s Commissioner has called for an independent inquiry into allegations of abuse at Fort Augustus Abbey Catholic boarding school.

A third Australian monk has now been implicated in a suspected paedophile ring, revealed by a BBC investigation.

The Scottish government said the allegations were matters for the Catholic Church in Scotland, and were for Police Scotland to investigate.

But Children’s Commissioner Tam Baillie said an inquiry was needed.

Speaking on BBC Radio Scotland he said: “I am actually appointed by parliament, not by the Scottish government, and the government has to listen to the lobby, if you like, the views, the judgement, and in my judgement this requires an independent inquiry.

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Charity calls for public inquiry into claims of school abuse

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

Friday 16 August 2013

ONE of Scotland’s leading ­children’s charities has backed calls for an independent public inquiry to be held into claims of sexual and physical abuse at a Catholic boarding school.

Children 1st, which works with those affected by abuse in Scotland, said a police investigation into historic allegations at Fort Augustus Abbey School in the Highlands may not be enough to address victims’ concerns.

The charity has also called on the Catholic Church to fully co-operate with the ongoing investigation and for it to pass on any information it has to the police.

More than 50 former pupils of the school and its preparatory school Carlekemp in East Lothian, which have now closed, came forward last month with allegations of ill-treatment at the hands of monks from the 1950s to the 1990s.

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Former Rosarian teacher now facing 59 charges …

FLORIDA
WPTV

Former Rosarian teacher now facing 59 charges of child porn on top of sexual battery accusations

Posted: 08/15/2013
By: Marissa Bagg

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. – Days before his next court appearance, prosecutors aren’t holding back on Stephen Budd. They’ve added 59 of charges of child pornography in the case against him.

“It was 19 videos and 40 images, the videos were approximately 2 hours total,” says West Palm Beach Police Detective David Lafont.

The former Rosarian Academy teacher is already facing five charges of sexual battery and molestation. He’s accused of forcing two young girls under his desk to perform sex acts on him in class. Police found a hard drive in Budd’s car the day he was arrested for those alleged crimes back in April.

“The daughter when she was interviewed, she said he asked her to swap computers from his car, his work computer with personal computer and leave it in his vehicle. When she went back one comp was missing,” said Det. Lafont.

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Obispo emérito de Villarrica entrega apoyo a cura acusado de abuso sexual

CHILE
Bio Bio

[con audio]

Su apoyo al sacerdote Orlando Rogel, que está acusado de abuso sexual reiterado y al momento enfrenta un juicio oral, entregó el obispo emérito de la Diócesis de Villarrica, Sixto Partzinger.

El prelado, si bien manifestó que por su actual condición eclesiástica no está al tanto del desarrollo del caso y que sólo hoy se enteró que Rogel está enfrentando un juicio, precisó que se le debe apoyar tal como señala el evangelio.

El obispo emérito de Villarrica aclaró además que Rogel sigue siendo sacerdote por cuanto esa condición es similar a un sacramento y es indeleble, aunque no tenga ministerio para ejercer.

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Child sex abuse inquiry to visit Kimberley

AUSTRALIA
Telegraph

THE Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse will be in the Kimberley region next week to meet with Aboriginal community groups.

Commissioners Helen Milroy and Andrew Murray will spend almost a week in the state’s north speaking to representatives from the Kimberley Stolen Generations, Yawuru community leaders, Aboriginal legal and medical services, sexual assault and mental health services and the Kimberley Land Council to explain how the Royal Commission works.

Ms Milroy, a consultant child and adolescent psychiatrist from WA and Mr Murray, a Rhodes Scholar and a former WA Senator, will also be there to learn about the extent of institutional child sexual abuse in the Kimberley region.

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Iceland: Bishop’s daughter: ‘Sexual assaulter once came to power – It can’t happen again’

ICELAND
Pressan

[Click here for the story.]

Guðrún Ebba Ólafsdóttir – daughter of the late Ólafur Skúlason, previous bishop – wants that every preventative measure be taken to ensure that no sexual offender is able to reach the highest position of any church ever again. Guðrún has invited the Church council (“Kirkjuráð) – the highest executive authority of the Church in Iceland – to a meeting, after her request for a hearing.

As the newspaper DV has discussed in the previous week, Guðrún supported Sigríður Pálína Ingvarsdóttir’s claims, accusing bishop Ólafur of sexual abuse and a rape attempt.

Sigríður had a meeting with the Church Council and presented her side of the story. Guðrún requested to meet the bishop last Spring but never received a reply. She lobbied her claim to the entire Council this Spring and will be allowed another meeting this Fall.

Below is an excerpt of Guðrún’s letter to the Council a year ago. She confirms in a conversation with Pressan that the letter is real, but does not know how it was leaked:

“It is an important issue to me that the Church will attempt with all its capacities to ensure that this does not happen again; that sexual offenders cannot reach the highest positions of respect. I think it is necessary for the Icelandic national Church to take a clear position against sexual abuse and publicly condemn it as sin. The Church must side with the victims, and many of the victims are having religious difficulties – and feel that God has betrayed them. I also think it is important for priests, and everybody else working for the Church, to receive the necessary information about sexual abuse.”

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Woman files sexual abuse suit against church, leader

NEW MEXICO
KOB

[with video]

By: KOB.com staff

An Albuquerque woman filed a lawsuit claiming a church leader sexually abused her as a child.

Monica Jaramillo said Michael Brunner, an elder at the Jehovah’s Witness church in Los Lunas, sexually abused her when she was just 8 years old.

Jaramillo, now 35, filed a lawsuit claiming other elders of the church knew about the incident but chose to do nothing.

The complaint also alleges Jaramillo’s mother was raped by Brunner.

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Public Statement Concerning Sexual Abuse in the Church of Jesus Christ

UNITED STATES
GRACE – Godly Response to Abuse in the Christian Environment

Recent allegations of sexual abuse and cover-up within a well known international ministry and subsequent public statements by several evangelical leaders have angered and distressed many, both inside and outside of the Church. These events expose the troubling reality that, far too often, the Church’s instincts are no different than from those of many other institutions, responding to such allegations by moving to protect her structures rather than her children. This is a longstanding problem in the Christian world, and we are deeply grieved by the failures of the American and global Church in responding to the issue of sexual abuse. We do not just believe we should do better; as those who claim the name of Jesus and the cause of the Gospel, we are convinced we must do better. In the hope that a time is coming when Christian leaders respond to all sexual abuse with outrage and courage, we offer this confession and declare the Good News of Jesus on behalf of the abused, ignored and forgotten.

Through the media we have been confronted with perpetual reports of grievous sexual abuse and its cover-up. Institutions ranging from the Catholic Church, various Protestant churches and missionary organizations, Penn State, Yeshiva University High School, the Boy Scouts, and all branches of our military have been rocked by allegations of abuse and of complicity in silencing the victims. And while many evangelical leaders have eagerly responded with outrage to those public scandals, we must now acknowledge long-silenced victims who are speaking out about sexual abuse in evangelical Christian institutions: schools, mission fields and churches, large and small. And we must confess we have done far too little to hear and help them.

Holocaust survivor and author, Elie Weisel, once said, “Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim…silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented.” When we choose willful ignorance, inaction or neutrality in the face of evil, we participate in the survival of that evil. When clergy, school administrations, boards of directors, or military commanders have been silent or have covered up abuse, they have joined with those who perpetrate crimes against the “little ones” – often children, but also others who are on the underside of power because of size, age, position or authority. …

Carol Ajamian – Retired Jim Arcieri Pastor of Community Bible Fellowship Church in Red Hill, PA
William S. Barker – Professor of Church History, Emeritus at Westminster Theological Seminary (PA)
Steve Brown – Professor, Emeritus of Preaching and Pastoral Ministry at Reformed Theological Seminary, President of Key Life Network, Inc., and Author
P. J. (“Flip”) Buys – Associate International Director of the World Reformed Fellowship, South Africa
Rebecca Campbell – Member of the Board of Trustees at Biblical Theological Seminary
Alan Chambers – Founder, Speak.Love
Kelly Clark – Attorney with the law firm of O’Donnell Clark and Crew, LLP in Portland, OR
Julie Clinton – President of Extraordinary Women
Tim Clinton – President of the American Association of Christian Counselors and Professor of Counseling and Pastoral Care at Liberty University
Wentzel Coetzer – Professor of Theology at Northwest University (Potschefstroom, South Africa)
James Courtney – Ruling Elder at Trinity Presbyterian Church (PCA) in Rye, NY
Margaret Courtney – Co-Director of Family Ministries at Trinity Presbyterian Church (PCA) in Rye, NY
Glenn Davies – Bishop of North Sydney, Australia D. Clair Davis Chaplain at Redeemer Seminary
Chuck DeGroat – Associate Professor of Counseling and Pastoral Care at Western Theological Seminary and Senior Fellow at Newbigin House
Mary DeMuth – Author and Blogger
David G. Dunbar – Professor of Theology at Biblical Theological Seminary
Diana S. Durrill – Pastor’s wife and Sexual abuse survivor
Michael J. Durrill – Pastor of Valley Community Church in Louisville, CO
William Edgar – Professor of Apologetics at Westminster Theological Seminary (PA)
Rob Edwards – Pastor of Mercy Presbyterian Church (PCA) in Forest, VA
Mr. Rinaldo Lotti Filho – Ruling Elder in the Presbyterian Church of Brazil (Sao Paulo)
Elyse Fitzpatrick – Counselor and Author
Ryan Ferguson – Pastor of Community Connection at North Hills Community Church in Taylors, SC
E. Robert Geehan – Pastor of The Reformed Church in Poughkeepsie, NY (RCA)
Shannon Geiger – Counselor at Park Cities Presbyterian Church (PCA) in Dallas, TX
Douglas Green – Professor of Old Testament and Biblical Theology at Westminster Theological Seminary (PA)
Fred Harrell – Senior Pastor of City Church in San Francisco, CA
Robert Heerdt – Chief Investment Officer at BenefitWorks, Inc.
Walter Henegar – Senior Pastor of Atlanta Westside Presbyterian Church (PCA) in Atlanta, GA
Craig Higgins – Senior Pastor of Trinity Presbyterian Church (PCA) in Westchester County, NY and North American Regional Coordinator for the World Reformed Fellowship
Justin Holcomb – Author and Adjunct Professor of Theology and Philosophy at Reformed Theological Seminary
Lindsey Holcomb – Author and former case manager for sexual assault crisis center
Peter Hubbard – Pastor of Teaching at North Hills Community Church in Taylors, SC
Carolyn James – President of WhitbyForum
Frank James – President of Biblical Theological Seminary
Karen Jansson – Board member of the World Reformed Fellowship Board Member and Treasurer of the Russian Orphan Opportunity Fund, USA
Kathy Koch – President and Founder of Celebrate Kids
Matthew Lacey – Development Director for GRACE
David Lamb – Associate Professor of Old Testament at Biblical Theological Seminary
Diane Langberg – Clinical Psychologist and Author
Daniel N. LaValla – Director of Library Services and Development Associate at Biblical Theological Seminary
Samuel Logan – International Director of the World Reformed Fellowship, President Emeritus of Westminster Theological Seminary (PA), and Special Counsel to the President at Biblical Theological Seminary
Tremper Longman – Robert H. Gundry Professor of Biblical Studies at Westmont College
Kin Yip Louie – Assistant Professor of Theological Studies at China Graduate School of Theology
Fergus Macdonald – Past President of the United Bible Societies (Scotland)
Todd Mangum – Academic Dean and Professor of Theology at Biblical Theological Seminary
Dan McCartney – Professor of New Testament at Redeemer Seminary
Scot McKnight – Professor of New Testament at Northern Seminary and Author
Jonathan Merritt – Faith and Culture writer
Pat Millen – Member of the Board of Trustees at Biblical Seminary
Philip Monroe – Professor of Counseling and Psychology at Biblical Theological Seminary
Amy Norvell – Director of Classical Conversations in Bryan/College Station, TX, Pastor’s wife, and Sexual abuse survivor
Thad Norvell -Pastor at Community Church in Bryan/College Station, TX K.
Eric Perrin – Senior Pastor of Covenant Presbyterian Church (PCA) in Cherry Hill, NJ
Michael Reagan – President of the Reagan Legacy Foundation
Matthew Redmond – Author
Nathan Rice – Director of Middle School Ministries at First Presbyterian Church (PCUSA) in Bellevue, WA
Tamara Rice – Freelance Writer and Editor
Adam L Saenz – Clinical Psychologist and Author
Karen L. Sawyer – Vice Chair and Chair Elect of the Board of Trustees, Biblical Theological Seminary and Adjunct Professor of Philosophy and Religion at Arcadia University
Scotty Smith – Founding Pastor of Christ Community Church in Franklin, TN
Ron Scates – Preaching Pastor at Highland Park Presbyterian Church (PCUSA) in Dallas, Texas
Andrew J. Schmutzer – Professor of Biblical Studies at Moody Bible Institute
Chris Seay – Pastor at Ecclesia in Houston, TX
Mike Sloan – Associate Pastor at Old Peachtree Presbyterian Church in DuLuth, GA
Basyle J. Tchividjian – Executive Director, GRACE and Associate Professor of Law at Liberty University School of Law
Laura Thien – LMHC and Board Chairperson of the Julie Valentine Center in Greenville, SC
Jessica Thompson – Author
Rick Tyson – Senior Pastor at Calvary Presbyterian Church in Willow Grove, PA
John Williams – Ruling Elder in the Orthodox Presbyterian Church in Washington Island, WI
John Wilson – Pastor in the Presbyterian Church of Victoria, Australia
William Paul Young – Author

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Evangelicals urged to confront sexual abuse

UNITED STATES
The Courier-Journal

Posted on August 15, 2013 by Peter Smith

Evangelical churches need to confront sexual abuse and coverup within their own ranks, according to a statement signed by more than 1,500 people worldwide and promoted by a former sex-crimes prosecutor.

The “Public Statement Concerning Sexual Abuse in the Church of Jesus Christ” was prompted in part by a Maryland lawsuit filed by 11 people against Sovereign Grace Ministries, a denomination now based in Louisville, alleging cover-up of abuse within its churches.

But Boz Tchividjian — a former Florida prosecutor and founder of GRACE, an organization that consults with Christian groups on preventing future abuse and investigating past cases — said the lawsuit underscored larger issues.

“We make public statements about so many issues in the American evangelical world, whether it’s Obamacare, gays in the Boy Scouts,” said Tchividjian, now a law professor at Liberty University in Virginia and a grandson of evangelist Billy Graham. “But here’s a huge issue that’s facing the church, and there’s nothing but silence.”

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California bill on sex abuse lawsuits stalls

CALIFORNIA
Manteca Bulletin

LOS ANGELES (AP) — A California bill that would give some sex abuse victims more time to sue failed to gain enough support to make it out of a key Assembly committee in Sacramento.

The bill needed nine votes in the Appropriations Committee move to the Assembly floor but received only six on Wednesday, the Los Angeles Times (http://lat.ms/17qYWHn) reported.

Four members of the committee opposed the bill and seven did not comment following emotional testimony from a sex abuse survivor lobbying for the bill.

Senate Bill 131 would permit the filing of lawsuits against private and nonprofit employers of alleged abusers by people who have been unable to do so due to time and age restrictions.

The proposed law would lift the statute of limitations for one year for the group of alleged victims who were 26 and older and missed the previous deadline set by a similar bill nearly a decade ago.

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California abuse bill could still threaten Catholic Church

CALIFORNIA
DFW Catholic

Los Angeles, Calif., Aug 16, 2013 / 02:03 am (CNA/EWTN News).- A California bill accused of unfairly targeting the Catholic Church and other groups with lawsuits on decades-old abuse charges has stalled in a committee, but the measure is still being considered.

On Aug. 14, Senate Bill 131 received six votes in the local Assembly Appropriations Committee, three short of the nine needed to advance to the assembly floor for a full vote. Four committee members voted against the bill while seven did not vote.

The committee, which primarily considers how much a bill will cost the state government, focused on whether new lawsuits would overburden the legal system, the Los Angeles Times reports. The group will consider the bill again next week.

California’s Catholic bishops have asked Catholics to continue to contact their lawmakers in protest of the legislation.

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Police Reports Provide New Details in Pastor Sex Abuse Case

IOWA
KCRG

DES MOINES, Iowa — Police reports are providing new information in the case of a youth pastor charged with sexual abuse.

Ryan McKelvey, 27, is charged with two counts of sexual abuse and two counts of sexual exploitation by a counselor or therapist after police said two girls in his congregation came forward with allegations of abuse.

Police reports said at first the 16-year-old girl didn’t provide much detail about what happened, but has now added more details to her account of what happened.

She told police she knew Ryan KcKelvey for two years and trusted and confided in him because he was her youth pastor at Heritage Assembly of God.

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More complaints against former priest

AUSTRALIA
Big Pond News

Friday, August 16, 2013

More victims have come forward with complaints against a former Catholic priest accused of sexually abusing boys in Victoria in the 1970s and 80s.

Former Rupertswood College principal Frank Gerard Klep, 69, of Burwood, has appeared in the Melbourne Magistrates Court for a committal mention in relation to more than 30 charges of sexual abuse against 11 victims.

The matter was adjourned because more victims have came forward with complaints.

Klep’s lawyer Tony Hargreaves said he hadn’t had a chance to speak with his client about four new complaints against him.

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Boy punched priest in head, court hears

AUSTRALIA
Border Mail

By Adam Cooper Aug. 16, 2013

An alleged victim of sexual abuse by a Catholic priest was told not to return to a boarding school when his father confronted management, a jury has been told.

The opening day of the trial for David Edwin Rapson heard the boy was 16 or 17 when he was allegedly grabbed on the testicles by the priest in his office at Salesian College Rupertswood one day in 1988.

Prosecutor David Cordy said the boy told Mr Rapson to “f… off” and punched him in the head and went home to report the alleged incident to his parents, who then contacted the Sunbury school.

But the boy’s father was told that the teenager’s behaviour was “inflammatory” and that it would be in the school’s “best interests” for him not to return, the County Court heard.

“So that was the end of that,” Mr Cordy told the jury in his opening address on Friday.

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St Benet’s priest steps down over school controversy

UNITED KINGDOM
Oxford Mail

A FORMER headteacher of a boarding school at the centre of sexual abuse allegations has “stepped aside” from his position at an Oxford hall.

It follows allegations that Father Francis Davison failed to act on reports of sexual abuse that were made during his time at the Catholic Fort Augustus Abbey School in the Scottish Highlands in the 1970s while he was headmaster.

Yesterday a St Benet’s Hall spokesman confirmed he had stepped aside from his role of religious superior at the hall in St Giles, where he was responsible for the welfare of student monks at the university for a year.

He added: “We would like to offer our heartfelt sympathies to former pupils of Fort Augustus Abbey School and their families.

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August 15, 2013

English RC Church tells Scots: Open up on abuse

SCOTLAND
Scotsman

by STEPHEN MCGINTY
Published on the 16 August 2013

THE head of child protection for the Catholic Church in England and Wales has said the Scottish church should open its files up to an independent inquiry.

Danny Sullivan, chairman of the Catholic Safeguarding Commission in England and Wales, said the Church in Scotland would benefit from outside scrutiny and criticised those in the church who suggested their current system was “streets ahead”.

The chairman was responding to Bishop Joseph Devine, the retired bishop of Motherwell, who has dismissed calls for an independent inquiry, which is currently being considered by the hierarchy of the Catholic Church in Scotland after the controversy surrounding sexual abuse at Fort Augustus Abbey School.

In a letter to Catholic weekly The Tablet, Mr Sullivan wrote: “Bishop Devine is wrong to dismiss an external review of safeguarding in Scotland on the number of cases he believes it involves. Viewing the documentary on Fort Augustus Abbey School makes appallingly clear once more the profound damage to one individual by abuse. England and Wales has benefitted from two external reviews which have given us a sense of purpose and strategy though we never regard ourselves as ‘streets ahead’ of anyone else. There indeed lies the road to complacency.”

He also criticised the bishop for pointing out that abuse is not restricted to Catholic institutions. “The Church above all has no defence. Long before procedures and protocols became necessary we always had the Gospels where Jesus made absolutely clear what should happen to anyone who harmed a child.”

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Third Australian monk implicated in St Augustus sex abuse scandal

SCOTLAND/AUSTRALIA
BBC News

By Mark Daly
BBC Scotland Investigations Correspondent

A third Australian monk has been implicated in a suspected paedophile ring at a former Catholic boarding school in the Highlands.

In a BBC programme, Australian monks Fr Aidan Duggan and Fr Chrysostom Alexander were exposed as paedophiles.

They inflicted physical and sexual abuse against pupils at St Augustus Abbey School and feeder school Carlekemp, East Lothian.

Now Fr Fabian Duggan, Fr Aidan’s brother, has been accused of sex abuse.

The BBC has spoken to four former pupils who were abused, or witnessed abuse by Fr Fabian.

Kees Vogt, who started at Carlekemp as a nine-year-old in 1969, is one of them.

He told the BBC: “Father Fabian had a long narrow room and what he would do, he would tend to call children in to talk to them. And, what he would then tend to do, is he would go to the other side where you would be trapped inside the room and you couldn’t get out again.

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How is Boston Archdiocese Caring for Clergy?

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Catholic Insider

In the wake of the situation with Msgr. Arthur Coyle having been arrested for paying a prostitute, a number of BCI readers–including priests–are asking again about the episcopal leadership in Boston, and also about how Boston cares for their clergy. This falls under the responsibility of Cabinet Secretary Fr. Kevin M. Sepe, Episcopal Vicar and Secretary for Parish Life and Leadership, and ultimately, to Cardinal Sean O’Malley.

One might want to assume the situation with Msgr. Coyle is a “one-off.” Still, with the position of Director of Pastoral Care of Priests vacant for two years and the diocesan website for the Office of Senior Priests currently listing as its director a priest who died in 2011, there is reason to question the archdiocesan commitment to care of clergy in need–whether that be a spiritual or psychological problem, or being elderly or ill. Here are several of the reader comments that jumped out at BCI:

Lazarus’ Table says:
August 9, 2013 at 7:48 am

Anyone who points a finger at Msgr Coyle and shouts “Sinner!” is in dangerous waters himself. Only God can judge, only He knows the degree of Msgr Coyle’s culpability, all the circumstances that led him to act as he did.

There are, however, some things we can know:
1) There is no agent of the archdiocese in whom a troubled priest can confide in confidence (outside Confession). A priest who needs help will not seek it out of fear he will be “reported”, “sent away”, etc.

2) The Cardinal is not only the priest’s ‘spiritual father’, he is also responsible for the good of the entire archdiocese, i.e., the institution. The good of the institution will always trump the good of the individual. Over are the days when the shepherd will leave the 99 to go in search of the lost 1.

3) In the opinion of many in the hierarchy, Msgr Coyle’s greatest fault was not soliciting a prostitute but getting caught. His story is not unique. Priests “in a relationship” –with females or males– are an accepted fact. Just be discreet.

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How Myers Played in Peoria

PEORIA (IL)
Spiritual Politics

Mark Silk | Aug 15, 2013

In the latest chapter of the John J. Myers story, our hero does his best Sgt. Schultz imitation. As in: ”I see nothing. I was not here. I did not even get up this morning.” That’s the gist of the what Myers had to say when deposed three years ago regarding accusations that Msgr. Thomas Maloney had sexually abused a series of children in the Diocese of Peoria during the time that Myers was climbing the greasy pole there.

Here’s a bit of His Excellency’s colloquy with Attorney Jeff Anderson, representing the plaintiff in the case.

Q. Okay. When it comes to Father Monsignor Maloney, at any time while Bishop or Coadjutor or while a priest of the Diocese of Peoria, did you have any suspicions or receive any information from any source suspicions of sexual abuse by him?

A. I did not have any suspicions. I — because of the, perhaps slipshod filing system that we had between the two different buildings of the office of the Bishop, there may have been things that got by me. But I did not have any suspicions.

Q. Since this lawsuit has been brought you’ve — now that this deposition scheduled or attempted to have been scheduled for some time, have you gone back and looked at the Maloney case and the files that you have and come to the realization that complaints and/or suspicions of sexual abuse by Maloney were missed by the diocese?

A. I don’t know if they were missed by the diocese. I was unaware of them. But other diocesan officials may have been.

Now, with Myers sitting halfway across the country as archbishop of Newark, Peoria has settled the case by forking $1.35 million over to the 25-year-old plaintiff, Andrew Ward, who claims Maloney abused him when he was eight. Public release of Myers’ deposition was part of the settlement — and you figure the guys holding the bag in Peoria were not unhappy to let the world see their former bishop in action. As we’ve learned from the Fugee case, passing the buck is Myers’ style.

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LCWR meets with Vatican overseer under lock, with guards

FLORIDA
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Aug. 15, 2013 NCR Today

ORLANDO, FLA. The archbishop given expansive oversight by the Vatican of U.S. Catholic sisters met Thursday here with some 825 of their representatives, speaking for about 40 minutes in a closed-door session held under lock and key.

Seattle Archbishop J. Peter Sartain was meeting with members of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR), over whom the Vatican has placed the prelate as “archbishop delegate” and given wide power to revise statutes and programs.

The meeting was the first between Sartain and the full membership of the sisters group since the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith gave him his authority in April 2012.

Standing outside the assembly hall where Sartain was speaking, the prelate’s voice could be heard faintly for about 37 minutes. Afterwards, there was about a minute of clapping before voices of individual sisters could be heard intermittently until a scheduled break 90 minutes into the meeting.

LCWR members have been asked by the group’s leaders not to discuss Thursday’s meetings with members of the press. Additionally, the doors into the convention hall where Sartain was speaking were locked with uniformed guards placed near them to prevent unauthorized entry. …

“Even our IT [information technology] conferences are not this secure,” said Kimberly Ritter, a meeting planner at St. Louis-based Nix Conference and Meeting Management.

One of the approximately eight security guards posted at the doors to the event said he was with a local security firm that was contracted specifically for Sartain’s talk.

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What if your pastor is accused of abuse?

UNITED STATES
Clergy Sexual Abuse Recovery

An accusation of clergy sexual abuse has been made against your pastor (or another beloved priest). The alleged victim, “Jane Doe”, said she was abused 30 years ago, and had filed a lawsuit against him and the diocese.

What do you think? He’s your pastor, a great guy, very charismatic and loved by all. He involves himself in parish activies, especially at the school. He is invited to dinner at parishioners’ houses regularly and makes people laugh. And those homilies. Oh, those homilies! They are spot on, inspiring and uplifting.

But now this “victim”, she calls herself, is saying he is not the man he says he is. In fact, he is quite the opposite. She claims that he pushed himself on her and gets very specific about the things he allegedly did to her that were unimaginably horrible.

No way. Not Father. He would never do anything like that! He loves the Lord so much and it is evident. And he denies it totally, saying he doesn’t even know who she is, but that there are so many parishioners that he has met while he has served as a priest, he very well may have met her and just doesn’t remember it. He would never lie about that.

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White Paper on Vulnerable Children: Reaction

NEW ZEALAND
TVNZ

The Government’s White Paper for Vulnerable Children has sparked debate from various organisations around the country.

NZEI past president Frances Nelson said the Government has missed a “golden opportunity” to tackle child poverty and “virtually ignored the many excellent submissions it received on the Green Paper for Vulnerable Children”.

She said the Government has again “gone down the road of punishment and monitoring”.

“We know that poverty is one of the leading causes of student underachievement. If the Government is serious about lifting student achievement, it would do something about child poverty.”

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NZ needs to take responsibility for child abuse – Key

NEW ZEALAND
TVNZ

[with video]

Proposed legislation targeting parents who seriously abuse or kill their children is the Government’s way of taking responsibility for New Zealand’s child abuse statistics, Prime Minister John Key says.

Social Development Minister Paula Bennett this morning unveiled a raft of child abuse prevention measures which could ban some parents from being near children.

If police or Child, Youth and Family believe someone poses a threat to a child, High Court or District Court judges could impose a ban, similar to restraining orders in cases of domestic violence, preventing them from working, living and socialising with children.

Screening and vetting of every person in the Government Children’s Workforce would also be introduced and people with serious convictions will be permanently restricted from working closely with children.

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North Ireland: Investigation on Clergy Sex Abuse in Catholic Residential Schools Begins

NORTHERN IRELAND
Vatican Crimes

THURSDAY, AUGUST 15, 2013

The truth about the most criminal organization in existence is being exposed – the Vatican. Already there is evidence of over 10 million crimes committed by priests and nuns worldwide, but the number is increasing daily as more and more victims are finally getting the courage to speak out.

A major inquiry into historical institutional abuse in Northern Ireland is launching an international appeal for victims and survivors to come forward. The inquiry seeks to investigate child abuse which occurred in residential institutions administered by nuns and priests in Northern Ireland over a 74-year period, from 1922 up to 1995.

The Inquiry recognizes that there has been considerable migration from Northern Ireland to various parts of the United States and is anxious to encourage any survivors who suffered clergy childhood abuse in Northern Ireland institutions but who now live overseas to get in touch. The Inquiry’s Chairman, Sir Anthony Hart, said he appreciates that the decision to contact the Inquiry can be a very difficult one for survivors, particularly if they live abroad.

“We recognize that, for many potential witnesses, reliving their experiences will be very painful and traumatic,” he said. “Indeed, some will not have told their closest relatives or friends about the abuse they suffered. If they now live overseas, the thought of contacting the Inquiry may seem especially daunting. But we want to emphasize that we’re doing everything we can to make the process as easy as possible for those living abroad.”

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Another ‘Stuntsuit’ Against Vatican by Church-Suing Contingency Lawyer Anderson Quietly Dismissed, Media Goes Mute

UNITED STATES
TheMediaReport

What is a “stuntsuit”? It is a lawsuit whose only real purpose is to generate publicity and garner media exposure for one’s cause.

So the word “stuntsuit” can readily apply to the silly lawsuit that was filed over a decade ago in 2002 in Oregon by contingency lawyer Jeff Anderson against the Vatican, wildly claiming that the Vatican is somehow the direct “employer” of all of the world’s 412,000 Catholic priests and is somehow directly and legally responsible for any and all misconduct committed by them.

Anderson’s filing of his “stuntsuit” in 2002 predictably amassed tremendous mainstream media attention. But after years of wasted time and effort, and after a federal judge’s dismissal of the matter a year ago, Anderson quietly dismissed his frivolous appeal just last week.

This time, however, the mainstream media did not even take notice.

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Berlin Priest Sentenced To Prison For Child Porn

CONNECTICUT
The Hartford Courant

Staff reports
The Hartford Courant
2:50 p.m. EDT, August 15, 2013

HARTFORD — A Catholic priest will spend five years in prison after he admitted in Superior Court Thursday that he had child pornography on his computer and chatted about sex on the Internet with underage boys.

The Rev. Michael Miller, 43, of Berlin, pleaded guilty in May to possession of child pornography, obscenity and three counts of risk of injury to a minor before Judge Hillary Strackbein.

He was sentenced Thursday to a prison term of 20 years, suspended after five, followed by 20 years of probation. He also must register as a sex offender.

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CASTING CALL IN CAPE GIRARDEAU, PRINCE WILLIAM DOCUMENTARY, FR. JOSEPH JIANG

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Berger’s Beat

. . .It’s been a month now since a civil child sex abuse lawsuit was filed against Archbishop Robert Carlson based on accusations that one of his priests, Fr. Joseph Jiang, molested a girl. The suit contained an incendiary charge that Carlson broke criminal evidence tampering laws by asking the girl’s parents for a $20k check Jiang reportedly gave them after Jiang admitted abusing the girl. Often pedophile priest cases are mentioned in the weekly St. Louis Review archdiocesan newspaper. So far, however, not a word about this unusual accusation has appeared. . .

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Chile – predator priest allowed around children

CHILE
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday August 15, 2013

Statement by Barbara Dorris, Outreach Director, 314-862-7688 SNAPdorris@gmail.com

Because of a legal short coming, a credibly accused Chilean predator priest is listed as able to work around kids.

We hope Chilean lawmakers will reexamine the standard that they use in making such decisions. Regardless of what the law may allow, church officials must be held to a higher standard.

Chilean Catholics and citizens deserve a clear, written pledge from church officials; Fr Karadima will never be allowed around kids.

We applaud Juan Carlos Cruz, James Hamilton, Jose Andres Murillo and other victims of Karadima for continuing to warn the public about the dangers of this predator priest.

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Second UN Committee Scrutinizes Vatican

UNITED STATES
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on August 15, 2013

The UN Convention Against Torture has announced that it will be reviewing reports by the Holy See to determine if they are in compliance with the international treaty against torture.

Other states being reviewed include Sierra Leone, Cyprus and Lithuania.

While it’s a routine review—and only in the informational stages—victims and advocates hope that the review will publicly expose Vatican crimes.

This latest news comes on the heels of a request of the UN Committee for the Rights of the Child, in which in the international organization asked the Vatican to account for every child sex accusation by clergy it has received and disclose all records of abuse and cover-up by church officials.

While these actions are symbolic and have no “teeth”—in other words, no one is going to go to jail and the Vatican can simply “quit” the UN if it doesn’t want to play along—it’s reassuring to the victims’ community to see that international bodies DO recognize that there is a problem.

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Headmaster of abuse school quits Oxford University

SCOTLAND
Scotsman

by CRAIG BROWN
Published on the 15 August 2013

A FORMER headmaster of a Scottish Catholic boarding school hit by accusations of serial child sex abuse has resigned from a senior position at a Benedictine college of Oxford University.

Father Francis Davidson has stepped down as monastic superior of St Benet’s Hall, where he was responsible for the welfare of student monks at the Oxford College, it was reported last night.

Fr Davidson has been accused of covering up abuse perpetrated by monks at Fort Augustus Abbey School in the Highlands and its preparatory school in East Lothian, Carlekemp, both of which are now closed.

The alleged abuse committed against pupils, and the surrounding cover-up, were revealed in a BBC investigation broadcast last month.

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Former headmaster resigns from Oxford University’s Benedictine college

UNITED KINGDOM
Oxford Mail

FATHER Francis Davidson has resigned from his role as monastic superior of the Benedictine college St Benet’s Hall, Oxford.

It follows allegations that he failed to act on reports of sexual abuse that were made during his time at the Catholic Fort August Abbey School in the Scottish Highlands in the 1970s where he was headmaster.

Last night it emerged that he’d quit his position at the Hall in St Giles where he was responsible for the welfare of students monks at Oxford University.

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Former Fort Augustus headmaster resigns from Oxford University post

SCOTLAND
Scottish Catholic Observer

A former headmaster of Fort Augustus Abbey School has resigned from a senior role at a Benedictine college of Oxford University in light of ongoing investigations of abuse and coverup at the school in the Scottish Highlands.

Fr Francis Davidson, the only surviving headmaster of the school, faces accusations of covering up child sex abuse during his time as headmaster at Fort Augustus (above) in the 1970s. As a result, he has left his post as monastic superior of St Benet’s Hall at Oxford where he cared for the welfare of students.

In a statement he offered his sympathies to any victims of historic abuse and said he was ‘shocked and saddened’ to hear of the allegations.

“I do not recall them being reported to me during my time as headmaster of Fort Augustus Abbey School,” he said. “As investigations into matters at Fort Augustus Abbey School and Carlekemp Priory School are ongoing, I have stepped aside from my role as religious superior at St Benet’s Hall.”

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Former head quits in abuse scandal

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

Thursday 15 August 2013

A former headmaster of a Catholic boarding school at the centre of claims of sexual and physical abuse by monks has resigned from a senior role at a Benedictine college of Oxford University.

Father Francis Davidson is accused of covering up child abuse during his time at Fort Augustus Abbey School in the Highlands.

He was accused of failing to alert police to at least one allegation.

He is quitting as monastic superior of St Benet’s Hall, responsible at the Oxford college for the welfare of student monks.

His resignation comes after allegations of abuse at the now closed school and feeder school Carlekemp in East Lothian spanning 30 years. Some 50 former pupils have come forward alleging abuse at the schools between the 1950s and 1990s.

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Ex-headmaster of Aberdeen school at centre of sexual abuse allegations resigns from university post

SCOTLAND
Daily Record

A FORMER headmaster of a boarding school at the centre of sexual abuse allegations has resigned from a role at Oxford University.

Father Francis Davidson has been accused of failing to act on reports during his time at the Catholic Fort Augustus Abbey School in the Highlands in the 1970s.

He has quit as monastic superior of the Benedictine college St Benet’s Hall, where he was responsible for the welfare of student monks at the university.

Alleged victims who attended the Abbey school told a BBC Scotland investigation that they were molested and beaten by monks over a period of three decades from the 1950s.

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Abuse claims school head quits post

SCOTLAND
Kincardineshire Observer

Published on 15/08/2013

A former headmaster of a Catholic boarding school at the centre of sexual abuse allegations has resigned from a role at Oxford University.

Father Francis Davidson has been accused of failing to act on reports during his time at the Catholic Fort Augustus Abbey School in the Highlands in the 1970s.

He has quit as monastic superior of the Benedictine college St Benet’s Hall, where he was responsible for the welfare of student monks at the university.

Alleged victims who attended the Abbey school told a BBC Scotland investigation that they were molested and beaten by monks over a period of three decades from the 1950s.

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Former Catholic school headmaster quits Oxford after abuse claims

UNITED KINGDOM
Telegraph

A former headmaster of a Catholic boarding school embroiled in a sex abuse scandal has resigned from a senior role at a Benedictine college of Oxford University.

By Hayley Dixon 14 Aug 2013

Father Francis Davidson is quitting his post as monastic superior of St Benet’s Hall after being accused of covering up child sex abuse during his time at Fort Augustus Abbey School in the Scottish Highlands.
He was responsible for the welfare of student monks at the Oxford College.

His resignation comes after a BBC investigation found evidence of physical and sexual abuse at the boarding school and its preparatory school in East Lothian.

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Vatican overseer preaches to LCWR on Mary’s submission to God

FLORIDA
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Aug. 15, 2013 NCR Today

ORLANDO, FLA. As U.S. Catholic sisters are meeting to discern their relationship with the church’s bishops, the archbishop given expansive oversight of them by the Vatican told their annual assembly Thursday the Virgin Mary teaches the faithful to hand themselves over “completely to the will of God.”

Mary, Seattle Archbishop J. Peter Sartain told some 825 sisters during a homily this morning, teaches that it’s only in “submitting ourselves over to the one who made us … that we find fulfillment.”

“She shows to us … what God himself desires to do in us all and through the church when we let the grace of God overtake us without placing an obstacle between ourself and that grace,” he continued.

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Prosecutors Seek Lengthy Sentence For Con Man Who Targeted Nuns, Priests

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
CBS Philly

By Tony Hanson

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) – Federal authorities are seeking a sentence of up to 30 years in prison for an admitted con man who targeted nuns, priests and others in a so-called advance fee scam with devastating personal results. But with sentencing set for Thursday morning, the defense is seeking leniency and blaming clergy sex abuse for the defendant’s conduct.

Federal prosecutor Karen Klotz is arguing for the long sentence, well above federal guidelines, because the ruthless crimes committed by defendant Adriano Sotomayor cost some victims all their savings. One victim committed suicide and another attempted suicide.

Klotz says Sotomayor is a repeat offender and this scheme started with an elderly nun in Puerto Rico who was told to send “fees” to collect on an inheritance.

But in its own pre-trial memo, the defense says the defendant was sexually assaulted by members of the Catholic clergy at age 13 and that has resulted in Sotomayor lashing out at his attackers through the proxies of the Catholic clergy and parishioners defrauded in this case.

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When your district is rife with crime, hold bad guys responsible

CALIFORNIA
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on August 15, 2013

Rep. Diane Harkey: Please take a look at cost of crimes in YOUR district before voting no.

Yesterday, CA Assembly Appropriations Committee Vice Chair Diane Harkey voted no on important crime victims legislation—even though a similar 2003 bill exposed horrible abuse in her own district.
I don’t believe it was a malicious act against victims, I just think she doesn’t know about the child sex crimes and cover-up that have thrived in the 73rd Assembly District.

SB 131—the California Child Victims’ Act, a bill that gives crime victims the opportunity to use the civil courts to seek justice and accountability—has stalled in House Appropriations Committee.
According to the Los Angeles Times:

A key question for the committee is whether new lawsuits would strain an already overburdened court system. At the height of the clergy abuse scandal in 2002, the legislature signed off on a similar one-year window. Hundreds of people filed claims, many of them against the Catholic Church.

Diane Harkey (R-Dana Point) was one of the no votes. She represents the district that is the home of St. Edward’s in Dana Point—home of some of the worst perpetrators in OC history. We wouldn’t know about the scope and scale of the crimes against her constituents were it not for for a similar, but broader, 2003 civil window bill.

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Iowa imam charged with sexual abuse; SNAP responds

IIOWA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Statement by Barbara Dorris, Outreach Director, 314-862-7688 SNAPdorris@gmail.com

Police have charged an Iowa imam with sexual abuse and sexual exploitation by a member of the clergy.

A 42-year-old woman and her 18-year-old daughter were sexually assaulted by a Muslim religious official in their home. Nermin Spahic was invited into their home to perform a religious ceremony to help with the daughter’s personal issues.

It is outrageous that a man would abuse his religious status. We urge officials at the Islamic and Cultural Center Bosniak to encourage anyone with more information to contact the authorities.

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Sex abuse lawsuit in Illinois focuses on actions of Newark archbishop

NEW JERSEY/ILLINOIS
National Catholic Reporter

[Deposition of Archbishop John J. Myers via BishopAccountability.org]

Brian Roewe | Aug. 15, 2013

Newark, N.J., Archbishop John J. Myers, under fire for his lax supervision of a priest under court order not to minister to youth, faces new questions concerning his handling of clergy sex abuse allegations while he was bishop in Peoria, Ill., more than a decade ago.

Attorneys for abuse victim Andrew Ward announced Tuesday that they had reached an agreement with the Peoria diocese over a lawsuit accusing Msgr. Thomas Maloney of molesting Ward when he was a boy in the mid-1990s. The diocese settled the suit for $1.35 million. Maloney died in 2009 at age 73.

Records released as part of the agreement show the Peoria diocese received complaints about Maloney’s inappropriate conduct with children in 1995 and 1999, but that in 2000 Myers wrote to a family that the diocese had no record of complaints against Maloney.

That same year, Myers nominated Maloney for the honorific “monsignor.”

In a 2010 deposition, also unsealed as part of the settlement, Myers said he never had any suspicions of sexual abuse on the Maloney’s part, but acknowledged “there may have been things that got by me” and describes the administration of diocesan records and documents in his time in Peoria as a “loose system.”

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A First Look at the Internet (Or: Somebody Must Be Responsible)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

Just an extremely brief posting today.

In the past, paedophiles have concentrated on getting into organisations which have a lot of contact with children. The Royal Commission will be looking at how those organisations have responded to this threat to children. However, if it is limited in this way, and not moving with the times, the problem will continue in a new form.

The reality of the new technologies to do with the world-wide-web is that children are among the major users. Parental blocks can be put on unsuitable sites by all means, but this does not protect their children from the on-line predators, often posing as children themselves.

In the mid-1990s, this author was invited to Queensland State Police Headquarters to consult with the newly established child-protection unit, Taskforce Argos. It was amazing, even at that time, how advanced the methods were. What was equally amazing was just how dedicated, and willing to learn, the members of the unit were. From my background, I am not normally likely to praise coppers, since they are authority figures.

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Second United Nations panel to question Vatican

GENEVA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Committee against Torture calls Catholic officials to account

For the second time in recent months, a United Nations panel will soon determine if Vatican officials are complying with an international treaty. The Geneva-based UN Committee Against Torture (CAT) has set next May as the date for a review of whether top church officials are honoring the 1984 treaty on torture.

[United Nations Human Rights]

“Every time anyone tells Catholic officials ‘You will be held to the same standard as other institutions,’ that’s progress,” said Barbara Blaine of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. “This is an encouraging development. We suspect this committee will see and point out how the church hierarchy continues to tolerate and enable sexual violence.”

“Vatican bureaucrats have long made and broken promises with impunity. Ever so slowly, those days are waning,” said David Clohessy of SNAP. “But progress is happening only because of brave victims and determined advocates. So for the safety of innocent kids and vulnerable adults, we all must all keep pressing hard and keep exposing complicity.”

In June, two US SNAP leaders traveled to Geneva and met with the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child, chaired by Kirsten Sandberg of Norway. In July, that panel released a list of “issues” related to child sex crimes and cover ups that church officials must response to by Nov. 1.

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Survivors of abuse in residential institutions in Northern Ireland asked to come forward

NORTHERN IRELAND
Irish Central

Published Sunday, August 11, 2013

By JANE WALSH, IrishCentral Staff Writer

A major inquiry into historical institutional abuse in Northern Ireland is launching an international appeal for victims and survivors to come forward. The inquiry seeks to investigate child abuse which occurred in residential institutions in Northern Ireland over a 74-year period, from 1922 up to 1995.

The Inquiry recognizes that there has been considerable migration from Northern Ireland to various parts of the United States and is anxious to encourage any survivors who suffered childhood abuse in Northern Ireland institutions but who now live overseas to get in touch. The Inquiry’s Chairman, Sir Anthony Hart, said he appreciates that the decision to contact the Inquiry can be a very difficult one for survivors, particularly if they live abroad. “We recognize that, for many potential witnesses, reliving their experiences will be very painful and traumatic,” he said. “Indeed, some will not have told their closest relatives or friends about the abuse they suffered. If they now live overseas, the thought of contacting the Inquiry may seem especially daunting. But we want to emphasize that we’re doing everything we can to make the process as easy as possible for those living abroad.”

The Inquiry is offering to meet the travel expenses of those who need to give their testimony in person. If a sufficient number of witnesses come forward from one country, the Inquiry will consider traveling to that country to hear their evidence. Potential witnesses are also offered the option of providing private testimony to the Inquiry’s Acknowledgement Forum if they don’t wish to participate in the public inquiry process. …

Survivors of childhood abuse in Northern Ireland institutions and any other potential witnesses who wish to contact the Inquiry should visit the Inquiry’s website at: www.hiainquiry.org or contact the Inquiry by telephone on 0800 068 4935. For more information or to discuss any of the above please contact Eileen at the Irish Pastoral Centre on 617.265.5300 X 13.

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Former teacher and choirmaster convicted of indecently assaulting young boys

UNITED KINGDOM
Get Surrey

A former teacher and choirmaster has been found guilty of attempted buggery and two counts of indecent assault against two boys.

John Lillis was convicted by the jury at Guildford Crown Court on Tuesday (August 13). He had already pleaded guilty to four other counts of indecent assault between 1973 and 1982 at an earlier hearing.

Lillis, a teacher at St Dunstan’s Catholic Primary School in Woking at the time of the offences, was allowed to continue in his job at a Woking church 20 years after first admitting indecently assaulting the boys, the court heard.

The 63-year-old, now of Arthur Road, Windsor, was first confronted in 1989 about the offences.

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Surrey choirmaster John Lillis guilty of indecent assault

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

A 63-year-old former teacher and choirmaster has been found guilty of indecently assaulting two boys under the age of 16 in Surrey.

John Lillis, of Arthur Road, Windsor, Berkshire, was convicted at Guildford Crown Court of one count of attempted rape and two of indecent assault.

He had earlier admitted five counts of indecent assault against the boys.

Lillis was remanded on conditional bail and will be sentenced at the same court on 6 September.

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Church paedophile persuaded not to resign by priest finally faces justice for abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
Express

By: Benjamin Russell
Published: Thu, August 15, 2013

A CHURCH organist who offered to resign after being caught molesting young boys but was persuaded to continue his work with the choir is about to be brought to justice.

The victims of John Lillis, 63, were kicked out the choir and their family given a lecture by a Roman Catholic Bishop about the need for “forgiveness”.

Now, 25 years on, he has been told he is likely to get a long prison sentence after being found guilty by a Crown Court jury of three even more serious sex offences, in addition to four he had already admitted.

The scandal that rocked the catholic community in Woking, Surrey, was outlined during a seven day trial at Guildford Crown Court.

It was also revealed that in addition to his continued work with the choir, at St Dunstan’s RC Church, Lillis was allowed to remain living in a subsidised church property, there The brothers, whose abuse began when one of them was as young as 10, have accused the Church hierarchy of “covering up” the paedophile scandal.

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BLOG: Time to fix child abuse punishment

AUSTRALIA
Illawarra Mercury

By DAVID SHOEBRIDGE Aug. 14, 2013

Too many people have turned a blind eye to the sexual abuse of children, writes DAVID SHOEBRIDGE.

Since coming into the NSW Parliament almost three years ago, I have worked to ensure that the crime of child sexual abuse is prosecuted as one of the most heinous crimes on the statute books. In that time I have been very critical of the failure, especially of the Catholic Church, to report abuse to police.

In working with the many courageous groups and individuals who support survivors of sexual abuse I have had my eyes opened to the real extent of the problem. They have shown me many cases where organisations have treated the sexual abuse of children as a lesser crime than the sexual abuse of adults. In many cases it has not been treated as a crime at all.

This has happened because for too long, too many people have turned a blind eye to the sexual abuse of children. When children reported what had happened to them they were often disbelieved, particularly if the abuser was a person in a position of authority. This must not continue.

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Dublin’s Auxiliary Bishop Walsh to make dramatic come back

IRELAND
The Irish Catholic

Garry O’Sullivan and Cathal Barry

In what some Dublin priests are describing as a ‘mystifying move’, auxiliary Bishop Eamonn Walsh is to be appointed Episcopal Vicar for Clergy in the archdiocese, the first senior appointment for Bishop Walsh since his dramatic resignation on Christmas Eve 2009 amid public pressure and a lack of full-some support from Archbishop Martin in the wake of the Murphy report.

However in August 2010, in what was widely seen as a public reprimand to Archbishop Martin, the Pope refused to accept the resignation Bishop Walsh and that of fellow auxiliary bishop Ray Field forcing Archbishop Martin to quietly announce their reinstatement buried in a three page letter on the sacraments.

Abuse victim Marie Collins at the time declared that Archbishop Martin’s authority had been “undermined”. However, Bishop Walsh has always considered his treatment ‘an injustice’ and it is believed a case was made to Rome along these lines and hence Rome refused to accept the resignation.

The ‘promotion’ now of Bishop Walsh, given he has been largely consigned to Confirmations has taken the clergy of the diocese by surprise. “It makes sense to give it to him. But it does show a complete lack of imagination” said one priest contacted by this paper. “The diocese is suffering from a lack of imagination. Where’s the vision?”

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Eclipsed and the world of the Magdalen Laundry

IRELAND
Galway Advertiser

By Charlie Mcbride

GALWAY THEATREGOERS are in for a treat next week with a new staging of Patricia Burke Brogan’s Eclipsed from Mephisto Theatre Company.

The production will be directed by Niall Cleary and the cast is Teresa Brennan, Catherine Denning, Siobhán Donnellan, Caroline Lynch, Zita Monahan, Emma O’Grady, Margaret O’Sullivan, and Liz Quinn.

First performed by Punchbag in 1992, Eclipsed is a powerful drama that sheds light on the lives of the women of the Magdalen Laundries. It won a Fringe First at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival and was revived successfully at the Town Hall Theatre in 1998. There have been more than 60 productions of the play since its premiere.

Mephisto has been producing work in Galway since 2006. Past productions at the Town Hall include The Mai by Marina Carr, The Honey Spike by Bryan MacMahon, and Grenades by Tara McKevitt.

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Fiscalía acusa a Iglesia Católica en Temuco …

CHILE
Bio Bio

[con audio]

Fiscalía acusa a Iglesia Católica en Temuco de no colaborar en caso de sacerdote imputado por abusos

En Temuco, el Ministerio Público denunció la nula colaboración de la Iglesia Católica para esclarecer el caso que mantiene a un sacerdote acusado de abuso sexual reiterado .

Desde el lunes se desarrolla un juicio oral en contra del sacerdote Orlando Rogel Pinuer de 56 años, acusado de seis abusos sexuales que habría cometido entre 2006 y 2011, cuando se desempeñaba como párroco en Cunco y director del hogar de menores dependiente de la iglesia en esa comuna.

El fiscal Omar Mérida, quien sostiene la acusación en contra del prelado a quien lo aqueja una severa diabetes que lo mantiene ciego, precisó que la Iglesia no ha prestado colaboración en la causa. Confirmó que el obispo de Villarrica, Francisco Javier Stegmeier -de quien depende jerárquicamente el sacerdote acusado-, incluso se excusó de asistir como testigo al juicio oral por encontrarse fuera de Chile.

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Víctima de Karadima denuncia …

CHILE
Publimetro

Víctima de Karadima denuncia que el Registro Civil no lo inhabilita para trabajar con menores

El periodista y una de las víctimas que denunció a Fernando Karadima, Juan Carlos Cruz, difundió a través de su cuenta de Twitter @jccruzchellew que el religioso “NO registra inhabilidades para trabajar con menores de edad”, según datos consultados a la página del Registro Civil.

Cabe destacar que Karadima fue sobreseído por la justicia chilena por sus abusos sobre Cruz, Murillo y Hamilton debido a que prescribieron dichos delitos. Sin embargo, fue condenado por el Vaticano a tener “una vida de oración y penitencia”.

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Registro Civil: Karadima habilitado para trabajar con niños

CHILE
Terra

El sacerdote Fernando Karadima se encuentra habilitado para trabajar con menores de edad, según denunció vía Twitter Juan Carlos Cruz, una de las tres personas que presentaron la denuncia por abusos sexuales contra el ex párroco de El Bosque.

En el sitio web del Registro Civil, al colocar el nombre completo y el RUT del religioso, se señala que Karadima “NO registra inhabilidades para trabajar con menores de edad.

El sacerdote fue sobreseído por los abusos en contra de Cruz, José Andrés Murillo y James Hamilton debido a que prescribieron dichos delitos.

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Karadima aparece habilitado para trabajar con menores

CHILE
24 Horas

POR JOSÉ MORGADO

Habilitado para trabajar con menores de edad.

Así se encuentra el sacerdote Fernando Karadima, según puede apreciarse en el sitio web del Registro Civil, donde -al colocar su nombre completo y RUT- se indica que el cura “NO registra inhabilidades para trabajar con menores de edad”.

La denuncia fue realizada a través de las redes sociales por parte de Juan Carlos Cruz, quien junto a José Andrés Murillo y James Hamilton, presentó la denuncia por abusos sexuales contra Karadima.

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Church apologizes to Kenora residential school survivors

CANADA
CBC News

The Presbyterian Church issued a specific apology on Wednesday to former students of a residential school in Kenora, Ont., where medical and nutritional experiments had taken place.

Former students of the Cecilia Jeffrey Indian Residential School attended a commemorative gathering on Wednesday at a memorial where the church-run, government-funded facility once stood.

Recently released documents reveal that aboriginal children who were sent to Cecilia Jeffrey were subjected to experimental treatments for ear infections, as well as nutritional and dental experiments that were recently highlighted by a food historian.

For some survivors, the latest revelations have compounded the pain they have long felt as a result of the residential school experience.

“We had thought that we’d somewhat come to peace with some issues, then there’s ongoing revelations of other events happening,” said Richard Green, a former student who organized Wednesday’s commemorative event.

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Funding cut for Yellowknife residential schools healing program

CANADA
CBC News

A Yellowknife healing program created to help deal with the legacy of residential schools is closing its doors this week, possibly for the last time.

A program called Embracing Our Humanness has been running out of the Healing Drum in Yellowknife for a while now, courtesy of some federal government funding.

But on Friday, the four-week program will come to an end because Ottawa announced the Aboriginal Healing Foundation funding that was bankrolling the program would not be renewed.

User support

“It makes me sad,” says Dawn Mangelana, who’s been using the service.”There’s a huge waiting list here at the Healing Drum society. Those people who are reaching out for help will not be fortunate enough to receive what I have through this program.”

More than 200 people are waiting to get into the program. It’s scheduled to run for two more cycles, but only for inmates in Yellowknife and Hay River jails.

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Judge Rudolph Randa erred by not disclosing potential conflict

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Should it matter that close family members of a federal judge hearing the Archdiocese of Milwaukee bankruptcy case are buried in archdiocesan cemeteries?

How about when this same judge ruled that the $50 million that the archdiocese holds in trust for its cemeteries was off limits in the bankruptcy case?

It might matter. And that’s why U.S. District Judge Rudolph T. Randa should have disclosed his connection to the archdiocese. It’s the judge’s responsibility to disclose potential conflicts, and on the face of it, this looks like a potential conflict.

In motions filed earlier this week, creditors stated:

“During the week of July 29, 2013, the committee discovered that at least nine of Judge Randa’s relatives (including his mother, his father and his wife’s parents) are buried in cemeteries owned and operated by the debtor, the very cemeteries that are to be maintained with the funds moved from the debtor’s accounts to the Cemetery Trust before filing for bankruptcy. This fact alone creates the appearance of partiality in favor of the Cemetery Trust in this action and establishes strong grounds for recusal.”

By purchasing burial rights, Randa entered into a contract with the archdiocese, which they claim is additional evidence of a conflict.

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Bill to allow sex abuse victims more time to sue fails to advance

CALIFORNIA
Los Angeles Times

By Ashley Powers
August 14, 2013

A bill that would give some sex abuse victims more time to file lawsuits, which has drawn fierce opposition from the Catholic Church, failed to get enough support Wednesday to make it out of a key legislative committee.

The bill, which needed nine votes to leave the lower house’s appropriations committee and go to the Assembly floor, mustered only six. Four committee members opposed the bill and seven did not weigh in after an emotional hearing that included testimony from a lobbyist who is also a sex abuse survivor.

The panel, which mainly considers how much a proposal would cost the state, will take up SB 131 again next week. It has already passed the state Senate and the Assembly judiciary committee.

The bill would, in part, lift the statute of limitations for one year to allow certain victims to sue private or nonprofit employers who may have failed to protect them from known molesters. Supporters say sex abuse victims need extra time to file lawsuits because it often takes decades for them to admit that they were molested.

A key question for the committee is whether new lawsuits would strain an already overburdened court system. At the height of the clergy abuse scandal in 2002, the legislature signed off on a similar one-year window. Hundreds of people filed claims, many of them against the Catholic Church.

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California Bill Would Extend Deadline on Child Sex Abuse Lawsuits

CALIFORNIA
Valley Public Radio

By MAX PRINGLE

A bill that would extend California’s statute of limitations on civil suits for victims of childhood sexual abuse has stalled in an Assembly Committee.

Democratic Senator Jim Beall says his bill would bring a measure of justice to people who may just now be coming to terms with childhood trauma.

“When they discover later in life, through therapy or whatever, that they were attacked by somebody, it allows them to go to civil court,” says Beall.

Under the bill, anyone 26 and older would get an extra year to seek damages against institutions that failed to prevent abuse.

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California measure to extend statute of limitations for sex abuse victims fails in committee

CALIFORNIA
Sacramento Bee

By Melody Gutierrez
mgutierrez@sacbee.com
Published: Thursday, Aug. 15, 2013

A bill to extend the statute of limitations for some sex abuse victims fell three votes short in an Assembly committee Wednesday amid fierce lobbying, including more than $250,000 from an umbrella organization of the California Catholic Council.

Senate Bill 131 by San Jose Democrat Jim Beall would open a one-year window for victims excluded from a 2003 law that extended the time during which sexual abuse victims can file a civil lawsuit.

The measure is sponsored by the National Center for Victims of Crime and supported by the California Police Chiefs Association and the Consumer Attorneys of California.

Opponents have argued that the bill unfairly targets the Catholic Church and Boy Scouts in order to create a revenue machine for lawyers.

“If the bill loses, the molester protectors win,” Beall said after it failed 6-4 along party lines in the Assembly Appropriations Committee.

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