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.

October 5, 2013

Sir Terry Wogan speaks of his hatred of Jimmy Savile and says his crimes were open secret at BBC

UNITED KINGDOM
Mirror

Veteran TV and radio legend Sir Terry Wogan has spoken of his hatred of Jimmy Savile and how his crimes were an open secret at the BBC.

The 75-year-old broadcaster has told of how he despised Savile and how his horrific legacy of child abuse has “poisoned” the BBC.

He said: “He always struck me as creepy. I’ve talked to people and not one of them has said: ‘I really liked him.’”

The Children in Need host recalled a celebrity lunch with journalists revealing that it was common knowledge in the industry what Savile was up to.

“I was sitting at a table having lunch and Savile was sitting one up from me, and also up from me was Jean Rook (the legendary columnist)

“And Jimmy Savile got up to go to the loo, and she looked across at me and said: ‘When are they going to expose him?’

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.

Jeremy Paxman: ‘I thought about quitting Newsnight’

UNITED KINGDOM
Evening Express

Published: 05/10/2013

NEWSNIGHT host Jeremy Paxman has admitted he “thought about” quitting the show after a scandal which saw an investigation into Jimmy Savile’s sex crimes dropped.

He said he was still enjoying presenting the BBC2 current affairs show but admitted it had been damaged by what happened.

Asked if he considered quitting, he said: “I thought about it of course but in the end I decided that you know these were … there were several bad decisions, they were individual bad decisions and I felt that loyalty commanded that you stayed.”

He also said senior figures at the BBC Trust – the corporation’s governing body – proposed dropping the show.

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.

Statement by Jennifer Haselberger

Minnesota
Jennifer Haselberger via Pioneer Press

For Immediate Release

Statement by Jennifer Haselberger

October 5, 2013

I have been asked to comment about the reaction of the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis to the recent news stories in the press.

Beginning in July of 2013, I provided Minnesota Public Radio with information regarding acts of sexual and other misconduct involving several members of the clergy of the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis, as well as the account of my unsuccessful efforts to convince the Archdiocesan administration to take the necessary steps to address these issues. My hope was that by making this information public it would serve as a warning about predatory priests currently serving in the Archdiocese.

I have the utmost respect for and confidence in the vast majority of priests serving in this Archdiocese, and I was honored to work on behalf of them, the men and women religious, and the lay faithful of this local church. It was with great sadness that I resigned my position as Chancellor for Canonical Affairs in April of 2013. However, as I explained to Archbishop Nienstedt in my letter of resignation, I had come to the conclusion that it had become impossible for me to continue in that position given my personal ethics, religious convictions, and sense of integrity.

I asked then, as I ask now, that Archbishop Nienstedt take his responsibilities towards the protection of the young and the vulnerable seriously. I asked that he permit a comprehensive, external review of the files of all clergy of the Archdiocese, and that following this review he remove from ministry and make public the list of clergy who have been determined to have engaged in acts of sexual misconduct, as well as those whom could reasonably be assumed to pose a threat to children and young people. Until this occurs, I do not believe that it can be said that the Archdiocese is honoring its promise to protect.

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.

Archdiocese official seeks external review of clergy for sexual misconduct

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

[With copy of Ms. Haselberger’s statement]

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 10/05/2013

A former archdiocese official called upon Archbishop John Nienstedt to allow an external review of all clergy and remove priests who have engaged in sexual misconduct or pose a threat to children.

Jennifer Haselberger issued a written statement Saturday in response to press reports about what she termed “my unsuccessful efforts to convince the archdiocesan administration to take the necessary steps” to address sexual misconduct by priests.

Beginning in July, she released information to Minnesota Public Radio “regarding acts of sexual and other misconduct involving several members of the clergy…My hope was that by making this information public it would serve as a warning about predatory priests currently serving in the archdiocese,” Haselberger wrote.

Among those was Rev. Jonathan Shelley, 52, who served until June 2012 at St. John the Baptist Church in Hugo and currently has no assignment. A desktop computer owned by Shelley was found in 2004 to have thousands of pornographic images on it. Archdiocese officials did not report the case to the police. The St. Paul police got involved this year only after Haselberger told the Ramsey County attorney’s office about the computer.

The police closed their investigation on Sept. 29 after finding no child pornography on discs the archdiocese provided. But a Hugo man who had alerted the archdiocese to the computer in 2004 turned over a copy of portions of its hard drive to police on Friday.

Haselberger served until April 30 as chancellor for canonical affairs for the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis. She resigned with “great sadness,” she said Saturday.

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.

Texas town now houses 1st convicted pedophile priest

TEXAS
USA Today

Church abuse case haunts lawyer who defended priest

SAN LEON, Texas — Pedophile Gilbert Gauthe sought shelter and found it here.

At 68, the former priest convicted in the first sex-abuse case against the Catholic Church is, by his own account, suffering from cancer. He is a registered sex offender and between jobs. His former protector, Judge Henry Politz of the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, is dead.

Any supplemental source of income that Gauthe may have is unknown. The Very Rev. Msgr. Richard R. Greene, spokesman for the the Diocese of Lafayette, La., where he committed his crimes said Gauthe receives no money from that diocese or from any other branch of the church.

Gauthe’s status as a cleric also is unclear. Greene said he believed Gauthe had been removed from the priesthood, laicized in church terms. But the diocese has no record of that and Gauthe’s name does not appear among the more than 300 U.S. priests who have been laicized since 1985.

Whether a priest or layman, however he supports himself, life for Gauthe may be more difficult now than it was inside prison walls.

Seeking to avoid exposure and publicity, he has withdrawn to the farthest point in Trinity Bay, just south of the Houston Ship Channel.

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.

Former St. Paul Archdiocese employee asks for comprehensive review of clergy

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: JACKIE CROSBY , Star Tribune Updated: October 5, 2013

A former employee of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis on Saturday asked that the archbishop conduct a “comprehensive, external review” of files of all clergy.

Jennifer Haselberger, 38, said she resigned from her job as chancellor for canonical affairs last fall because top church officials failed to pursue her allegations of sexual and other misconduct involving several members of the clergy.

Haselberger is at the center of an investigation that sparked the sudden resignation this week of Peter Laird, who held the No. 2 position at the archdiocese.

In a prepared statement Saturday, Haselberger made a plea for action, asking that Archbishop John Nienstedt “take his responsibilities toward the protection of the young and the vulnerable seriously.”

Haselberger asked that Nienstedt review clergy files and “remove from ministry and make public the list of clergy who have been determined to have engaged in acts of sexual misconduct, as well as those whom could reasonably be assumed to pose a threat to children and young people. Until this occurs, I do not believe that it can be said that the Archdiocese is honoring its promise to protect.”

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.

Dominican Republic and Poland to determine their position on priest case

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
Dominican Today

Santo Domingo.– Justice minister Francisco Dominguez Brito said Friday that he and his Polish counterpart will be issuing joint statements with the firm intention that impunity does not prevail in the case of priest Wojciech Gil (Padre Alberto), who is under investigation for child molestation.

Dominguez Brito stated that there have already been discussions with his counterpart in Poland and did not rule out the possibility that a group of Dominican prosecutors travel to Poland in order to guide and support the process against the priest.

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.

Twin Cities Catholics react to news about church leaders, priests

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

by Jon Collins, Minnesota Public Radio,
Tom Scheck, Minnesota Public Radio
October 4, 2013

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Catholics in the Twin Cities have a wide range of reactions to recent news about the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis — including an MPR News report that the archdiocese knew about a priest’s sexual misconduct but failed to remove him from ministry, and the subsequent resignation of the top deputy of the archdiocese.

About 600 Catholics gathered for the annual Candlelight Rosary Procession from the State Capitol to the Cathedral of St. Paul Friday.

Greg Holupchinski of St. Paul said the recent revelations were unfortunate.

“It’s too bad that when you hear about the church in the news it’s either that we have a new pope or we have a few errant priests,” Holupchinski said. “One bad apple seems to spoil the bunch sometimes.”

Holupchinski said Catholics understand that the church is filled with sinners, but that he’d like to see more transparency from its leaders.

“The longer you keep it under wraps, the more negative effects there are going to be over time,” Holupchinski 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.

New Savile abuse victims are STILL coming forward a year after paedophile presenter’s reign of terror was exposed

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

By DANIEL MARTIN

The NSPCC is still receiving calls from victims of Jimmy Savile a year on from the TV documentary which exposed the serial paedophile’s reign of terror.

Police say there the former BBC broadcaster abused at least 1,300 people over 54 years – but the children’s charity said more were still coming forward.

The charity revealed that publicity over the scandal has led to an overall surge in the number of child victims of sexual abuse and rape contacting the NSPCC.

Over the past year, the number of referrals from the charity’s helpline to police and social services has almost doubled – up 84 per cent – in response to publicity surrounding the scandal.

In June and July this year, almost 600 calls were referred – up from 323 over the same two months the year before.

The chief executive of the NSPCC hailed the increase, saying it showed that the Savile scandal was encouraging victims to come forward after years of silence.

But Peter Wanless warned that, unless the country does more to step in sooner, we could find that another Savile has long been in our midst going unpunished.

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

The Franciscan most likely to influence Francis

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

Sean O’Malley is not only the lone American on the Council of Cardinals, but he’s also the lone Franciscan

JOHN L. ALLEN JR.*

Pope Francis made a historic visit to Assisi on Oct. 4, in part to meet the Franciscans responsible for keeping alive the spiritual legacy of his namesake. Yet it may actually have been a Franciscan the pontiff brought with him who has the greatest imprint on his papacy.

The pope was flanked throughout the day by eight prelates who make up his “Council of Cardinals,” recently formalized by a chirograph as the pope’s most important sounding board, who had just wrapped up three days of intense discussions on a wide variety of possible reforms – reorganization of the Roman Curia, changes in the Synod of Bishops, the role of the laity in the church and the Vatican, and the pastoral care of marriage.

One of those eight clearly stood out, especially in Assisi: Cardinal Sean O’Malley of Boston, who wore his brown Capuchin habit throughout the day rather than the crimson-lined black cassock typically associated with Princes of the Church.

Visually, it was a reminder that O’Malley is not only the lone American on the Council of Cardinals, but he’s also the lone Franciscan – and for a pope named Francis, that’s no small matter in terms of the extent to which O’Malley has the pontiff’s ear.

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.

Religious Authority In An Age Of Authenticity

UNITED STATES
The American Conservative

By ROD DREHER • October 4, 2013

At the risk of going too Catholic-heavy today, I want to point to the latest from the two church scandals, and explore briefly the implications for all church leadership in our present time.

First, news from the Diocese of Trenton, about a 30-year-old Catholic priest who was the object of a sting run by two young Catholic men who were sick and tired of him sexually harrasing them. They pretended to be a 16-year-old boy online. Fr. Riedlinger engaged in graphic sexting with what he thought was a minor. The two men saved all the evidence and gave it to the Bishop of Trenton, to show him that Fr. Riedlinger had no business in the priesthood. Bishop O’Connell yanked him from the parish. The two men pressed the bishop to tell the people of the parish what their priest had been up to, in case he had treated others in the parish that way:

The messages show Riedlinger needed little or no invitation to steer the conversation to sex. He spoke of past encounters and the size of his penis, encouraged Josh to enjoy sex with his boyfriend and repeatedly told him how alike they were in their thirst for pornography and sex.

“I love u dude. Ur a sick (expletive) like me,” Riedlinger wrote.

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

Catholic Church ‘will not pay’ child sex victims

POLAND
Irish Examiner

Saturday, October 05, 2013

Poland’s Catholic Church has said it will not pay compensation to victims of priests who sexually abused children.

By Monika Scislowska

Rev Jozef Kloch said in comments aired by Polish Radio 1 that responsibility for compensation lies with the perpetrator.

Kloch was reacting to a €47,500 claim made by a 25-year-old victim against his parish and local church authorities after they failed to reach a settlement. The claim could now be taken to court, in what would be Poland’s first such case.

“The Church will not pay compensation to victims of paedophile priests,” Koch said. “The wrongdoer should do it.”

Earlier, Bishop Wojciech Polak, secretary of the Episcopate, apologised to the victims and also offered psychological and therapeutic 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.

NEWS RELEASE: SECOND CIVIL COMPLAINT FILED …

MINNESOTA
Jeff Anderson & Associates

[the lawsuit]

(Faribault, MN) – A Rice County judge sentenced former Shattuck-St. Mary’s teacher Lynn Seibel, to 52 months in prison today after Seibel pled guilty in July for sexually abusing six male students at the elite private boarding school in Faribault, Minnesota. As an AP Drama teacher and dorm parent, Seibel encouraged “naked dance parties,” showed students pornography, and held group masturbation sessions with underage boys. Seibel must register as a sex offender, participate in a treatment program and cannot have access to print or digital materials that are sexually explicit in nature.

One of Seibel’s victims who attended Shattuck from 2000-2004, along with his attorneys Jeff Anderson & Associates, filed a lawsuit today in Rice County alleging sexual abuse by Seibel and naming the school as defendants. In addition to the naked dance parties and pornography viewing, Seibel sexually abused students after locking the doors to a classroom adjacent to the basketball gym. Seibel held his group masturbation sessions and penis enlargement and measuring sessions on-campus, and was finally caught in 2003 with child pornography on his computer.

“What’s clear is that Seibel created a culture of coercion, confusion and sexual perversion,” said Doe YZ’s attorney, Jeff Anderson. “What’s just as clear is that many around and at the top of Shattuck-St. Mary’s, wittingly or unwittingly, permitted Seibel’s exploitation of students. We are grateful to all of the survivors who have courageously stepped forward to hold this man and institution accountable for their actions.”

Despite reports of inappropriate behavior made to another teacher in the fall of 2000, who in turn reported Seibel to two administrators, nothing was reported to law enforcement and Seibel remained at the school for another three years. Since Seibel’s arrest in Minnesota, multiple survivors have already come forward alleging abuse by Seibel during his 11 year career with the school. Seibel was also convicted in Los Angeles, California of soliciting or engaging in lewd conduct in a public place.

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.

Probe continues in alleged archdiocese cover-up

MINNESOTA
KARE

[with video]

Karla Hult

ST. PAUL, Minn. — The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis says it continues to have “zero tolerance for sexual abuse.”

Officials released that statement in the wake of a rocky week, during which Father Peter Laird resigned as Vicar General and a police report came to light that suggested church leaders may have looked the other way when it came to a local priest accused of having child pornography.

Also this week, KARE 11’s media partner — Minnesota Public Radio News — aired a second story in their investigation into the archdiocese. The MPR investigation is based, in part, on an exclusive interview with a former top canon lawyer for the archdiocese, Jennifer Haselberger.

“I think what has been so important is that she was a senior official, and she was in charge of the records department. And then she also is a canon lawyer, so she brings an expertise to the story at a level of decision making that’s unusual in a story about the Roman Catholic Church,” said Madeleine Baran, an MPR Reporter.

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.

Archdiocese attorney says no evidence of child porn found

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: DAN BROWNING, KEVIN GILES and KEVIN DUCHSCHERE , Star Tribune staff writers Updated: October 4, 2013

An attorney for the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis said Friday that neither police investigators nor a computer forensics expert found evidence to support allegations by a former archdiocesan employee that one of its priests had viewed child pornography on his computer.

Tom Wieser, an attorney for the archdiocese, said some “false inferences” have been drawn from police reports that seem to imply that child pornography was found on the priest’s old hard drive.

The St. Paul police, Ramsey County and Washington County all indicated they would consider new investigations should evidence supporting the allegation — which surfaced anew Thursday — prove compelling. Meanwhile, the Hugo resident who first discovered pornography on the computer and reported it nearly a decade ago said he had kept a copy of what he found and provided it to police.

The former archdiocese employee, Jennifer Haselberger, 38, said in a deposition last month that she resigned from her job as chancellor for canonical affairs because top church officials failed to pursue her allegations last fall. Haselberger said child pornography had been copied from the priest’s old hard drive and stored on discs in a vault.

In a deposition for an unrelated case last month, Haselberger said that she reported the allegations to authorities and quit. She could not be reached for comment Friday and her attorney did not respond to messages.

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.

‘I’ve done nothing wrong’ says priest accused of molesting boys

POLAND
The News

Father Wojciech Gil, accused of molesting minors in the Dominican Republic, has said that he is innocent of the charges made against him and will pray for his accusers.

“I know that I did not do anything wrong in relation to these children,” the 36 year-old Gil has told the TVP public broadcaster, in his first interview since police found him last week staying with his parents in southern Poland.

Interpol issued a warrant for his arrest after he failed to return to the Dominican Republic, where he has worked as a priest for the last eight years, from holidaying in Poland last May.

Of the three children who have made allegations against him – one of which says that he was abused for four years – Father Gil said that he “prays for them as a priest and as a man”.

“I am innocent and the charges are completely fictional,” Gil added.

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.

Assertion: Archbishop Nienstedt was shown child-porn photos

MINNESOTA
MinnPost

By Brian Lambert | 10/04/13

Worse and worse … . Today Madeleine Baran and Mike Cronin at MPR report: “Upset that her superiors had refused to take action, a former church official reported to police that leaders of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis had kept secret for eight years images of pornography — some of it appearing to show children — belonging to one of its priests. Jennifer Haselberger, the archdiocese’s former chancellor for canonical affairs, marched the images she’d found into the offices of one church leader after another in May 2012. But none responded. The last straw for Haselberger came after she provided Archbishop John Nienstedt with copies of some of the images she had discovered in the archdiocese’s files on the Rev. Jonathan Shelley, 52. She said the photos appeared to show boys performing oral sex. The Rev. Peter Laird, the archdiocese’s vicar general at the time, Nienstedt’s deputy, ordered her to hand over the pornographic images.”

In the Strib story on the resignation of Archbishop John Nienstedt’s “top lieutenant,” Jeff Strickler writes: “St. Paul attorney Jeff Anderson, a leading plaintiffs’ lawyer in pursuing cases against the archdiocese over child abuse, said the police report implies that the archdiocese destroyed evidence. The police report says that the archdiocese seized the evidence about the child pornography and kept it in a vault. When another diocesan official, Jennifer Haselberger, discovered the evidence, [the Rev. Peter] Laird told her to put it back in the vault, she told police. Haselberger, who has since resigned, brought the matter to police attention. When the police went to the vault, the evidence of child pornography that they were told would be there was missing. … The pornography allegations made public Thursday date to 2003. But most of the police report focuses on events that have taken place in the last few months after officers were contacted by Haselberger.”

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.

Copies of Hugo priest’s alleged porn turned over to police

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.com

A Hugo man remembered this week that he had copied files from the Rev. Jonathan Shelley’s hard drive and put them in his safe.

So, on Friday, nine years after he gave to the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis the hard drive containing pornographic images, Joe Ternus turned over the evidence to St. Paul police.

“I called Sgt. (William) Gillet, and he got back to me today, and he came up and took possession of those this afternoon,” Ternus said.

Police spokesman Howie Padilla confirmed that “an individual did give us new information” Friday afternoon.

“Whether that new information warrants reopening that investigation remains to be determined,” Padilla 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.

Asociación de Fiscales respalda a persecutor cuestionado por la defensa del cura O’Reilly

CHILE
Bio Bio

[Summary: The national attorneys association said Luis Hermosilla, lawyer representing priest John O’Reilly, was inappropriate in telling a judge that the prosecutor was lying. The prosecutor has not falsified any information given to the court, according to the association.]

La Asociación Nacional de Fiscales calificó como inapropiados los dichos del abogado defensor del cura John O’Reilly, Luis Hermosilla, sobre el fiscal de la zona oriente, Matías Moya.

Al término de la audiencia de cautelas de garantías que se realizó este miércoles, el abogado Luis Hermosilla, representante del sacerdote John O’Reilly, quien fue formalizado por el fiscal de la zona oriente, Matías Moya, por abuso sexual de dos alumnos del colegio Cumbres, increpó al persecutor de “mentir” ante la jueza Daniela Guerrero.

La Asociación Nacional de Fiscales salió al paso de esta crítica y aseguró que el Ministerio Público no ha falseado ninguna información ante el tribunal. Incluso el organismo envió una carta a un diario de circulación nacional aclarando que falta información sobre la foto que fue publicada en la edición de este jueves, donde aparece el defensor Hermosilla apuntando al persecutor en medio de una discusión que originó el representante de O’Reilly al término de la audiencia.

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.

¿Qué dice el cardenal López Rodríguez de los casos de sacerdotes acusados de pederastia?

REPUBLICA DOMINICANA
Hoy

A raíz de las distintas denuncias hechas públicas en el país acerca de los casos de sacerdotes católicos acusados de abuso sexual a menores de edad, el Episcopado Dominicano dio a conocer esta mañana un comunicado con la posición que tiene en este sentido el cardenal Nicolás de Jesús López Rodríguez.

Ver comunicado aquí: http://goo.gl/3fdY7l

A través del documento presentado en rueda de prensa, el arzobispo de Santo Domingo expresó su pesar ante los últimos escándalos ventilados en medios de comunicación sobre acusaciones emitidas a sacerdotes y al nuncio saliente.

“Me consta que muchas personas, sobre todo los de fe sencilla, pero también otros que se sienten parte activa de la gran familia católica, están observando con preocupación y profunda tristeza el presente cuadro”, dijo.

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

Judge to attorney: File complaints in abuse cases within 30 days

PENNSYLVANIA
The Altoona Mirror

October 5, 2013

By Phil Ray (pray@altoonamirror.com) , The Altoona Mirror

Altoona attorney Richard Serbin, since the beginning of the year, has filed notices of pending lawsuits in seven cases of suspected child sexual abuse involving former students at Johnstown’s Bishop McCort Catholic school.

The lawsuits stem from alleged abuse at the hands of Brother Stephen Baker who served at the school as an athletic trainer in the 1990s.

Baker was a Franciscan friar who lived at St. Bernadine Monastery in Hollidaysburg when he committed suicide Jan. 26.

He was the subject of child abuse investigations in Ohio, Minnesota and Pennsylvania.

Blair County President Judge Jolene G. Kopriva wants Serbin to file complaints in his cases, according to documents filed in the Blair County Courthouse.

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.

Iglesia de Polonia pide perdón por abuso sexual a menores en RD

POLONIA
Hoy

[Summary: Poland, a very Catholic country, faces a pedophilia scandal after Pope Francis dissmissed Josef Wesolowski as Vatican nuncio to the Dominican Republic. Wesolowski is alleged along with another Polish priestto have sexually abused minors in the Caribbean country. Although several cases of pedophilia have come to light in Poland, none has caused scandal as in the United States and Ireland. Bishop Wojciech Polak, secretary general of the Polish episcopate, on Friday said the situation is painful and difficult. He added that confidence in the church has suffered. He offered an apology and said it was “the least we can do.”]

VARSOVIA. AFP. La Iglesia de Polonia, país muy católico, enfrenta un escándalo de pedofilia después de que el papa Francisco destituyera de sus funciones al nuncio del Vaticano en República Dominicana, el polaco Josef Wesolowski, acusado junto a otro cura de la misma nacionalidad en misión en el país caribeño de abuso sexual a menores.

A pesar de que en los últimos años han salido a la luz varios casos de pedofilia en este país europeo, ninguno ha provocado un verdadero escándalo, al contrario de países como Estados Unidos o Irlanda, en donde casos de este tipo han sido ampliamente mediatizados y condenados.

El Secretario General del Episcopado polaco, monseñor Wojciech Polak, calificó el viernes a este caso de “doloroso y difícil”.

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.

ARLENE VIOLET – Vatican needs new moral compass over bank

RHODE ISLAND
The Valley Breeze

Let’s see if I have this right. The Pope’s butler allegedly leaked documents which show systemic corruption in the Vatican. He is arrested. A study commission is appointed to root out other transgressors who leaked the information about the apparent illegalities so they too can be prosecuted. Nobody who actually perpetrated any offenses is fired let alone charged with any offenses. Sounds just like secular governments, doesn’t it? Kill the messenger.

Of course, the Vatican response is more opprobrious given the sanctimoniousness of its pronouncements about “Vatileaks.” The Pope is quoted as condemning this “grave immoral act” since the people who wrote the memos thought that they were speaking freely in front of God. Would that this Pope got so lathered up both in his former position as chief investigator of the child sexual abuse claims and now as head of the church. Now, that scandal is what I call one of “grave immoral acts.”

What “crimes” did the butler commit? For the umpteenth time in Church history he revealed evidence of money laundering rules being violated. He exposed millions of dollars being blown on contracts which many consider are kickbacks. The head of the Vatican bank was another whistle-blower who begged not to be transferred out of his position but he was sent packing. It isn’t right to tell Granny in her pew about how her widow’s mite is spent. The sad irony is that this Vatican bank chief was trying to get the bank on the so-called “white list” of financially virtuous countries. The Vatican, a country unto itself, isn’t on the list because of its suspect practices. That’s quite an indictment for a religious institution.

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.

Vatican’s bank scandal-prone

UNITED STATES
The Norman Transcript

The Mankato (Minn.) Free Press
The Norman Transcript

NORMAN — It might be the ideal environment for a financial scandal: Millions of dollars in assets, a hands-off top authority with higher priorities and little background in finance, a culture of secrecy.

And thus it has been over the years with the Institute for Religious Works, the Vatican bank.

One of the mandates Pope Francis received when he ascended to the papacy was to clean up the increasingly corrupt Vatican bureaucracy, and the bank was high on the list of problems.

A milestone of sorts was reached this week when the bank, for the first time in its 71-year history, published its financial statements. The documents revealed net earnings in 2012 of nearly $117 million, with more than half that sum going to the pope for his charitable works.

The bank also said it won’t do nearly as well this year, in no small part because of the expense of establishing the financial controls the rest of the world expects of a major bank.

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Day students seek class action for suffering at native residential schools

CANADA
Times Colonist

THE CANADIAN PRESS
OCTOBER 4, 2013

KAMLOOPS, B.C. – Students who attended native residential schools in B.C., but did not live in residence, are seeking redress for their experiences.

Lawyers representing groups of former day scholars from the Tk’emlups and Sechelt bands say an application to certify a class action lawsuit will be filed in federal court sometime this month.

Chief Shane Gottfriedson of the Tk’emlups Band near Kamloops, B.C., says if the suit is approved, he’s hoping it will be joined by thousands of day students who were sent to residential schools operating across Canada for more than 120 years.

Once approved, any class action suit would not be heard until the fall of 2014, at the earliest.

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Abuse victims demand answers from Catholic Church over draft police agreement

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

[with video]

Posted Fri 4 Oct 2013

Sexual abuse victims have reacted with shock over revelations the church tried to strike an agreement with NSW police to withhold critical information about paedophile priests.

Transcript

EMMA ALBERICI: Abuse victims are demanding answers from the Catholic Church after explosive revelations were aired on this program last night.

They’ve been shocked to learn of allegations that the Church had tried to strike an agreement with police that would withhold critical information about paedophiles within its ranks.

The police deny the draft agreement was put into practice but a Freedom Of Information request shows the issue goes much further than the Catholic Church.

Jason Om reports.

JASON OM, REPORTER: The latest revelations about the way the Church has handled abuse cases has angered the people whose lives have been damaged.

JOHN ELLIS, ABUSE VICTIM: It’s always a sad day when something that you know in your heart but don’t want to believe is suddenly, comes to light as being true.

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Ex-assistant pastor jailed for sex abuse

MALAYSIA
The Star

Updated: Saturday October 5, 2013

A FORMER assistant pastor was sentenced to 16 months’ jail for making a 15-year-old girl from his church perform oral sex on him twice.

Both cannot be identified because of a gag order to protect the identification of the victim but the court heard that in one of those incidents, the offence was committed on church grounds and the other at a park in 2011.

The 46-year-old man, who is married with three children of his own, also faced a third charge of committing an obscene act that was considered during his sentencing.

The accused was in charge of the church’s youth group, and had organised programmes and activities for its younger members.

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Timeline of sex-abuse fallout in Catholic Church

UNITED STATES
Star Tribune

Article by: Seattle Times Updated: October 4, 2013

January 2002: Scandal breaks with reports that priests in Boston sexually abused hundreds of children over past decades; victims across nation later file lawsuits.

September 2003: Archdiocese of Boston agrees to pay $85 million to settle 552 clergy sex abuse claims. In December 2002 Pope John Paul II accepts resignation of Boston Archbishop Bernard Law after court documents suggested he routinely covered up allegations of abuse involving scores of priests, shuffling some from one parish to the next.

July 2004: Beset by abuse claims, Archdiocese of Portland, Ore., becomes first to seek bankruptcy protection.

September 2004: Diocese of Tucson (Arizona) seeks bankruptcy protection, followed in December by Diocese of Spokane.

2006-2011: Six more dioceses or archdioceses seek bankruptcy protection, including Milwaukee.
July 2007: Archdiocese of Los Angeles agrees to $660 million settlement with 508 people who accused priests of sexual abuse, the church’s biggest U.S. payout.

September 2007: Diocese of San Diego reaches $198.1 million settlement with childhood sexual abuse victims.

February 2009: Beset by continuing claims, Jesuit order in Northwest (Oregon) becomes first Catholic religious order to seek Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. In 2011, order agrees to pay $166.1 million to about 500 abuse victims as part of bankruptcy settlement. The abuses spanned decades and states, from remote Alaskan villages to boarding schools on Northwest tribal lands.

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Oct. 4 statement from archdiocese

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis released this statement Friday:

Over the past few days, there have been multiple media reports concerning the conduct of a number of priests going back many years. Unfortunately, these reports are incomplete and leave a false impression about the commitment of the Archdiocese to identify and address misconduct by priests. It is critical to understand that our standard is zero tolerance for sexual abuse of a minor or vulnerable adult and absolute accountability.

Since 2002 we have implemented a long list of policy and procedural reforms to clarify guidelines and strengthen enforcement. Some of the actions we have taken include completing more than 3,000 adult safe environment training sessions for approximately 70,000 adults; conducting 105,000 background checks on clergy, staff and volunteers; and providing over 100,000 children with age-appropriate lessons to help keep them safe.

As a further demonstration of our commitment to handling these matters aggressively and consistently, we have formed a special task force and charged them with conducting a full review of our policies and practices. When the report is complete, the findings and recommendations will be released publicly.

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October 4, 2013

Archdiocese at center of accusations, resignation, new investigation

MINNESOTA
Fox 9

by Karen Scullin

ST. PAUL, Minn. (KMSP) –
More accusations have been brought against the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, this time involving alleged possession of child pornography and a cover-up. On top of that, the Archbishop’s top deputy has resigned, and it appears a new criminal case is about to get underway.

Jeff Anderson, a St. Paul attorney representing victims of sexual abuse by clergy, was trying to get a judge to release a list of 33 names the Archdiocese has investigated for abuse when church lawyers suddenly presented a police report in court.

“My reaction was disbelief,” Anderson said. “The Archdiocese waved a police report suggesting that Father John Shelley was innocent and had been cleared by police.”

But the report details an investigation by St. Paul police in May of 2013 in which a former church employee — Jennifer Haselberger — called police. She told them church leaders failed to report “thousands of images” of child pornography found on the computer of Rev. John Shelley, a local priest. She even revealed there was a report done by a private investigation firm hired by the Archdiocese that confirms the findings.

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Police to examine pornography on priest’s hard drive

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

by Tom Scheck, Minnesota Public Radio
October 4, 2013

ST. PAUL, Minn. — St. Paul police have obtained a copy of the pornography-filled computer files belonging to a priest in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis.

Joe Ternus, of Hugo, Minn., gave police the files, which came from a computer that once belonged to the Rev. Jonathan Shelley. The files contained thousands of pornographic images, including some that may have included minors.

Earlier this week, police closed a child pornography investigation into Shelley for lack of evidence. St. Paul police said today that they will review the hard drive and decide whether to reopen a criminal case against him.

Ternus discovered the images 10 years ago after a parish official gave Ternus’ father Shelley’s computer. Ternus said he contacted St. Paul police today to tell them that he made a copy of a large part of Shelley’s hard drive before he turned over the computer to the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis.

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Former Shattuck-St. Mary’s teacher Lynn Seibel sentenced to prison for abusing students

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: DAVID CHANEN , Star Tribune Updated: October 4, 2013

Former Shattuck-St. Mary’s drama teacher Lynn Seibel was sentenced Friday to 52 months in prison for sexually abusing six male students.

According to criminal charges, he encouraged “naked dance parties,” showed students pornography and held group sex sessions with underage boys. He pleaded guilty in July.

Also Friday, a Seibel victim filed a lawsuit, the second of its kind, against the private boarding school in Faribault, Minn. The victim, who attended from 2000 to 2004, is identified as DOE YZ in the suit. The new Minnesota Child Victims Act passed in May eliminated the civil statute of limitations for child sexual abuse survivors and opened a three-year window for prior victims to come forward and hold their abusers and the institutions that may have allowed their abuse, accountable in court.

“What’s clear is that Seibel created a culture of coercion, confusion and sexual perversion,” said Doe YZ’s attorney, Jeff Anderson. “What’s just as clear is that many around and at the top of Shattuck-St. Mary’s, wittingly or unwittingly, permitted Seibel’s exploitation of students. We are grateful to all of the survivors who have courageously stepped forward to hold this man and institution accountable for their actions.”

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Minnesota archdiocese accused of withholding child porn from police

MINNESOTA
National Catholic Reporter

Joe Winter | Oct. 4, 2013

ST. PAUL, MINN. The archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis has been accused of withholding from police images of child pornography that were on a priest’s laptop, deciding instead to place the evidence in a church-owned vault.

The second-in-charge at the archdiocese, Fr. Peter Laird, who was its vicar general and moderator of the Curia, resigned Thursday after the information from a St. Paul police report was released in court during a separate matter involving child-sex charges. According to the report, Laird appears to have had a role in keeping the information suppressed.

About 2,300 images have been found, according to the report. A forensics expert hired by the archdiocese said he “was instructed to view only some of the (computer’s) contents,” the police report adds.

The laptop, owned by Fr. Jonathan Shelley, was later sold at a rummage sale, and the new owner discovered the images and alerted the archdiocese in about 2003, the police report says. The images were soon secured in the vault, the report states.

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Priest raped and molested two young boys …

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

Priest raped and molested two young boys over almost two decades – and police say there could be MORE victims

By KIERAN CORCORAN

A former priest who raped and molested two boys for almost two decades has been jailed for 13 years.

Phillip Challis, 52, admitted 17 sexual offences carried out between 1991 and 2009 while he was a priest in Merton, southwest London.

He pleaded guilty to crimes including raping a child, indecent assault, attempted rape and taking indecent photographs.

Challis was caught by child abuse investigators in January after a 17-year-old boy came forward to say he had been abused by Challis since he was eight.

Police later found out that Challis had also abused a second male victim, who is now 29, since he was seven years old.

But a senior officer in the Metropolitan police today said it was ‘entirely possible’ that Challis abused more than two people.

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Att’y Responds To Latest Allegations Against Catholic Church

MINNESOTA
CBS Minnesota

MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO/AP) – The top deputy at the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis resigned Thursday amid fresh criticism of how top church officials handled cases of priests accused of sexual abuse.

The archdiocese announced the Rev. Peter Laird’s resignation as vicar general in a statement on its website. His departure follows a report by Minnesota Public Radio News last week documenting how church leaders including Laird knew about a long record of sexual misconduct by the Rev. Curtis Wehmeyer but promoted him anyway. Wehmeyer is now in prison for sexually abusing two boys and possessing child pornography.

Jeff Anderson works with victims of sexual abuse. He says the latest allegations against the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis are not surprising.

A former canon lawyer with the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis says the last straw before she quit was how officials refused to take action when she discovered pornography on CDs in files on a priest up for promotion.

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Ohio priest convicted of abuse wants acquittal

OHIO
Greenwich Times

CINCINNATI (AP) — An Ohio priest found guilty of taking a 10-year-old boy to West Virginia for sex is asking a federal judge to throw out the verdict or give him a new trial.

In a court filing Friday, attorneys for Robert Poandl (POH’-andel) argue that the jury verdict on Sept. 20 was the result of “passion and emotion” and that no rational trier of fact would have found the priest guilty.

Prosecutors told jurors that Poandl took the boy to Spencer, W.Va., in August 1991 and raped him while visiting a church there.

Poandl’s attorneys argued at trial and in Friday’s court document that the allegations are false and that the boy wasn’t even on the trip.

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MN – Prosecutor to investigate MN clergy sex crimes, SNAP responds

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, October 4, 2013

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

We are grateful that a Minnesota prosecutor is investigating the alarming Fr. Jonathan P. Shelley case, in which several high ranking Twin Cities Catholic officials kept thousands of images of child pornography on a priest’s computer were kept for a decade from law enforcement. We hope other county prosecutors in Minnesota open similar investigations into clergy sex crimes and cover ups in Minnesota.

[Star Tribune]

We agree that local and federal prosecutors should work together. In order to pierce the extraordinary secrecy of top church staff, the help of local, state and federal authorities and statutes will be critical.

It’s just not right for authorities to sit back and let complicit officials hide crimes until an arbitrary deadline passes, then shrug their shoulders and walk away. Serious, on-going recklessness that endangers children requires an aggressive response by law enforcement.

In recent years, we’ve seen more police and prosecutors become more assertive and creative in pursuing even older cases of child sex crimes and cover ups. It’s a welcome trend. And it’s obviously a necessary trend if there’s even a chance of getting secretive, self-serving institutions to ever change their decades-old patterns of putting their interests above the safety of youngsters.

Law enforcement, however, can only do so much. Regular citizens – brave individuals like Jennifer Haselberger and Joe Ternus – must also step up. They must overcome their fears and pick up the phone and share every tidbit of information and suspicion they have heard about clergy sexual misdeeds. They must put worries about their parish or their archdiocese aside and put the well-being of children first.

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Chronicle of haunted dreams

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

October 5, 2013

Gerard Windsor

David Marr paints a devastating portrait of a powerbroker he sees as the enemy.

George Pell refused to speak with David Marr for this Quarterly Essay. It was not a wise move. If you have any attractive elements in your personality, and many testify that Pell does have them, an intimate conversation with an enemy can only have a softening impact.

Witness Marr’s surprising empathy with Tony Abbott in his last Quarterly Essay. Abbott had been ready to chat. There is no doubt that Marr sees Pell as an enemy. His 2000 book, The High Price of Heaven, made clear his antipathy to religion, above all in the form of the Catholic Church. Here Marr’s colours are nailed to the mast even in the miniature on the cover: Pell, prince of the church, enthroned, bathed in Renaissance gold – never a benign look for a prelate. But Marr is also a professional. In this instance, he’s the professional lawyer as much as the journalist.

The essay must be something of a dry run for the Royal Commission, and it makes very painful reading. Evil men and their orgies of destruction of young lives occupy much of its space, and it is more a forensic piling-up of evidence than any artistically choreographed revelation. Centrally, it’s an indictment of Pell for blind, evasive, flint-hearted reactions to reports of paedophilia by priests who were his responsibility. For good measure, there is also a ready summary of the case brought against Pell by two former altar boys turned criminals, a case where the outcome was a technical draw.

Has a more devastating portrait of a ”respectable”, living, non-politician, Australian public figure ever been published? Although Marr concentrates on Pell’s role in the abuse scandal, the most novel element of The Prince is a probing of the personality that began life in a pub in Ballarat.

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The Prince: Faith, Abuse and George Pell

AUSTRALIA
Quarterly Essay

Quarterly Essay 51
The Prince: Faith, Abuse and George Pell
David Marr

Release Date:
September 2013
Our Price:
$19.99
ISBN:
9781863956161

The leading Catholic in the nation and spiritual adviser to Tony Abbott, Cardinal George Pell has played a key role in the greatest challenge to face his church for centuries: the scandal of child sex abuse by priests.

In The Prince, David Marr investigates the man and his career: how did he rise through the ranks? What does he stand for? How does he wield his authority? How much has he shaped his church and Australia? How has he handled the scandal?

Marr reveals a cleric at ease with power and aggressive in asserting the prerogatives of the Vatican. His account of Pell’s career focuses on his response as a man, a priest, an archbishop and prince of the church to the scandal that has engulfed the Catholic world in the last thirty years. This is the story of a cleric slow to see what was happening around him; torn by the contest between his church and its victims; and slow to realise that the Catholic Church cannot, in the end, escape secular scrutiny.

The Prince is an arresting portrait of faith, loyalty and ambition, set against a backdrop of terrible suffering and an ancient institution in turmoil.

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Washington County attorney opens investigation of priest

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

KEVIN GILES and DAN BROWNING , Star Tribune staff writers Updated: October 4, 2013

Pete Orput calls for search into evidence from case of pornography on computer; Jeff Anderson calls for full-scale investigation.

The Washington County attorney has opened an investigation into allegations that an area Catholic priest was in possession of child pornography.

County Attorney Pete Orput said Friday that he had assigned two attorneys in his office “to take a hard look” at potential criminal charges against the priest related to his presence in Hugo, Mahtomedi, Stillwater and Bayport from 1995 to 2012

“There are no sacred institutions when it comes to criminal activity,” Orput said.

The allegations, which emerged as a police report in a St. Paul courtroom Thursday, say Catholic church officials knew the priest had been in possession of child pornography.

Orput said it was too early to say what charges, if any, might result from the investigation. Nobody claiming to be a victim had come forward in Washington County, he said, and attorneys would need to establish evidence of child pornography.

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Priest Abuse Survivor Group Lashes Out at Diocese after St. Aloysius Priest Sexting “Covered u

NEW JERSEY
Ocean Signal

JACKSON-David Clohessy, the director of the Chicago based Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests (SNAP) lashed out against the Trenton Catholic Diocese and Bishop David M. O’Connell for the handling of former St. Aloysius priest, Father Matthew Riedlinger.

A message posted on the SNAP website by Clohessy read:

We firmly believe that Fr. Matthew Riedlinger is being suspended now only because these brave victims spoke up and because O’Connell fears that media attention will bring even more victims forward.

Now is not the time for complacency. The root cause of this crisis remains unaddressed – the obsession by Catholic officials to protect one another and their reputations, instead of protecting innocent kids and vulnerable adults. Belatedly and grudgingly suspending just one sexually troubled and abusive cleric won’t fix this on-going and disturbing scandal.

We hope that every single person who saw, suspected or suffered misdeeds or crimes by Fr. Riedlinger – or any other Trenton cleric – will find the courage and strength to step forward. That’s how innocent kids and vulnerable adults are protected, secrets are exposed and cover ups are deterred.

SNAP was founded in 1988 by Barabara Blaine after living for years after being abused as an 8th grader by a Toledo, Ohio priest. Her calls to the Toledo bishop fell on deaf ears, so she began reaching out and networking with other victims of abuse at the hands of religious leaders.

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Raynes Park priest jailed for sex attacks on boys aged eight and seven

UNITED KINGDOM
Your Local Guardian

By Nick Hitchens, Assistant Editor

A former priest who raped and sexually abused boys as young as seven has been jailed for 13 years.

Phillip Challis of Meadow Close Raynes Park was sentenced at Kingston Crown Court earlier today after pleading guilty at an earlier hearing in August.

In total the 52-year-old confessed to 17 charges of historical sexual assault, including two rapes on a child under 13, attempted rapes and sexual assaults.

The court heard police were first tipped off about Challis when the Child Abuse Investigation Team at Barnes received an allegation from a 17-year-old boy of abuse dating back to when the victim was eight.

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Top deputy at Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis resigns

MINNESOTA
Fox 9

posted by Mike Durkin

ST. PAUL, Minn. (KMSP) –
The top deputy at the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis resigned Thursday amid new criticism of how the church mishandled alleged sexual abuse by priests.

Minnesota Public Radio reports church leaders, including Rev. Peter Laird, knew about sexual misconduct by St. Paul Rev. Curtis Wehmeyer, but promoted him anyway.

Wehmeyer is now in prison for abusing two boys and possessing child pornography.

The Archdiocese says Laird’s resignation has nothing to do with the sexual abuse reports or the Wehmeyer case.

“When you’re caught doing wrong, you have two choices,” said a statement from Bob Schwiderski, Minnesota Director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP). “You can stop doing wrong. Or you can try even harder to hide your wrongdoing. Twin Cities’ Catholic officials are doing the latter.”

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Polish priest denies abusing boys as Dominican indictment proceeds: EFE

POLAND
Dominican Today

Warsaw.- Polish priest Wojciech Gil, charged with sexually abusing at least 15 boys in the Dominican Republic, on Friday denied the accusations, and said his only fault was placing too much trust on the youngsters, EFE reports.

“I haven’t inflicted any harm on the children, and if I must apologize it’s for my naiveté in trusting these people too much,” said the prelate by phone to Polish TVP Info.

Gil (Padre Alberto) remains with his family in Poland since the allegations of the abuse of the boys surfaced, and for now doesn’t intend to return to the Dominican Republic, where he headed the parish at the central mountain town of Juncalito.

In addition to Gil, Polish bishop and former Vatican envoy to the Dominican Republic Jozef Wesolowski, former apostolic nuncio, is also accused of sexually abusing of boys on the island.

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Former archdiocese official says church leaders refused to take action when she found porn

MINNESOTA
The Republic

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
October 04, 2013

ST. PAUL, Minnesota — A former canon lawyer with the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis says the last straw before she quit was how officials refused to take action when she discovered pornography on CDs in files on a priest up for promotion.

Jennifer Haselberger tells Minnesota Public Radio (http://bit.ly/19pDZvw ) some images appeared to show boys as young as 12 engaged in sex. They came from a computer that belonged to the Rev. Jonathan Shelley. She says Archbishop John Nienstedt’s top deputy, the Rev. Peter Laird, ordered her off the case and to turn over the file box. She contacted authorities instead.

Police concluded the CDs showed only adult pornography and closed the investigation.

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IL – Cardinal George insults Catholics with spurious claim, SNAP responds

CHICAGO (IL)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, Oct. 4, 2012

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314 566 9790, SNAPclohessy@aol.com )

Cardinal Francis George is being deliberately deceitful and insulting the intelligence of Chicago Catholic officials. He claims that he can’t stop a priest from counseling grieving adults and kids for a police department.

Specifically, through one of his public relations staffers, that he “has no authority to remove” Fr. Robert Stepek from his job in Burbank.

Cardinal George can, of course, assign a priest to all kinds of jobs – in a parish, school, hospital, cemetery or chancery office. But he says he can’t prevent a priest from working in a secular job. Nonsense.

He’s a Cardinal. He heads the third largest archdiocese in America. He’s the former head of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops. He helps pick the pope. But despite all this, in reality, he would have us believe that he’s powerless over one of his own priests. This defies common sense.

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MN – Victims “not impressed” with Catholic official’s resignation

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, Oct. 3, 2013

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314 566 9790, SNAPclohessy@aol.com )

The resignation of the St. Paul-Minneapolis archdiocesan vicar general is pure public relations. It’s a desperate move to reassure justifiably outraged Catholics. But it’s not real reform.

The problem starts at the top and is rampant throughout the archdiocesan hierarchy – a long-standing, deeply -rooted and on-going obsession with preserving the reputations of clerics, not the safety of kids.

We are convinced that everything the vicar general did in the Fr. Curtis Wehmeyer case was done with the archbishop’s input and approval.

So this is not progress. If Archbishop Nienstadt fired Msgr. Laird – or clearly demoted or disciplined him – that might be progress. But church officials have long resigned when the heat becomes too intense and their successors have acted in the same irresponsible ways in clergy sex abuse and cover up cases.

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Council of Cardinals; pope interviews; Assisi; Francis the mystic; and war on Christians

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

John L. Allen Jr. | Oct. 4, 2013 All Things Catholic

I’ve been covering the Vatican for almost 20 years, and aside from the two conclaves during that span, I’d be hard-pressed to recall many weeks with more breaking news than what we experienced the last seven days.

After giving a talk for the Cushwa Center at the University of Notre Dame on Monday night, I’ve been in Rome following events. Here’s a tick-tock of what we’ve seen:

* On Monday, Pope Francis presided over a consistory of cardinals that set April 27, Divine Mercy Sunday, as the date for the canonizations of Popes John Paul II and John XXIII. The sainthood double-play is expected to bring more people to Rome than for any event since the funeral Mass of John Paul II in 2005.
* In that same consistory, Francis took the temperature of the cardinals about the idea of setting up national and regional tribunals around the world to handle sex abuse cases. It’s an idea that’s been around a while, reflecting the fact that many dioceses, especially in the developing world, don’t have the resources or expertise to process these cases effectively. If Francis follows through, it would mark his first concrete act of reform on the sex abuse front.
* Also on Monday, Francis issued a chirograph, or legal document, formally establishing his new Council of Cardinals as a permanent advisory body and giving himself latitude to add members. In effect, it was a way of underlining how much importance the pope attaches to the group, informally dubbed the “G-8.”

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FISCALÍA DE PUERTO NATALES INVESTIGA A PRESBÍTERO POR DENUNCIA DE ABUSO SEXUAL

CHILE
Radio Polar

El fiscal Daniel Soto señalo que el colegio Salesianos Monseñor Fagnano de Puerto Natales, el día miércoles 2 de octubre de 2013, formulo una denuncia por el presunto delito de abuso sexual cometido en dicho colegio, en razón de lo anterior se iniciaron las primeras diligencias, lo primero de todo acoger a la victima resguardar su identidad y coordinar las primeras diligencias con personal de la sección de investigaciones policiales de Carabineros de Chile de la Segunda Comisaria Puerto Natales, quienes trabajaran junto a la fiscalía local con respecto a esta materia, para la fiscalía lo más relevante la mantención de discreción en cuanto a la identidad de las personas involucradas, se entiende que los actos preliminares de la investigación darán luces de que es lo que se resolverá a futuro, las víctimas se encuentran derivadas a la unidad de víctimas de la fiscalía.

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Investigan a cura por abuso sexual

CHILE
El Pinguino

[Summary: The prosecutor is to determine if priest Jose Quinteros Martinez has committed sexual abuse against a minor. He is a member of the Congregación Salesiana de Última Esperanza.]

Las indagaciones de la fiscalía apuntan a determinar si José Quinteros Martínez incurrió en conductas impropias constitutivas de delito en contra de una menor de edad.

La Fiscalía de Última Esperanza inició una investigación en contra de un sacerdote, miembro de la Congregación Salesiana de Última Esperanza, denunciado por la dirección del Liceo Monseñor Fagnano por su presunta responsabilidad en un delito de índole sexual en contra de una menor, estudiante de dicha casa de estudios.

La denuncia ingresó a la fiscalía de esa provincia el día miércoles y fue recibida por el fiscal adjunto subrogante del Ministerio Público, Daniel Soto, quien al ser consultado por el hecho manifestó que “efectivamente, la dirección del Colegio Salesiano Monseñor Fagnano realizó ante esta fiscalía la denuncia que dice relación con la participación de un presbítero, en un hecho constitutivo de delito sexual, que afectó a una menor de edad, mayor de 14 y menor de 18 años, estudiante de dicho establecimiento educacional”, indicó.

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MN – Twin Cities priest scandal is “worst yet,” SNAP says

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, Oct. 4, 2013

Statement by Bob Schwiderski of Wayzata, Minnesota Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( skibrs@q.com , 952 471 3422 )

A police report says that top officials at the St. Paul-Minneapolis archdiocese withheld evidence of child porn and now the alleged sex offender can’t be criminally charged.

[Pioneer Press]

And for a decade, several archdiocesan staffers hid the alleged child porn from parents, parishioners and the public.

Both moves are extraordinarily irresponsible and kept children at risk. Both moves prove that, in the Catholic hierarchy, when it comes to clergy sex crimes and cover ups, little has changed.

Jaded Catholic and citizens who are inclined to say “Ho hum, another Catholic sex scandal” should pay close attention here. This case is different. This is the worst case in Minnesota in more than a decade.

Because several Catholic officials protected him, a priest who had thousands of images of child porn and might otherwise have spent the last decade in prison won’t go to prison. Every day of this decade of deliberate deceit, secrecy and recklessness has happened AFTER America’s Catholic bishops solemnly pledged to be “open and transparent” about clergy sex crimes.

Like similar cases in Kansas City (involving Bishop Robert Finn) and Philadelphia (involving Msgr. William Lynn), this case shows that high-ranking Catholic officials continue to obsess with protecting themselves and their reputations instead of protecting innocent kids and vulnerable adults.

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VT, AL – Sex offender wins controversial ruling

VERMONT/NEW YORK
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

He lived in Vermont and Birmingham suburb & won decision in New York

For immediate release: Friday, Oct. 4

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314 566 9790, SNAPclohessy@aol.com )

A convicted sex offender who lived in Vermont has won a court ruling in New York that means he won’t have to submit to a test to determine whether he’s attracted to underage girls. He is David McLaurin.

[Boston.com]

Everyone, even pedophiles, deserves his humanity. But the humanity of a predator doesn’t trump the humanity of innocent kids.

Those who oppose this test should propose alternative ways to protect kids from predators. One in four girls and one in eight boys will be sexually assaulted. Given these horrific numbers, and the devastating life-long effects of childhood sexual abuse, something must change. We as a society must re-examine some of our archaic notions if we are to do more to safeguard the vulnerable.

This test may seem invasive to adults. But raping and sodomizing children is indeed far more invasive, and far more hurtful.

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Royal Commission heads to Melbourne, Perth

AUSTRALIA
9 News

Survivors of child sex abuse in Australian institutions will be able tell their tales during Royal Commission hearings in Melbourne and Perth next week.

Commissioners will be in Melbourne from Monday for more face-to-face private sessions with abuse survivors, and from Tuesday in Perth.

Royal Commission chief executive officer Janette Dines says the private sessions are helping the commissioners understand the extent of child sex abuse inside the nation’s institutions.

“We know that for many of the victims sharing their story with the commission is very hard. But, equally, the opportunity to tell their story has proved beneficial for many,” she said.

Ms Dines said trained counsellors are available to provide immediate support to anyone in distress.

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Top deputy of archdiocese resigns amidst scandal

MINNESOTA
KARE 11

ST. PAUL, Minn. – The top deputy of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis resigned his post Thursday as concerns grow over the church’s approach to sex abuse cases involving clergy.

The Rev. Peter Laird explained his sudden departure as vicar general in a statement posted on the archdiocese’s website Thursday afternoon.

“Over the last few years, this Archdiocese has made significant progress in many areas, including how we have strengthened policies and practices regarding clergy misconduct,” Laird said in the statement. “I am hopeful my decision to step aside at this time, along with the formation of a new task force can help repair the trust of many, especially the victims of abuse.”

Archdiocese leaders, staff and priests, he added, “are sincerely committed to proactively addressing these difficult issues.”

Laird was identified in a Sept. 23 MPR News story detailing how the archdiocese knew of the sexual misbehavior of a priest, Fr. Curtis Wehmeyer, yet kept him in the ministry.

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COUNCIL OF CARDINALS TO MEET FROM 3 TO 5 DECEMBER

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 4 October 2013 (VIS) – The first meeting of the Council of Cardinals ended yesterday afternoon, according to a communique from the Holy See Press Office.

It was agreed that the next meeting of the Council will take place from 3 to 5 December, to be followed by third meeting in February 2014. This will enable the work of the Council – especially in this initial phase – to proceed at a rapid pace.

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Victims call for Papal audience

NORTHERN IRELAND
Derry Journal

A former Derry homeboy is hopeful of an audience with Pope Francis after the Vatican confirmed that his request was forwarded to the Holy Father.

Brian Doherty, who has talked openly about being abused in the Termonbacca Home for Boys under the care of the Sisters of Nazareth, requested an audience with the Holy Father on behalf of Survivors and Victims of Institutional Abuse (Savia) group.

He told the Journal that he had asked that a large delegation made up of people who suffered abuse while in Catholic-run institutions be granted a meeting with the Pontiff either in the Vatican or in Ireland.

Brian told the ‘Journal’: “I would hope that we could get a group of around 60 people to meet the Pope but even if a smaller number is permitted that would be acceptable. We’ve written letters to the Vatican in the past and never even received an acknowledgment, so we’re hopeful that something will come of it this time around.”

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Hearing held on harassment charges against Berlin resident

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Berlin Daily Sun

By Debra Thornblad

A hearing on charges that a Berlin resident made harassing phone calls to the president of the Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights took the better part of the day in Lancaster District Court Tuesday.

The hearing was continued while Lancaster District Court Judge Paul Desjardins considers a motion to dismiss filed by the defendant, Frank LaFerriere, 53, of Berlin.

LaFerriere is charged with three counts of harassment against William Donohue, who heads the non-profit Catholic advocacy organization based in New York City. LaFerriere has a pending lawsuit against the Catholic Church for sexual assaults that he says happened when he was 14 and 15.

The three harassment complaints allege LaFerriere called Donohue’s cell phone in January and February of this year, leaving what Donohue described as “abusive, annoying and threatening” messages.

LaFerriere was arrested on one count of harassment on February 22 and two other counts were added on June 28.

Donohue was the first witness on the stand. He described himself as a writer and publisher of a blog and several books and said he has also appeared on several television and radio programs. He agreed under cross examination that he had taken some positions on issues involving the Catholic Church for which he had been criticized and that he was a public person who had put himself and his views “out there.”

Donohue estimated that from December 2011 to early this year he had received about 150 calls from LaFerriere, who identified himself in some of the calls. Donohue started taping the calls in March 2012 and also contacted New York City police, who thought it might be a hate crime and recommended a bodyguard. New York police opened an investigation and contacted Berlin police, who filed the complaints. …

If Desjardins denies the motion to dismiss, the case will continue on Nov. 22 at 1 p.m. LaFerriere is expected to testify if that happens.

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Abogado de cura O’Reilly confiado en que juicio se “caerá” por supuesta falta de pruebas

CHILE
Bio Bio

El abogado defensor del sacerdote John O’Reilly, Luis Hermosilla, aseguró a Radio Bío Bío que la causa que investiga el Ministerio Público por abusos sexuales contra dos alumnas del Colegio Cumbres de Las Condes, se “caerá” al igual que el caso del ejecutivo del Banco Central.

En tanto, la Fiscalía Oriente estableció que será la justicia la que determinará si es que eventualmente hay falta de pruebas para culpar de los delitos al Legionario de Cristo.

Luego que la jueza Daniela Guerrero rechazara la solicitud de Luis Hermosilla para conocer la identidad de cinco testigos protegidos en la causa, el representante del religioso aseguró que este caso se caerá al igual que el del gerente del Banco Central, Enrique Orellana, quien fue declarado inocente -en un tercer juicio oral- por la violación a sus tres hijas.

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Graphic pedophilia ‘evidence’ mounts against Polish priest

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
Dominican Today

Santiago.- The months-long investigation by the Santiago Office of the Prosecutor and the analysis of computer files seized from Polish priest Wojciech Gil found that the Catholic prelate abused at least 15 boys.

Among the photos found figure the priest masturbating one of the minors, as well as other aberrant poses.

Most of the minors in the Catholic priest’s photos are from the Santiago province hamlet of Juncalito, near the Central Mountain town of Janico. Many appear dressed in women’s undergarments also seized during raids conduced just days after the scandal broke.

“We’ve found in the hard disks, a laptop, DVD, at least 14 or 15 children in the hundreds of photos that he kept, who are from Juncalito and were forced to put on girls underwear,” said a source quoted by citysantiago.com. A total of 30 pieces were found and of these 10 were small thongs and another eight were tights.

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Poland’s church will not pay child sex victims

POLAND
The Kansas City Star

October 4
The Associated Press

WARSAW, Poland — A spokesman for Poland’s Catholic Church says it will not pay compensation

The Rev. Jozef Kloch said in comments aired by Polish Radio 1 on Friday that the responsibility for compensation lies with the perpetrator.

Kloch was reacting to a 200,000 zlotys ($64,000) claim made by a 25-year-old victim against his parish and local church authorities after they failed to reach a settlement.

Kloch says “the Church will not pay compensation to victims of pedophile priests. The wrongdoer should do it.”

Some 27 priests have been convicted in Poland of abusing children. Authorities in the Dominican Republic are investigating allegations that two Polish priests there, including a Vatican envoy, abused boys.

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Open To Thinking: The Vatican Bank Follies

UNITED STATES
Windy City Times

by Nick Patricca
2013-10-02

Institute for the Works of Religion, the proper name for ‘The Vatican Bank,’ was created in June 1942 by Pope Pius 12 to deal with the money crises caused by WW2, to prepare for post-war recovery efforts, and to work against communist takeovers, especially in Italy and France.

The IOR ( its Italian acronym ) is not a division of the Vatican City State; nor is it an office of the Catholic Church’s organizational and curial structures. It is an independent ‘charitable institute,’ run by a board of supervisors ( usually laymen ), overseen by a committee of cardinals under papal direction.

The principal purpose of the IOR is to promote acts of charity inspired by the Christian faith.

Of course, the Vatican had been in the banking business for a very long time prior to 1942. During the Avignon Papacy ( 1309—1378 ), bereft of its financial base in Rome and in the Papal States and ever at odds with Kings and Emperors, the papacy developed an extensive banking system in order to support its centralization of church authority and administration and to free itself from secular control, thus playing a crucial role in the rapid rise of banking in our modern sense.

One would think that with so much experience with money, power, and organization, the papacy would be competent to run a bank. Nothing could be farther from the truth. The administration of the Vatican Bank has been so unbelievably sordid and incompetent that it defies a rational presentation, giving rise to conspiracy theories ( IN HIS NAME, Yallop, 1984 ) and conspiracy theories about conspiracy theories ( A THIEF IN THE NIGHT, Cornwell, 1989 ).

THE CHICAGO CONNECTION. Although the Vatican is rich in real property holdings and art treasures, it is seriously and chronically short of cash. In 1032 the Norse King Canute imposed a tax ( Peter’s Pence ) upon all his subjects in the British Isles to assist the pope. This tax quickly developed into an independent revenue-stream for the direct support of the reigning pope and his projects, such as, protecting pilgrims and building St Peter’s Basilica. Among the biggest contributors of all time to the Vatican were Cardinal Spellman ( + December, 1967 ) of New York and Cardinal Cody ( + April 1982 ) of Chicago, giving these donors enormous clout with the pope. This clout led to the appointment of Archbishop Paul Marcinkus ( + February 2006 ) of Cicero, Illinois as president of the Vatican Bank for 18 years from 1971 to 1989. ( It is alleged that Marcinkus and Cody made frequent trips between Chicago and Rome carrying suitcases full of cash. )

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Latest Action Alert: October 2nd, 2013

MASSACHUSETTS
Reform the Statutes of Limitations on Child Sex Abuse

MA Action Alert: Call (or fax) MA Sen. and House Leaders to Get Window Bill, Bill H. 1455 (& Senate Bill S.633), out of the Joint Judiciary Committee

Hon. Robert A. DeLeo
Speaker of the House
State House, Room 356
Boston, MA 02133
Phone: 617-722-2500
Fax: 617-722-2008

District Office

220 Beach Street
Revere, MA 02151
Phone: 781-289-8965
Fax: 781-289-0582

Hon. Therese Murray
President of the Senate
State House, Suite 332
Boston, MA 02133
Phone: 617-722-1500
Fax: 617-248-3840
District Office
10 Cordage Park Circle
Room 229
Plymouth, MA 02360
Phone: 508-746-9332
Fax: 508-746-4910

Urge leadership to protect kids — not the institutions that endanger them!
P.S. Do not email.

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The Catholic Labyrinth

UNITED STATES
Chris Castaldo

Chris Castaldo / Friday, October 4th, 2013

Peter McDonough. The Catholic Labyrinth: Power, Apathy, and a Passion for Reform in the American Church. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2013. 408 pp. $29.95. cover

A maze is a complex route offering a choice of directions. A labyrinth, by contrast, typically has a single route that leads you from an exterior entrance point to the center. In other words, unlike mazes, labyrinths offer an unambiguous and simple path. Whether Peter McDonough intended to describe The Catholic Labyrinth as a “simple” path is rather doubtful. But ironically, it may actually be an appropriate description.

McDonough, professor emeritus of political science at Arizona State University, is a two-time Fulbright fellow who has spent more than a little time analyzing the history of Catholicism. He’s perhaps best known for his volume on the Society of Jesus, Passionate Uncertainty: Inside the American Jesuits. Writing from a left-of-center perspective, McDonough is a cultural exegete unafraid to critique the unpleasant dimensions of religious life. This book is no exception. However, it is not a screed, as McDonough explains:

The purpose [of this book] is neither to defend nor to indict the church. “Power” and “apathy” take up two-thirds of the subtitle to signal that “a passion for reform” constitutes just one among several positions in American Catholicism—and not an especially homogeneous one at that. My question is why the different strategies emerged in the first place and, second, how they condition the future of the church. (9)

The Catholic Labyrinth presents itself as a behind-the-scenes look at the battle to achieve reform within the Catholic Church. The investigation focuses on numerous challenges facing contemporary Catholicism in America: for example, the sexual abuse scandals, a marked decline in attendance and vocations to the priesthood, and the closing of parishes and parochial schools. Each of these phenomena is influenced by the “Matrix of American Catholicism”—that is, the network of religious traditions, institutions, cultural trends, organizational hierarchy, and power brokers responsible for leading the American church. On this theme, the opening chapters lay valuable groundwork for understanding how recent attempts at aggiornamento (updating or reform of the church) have progressed.

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Group demands pastor’s ouster from police

CHICAGO (IL)
Southtown Star

By Mike Nolan mnolan@southtownstar.com October 3, 2013

A group that represents victims of clergy abuse is calling on the Archdiocese of Chicago to remove the Rev. Robert Stepek from a job he’s held for nearly seven years as a police department counselor in Burbank.

Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests President Barbara Blaine, speaking Thursday outside the archdiocese offices, said Stepek, former pastor at St. Albert the Great Church in Burbank, “should not be in a position of power and authority over people.”

At least three men have accused Stepek of sexually abusing them when they were boys, and the archdiocese previously had found credible the allegations of two brothers who alleged they were abused by Stepek when he was at St. Symphorosa Church in Chicago in the early 1980s.

The archdiocese removed Stepek from the ministry at St. Albert in November 2006 while the allegations were being investigated. The priest filed a defamation lawsuit against the brothers, claiming they were fabricating their allegations in hopes of a large cash payouts.

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Trenton Diocese suspends priest at center of sexting scandal

NEW JERSEY
Courier-Post

TRENTON — The leader of the Diocese of Trenton on Thursday suspended a priest at the center of a sexting scandal.

The Rev. Matthew Riedlinger now is barred “from all priestly ministry, including presenting himself as a priest or wearing clerical garb,” the diocese said in a statement. Riedlinger is accused of sexting with a man he reportedly thought was a 16-year-old boy.

Bishop David O’Connell called Riedlinger’s actions a “betrayal of trust and confidence.” In a previous statement, the diocese said Riedlinger had taken an indefinite leave of absence Sept. 23.

A victim-advocacy group, the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, has criticized the diocese for waiting a year to tell parishioners why it removed Riedlinger from St. Aloysius Church in Jackson, Ocean County.

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CARDINAL DOLAN JOINS STEVEN COLBERT, LINDBERGH HIGH’S GAY STRAIGHT ALLIANCE

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Berger’s Beat

In less than two weeks, Cardinal Tim Dolan will join Steven Colbert of “Comedy Central’ at the annual Al Smith Dinner – the white-tie roast at N.Y.C’s Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. For now, Cardinal Dolan is coming under fire from SNAP for his “secrecy” in a clergy child sex case that surfaced this week in Manhattan. Dolan admits waiting months to oust a deacon, Al Mazza, from his post because of substantial child sex abuse allegations. And in a letter to parishioners and in a news release, Dolan urges people who have information about the alleged child molester to call church officials instead of law enforcement. .

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Church hid priest’s pornography from police, parishioners for years

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

[with audio]

By Madeleine Baran and Mike Cronin, Minnesota Public Radio
October 4, 2013

Upset that her superiors had refused to take action, a former church official reported to police that leaders of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis had kept secret for eight years images of pornograpy — some of it showing children — belonging to one of its priests.

Jennifer Haselberger, the archdiocese’s former chancellor for canonical affairs, marched the images she’d found into the offices of one church leader after another in May 2012. But none responded.

The last straw for Haselberger came after she provided Archbishop John Nienstedt with copies of some of the images she had discovered in the archdiocese’s files on the Rev. Jonathan Shelley, 52. She said the photos showed boys performing oral sex. The Rev. Peter Laird, the archdiocese’s vicar general at the time, Nienstedt’s deputy, ordered her to hand over the pornographic images.

“I did as I was told,” said Haselberger, who resigned in April. “I went back to my office. I closed the door and I called Ramsey County.”

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Archdiocese’s Vicar General Peter Laird resigns amid court allegations

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 10/04/2013

The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis said Thursday the Rev. Peter Laird has resigned as vicar general and moderator of the curia.

In that role, he assisted the archbishop in the general care and administration of the archdiocese.

Laird’s departure came the same day allegations emerged in a court hearing that the archdiocese possessed images of child pornography from the computer of Hugo priest Jonathan Shelley, and 10 days after a Minnesota Public Radio news report about information the archdiocese possessed but did not give to police regarding convicted St. Paul priest Curtis Wehmeyer’s sexual behavior.

“Father Laird’s decision to resign was unexpected and was his decision alone. He did nothing improper,” said James Accurso, spokesman for the archdiocese. “This is an opportunity for a fresh start in leadership.”

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ROYAL COMMISSION RETURNS TO PERTH …

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

ROYAL COMMISSION RETURNS TO PERTH TO HEAR MORE STORIES FROM SURVIVORS OF INSTITUTIONAL CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse will hold more face-to-face private sessions with Commissioners in Perth commencing 8 October.

Royal Commission CEO, Ms Janette Dines, said the Royal Commission is visiting cities around the country listening to people’s stories.

“This is a chance for Western Australian’s affected by child sexual abuse in an institution to tell a Commissioner what happened to them.

“We understand how difficult it can be for people to come forward and talk about what happened to them. There are trained counsellors available to provide immediate support to anyone in distress,” she said.

“The Royal Commission will offer more than 1,000 private sessions before the end of this year and we will return to Perth later in the year to hear from more people,” Ms Dines said.

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ROYAL COMMISSION RETURNS TO MELBOURNE …

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

ROYAL COMMISSION RETURNS TO MELBOURNE TO HEAR MORE STORIES FROM SURVIVORS OF INSTITUTIONAL CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse will hold more face-to-face private sessions with Commissioners in Melbourne commencing 7 October.

Royal Commission CEO, Ms Janette Dines, said there has been a strong response from people in Victoria wanting to tell their story in a private session.

“We know that for many of the victims sharing their story with the Commission is very hard. But, equally, the opportunity to tell their story has proved beneficial for many.

“The private sessions are contributing significantly to the Commissioners’ understanding of the nature and extent of the sexual abuse of children within institutions in Australia.”

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A tentative hail to the biggest cab on the rank

AUSTRALIA
The Age

[Submission: Truth Justice and Healing Council]

October 4, 2013

Those, including this newspaper, who welcomed the announcement of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Abuse are entitled to feel some sense of vindication at the formal submission of the Catholic Church to the commission, made public yesterday. As demands for the commission became increasingly strident late last year, Sydney Archbishop George Pell was arguing, right up to the last minute, that it was not needed.

He maintained that the Catholic Church had fixed the deficiencies in the two protocols it introduced in 1996, the Melbourne Response and Towards Healing. The admissions of failure, and an openness to listen ”to criticism and advice”, that were promised in Thursday’s submission to the commission show how flawed that claim was.

Cardinal Pell was irked by what he said were suggestions that the Catholic Church was ”the only cab on the rank” when, in his mind, it had done more than most to combat this scourge that has so damaged our society. Of course, it was not so much the abuse – appalling as it was, with devastating effects on victims and their families – that diminished the church’s public standing. It was the cover-ups, the silencing of victims, the moving of paedophile priests to unsuspecting parishes that most disgusted the faithful and non-believers alike when, thanks to the media and police, they began to emerge. That behaviour is unlikely today.

The cardinal was correct that his church is not the only cab on the rank. Most churches and secular institutions, particularly orphanages, have had their share of perpetrators, and it is right that the royal commission is casting a wide net. Yet it is also true that the Catholic Church has been disproportionately represented – its clergy and religious offended at six times the rate of all the other churches put together, according to evidence to the Victorian parliamentary inquiry into how the churches handled child sexual abuse.

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It looks like Pope Francis is serious about cleaning up the Catholic Church

VATICAN CITY
The Week

Bank audits, sex abuse tribunals, and curial shake-ups, oh my!

By Peter Weber | October 3, 2013

In some respects, the Catholic Church is like any giant, multinational organization. It has some amount of corruption, bureaucratic dysfunction, even crime. But it’s also a religious institution, which we generally (and rightly) hold to higher ethical standards than, say, Coca-Cola or ExxonMobil. The Catholic Church is also different in that its chief executive, the pope, has more control over his organization than any CEO.

Since his election in March, and especially in the past few months, Pope Francis has really shaken up the tone and timbre of the church, particularly in its attitude toward controversial issues like gay marriage and abortion. And people have noticed. Even observers prone to be more critical of the Holy See, like The Daily Show’s Jon Stewart, are cautiously welcoming a new morning at the Vatican. On Wednesday, President Obama shot some praise the pope’s way, too. “I have been hugely impressed with the pope’s pronouncements,” Obama told CNBC, when asked.

Obama added that Pope Francis’ open-armed “spirit, that sense of love and unity, seems to manifest itself in not just what he says, but also what he does.” But that touches on one of the criticisms (or accolades, depending whom you ask) of the new pope: He says all the right things, but outside of his personal habits and interactions, he isn’t really backing up those words with action.

That may be changing.

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Catholic Church in Australia to Overhaul Systems and Procedures Concerning Child Sexual Abuse, Admits Cover-up

AUSTRALIA
International Business Times

By Esther Tanquintic-Misa | October 4, 2013

The Catholic Church in Australia on Thursday has proposed to work on new systems and procedures on how it would deal child sex abuse cases in the future.

The proposals, according to Francis Sullivan, CEO of the Truth Justice and Healing Council, are being aimed to be presented in the first half of 2014 to Catholic Church leaders in Australia.

Part of the reform proposals include:

Appointing independent compensation commissioners to determine payments to victims who go through the victim response process known as Towards Healing. This would separate the pastoral responses in Towards Healing from the determination of financial payments;

The appointment of lay and independent experts to strengthen the Church’s National Committee of Professional Standards;

The introduction of an independent national board to develop and administer national child protection standards. The board would monitor adherence to these standards and publicly report on compliance;

The board would also provide more rigorous assessment, monitoring, auditing and enforcement of Towards Healing practices;

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Catholic church attempted to conceal sexual abuse evidence

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

Australian Associated Press
theguardian.com, Thursday 3 October 2013

The Catholic church believed it had an understanding with the NSW police in 2003 that allowed it to conceal evidence against paedophile priests, a freedom of information (FOI) document reveals.

The file, accessed through FOI laws by NSW Greens MP David Shoebridge and obtained by ABC’s Lateline, documents the Catholic church’s attempt to co-opt NSW police to enter into the illegal agreement.

“Church authorities shall make available the report of an assessment and any other matter relevant to the accused’s account of events only if required to do so by court order,” the unsigned draft memorandum read.

Catholic Commission for Employment Relations executive director Michael McDonald wrote to the NSW child protection squad on 18 June 2003 seeking confirmation the memorandum of understanding (MOU) was still in place.

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City continues to stand by hiring of priest accused of sexual abuse

ILLINOIS
Chicago Tribune

Vatican rules again that it couldn’t find sufficient proof of molestation, 7 years after Chicago Archdiocese asked cleric to leave Burbank parish

October 03, 2013|By Jennifer Delgado, Chicago Tribune reporter

Seven years ago, the Archdiocese of Chicago removed the popular pastor of a southwest suburban church after he was accused of molesting two brothers.

But Burbank Mayor Harry Klein thought the Rev. Robert Stepek was innocent. So, in 2007, he recommended the priest for a different position of authority: Police Department counselor, helping victims who sometimes included children. Stepek got the job.

To this day, the mayor and some in the community defend the move, while others question the wisdom of hiring a person accused of such an offense to work in a police department.

“I just don’t understand why you would hire someone (accused of) something like that to work with the public,” said Linda Beck, a Burbank resident who occasionally attends St. Albert the Great Catholic Church, where Stepek was pastor for eight years. “I’m disappointed in their judgment.”

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Priest’s computer, DNA seized in abuse case

PENNSYLVANIA
Citizens Voice

BY JOSEPH KOHUT (STAFF WRITER)
Published: October 4, 2013

Lackawanna County detectives seized a laptop computer, samples of bodily fluid and DNA as evidence against a suspended Diocese of Scranton priest accused of sexual misconduct with a 15-year-old boy, according to search warrant inventories filed Thursday.

Detectives Chris Kolcharno and Justin Leri served the warrants against the Rev. William Paulish, 56, on Sept. 20, hours after he was caught in the backseat of his Toyota Venza in a parking lot at Penn State Worthington Scranton campus with a teenager who was not wearing pants.

Detectives took seven swabs of bodily fluid from the car’s backseat. They also seized a green towel detectives believe was used to clean up bodily fluid after sex acts.

They also served a warrant on his home at 750 Third St., Blakely, and seized an HP Pavilion laptop and power cord. According to an affidavit in support of the warrant, the Rev. Paulish told police he views “Twink” pornography, which depicts teenaged boys engaged in sexual acts in various stages of nudity, detectives said.

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October 3, 2013

Bishop of Trenton suspends priest for ‘betrayal of trust’

NEW JERSEY
Roman Catholic Diocese of Trenton

Trenton NJ, October 3, 2013 – The Bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Trenton, Most Rev. David M. O’Connell, C.M., has formally suspended Rev. Matthew Riedlinger from all priestly ministry, including presenting himself as a priest or wearing clerical garb.

The Bishop has taken this rare, but significant, step due to Father Riedlinger’s actions which form a ‘betrayal of trust and confidence’ not only for those whom Father Riedlinger has hurt with his online and cell phone activities, but also for the Catholic community and beyond.

All information with regard to Father Riedlinger had been turned over to the Ocean County Prosecutor’s Office, and the Diocese will cooperate fully with them and any law enforcement agency, should further investigation into Father Riedlinger’s activities become necessary.

“I had tried from the beginning to take concerted action, but also to get help for Father Riedlinger. But the more I have learned of his actions during and subsequent to outpatient and inpatient treatment, the more it has become clear that strong, resolute and permanent action must now be taken to protect others, particularly, our youth,” said Bishop O’Connell.

“I am seeking advice from the Congregation of the Doctrine of Faith with regard to the next steps, as his actions have clearly contravened his priestly vows, and, although given ample opportunity to atone for his actions and to get help for his problems, he has failed to do so.”

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Priest from Jackson suspended following sexting scandal

NEW JERSEY
Asbury Park Press

Written by
Amanda Oglesby
@OglesbyAPP

JACKSON — A Catholic priest who once ministered at St. Aloysius Church has been suspended in the wake of a sexting scandal with a man who he reportedly thought was a 16-year-old boy.

The Diocese of Trenton announced Thursday that the Rev. Matthew Riedlinger, 30, was formally suspended by Bishop David M. O’Connell following news that Riedlinger was involved in sexual text message and online conversations that “clearly contravened his priestly vows,” O’Connell said in a prepared statement.

Riedlinger recently took a leave of absence from the priesthood after people questioned his participation in another priest’s funeral Mass that occurred weeks ago, church authorities said.

After taking public criticism Wednesday from the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, known as SNAP, O’Connell decried Riedlinger’s actions as a “betrayal of trust and confidence” not only to the people hurt by the priest’s sexual conversations but to the Catholic community.

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Top deputy at Twin cities archdiocese resigns

MINNESOTA
Seattle PI

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — The top deputy at the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis has resigned amid criticism of how church officials have handled cases of priests accused of sexual abuse.

The archdiocese announced the resignation of the Rev. Peter Laird as vicar general in a statement Thursday. It quotes Laird as saying he’s hopeful his decision can help repair the trust of abuse victims and others.

His resignation follows a report by Minnesota Public Radio last week documenting how top church officials including Laird knew of sexual misconduct by the Rev. Curtis Wehmeyer, who’s now serving a prison sentence for sexually abusing two boys and possessing child pornography.

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Francis Sullivan, CEO, Church’s Truth Justice Healing Council

AUSTRALIA
ABC – Lateline

Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Broadcast: 03/10/2013
Reporter: Tony Jones

Francis Sullivan the CEO of the Catholic Church’s Truth Justice Healing Council discusses the MOU revealed under freedom of information and the Church’s planned reforms to its Towards Healing program for victims of clericial abuse.

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Victims group: Archdiocese should release files on accused priest

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tribune

By Jennifer Delgado, Chicago Tribune reporter
6:09 p.m. CDT, October 3, 2013

Members of an advocacy group for people abused by priests delivered a letter to Cardinal Francis George on Thursday, demanding he release details of the Roman Catholic Church’s investigation into a southwest suburban priest accused of molesting boys in the 1980s.

The letter was given the same day the Tribune reported that the Burbank Police Department hired the priest — the Rev. Robert Stepek — as a counselor who sometimes works with children.

With the Archdiocese of Chicago’s information, the residents of Burbank would likely object to Stepek being on the Police Department’s payroll, said Barbara Blaine, president of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. The archdiocese also should prohibit Stepek from holding that job, she added.

“The Police Department should know better,” Blaine said. “They’re supposed to be the people protecting citizens from people like Father Stepek.”

In May 2006, one man alleged to a priest that he and his brother had been sexually abused by Stepek in the early 1980s. Stepek was asked to temporarily step down as pastor at St. Albert the Great in Burbank

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Hugo priest possessed child porn, archdiocese withheld evidence, St. Paul police report says

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 10/03/2013

A police investigation into allegations that a Hugo priest possessed child pornography will not lead to charges against him — because the evidence was withheld by the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis, according to a police report discussed in Ramsey County court Thursday.

The St. Paul police report by Sgt. William Gillet, dated Sunday, says he and Cmdr. Josh Lego met March 5 with Joseph Kueppers, chancellor for civil affairs for the archdiocese, and Andrew Eisenzimmer, who had just retired from that position two months earlier.

They requested a “white banker’s box” that they had been told was in a vault at the archdiocese and contained information about Rev. Jonathan Shelley.

An archdiocese official told them they would find computer discs with “thousands of images of child pornography” and reports that made reference to search terms such as “helpless teenage boys,” “naked boy pics” and “hard core teen boys.”

The discs came from a laptop computer owned by Shelley, the police report quoted the official as saying.

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Archdiocese’s Vicar General Peter Laird resigns

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 10/03/2013

The Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis said Thursday Vicar General Peter Laird resigned.

Laird’s departure came the same day as allegations emerged in a court hearing that the archdiocese possessed images of child pornography from the computer of Hugo priest Jonathan Shelley, and 10 days after a public radio news report about information that the archdiocese possessed but did not give to police regarding convicted St. Paul priest Curtis Wehmeyer’s sexual behavior.

“Over the last few years, this archdiocese has made significant progress in many areas, including how we have strengthened policies and practices regarding clergy misconduct,” Laird said in a statement posted on the archdiocese website. “The challenge to do better can never end until we have done everything in our power to prevent all acts of misconduct.

“I am hopeful that my decision to step aside at this time, along with the formation of a new task force, can help repair the trust of many, especially the victims of abuse,” he said.

Laird will remain as temporary administrator at Church of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Maplewood. Rev. Mark Huberty is on leave from that post in the wake of allegations that he had an inappropriate relationship with an adult woman.

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Catholic Diocese of Gallup’s media liaison resigns

GALLUP (NM)
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, NM, Oct. 3, 2013

By Elizabeth Hardin-Burrola
Independent correspondent
religion@gallupindependent.com

GALLUP – The Rev. Tim Farrell, the Catholic Diocese of Gallup’s media liaison, upset with a recent appointment made by Bishop James S. Wall, resigned from his position Monday.

Farrell, pastor of Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Farmington, stepped down after serving as the diocese’s media liaison and spokesman for the past year. Wall’s appointment of a controversial former chancery official, Deacon Timoteo Lujan, to help run a formation program for church deacons was the flashpoint for Farrell’s resignation.

“I am stepping down because I found out that Deacon Timoteo Lujan has been named as co-director of the diaconate formation program,” Farrell said in an email Tuesday evening. “I will not work with such a person at the diocesan level and I told Bishop Wall this. I was astounded and quite offended that this appointment was made. Really? We can’t get anyone better than this in such a position. Shame, shame.”

Farrell’s public statement is rare in a Catholic diocese where most priests have been reluctant to publicly question chancery decisions. However, Farrell is not alone in his views. For years, many priests, deacons and diocesan employees have privately submitted concerns to the Gallup bishop, church hierarchy and the media about Gallup chancery policies, decisions and appointments.

A number of such concerns were aired during a priest convocation Wall convened in 2012, according to priests who attended. Central to that were concerns about the actions and decisions made by leading chancery officials in the years leading up to the late Bishop Donald E. Pelotte’s injuries, resignation and death, and in the years since Wall took the helm of the Gallup Diocese. The Rev. James Walker, who served as vicar general under Pelotte and Wall, tendered his resignation at the conclusion of that convocation.

Other chancery officials, Lujan and his fellow deacon, James Hoy, have been at the center of those concerns. Many diocesan personnel believe Lujan, Pelotte’s former chancellor, and Hoy, the diocese’s longtime chief financial officer who resigned in June, were the powers behind the throne.

Media questions to the diocese about the role of both men have been repeatedly dismissed or gone unanswered during the past decade.

Lujan was contacted at his home Wednesday evening for comment. “I do not want to have a conversation with you now or anytime,” Lujan said before hanging up the phone.

Before becoming a priest, Farrell was a newspaper journalist in New Mexico and Mississippi. When he was appointed media liaison, Farrell said he was “not a public relations man,” but he promised to try to “build a bridge between the bishop and the media.” During the past year, Farrell has worked to provide answers to media questions – something that had rarely happened in the two years prior to his appointment.

Suzanne Hammons, the current media coordinator for the diocese, said she would succeed Farrell as media liaison in an emailed announcement Tuesday, which thanked Farrell for his service as liaison. As the coordinator, Hammons has managed the diocesan websites and edited the Voice of the Southwest, the official publication of the Gallup Diocese.

Hammons was contacted Wednesday with questions about Farrell’s resignation and the ongoing concerns about Lujan. Hammons said she would not be able to get any immediate responses from chancery officials, but said she would try to obtain the answers in the future.

Hammons will be the fourth media representative for the diocese in six years. She graduated from Gallup’s Middle College High School in 2007, and she is a 2011 graduate of Benedictine College in Atchison, Kan., with a degree in mass communications.

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Ocean County Priest Suspended After Sexting Scandal

NEW JERSEY
Patch

Posted by Tom Davis (Editor) , October 03, 2013

A Catholic priest who once ministered to an Ocean County congregation has been suspended following a sexting scandal with a man he reportedly thought was a 16-year-old boy.

The Bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Trenton, Rev. David M. O’Connell, C.M., has formally suspended Rev. Matthew Riedlinger from all priestly ministry, including presenting himself as a priest or wearing clerical garb.

Riedlinger preached at St. Aloysius Church in Jackson until August 2012, when he entered counseling following complaints of inappropriate cellphone text conversations with other adults, according to USA Today.

The Diocese of Trenton said it has taken this “rare, but significant, step due to Father Riedlinger’s actions which form a ‘betrayal of trust and confidence,’ not only for those whom Father Riedlinger has hurt with his online and cell phone activities, but also for the Catholic community and beyond.”

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Sexting priest suspended from ministry; Trenton bishop apologizes to parishioners

NEW JERSEY
The Star-Ledger

By Mark Mueller/The Star-Ledger
on October 03, 2013

A Roman Catholic priest caught up in a sexting sting with someone he thought was a 16-year-old boy last year has been suspended from ministry by Trenton Bishop David M. O’Connell, who called the priest’s behavior “a betrayal of trust and confidence.”

The Rev. Matthew Riedlinger, formerly an assistant pastor at St. Aloysius Church in Jackson, may not serve as a priest in any capacity and may not wear clerical garb, O’Connell said in a statement issued late this afternoon.

Riedlinger, the subject of a lengthy story in The Sunday Star-Ledger, had already been on restricted ministry, attending to the needs of retired Bishop John M. Smith.

O’Connell removed Riedlinger from the Jackson parish in August 2012 after learning he was the subject of an elaborate sting in which he thought he was corresponding with a teenage boy. Riedlinger also frequently texted in sexually explicit terms with young adults, according to a complaint filed with the diocese and The Star-Ledger’s findings.

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Trenton Diocese suspends priest over online, phone activities, ‘betrayal of trust’

NEW JERSEY
The Republic

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
October 03, 2013

TRENTON, New Jersey — The Roman Catholic Diocese of Trenton has suspended a priest for online and cellphone activities it says represented a “betrayal of trust.”

Bishop David M. O’Connell announced Thursday the suspension of Rev. Matthew Riedlinger from all priestly ministry. Riedlinger had worked at St. Aloysius Church in Jackson until August of 2012.

Allegations had been made that he had sent sexually explicit messages to a person he believed to be an underaged boy. A church administrator said sexual conversations had even taken place while Riedlinger was receiving church-ordered counseling.

The diocese said it turned over all the information it has to prosecutors.

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NY court: Penile stimulation test ‘invasive’

NEW YORK
Boston.com

NEW YORK (AP) — Subjecting a sex offender who is no longer imprisoned to ‘‘extraordinarily invasive’’ penile stimulation testing risks violating the premise that even convicts retain their humanity, a federal appeals court said Thursday.

The ruling by the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan frees former police officer David McLaurin of a requirement that he submit to penile plethysmography, a test in which a man’s erectile responses are measured as he is shown sexually stimulating images.

An all-male three-judge appeals panel said it saw a ‘‘clear distinction’’ between penis measurement and other conditions of supervised release, including restrictions on where sex offenders may live, their interactions with children and their access to pornographic material.

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NY- Sex offender wins ruling on controversial test

NEW YORK
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, Oct. 3

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314 566 9790, SNAPclohessy@aol.com )

A convicted sex offender who lived in Vermont and Alabama has won a court ruling in New York that means he won’t have to submit to a test to determine whether he’s attracted to underage girls.

[Boston.com]

Everyone, even pedophiles, deserves his humanity. But the humanity of a predator doesn’t trump the humanity of innocent kids.

Those who oppose this test should propose alternative ways to protect kids from predators. One in four girls and one in eight boys will be sexually assaulted. Given these horrific numbers, and the devastating life-long effects of childhood sexual abuse, something must change. We as a society must re-examine some of our archaic notions if we are to do more to safeguard the vulnerable.

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Vicar general of St. Paul-Minneapolis Archdiocese resigns

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: JEFF STRICKLER , Star Tribune Updated: October 3, 2013

The Rev. Peter Laird resigned Thursday as vicar general and moderator of the curia for the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis.

He was appointed to the position, which serves as an assistant to Archbishop John Nienstedt in administration of the archdiocese, in 2009. His resignation takes place immediately.

The Rev. Charles Lachowitzer, who is serving as pastor of the Church of St. John Neumann in Eagan, was named to replace Laird, but he won’t assume the post until his current position is filled. In the meantime, the auxiliary bishop, the Rev. Lee Piche, who preceded Laird in the job, will oversee it.

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Statement Regarding Transition in Leadership for Vicar General and Moderator of the Curia

MINNESOTA
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis

Date:Thursday, October 3, 2013
Source:Jim Accurso

Archbishop John C. Nienstedt announced today the resignation of the Father Peter Laird as Vicar General and Moderator of the Curia for the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis, effective immediately.

“Over the last few years, this Archdiocese has made significant progress in many areas, including how we have strengthened policies and practices regarding clergy misconduct. The challenge to do better can never end until we have done everything in our power to prevent all acts of misconduct,” Father Laird said.

“I am hopeful my decision to step aside at this time, along with the formation of a new task force can help repair the trust of many, especially the victims of abuse,” he said. “I know the leadership, the dedicated staff and my fellow priests in the Archdiocese are sincerely committed to proactively addressing these difficult issues.”

Father Laird has served since November 2009 in the position which is responsible for assisting the Archbishop in the general care and administration of the archdiocese. Father Laird will continue to serve in a variety of roles within the archdiocese, including as the temporary administrator at the Church of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Maplewood.

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Laird, top deputy of Archdiocese, resigns

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

by Madeleine Baran, Minnesota Public Radio,
Rupa Shenoy, Minnesota Public Radio
October 3, 2013

The top deputy of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis resigned that post today amid growing concerns about the church’s approach to clergy sex abuse cases.

The Rev. Peter Laird explained his sudden departure as vicar general in a statement posted on the archdiocese’s website Thursday afternoon.

“Over the last few years, this Archdiocese has made significant progress in many areas, including how we have strengthened policies and practices regarding clergy misconduct,” Laird said in the statement. “I am hopeful my decision to step aside at this time, along with the formation of a new task force can help repair the trust of many, especially the victims of abuse.”

Archdiocese leaders, staff and priests, he added, “are sincerely committed to proactively addressing these difficult issues.”

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Polish church rejects first demand for damages in paedophile case

POLAND
GlobalPost

AFP

Poland’s powerful Roman Catholic Church on Thursday rejected a first-ever request for damages by a victim of a convicted paedophile priest, opening the door to legal action, judicial officials said.

A demand for 47,500 euros ($63,500) in damages was made by a 25-year-old male plaintiff, identified only Marcin K., who was molested as a child.

A Catholic priest was last year sentenced to two years behind bars in the case, but his diocese refused to be held financially liable.

“The parties did not arrive at an agreement. The door is now open for a civil lawsuit,” Slawomir Przykucki, a court spokesman in Koszalin, northern Poland, told AFP after the mediation hearing at the court failed.

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‘I’m Not Listening!’: Mainstream Media Ignores…

UNITED STATES
TheMediaReport

‘I’m Not Listening!’: Mainstream Media Ignores Current Epidemic of Abuse in Evangelical Church, Instead Focuses on Stale Claims in Catholic Church

Just last week, Boz Tchividjian, a prominent Liberty University law professor and the grandson of Billy Graham, stood before a roomful of journalists and declared that Evangelical missions are a “magnet” for sexual abusers and that Evangelicals “are worse” than the Catholic Church at handling the problem.

Speaking to the annual gathering of the Religion Newswriters Association (RNA) in Austin, Texas, Tchividjian said that Evangelicals have “sacrificed the souls” of innocent children, and of known data from abuse cases, a shocking 25 percent are repeat cases, he claimed.

Tchividjian is also the executive director of an organization called Godly Response to Abuse in the Christian Environment (GRACE), which works on combating abuse in the Evangelical community.

Last summer, GRACE spearheaded an online petition condemning the “silence” and “inattention” to sex abuse in Evangelical organizations, especially its missions.

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A Letter to Cardinal George regarding Fr. Robert Stepek

CHICAGO (IL)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Cardinal Francis George
Archdiocese of Chicago
835 N Rush St
Chicago IL 60611

October 3, 2013

Dear Cardinal George:

We belong to a support group called SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. Despite the word “priest” in our title, we have members who were molested by religious figures of all denominations, including nuns, rabbis, bishops, and Protestant ministers. Our mission is to heal the wounded and protect the vulnerable.

As you know, one of your priests, Fr. Robert Stepek, now works for the Burbank police department.

At least three men say he molested them as children.

At least three men have filed civil child sex abuse lawsuits against the archdiocese because of him.

At least two of these cases have settled.

Your abuse panel determined that child sex abuse allegations against him are credible.

And this week, it was revealed that Vatican officials say he “engaged in behaviors inappropriate for a priest.”

And this week, you said you would not put him back in a parish.

So while you are protecting yourself and your archdiocese from legal liability (by not giving Fr. Stepek a church job), you’re doing little if anything to really protect others from him. You’re letting him work at the police department, refusing to put him in a treatment center, hiding records about his alleged crimes and sitting behind your desk instead of aggressively reaching out to other who might be able to help put Fr. Stepek in prison.

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Reform of the Curia will be “substantial”

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Radio

[with full text of Father Lombardi’s briefing]

(Vatican Radio) A new Apostolic Constitution will probably be written to replace Pastor Bonus, which will emphasize the Curia’s service to the universal Church and local churches. The Council of Cardinals appointed by Pope Francis to assist him in his governance of the Church and reform of the Curia has been meeting at the Vatican since Tuesday.

In a briefing, the head of the Vatican Press Office Father Federico Lombardi, SJ, said we can “expect a new Constitution.” He said changes will not be a “simple upgrade” nor “marginal”, but will be “substantial”. He said an important reorientation will be with the Secretariat of State, which should be in all respects a “Secretary of the Pope,” and that this will be part of the guidelines he gives the next Secretary of State, who takes office on October 15th.

In addition, a separate figure acting as a “Moderator of the Curia” could be appointed to coordinate relations between the Pope and the heads of the various Departments and offices.

The Council also spoke about the role of the laity in the Church, and how this role may be more appropriately and effectively recognized and followed in the government of the Church.

The Cardinals also continued their discussion from Tuesday on the Synod of Bishops, as Pope Francis prepares to decide its theme and implementation.

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Pope’s Reform Plans, Bigger than Expected

VATICAN CITY
Rome Reports

[with video]

October 3, 2013. (Romereports.com) The Vatican spokesman has announced that Pope Francis isn’t planning on reforming the Vatican’s Apostolic Constitution. Rather, he’s planning on drafting a completely new document, that deals with the governance of the Church.

FR. FEDERICO LOMBARDI
Vatican Spokesman
“The idea is not limited to updating the current ‘Pastor Bonus’ constitution, with small tweaks here and there. Instead the Pope plans on drafting a new constitution that includes new relevant changes. I think we can expect a new constitution.”

The new law will highlight two main aspects. First, that the Roman Curia shouldn’t be a power house, but instead it should be ‘at the service’ of the Universal Church. Also the Vatican’s State Department will more of a branch rather than a full governing body.

The Council of Cardinals recommended that a ‘moderator’ be assigned to coordinate the relationship between the Pope and the dicasteries of the Church. The council of eight cardinals is also analyzing how the role and work of the laity can be recognized more directly within the Church.

FR. FEDERICO LOMBARDI
Vatican Spokesman
“Special attention will be given so that institutions can adequately respond to the laity and the service they provide to the Church. Currently we have a Pontifical Council, but that relationship and presence could be strengthened so that the Curia is more involved with the laity.”

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Catholic reform theologian Hans Küng, 85, considers assisted suicide

Reuters

By Tom Heneghan OCTOBER 3, 2013

Hans Küng, Roman Catholicism’s best known rebel theologian, is considering capping a life of challenges to the Vatican with a final act of dissent – assisted suicide.

Küng, now 85 and suffering from Parkinson’s disease, writes in the final volume of his memoirs that people have a right to “surrender” their lives to God voluntarily if illness, pain or dementia make further

Küng has championed reform of the Catholic Church since its 1962-1965 Second Vatican Council, where he was a young adviser arguing for a decentralized church, married priests and artificial birth control. The Council did not adopt these ideas.

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Vatican administration needs total overhaul, cardinals tell pope

VATICAN CITY
GlobalPost

By Philip Pullella

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) – Cardinals advising Pope Francis on how to reform the Vatican believe the Holy See’s central government is so problem-ridden that only a total overhaul can fix it, the Vatican said on Thursday.

The unusually stark acknowledgement came on the third and final day of closed-door meetings between the pope and eight cardinals from around the world who are discussing the Vatican’s troubled administration and mapping out possible changes in the worldwide Church.

Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi said the cardinals were no longer considering adjustments or changes to a 1998 constitution on the workings of the Vatican’s various departments, known as “Pastor Bonus” (Good Shepherd).

“(The cardinals) are leaning towards a constitution with very significant new elements; in short, a new constitution,” Lombardi told reporters at a briefing.

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Vatican: New constitution needed to reform curia, advisors tell Pope

VATICAN CITY
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Vatican City, 3 Oct. (AKI) – The scandal-tainted Vatican Curia or central administration needs completely overhauling with a new constitution, a group of cardinals advising Pope Francis has reported.

“They are leaning towards a constitution with very significant new elements; in short, a new constitution,” Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi told a media briefing on Thursday.

At the end of three days of closed-door meetings with the Argentinian pontiff, the group of eight cardinals concluded that more was needed than amendments to the current constitution governing the Vatican department, Lombardi said.

The bulky 1998 constitution is known by its Latin name of “Pastor Bonus” (The Good Shepherd) and re-writing the document will be a major task, according to Lombardi. He said he did not know how long this would take.

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