ABUSE TRACKER

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

June 24, 2014

Cardinal Levada advances to announcer’s post

VATICAN CITY
Catholic Sentinel

Cardinal William Levada, former archbishop of Portland, has become the man who will announce the name of the new pope, should there be a papal election in the next two years.

That’s because of the domino effect after a set of seniority based honorific promotions at the Vatican.

At the weekend’s ordinary consistory — a gathering of cardinals — Pope Francis announced the promotion of six of the men from cardinal deacon to cardinal priest.

The promotions are mainly ceremonial, but there is one main practical change. One of those promoted was French Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, who had been the most senior cardinal deacon. In the post, it was his responsibility to announce the election and name of a new pope, which he did in March of last year.

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.

Are Church leaders listening to the wake-up calls?

INDIA
UCA News

Fr Myron Pereria, Mumbai India June 24, 2014

Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, former Vatican Secretary of State and right hand of Pope Benedict XVI, has been implicated in a multi-million dollar fraud and embezzlement case. He is also in hot water for his new apartment, infinitewly more luxurious than the pope’s own lodgings.

This somehow typifies and also casts a depressing shadow on the way the Church government has been run over the past few decades.

The degree of ‘moral turpitude’ at the highest levels astounds the imagination. Are cardinals and bishops no better than crude politicians after all?

For a long time, for centuries in fact, the Catholic Church was one of the few institutions where a young man, with no family connections and little money, could rise to eminence on the basis of intelligence, shrewdness and ambition alone.

If in addition, he was servile enough to authority and avoided scandals, especially sexual ones, he could go far.

As a tried and tested formula, it worked for centuries, and still does. As proof, just look at the popes, the bishops and the senior clergy who have “made it”. All of them belong to an institution called the Church to which they have given their lives, from which they draw certain benefits, and whose stability and public image they are sworn to uphold.

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.

Wife defends Jehovah’s Witness elder Mark Sewell accused of sexual assaults

WALES
Wales Online

Mary Sewell told Merthyr Crown Court that she didn’t believe her husband Mark Sewell was guilty

The wife of a former Jehovah’s Witness elder accused of sex assaults told a jury that she was unconcerned at seeing a semi-naked teen lying on their bed.

Mary Elizabeth Sewell, speaking at Merthyr Tydfil Crown Court yesterday, said the girl was lying face down, clothed from her bottom down but with her top half covered with a towel, for her husband Mark Sewell to massage her.

“It did not cause me any concern,” Mrs Sewell, a beautician, told the jury.

“I am quite aware that it happened. She was often massaged. She had shoulder and top of the neck problems and she used to ask him if he would massage her.”

She denied seeing her husband straddling the girl and said that her husband had an interest in massage and that her and her husband had performed massages on each other.

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.

Salvos sorry for abuse ‘greatest failure’

AUSTRALIA
Echo Netdaily

The Salvation Army says it is profoundly sorry for the abuse suffered by children in its care, and events revealed by the royal commission into child sexual abuse represent the greatest failure in its history.

However, the organisation maintains sexual abuse was not widespread after the commission heard evidence of more than 100 cases of children suffering horrendous abuse in homes run by the Salvation Army in Queensland and NSW in the 1960s and 1970s.

As the royal commission moved to finalise its investigation into the church on Monday, counsel for the Salvation Army, Kate Eastman, challenged a statement from counsel assisting the commission that sexual abuse was ‘widespread’ at boys’ homes it ran.

In an apology to survivors, Ms Eastman read a statement from the Salvation Army saying the organisation was ‘profoundly sorry for failing to care for you as you deserved, for the neglect, hurt, abuse and deprivation of human rights that all children are entitled to’.

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.

Royal Commission: Vatican’s handling of sexual abuse claims against Wollongong priest John Nestor in spotlight

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Antonette Collins

It took nearly 20 years for the Vatican to dismiss a Wollongong parish priest after allegations against him first emerged, the royal commission into child sexual abuse has heard.

Father John Nestor was charged and convicted of indecently assaulting a 15-year-old altar boy in Wollongong in 1996. A year later he was acquitted on appeal.

When further allegations surfaced about him engaging in inappropriate behaviour with boys at holiday camps, the local diocese tried to have him removed from the ministry.

Counsel assisting the commission Angus Stewart told the hearing the Vatican upheld an appeal by Mr Nestor in 2001.

“The congregation ruled that the Towards Healing Assessment process had not complied with the procedural requirements for an preliminary investigation under canon law,” he said.

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

Why Bishop Morris was sacked

AUSTRALIA
Eureka Street

Frank Brennan | 23 June 2014

Frank Brennan launches Benedict, Me and the Cardinals Three by Bishop William Morris.

I am delighted to be asked to participate in the launch of Bishop William Morris’ book. Bill was bishop of Toowoomba for 18 years. This book is the story of his forced retirement at the insistence of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI and at the instigation of three Roman curial cardinals all of whom have now left the Vatican, having passed retirement age. Naturally, we were not expecting any of those four to be with us this evening. Sadly Bill could not be with us either, being laid up in a hospital bed in wintry Queensland.

In the 1960s, I lived for five years in the Toowoomba diocese while attending Downlands College, a boarding school for boys conducted by the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart. At that time, I had regularly to deny any relationship to the then Bishop of Toowoomba William Brennan who gave very long sermons on hot and cold days much to the displeasure of the Downlands students. I used to emerge from chapel rightly claiming to be from another branch of the family back there in the bog.

Some of the key priests who appear in Bill Morris’ book also were educated at Downlands. The MSCs had a no nonsense style to them, enjoying their independence from the local bishop while being very dedicated to the pastoral care of people in the far flung country diocese and always attentive to the pastoral requests of the parish priests, a disproportionate number of whom went to Downlands.

I remember one MSC arriving unexpectedly at the school mid-year to teach French. It was just after Humanae Vitae and he had expressed some reservations while ministering south of the Tweed River.

One of the ex-Downlanders to appear in the book is Bill Morris’ Vicar-General Peter Dorfield who, true to form as one of the world’s most punctilious note takers, provided a detailed account to Bill about his unfortunate meeting with the papal visitator Archbishop Charles Chaput who came to the diocese for four days (including Anzac Day) in 2007 to report on the state of the diocese. Chaput told Dorfield that Morris was:

a good, humane and prayerful bishop but innocent and naïve and open to manipulation because of (his) great desire to see good in everyone, and that people had taken advantage of (his) goodness and trust. (He) had been captured, manipulated and misled by a so-called progressive group of priests in the diocese who were in fact ‘running the diocese’; as a result of the actions of these priests, (he) had been led astray and now needed to recant, and in effect throw (himself) on the mercy of the Vatican authorities, promising a more orthodox and obedient future.

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.

Wolllongong Catholic leaders to give evidence in royal commission

AUSTRALIA
Illawarra Mercury

By KATE McILWAIN June 23, 2014

Some of Australia’s most senior Catholic leaders – as well as key Wollongong church figures – will appear before the royal commission into child sexual abuse’s investigation into Wollongong’s Catholic Diocese over the next two weeks.

The public hearing, which begins in Sydney on Tuesday, is the first time the actions of the Catholic Church in Wollongong have come under the microscope of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

It will focus on how the diocese and the Vatican responded to allegations of sexual assault against then Father John Gerard Nestor in the 1990s.

The witness list includes Adelaide Archbishop Phillip Wilson, who was Wollongong’s bishop from 1996 to 2000, and the general secretary of the Catholic Bishops Conference Father Brian Lucas.

Last week, former premier Barry O’Farrell called for Fr Lucas to be sacked, after Commissioner Margaret Cunneen’s report found he had failed to act since 1993 when he knew about child sexual abuse in the Newcastle Maitland Diocese.

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.

Royal commission into sex abuse: 20 years to fire Wollongong priest

AUSTRALIA
Illawarra Mercury

By Annette Blackwell June 24, 2014

A Wollongong priest wasn’t fired until 20 years after complaints about him molesting young boys became known, and the Pope was the only one with the power to dismiss him from the priesthood, an inquiry has been told.

At a hearing in Sydney the royal commission into child sexual abuse is looking at how the Catholic Church under its own law – canon law – deals with priests and others against whom allegations have been made but no convictions obtained.

In particular, it is looking at the case of John Gerard Nestor, 50, who was a priest in the Wollongong diocese when he was charged in 1997 with the indecent assault of a teenage altar boy.

The priest admitted in his 1997 court case that he had slept on mattresses on a floor with the boy and his younger brother in July 1991, but he denied assaulting the boy.

Prime Minister Tony Abbott, then a federal parliamentary secretary to the employment minister, told the court at the time ‘‘he (Nestor) was … a beacon of humanity at the seminary’’.

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.

Defrocked priest pleads not guilty to new sex abuse charges

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times

Convicted child molester and defrocked Catholic priest Daniel McCormack pleaded not guilty Monday to new sexual abuse charges stemming from a 2005 incident.

McCormack pleaded not guilty to three counts of felony aggravated criminal sexual abuse before Judge Angela Munari Petrone, court records show.

At a bond hearing in May, prosecutors said the alleged victim was 10 and a parishioner at St. Agatha in the 3100 block of West Douglas, where McCormack worked as a priest.

The boy was participating in an after-school program at the church and the alleged abuse happened between September 2005 and December 2005. The alleged victim disclosed the abuse in 2013.

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 overturned bishop’s ban on priest

AUSTRALIA
SBS

AAP

Senior church official Brian Lucas has been asked to explain why he didn’t take notes when interviewing abusive priests.

Brian Lucas, the senior churchman who former NSW premier Barry O’Farrell wants sacked, has been asked at a royal commission to explain his practice of not taking notes while interviewing abusive priests.

Fr Lucas, the general-secretary of the church’s national body the Conference of Bishops, was making his second royal commission appearance in two weeks on Tuesday.

Justice Peter McClellan questioned Fr Lucas’s practice at a Sydney hearing in which the commission is looking at how the Catholic Church, under its own canon law, deals with priests and others against whom allegations have been made.

As a member of the church’s special issues committee in 1993, Fr Lucas interviewed John Gerard Nestor, a priest in the NSW Wollongong diocese, who was defrocked by the Vatican in 2008.

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.

‘Still a lot we have to do’: Winona Diocese releases new info on abusive priests

MINNESOTA
Winona Daily News

[press packet]

Jerome Christenson Daily News

The Bishop believes.

Bishop John Quinn, at a Monday-morning news conference the Diocese of Winona held to release new information on sexual abuse alleged against 13 former priests of the Winona diocese, said he believes the abuse actually did take place.

“They don’t make these things up,” he said of those who have come forward to report sexual abuse.

Quinn spoke candidly and at length about the cases, acknowledging the “deep wounds” inflicted by abusive clergy and offering his apologies to “anyone who has been harmed.”

“Words cannot express my deep sorrow,” he said.

Prior to the bishop’s statement, the Diocese distributed a summary of the accusations made against each priest, including a photo, brief biography and a list of their pastoral assignments, as well as the number of accusations made against each and when they were made.

The information, which did not go into detail about any of the accusations, built upon the list of names the diocese released in December 2013 in response to an ongoing lawsuit against both the diocese and the Archdiocese of St. Paul-Minneapolis.

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June 23, 2014

Boys’ home abuse our greatest failure, says Salvation Army

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

JUNE 24, 2014

NSW Police are investigating claims of child-sex abuse at a ­Salvation Army boys’ home the church has described as the “greatest failure” in its history.

The investigation focuses on allegations of abuse at the Gill Memorial Boys’ Home in Goulburn in country NSW, and in particular against one officer, who cannot be named.

The case is among more than 160 referred to various police ­forces across the country by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, which is due to publish its first interim report next week.

Evidence before the commission shows nine children allege they were abused by the officer, who in August 1974 pleaded guilty to indecently assaulting one boy at the Gill home.

A separate 1996 prosecution was abandoned due to the officer’s apparent ill health, Salvation Army barrister Kate Eastman SC told the commission, but “these matters appear now they may have been revisited’’.

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 Milwaukee priest removed from Chicago area church

CHICAGO (IL)
WISN

MILWAUKEE —A former Milwaukee priest was suddenly removed from his position at a suburban Chicago church over the weekend.

Father James Dokos was a trusted leader and pastor for years at the Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church until 2012, when he transferred to Glenview, Ill. Then questions began surfacing about some lavish spending of church money.

The famous Frank Lloyd Wright-designed Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church on Milwaukee’s northwest side has been gaining new attention because of allegations of fraud against a former pastor.

WISN 12 News began investigating last fall, after Milwaukee County prosecutors served multiple search warrants stating they were seeking information on Dokos’ use of more than $100,000 in a trust fund.

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 Wauwatosa priest to be charged in handling of $100,000

WISCONSIN
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

The former priest at Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church in Wauwatosa who is accused of misappropriating more than $100,000 from a trust he managed there is in the process of being charged with theft, the Milwaukee County district attorney’s office said Monday.

Father James Dokos has been named in a charging document that has been provided to his attorney and the church’s parish council, Assistant District Attorney David Fleiss said. He could not say when the charge would be filed.

Dokos, who was transferred to SS Peter & Paul Orthodox Church in Glenview, Ill., in 2012, has been suspended from his duties there, according to a story in the Chicago Tribune. Efforts to reach the Greek Orthodox Metropolis of Chicago on Monday were not successful.

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.

Salvation Army sack accused sex abusers John McIver and Colin Haggar

AUSTRALIA
Daily Telegraph

JANET FIFE-YEOMANS THE DAILY TELEGRAPH JUNE 24, 2014

THE Salvation Army has sacked an officer accused of being a notorious child abuser — six months after giving him a silver star award.

Major John McIver was dismissed last week and allegations against him, including raping a boy, have been referred to the police, the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sex Abuse was told yesterday.

The Salvation Army has also sacked a second officer, Lieutenant Colonel Colin Haggar, 25 years after he admitted sexually assaulting a girl aged eight. Mr Haggar was sacked after the incident but reinstated in 1993 with former Salvos chief of personnel Major Peter Farthing stating in the commission as late as April this year that sexually assaulting an eight-year-old girl did not make Mr Haggar a paedophile. There have been 19 Salvation Army officers named as perpetrators of abuse, counsel Kate Eastman told the commission in final submissions.

Mr McIver, who has denied all claims, was not suspended until January when the commission began hearing evidence he had sexually and physically abused boys from 1974 at the Akira Salvation Army home for boys at Indooroopilly in Brisbane.

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Diocese of Winona releases sex abuse details

MINNESOTA
News 8000

Author: Leah Linscheid, llinscheid@wkbt.com
Published On: Jun 23 2014

WINONA, Minn. (WKBT) –
In a move some are calling ‘unprecedented,’ the Catholic Diocese of Winona is releasing details of years of sexual abuse by priests in its churches.

Back in December, courts ordered the diocese to release the names of 14 priests accused of sexual abuse dating back to the 1960s. More than six months later, the diocese is now voluntarily sharing the details behind those accusations.

“We are establishing and taking back, we hope, our credibility,” said Bishop John Quinn.

The reports show most accusations stemmed from the 1970s and 80s. In one case, the report shows a Winona priest was accused 36 different times of sexually abusing a child. In a handful of cases, priests were repeatedly placed in treatment after accusations surfaced – but they returned to the diocese just months later under a different position or parish.

“In nearly all the cases, the priests who were returned to ministry after treatment were placed back into parishes based on the widespread belief that they could be rehabilated,” said Nelle Moriarty, chairperson of the Diocese of Winona Review Board. “Today as a society, we now know that rehabilitation as a sxual offender is most likely not possible.”

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Kingsport priest denied appeal

TENNESSEE
WCYB

By Kristen Quon, kquon@wcyb.com

KINGSPORT, Tenn. –
The State Supreme Court has upheld the conviction against a former Kingsport priest, Warren Sullivan county district attorney, Barry Staubus told News 5 that he received word today, Monday June 23rd, that the 2011 conviction of William Casey’s appeal was denied.

A judge sentenced Casey to more than 30 years in prison after a jury found him guilty of sexual misconduct and rape of Warren Tucker.

Tucker says, Casey abused him for five years beginning in 1975 when he was an altar boy at St. Dominic’s Catholic Church in Kingsport.

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Irish priests are not smiling because of women: Irish ex-president mocks Pope Francis! Irish nuns akin to Nazis

UNITED STATES
POPE FRANCIS the CON-Christ.

June 21, 2014

Paris Arrow

With compilation of Tuam nuns news

Pope Francis has called-in sick for the summer and has cancelled even his well-oiled money machine Wednesday Angelus where he shows all his teeth nonstop to the screeching adulation of Francis-Maniacs who sound more like Catholic zombies in Brad Pitt’s World War Z movie and are probably making him more sick and there’s no antidote to it, read our article, Pope Francis is sick with lies, lies, lies & burdened yoke from Opus Dei Beast PR Deceits Team weighs heavy on Jesuit puppet pope. But aside from the sick (only one-year old) pope, Irish priests these days too are depressed and not smiling because of three women specifically who are giving them – and to Pope Francis – messages unparalleled to Martin Luther’s Ninety-Five Theses in 1517. Martin Luther pointed out the 95 corruptions in the Vatican especially its rampant sale of indulgences – to build the mammoth St. Peter’s Basilica – that condemned to hell even the poor if they did not buy them.

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Scottsville pastor suspected of sexually assaulting teen in church

KENTUCKY
WSMV

Reported by Nancy Amons

SCOTTSVILLE, KY (WSMV) –
A southern Kentucky pastor is accused of sexually assaulting a 14-year-old boy in his church, and police are worried there may be more victims.

Roy Neal Yoakem is the pastor at the New Gospel Outreach Church in Scottsville, KY.

Authorities say they believe at least one alleged incident happened at the church, and they’re investigating another alleged incident they believe occurred in Gallatin.

Gallatin police are expected to serve more warrants, including a charge of rape by an authority figure.

Yoakem’s name was covered up on the sign outside the church on Friday, the day after the church’s board appointed Stephen Bratcher as interim pastor.

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EX-PRIEST PLEADS NOT GUILTY TO LATEST SEX ABUSE CHARGES

CHICAGO (IL)
WLS

Monday, June 23, 2014

CHICAGO (WLS) — Former Roman Catholic priest Daniel McCormack appeared in court Monday to face new child sex abuse charges.

McCormack pleaded not guilty. The defrocked priest has pleaded guilty in several previous cases.

Members of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests say there may be more victims yet to come forward.

“I think it’s really important that we work hard to create an environment where victims feel safe to report, and I’m not sure that Cardinal George has created that kind of an environment in this church,” said SNAP’s Barbara Blaine.

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Winona diocese releases more details about priest abuse

MINNESOTA
WXOW

WINONA, Minn. (KTTC) — The Diocese of Winona voluntarily released more details Monday about 13 priests who have been credibly accused of sexually abusing children.

The diocese said it’s releasing the information in an effort to be transparent and promote healing.

The names of the accused priests were revealed in December as part of a court order. But details about the accusations against them weren’t released.

The diocese held a news conference Monday morning at the Cathedral of Sacred Heart. The diocese said nine of the 13 priests on the list are dead and two have been laicized, or removed from the priesthood. Two more priests have laicization pending. The diocese said none of the priests credibly accused of sexual abuse are still in active ministry.

Nearly all of the sexual abuse committed happened in the 1970s and early 1980s, according to the diocese. The diocese said nearly all of the priests who had sexually abused children were sent for treatment and diagnosis when the diocese learned about the accusations.

The list of priests includes:

Thomas P. Adamson Permanently removed from ministry in 1984; laicized 2009
Sylvester F. Brown Deceased 2010
Joseph C. Cashman Permanently removed from ministry in 1992; laicization pending in Rome
Louis G. Cook Deceased 2004
William D. Curtis Deceased 2001
John R. Feiten Deceased 2001
Richard E. Hatch Deceased 2005
Ferdinand L. Kaiser Deceased 1973
Jack L. Krough Permanently removed from ministry in 2002; laicization pending in Rome
Michael J. Kuisle Deceased 1971
James W. Lennon Deceased 2000
Leland J. Smith Permanently removed from ministry in 1994; laicized April 2014
Robert H. Taylor Deceased 2012

Priests accused of abuse after 2004

Leo Charles Koppala Permanently removed from ministry 2014.

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Diocese Releases More Information on Accused Priests

MINNESOTA
KEYC

By Dan Ruiter, News Director

WINONA, Minn. – The Diocese of Winona Monday released much more information on 14 priests accused of abuse in the last 50+ years – and some of the abuse occurred while they were serving parishes in our region. The Diocese did so because of what it calls “an unprecedented effort for transparency and healing.”

Nine of the 14 priests on the list are deceased, two have been laicized, and two are pending laicization. Officials with the Winona Diocese say no priests of the Diocese of Winona who have been credibly accused of child sexual abuse are still in active ministry.

At least 5 of those 14 accused priests served area churches at the time the allegations were made.

Louis Cook was accused of child abuse that reportedly took place between 1966 and 1969 during the time he was serving parishes in Delevan and Easton. However, it should be noted that four days after the complaint was filed with the Diocese, the alleged victim withdrew her complaint. Father Cook had no other accusations.

William Curtis had a pair of child sexual abuse accusations. One of those complaints was filed during his time in Good Thunder.

Richard Hatch was removed from his duties in 1963; but faced accusations of child sexual abuse and additional accusations while he was serving the Church in Saint James.

Ferdinand Kaiser pleaded guilty to Sodomy charges in 1968 in Waseca County. He was serving a church in Iosco, which is between Janesville and Waseca. He resigned from the ministry in 1968.

Leo Charles Koppala is the only priest in the Winona Diocese facing allegations of abuse that occurred after 2004. Koppala was convicted of 2nd Degree Criminal Sexual Conduct in March 2014. He’s been deported to his native India and his home Diocese in India has been notified of his conviction.

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Diocese of Winona releases new info on abusive priests

MINNESOTA
Winona Daily News

The Bishop believes.

Bishop John Quinn told a Monday morning news conference that he bleieves the sexual abuse alleged against 13 former priests of the Winona diocese actually did take place.

“They don’t make these things up,” he said of those who have come forward to report sexual abuse.

Prior to the bishop’s statement, the Diocese distributed a summary of the accusations made against each priest, a photo, brief biography and a list of their pastoral assignments. The information will be made available on the diocesan website.

The information released Monday expands upon the information that accompanied the initial release of the names of the 13 “credibly accused” priests on Dec. 16. Quinn said the information was compiled with the concern to protect the identity of victims and the innocent and to comply “with privacy laws related to medical and mental-health information.

“We are committed first and foremost for the compassionate healing for the victims and their families,” said Bishop John Quinn in a statement. “We remain steadfast to finding and telling the truth and are vigilantly committed to ensuring these unspeakable crimes against children never happen again.”

The abuse occurred primarily in the 1970s and 1980s. Nine of the 13 priests on the list are deceased, two have been laicized, and two are pending laicization. None are in active ministry.

The highest-profile priest on the list, Thomas Adamson, has admitted to having sexual contact with at least a dozen boys over two decades of ministry, stopping only when one of his victims came forward publicly in 1984. He continues to draw a monthly pension check from the diocese, as required by law, the diocese has said.

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While church volunteer was molesting girl, TN pastor was diverting cops, lawsuit claims

TENNESSEE
The Raw Story

By Travis Gettys
Monday, June 23, 2014

A support group for clergy sex abuse victims has asked prosecutors in Tennessee to investigate whether a Baptist minister altered his account of sex abuse by a church volunteer to protect himself from civil liability.

The family of a girl who was molested by a member of First Baptist Church of Bemis sued the church last month for negligence after the church allowed Chad Lutrell to volunteer at Vacation Bible School five years ago, when the abuse took place.

The suit, which seeks $2 million in damages, claimed then-pastor Mark McSwain allowed Lutrell to work with children even though he knew of previous allegations of sexual misconduct.

According to the suit, Lutrell had been seen at church kissing girls between the ages of 6 and 10 on the mouth, and three adult women said he had stalked, threatened, and harassed them.

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KS- Abuse allegations made against KC priest, SNAP responds

KANSAS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, June 23, 2014

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

Two credible abuse allegations have been made against a retired Kansas City priest. We are saddened that KC Catholic officials are apparently trying to keep this quiet by putting it only in a church publication. They should be alerting all the parishioners and the public very aggressively, begging others with information or suspicions about this priest to step forward, get help, call police, expose wrongdoers and start healing.

We are grateful to the brave victims who spoke up and hope they will continue to seek help.

[The Leaven]

Fr. George Seuferling, who retired in 2001, is accused of inappropriate behavior with non-minors. Officials with the Archdiocese of Kansas City, KS say the allegations are credible. Fr. Seuferling’s work is supposedly being limited to doing wedding and funerals of relatives. We believe a stricter limitation should be imposed. At a minimum, for the safety of the public, he should be sent to a remote, secure, independent treatment center for evaluation.

We hope anyone who saw, suspects, or suffered child sexual abuse by Fr. Seuferling will immediately call secular law enforcement. It is never too late to report what you know and doing so will help keep other people safe.

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The Best Revolutions Begin With One Small Action

UNITED STATES
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on June 23, 2014

This blog has long rallied against the problem of the cover-up of sexual abuse in public schools. Unfortunately, the victims in these cases—when they are ready and able to come forward and get accountability— usually don’t have criminal and civil rights to expose the abuse. As a result, victims and the public are seldom, if ever, able to learn the full story. …

But a little law in Hawaii may be starting a revolution. On Friday, Hawaii’s civil window for victims of child sex abuse was extended for two more years. But it was also expanded. The new law added the state and counties as potential defendants. That means that if kids were sexually abused in public schools and institutions, they have the next two years to come forward and expose the crime. And if the crime was covered up by a government official, school administration, or bureaucracy, we will find that out, too.

My hope? Other states will look to Hawaii as an example. And a revolution will begin.

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MN- Victims want whereabouts of predator priests

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by priests

For immediate release: Monday, June 23, 2014

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

Information on abuse is good. Action on abuse is better.

And current information beats old information. So we beg Winona Bishop John Quinn to disclose the whereabouts of Fr. Joseph C. Cashman, Fr. Jack L. Krough, and Fr. Leland J. Smith – all of whom are living and are defrocked or being defrocked. Any of these men could now be living next to a day care center (as a suspended Youngtown predator priest did for years) or school or playground. They could be babysitting neighbors’ kids in an apartment building filled with single immigrant mothers.

We also call on Quinn;

– to disclose whether proven, admitted or credibly accused Winona predator priests are getting any kind of supervision whatsoever,

– to write Vatican officials urging them to suspendFr. Carlos Urrutigoity, a credibly accused abusive priest who worked in several places, (Minnesota and Pennsylvania, Argentina and Switzerland), was the subject of a $454,000 settlement, and is now second in command of a diocese in Paraguay. (Scranton’s bishop has pledged to do this.)

[Times-Tribune]

[SNAP]

– to write South American church officials urging them to warn their flocks about Fr. Urrutigoity, and

– to write to bishops in India urging them to warn their flocks about Fr. Leo Charles Koppala who pleaded guilty in March to child sex crimes in Minnesota and has been deported to his native country.

Finally, we beg Bishop Quinn to aggressively reach out to his flock – using his bully pulpit, parish newsletters, diocesan website, and personal parish visits – and beg anyone who saw, suspects or suffered child sex crimes to come forward, report to police and start healing. A news conference is good, but in-person parish visits would be an effective follow-up.

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Eight kinds of power the Vatican exercises to control Catholics

UNITED KINGDOM
Church and State

Editor’s note: The following comes from Chapter 4 of N4CM Chairman Dr Stephen D Mumford’s book, American Democracy and the Vatican.

In 1980, Jean-Guy Vaillancourt, a Canadian Roman Catholic pro­fessor of sociology at the University of Montreal, published a book entitled Papal Power: A Study of Vatican Control Over Lay Catholic Elites.[11] This is a study of the techniques intensively used by the Vati­can in many countries to control Catholic laypersons in Italy over the past one hundred years. In 1875, the Vatican created a system of local parish committees of at least five members each, called Catholic Actions. These committees were created to organize laypersons to assist the Vatican in seizing control of local, state, and national politi­cal machinery. Over the years, the Church gained considerable experience in organizing these committees and in ensuring obedience and a very high degree of responsiveness to the chain of command by the committees. These committees and their more recent counterpart, civic committees, are highly effective in mobilizing Vatican efforts. Vaillancourt places the role of the committees in proper perspective by discussing

a famous open letter presented to the Pope in 1968 by dissatisfied Catholics from France and elsewhere. The letter severely criti­cized the Vatican’s excessive attachment to wealth and power, stressing the idea that Church authorities are too repressive and manipulative:

“The whole Church apparatus is organized for control: the Roman Curia controls the bishops, the bishops the clergy, the clergy controls the laity . . . and the lay Christians control (what an illusion!) mankind. Hence a multiplication of secretaries, commissions, structures, etc., with their programs and rules. . . . Underhand influences have suffocated the openness which had manifested itself at the lay conference in Rome, a congress which had very little communication with the bishops who were then meeting in a synod.”

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Allegations made against archdiocesan priest

KANSAS CITY (KS)
The Leaven – Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Kansas City, Kansas

June 20, 2014

The Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas has received two credible allegations of inappropriate conduct by Father George Seuferling. These allegations do not involve minors.

Father Seuferling, who retired in 2001, is now limited in his public exercise of priestly ministry to weddings and funerals for family members.

The archdiocese asks anyone who has knowledge of inappropriate conduct by any priest, deacon, employee or volunteer to please contact the confidential report line at (913) 647-3051 or civil authorities.

The archdiocese respects the sincere concerns of all individuals who bring forth allegations of misconduct and is fully committed to conducting thorough investigations of all such allegations and cooperating with law enforcement officials.

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Christian radio host in Michigan busted in child sex probe, feds say

MICHIGAN
New York Daily News

BY JOE KEMP
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Monday, June 23, 2014

A host for a Christian radio station in Michigan was busted for paying to have sex with minors, federal investigators said.

John Balyo, 35, was collared on child sex charges after investigators with the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement linked him to a human trafficking case, authorities said.

Balyo — the morning host on WCSG Radio, based in Grand Rapids — allegedly paid an accused john, 41-year-old Ronald Lee Moser, to arrange sexual encounters with his victims.

Moser was arrested in early June, after officers with the federal agency’s Homeland Security Investigations unit raided his home — where they found him living with a 12-year-old boy and a stash of child pornography, authorities said.

Moser — who was allegedly running a website that allowed customers to pay for sex with underage boys — helped lead investigators to Balyo.

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WCSG general manager addresses Balyo arrest

MICHIGAN
WOOD TV

[with video]

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (WOOD) – The general manager of a local Christian radio station addressed the highly publicized arrest of one of the station’s former morning personalities Monday on the air.

WCSG General Manager Chris Lemke went on air at 7:30 a.m. to make a statement about John Balyo, 35, who was arrested Friday at a Christian music festival in Gaylord, Mich.

Balyo is facing one county of first-degree criminal sexual conduct for allegedly paying a man named Ronald Moser to set up sexual encounters with minor victims at Grand Rapids-area hotels, according to a Homeland Security agent.

Lemke said WCSG, which is owned by Cornerstone University, officially parted ways with Balyo on Saturday.

The following is a transcription of Lemke’s radio address:

“This past Friday, the WCSG family was shocked and saddened to learn that WCSG morning show host John Balyo was arrested amid allegations which have since been much publicized.

On Saturday, WCSG and Cornerstone University ended its affiliation with John. We sincerely grieve over these recent events. Our family is deeply aching and we know that you may be hurting as well.

We know that no one, absolutely no one, is immune from falling into the darkness of sin and yet we have hope. Those who truly follow and live for Jesus Christ know that he alone has the power to restore broken lives and broken trust

In that light, I want you our radio family to know that more than ever, WCSG exists to serve as a Christ-centered influence, through compelling content for all of our platforms, through compassionate relationships. Our vision is to be that encouraging, engaging and equipping media influence for Christ, his church, his kingdom and you here in West Michigan and around the world.

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Former Christian radio host John Balyo also out as sheriff’s reserve after sex charges

MICHIGAN
MLive

By John Agar | jagar@mlive.com
on June 23, 2014

GRAND RAPIDS, MI – John Balyo, the former Christian radio host accused of sexual assault, was fired as a Kent County sheriff’s reserve on Friday, June 20, when the allegations came to light.

Balyo served in the Enforcement Unit of Kent County Sheriff’s Department’s Traffic Squad.

The all-volunteer group provides assistance to Kent County Sheriff’s Department and other police agencies in the county at special events.

Undersheriff Jon Hess said the director of the Traffic Squad terminated Balyo on Friday. Balyo had volunteered as a reserve since 2004.

Hess reported no problems with Balyo’s work.

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WCSG prays for healing after radio host John Balyo busted on child-sex assault allegation

MICHIGAN
MLive

By John Agar | jagar@mlive.com
on June 23, 2014

GRAND RAPIDS, MI – WCSG general manager Chris Lemke urged listeners on Monday, June 23, to pray for former host John Balyo, his family, co-workers and alleged victims after Balyo was accused of paying for sexual encounters with children.

“God’s people will not lose heart,” Lemke told listeners.

He said the criminal allegations, reported late last week, have left staff in grief. Balyo’s morning co-host, Amanda, is taking this week off, but will return next week.

“And, we know you may be hurting as well,” Lemke told listeners.

“Yet, we have hope.”

He said that a listener outpouring of support, in text messages and emails to the station, have buoyed Balyo’s co-workers, who were in disbelief after hearing the allegations.

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Christian radio host arrested in Gaylord on child sex charges

MICHIGAN
Detroit Free press

By Bob Brenzing, Christopher Zoladz and Phil Dawson

GAYLORD — WCSG Radio announced Saturday that it has fired personality John Balyo after the 35-year old Caledonia resident was arrested Friday on child sex charges.

Cornerstone University released this statement Saturday: “Effective today, John Balyo is no longer affiliated with WCSG Radio. Chris Lemke, general manager of WCSG-FM, will address this matter on-air at 7:30 am during Monday’s (June 23) WCSG morning show.”

Balyo was arrested on charges of first-degree criminal sexual conduct.

He was arrested around 11:30 a.m. Friday at the Big Ticket Festival, a Christian music gathering near Gaylord. The arrest was made by officers with Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), Michigan State Police and the Battle Creek Police Department.

Authorities say Balyo allegedly paid another person, who is a defendant in another child exploitation case, to arrange for sexual encounters with minor victims. Further details are being withheld until Balyo appears in court.

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Can The Institute in Basic Life Principles Be Trusted to Police Itself?

UNITED STATES
Farmer, Jaffe, Weissing, Edwards, Fisto and Lehrman

Posted on Mon, Jun 23, 2014

by Adam Horowitz

The Institute in Basic Life Principles (IBLP) is an international conservative Christian organization based in Oak Brook, Illinois with millions of followers. IBLP was established by Bill Gothard. A recent controversy involving its founder Bill Gothard demonstrates why no organization should rely solely on an internal investigation when dealing with matters such as a child sexual abuse and sexual harassment.

According to its mission statement, IBLP “is dedicated to giving individuals, families, churches, schools, communities, governments, and businesses clear instruction and training on how to find success by following God’s principles found in Scripture.” IBLP’s conferences and seminars have been attended by millions of people around the world. Youth conflict resolution is an integral part of IBLP’s ministry, including community outreach, troubled youth mentoring, and ministry training.

Recently IBLP and its 79-year old founder Bill Gothard has been at the center of a sexual harassment controversy. In February 2014, IBLP’s board announced that Bill Gothard has been placed on administrative leave by the board members of his nonprofit organization amid an investigation into allegations that he sexually harassed several women and young girls.

A Christian-run online organization named Recovering Grace has been collecting and publishing victim accounts of sexual abuse by Gothard. According to Recovering Grace, at least 34 different women (including minors) allege they were victims of sexual abuse, “sexual harassment” and emotional abuse by Bill Gothard. The abuse allegedly endured for decades. Religion News Service also reported Gothard was also accused of failing to report allegations of child abuse.

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David Clohessy & Barbara Dorris: Springfield’s new bishop must reach out to clergy abuse victims

MASSACHUSETTS
Daily Hampshire Gazette

By DAVID CLOHESSY
and BARBARA DORRIS
Monday, June 23, 2014

SPRINGFIELD — We take strong issue with comments on abuse made last week by the new head of the Springfield diocese.

For several years, Bishop Thomas Rozanski, previously an auxiliary bishop with the the Archdiocese of Baltimore, Maryland, has served on the Committee on the Protection of Children and Youth overseen by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.

That body has been virtually worthless. It has done little or nothing about the absolute bare minimum and has focused far more on public relations than abuse prevention.

Last week, as media in the Valley reported, Bishop Rozanski claimed that being on the panel “has taught me first of all about the importance of reaching out to victims and survivors acknowledging their pain.”

This is disingenuous. Bishops keep pretending that they didn’t “understand” abuse until recently and that their carefully crafted cover-ups were somehow well-intentioned “mistakes” when they were, we believe, deliberate decisions to protect church officials instead of innocent children.

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Italian police disguise themselves as priests to catch blackmailers

ITALY
Telegraph (UK)

By Nick Squires, Rome 23 Jun 2014

Italian police organised a sting in which they disguised themselves as priests, in order to catch two men who were blackmailing a senior Catholic clergyman over erotic telephone conversations they had taped.

Police officers sprung their trap at the weekend, arresting two Romanian men. The men had been blackmailing the priest for months and demanding €250,000 in return for not handing the taped conversations to the media.

The tapes allegedly recorded Gregorio Vitali, the 70-year-old rector of a church in Vigevano, in the Lombardy region of northern Italy, having an erotic conversation with one of the two men, the Italian press reported.

The priest had allegedly handed over €100,000 euros to the blackmailers in return for their silence but finally called in the police after they demanded an additional €150,000.

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IRELAND’S “MASS GRAVE” HYSTERIA

UNITED STATES
Catholic League

Mass hysteria has gripped Ireland, England, and the United States over reports that nearly 800 bodies of children have been found in a mass grave outside a former home run by nuns in Tuam, near Galway. The Catholic Church has been hammered incessantly, and shrill cries of maltreatment abound. Fresh off the heels of horror stories about the Magdalene Laundries, and the torment of Philomena Lee (as recorded in the film, “Philomena”), the public is reeling from the latest report of abuse at the hands of cruel nuns.

None of this is true. There is no mass grave. Women were not abused by nuns in the Magdalene Laundries. And Philomena’s son was never taken from her and then sold to the highest bidder. The evidence that the public has been hosed is overwhelming. Truths, half-truths, and flat-out lies are driving all three stories. That’s a bad stew, the result of which is to whip up anti-Catholic sentiment. This is no accident.

The McAleese Report on the Magdalene Laundries is the most authoritative account of what actually happened in these facilities for “fallen women.” This government report, which was released in February 2013, does not even come close to indicting the nuns—not a single woman was ever sexually assaulted by one of the sisters, and the conditions in the laundries were not “prison like.” We know this because of the records that were examined, the women who were interviewed, and the physicians who offered their testimonials.

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Pope reportedly receives letter criticizing treatment of LCWR

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Jun. 23, 2014 NCR Today

Pope Francis has received a letter from a number of prominent U.S. theologians and nonprofit Catholic groups criticizing the Vatican’s treatment of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR), according to a group that organized signing of the letter.

The effort, announced Monday by the group Catholics in Alliance for the Common Good, may represent the first direct appeal known to be received by the pontiff regarding LCWR, a group that represents some 45,000 U.S. Catholic sisters and has been placed under a sort of receivership by the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

There have also been a number of other efforts undertaken by U.S. Catholics to reach Francis on the LCWR issue, including an online petition organized in May that reached nearly 10,500 signatures.

“We believe the recent criticism of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR) has been unjust,” reads Monday’s letter, which is signed by half a dozen theologians, the heads of Catholics in Alliance and the Franciscan Action Network, and former leaders of the Center of Concern and the Catholic Theological Society of America.

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Diocese of Winona to release new info on abusive priests

MINNESOTA
Winona Daily News

The Diocese of Winona announced Monday morning that it plans to release new details about the 13 priests who have been credibly accused of abuse while serving in the diocese.

The diocese plans to release the information at an 11 a.m. news conference. It didn’t detail what will be released, though it did say the information “protects the victims and the innocent” and complies with privacy laws related to medical and mental-health information.

“We are committed first and foremost for the compassionate healing for the victims and their families,” said Bishop John Quinn in a statement. “We remain steadfast to finding and telling the truth and are vigilantly committed to ensuring these unspeakable crimes against children never happen again.”

The abuse occurred primarily in the 1970s and 1980s. Nine of the 13 priests on the list are deceased, two have been laicized, and two are pending laicization. None are in active ministry.

The highest-profile priest on the list, Thomas Adamson, has admitted to having sexual contact with at least a dozen boys over two decades of ministry, stopping only when one of his victims came forward publicly in 1984. He continues to draw a monthly pension check from the diocese, as required by law, the diocese has said.

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Chile- Vatican says bishop is innocent of child abuse, SNAP responds

CHILE
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, June 23, 2014

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

Catholic officials say that a Chilean bishop is innocent of child sexual abuse. We are skeptical of this claim and hope anyone with additional information will come forward immediately.

[Catholic Herald]

Bishop Cristian Contreras Molina of San Felipe Chile was accused of sexually abusing minors earlier this year. Both the Vatican and the district attorney concluded their investigations into those allegations.

It takes a great deal of courage to report child sexual crimes and they are rarely made lightly.

We hope anyone who saw, suspects, or suffered child sexual abuse by any Chilean Catholic official will immediately call secular law enforcement. It is never too late to report what you know and doing so will help keep other children safe.

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Popular Michigan contemporary Christian radio DJ fired after arrest on child sex charges

MICHIGAN
The Raw Story

By Tom Boggioni
Sunday, June 22, 2014

A popular Christian disc jockey has been terminated, following his arrest Friday afternoon at a Christian music festival, on a sexual assault on a minor charge.

John Balyo, 35, of Caledonia, was arrested at the Big Ticket Festival, one of the nation’s largest Christian music events, Battle Creek police confirmed to WZZM-13.

Balyo, a graduate of Cornerstone University, a Christian college located in Grand Rapids, was employed for the past eight years as an on-air personality at contemporary Christian radio station WCSG affiliated with Cornerstone .

According to Battle Creek police Sgt. Jim Marten, Balyo’s name was given to investigators by Ronald Moser of Battle Creek, who was runs website offering paying customers sex with underage boys. Earlier this month, police raided Moser’s home, where they discovered him with a 12-year-old boy and a stash of child pornography.

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What did the church leaders know about this priest?

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher (article updated 23 June 2014)

Australia’s national child-abuse Royal Commission is investigating how the Catholic Church authorities dealt with a priest, John Gerard Nestor, who was convicted by a magistrate in 1997 for the alleged indecent assault of an altar boy. In a higher court, Nestor successfully appealed against this conviction. But the church authorities possessed certain “additional information” about Nestor (not regarding this boy). Perhaps the Royal Commission might be able to uncover this information.

During his twenties, John Nestor worked in secular jobs as an administrator. In his early thirties, he became a student in a Catholic seminary, aspiring to become a priest. He was ordained as a priest in 1989 (in his late thirties) and was accepted into the Wollongong Diocese, south of Sydney.

A relative of his was Bishop William Murray, head of the Wollongong Diocese.

When police charged Nestor in the 1997 court case, Father Nestor (then aged 45) admitted that he had slept on mattresses on a floor with a boy (aged about 14) and his younger brother in July 1991, but denied assaulting the boy.

Mr Tony Abbott, who was a member of the Federal Parliament in the Howard Government, gave “good character” evidence for Nestor before the sentencing. Mr Abbott told the court that Nestor was an upright and virtuous man whom he had known since 1984 while studying at Sydney’s St Patrick’s Seminary to become a priest. Mr Abbott said: “He [John Nestor] was … a beacon of humanity at the seminary.”

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Priest Who Killed Nun Tells Court That He Wants To Come Home To Die In Toledo

OHIO
10 TV

TOLEDO, Ohio – An ailing Roman Catholic priest convicted of killing a nun is asking a judge to let him come home to Toledo to die.

An attorney for Gerald Robinson filed a motion in federal court Friday seeking “an act of grace for a dying man.” The 76-year-old Robinson could possibly spend his final days in the care of nuns who have agreed to take him in.

Robinson is in a prison hospice unit in Columbus.

The (Toledo) Blade reports that his attorney on June 2 sent a letter to the governor requesting Robinson’s release from prison after learning that Robinson had suffered “a massive coronary” and was terminal. But that request was denied.

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Extent of Church child abuse convictions revealed

POLAND
The News

23.06.2014

Nineteen Polish clergyman were convicted of sexually abusing children from 2010 to 2013, according to data presented at a Church conference in Krakow over the weekend.

The research was conducted by chairman of the Child Protection Centre Father Adam Zak, who contacted over 250 courts nationwide.

Child abuse cases were widely publicised in the Polish media over the last two years, and Father Zak stressed that “the ignorance” that had previously held sway was dangerous.

“The fact of this ignorance is disturbing because on the one hand it hides suffering and harm from our conscience, and on the other hand there is betrayal and a terrible infidelity,” he said.

Father Zak revealed that he intends to broaden his research to cover convictions since 1990.

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Exculpan a obispo chileno acusado de abusos sexuales

CHILE
El Mostrador

El obispo de la ciudad chilena de San Felipe, Cristián Contreras Molina, ha sido exonerado de una acusación de abusos sexuales por la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe, que investigó el caso, informó hoy el obispado de esa localidad, situada en la región chilena de Valparaíso. “La instancia vaticana ha concluido que dichas acusaciones no son ciertas y ha establecido la ausencia de elementos incriminantes”, señaló el obispado en un comunicado de prensa.

El caso se conoció a comienzos del pasado febrero, cuando el Vaticano abrió una investigación para desvelar la veracidad de una supuesta vinculación del obispo Contreras, perteneciente a la orden de los Mercedarios, con un caso de abuso sexual. La denuncia fue hecha aparentemente por otros curas, que acusaron al obispo de haber abusado años atrás de un adolescente de 15 años.

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Cierran indagatoria contra obispo de San Felipe…

CHILE
Publimetro

Cierran indagatoria contra obispo de San Felipe Cristián Contreras por supuesto abuso a menor

La Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe en el Vaticano desestimó las acusaciones contra el obispo diocesano Cristián Contreras Molina, por el presunto abuso sexual que habría afectado a un menor de edad.

El Obispado de San Felipe dio a conocer este viernes una declaración pública en que comunicó el término de la investigación canónica contra el religioso, estableciendo que “no son ciertas” y que éstas carecen de “elementos incriminantes” .

Junto a lo anterior, se indicó que esta denuncia también fue investigada en el ámbito civil, la que fue archivada por falta de antecedentes.

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Vatican declares Chilean bishop innocent of sexual abuse charges

CHILE
Catholic Herald (UK)

By JORGE POBLETE on Monday, 23 June 2014

After almost a year of investigation, the Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith concluded that Bishop Cristian Contreras Molina of San Felipe was innocent of the child abuse accusations made against him.

Through a statement, the Diocese of San Felipe said that “the Vatican has concluded that those accusations were not true and has established the absence of incriminatory evidence.”

The district attorney’s office also closed its investigation regarding the case, the statement said, adding that the bishop had cooperated with both investigations.

“I always said that this accusation was a slander. Now I’m at peace. I have no doubts that the people of God know who their pastors are. I have received support from my family, the community and the priests,” said the bishop during a press conference June 20.

Paraphrasing Pope Francis’ words, he added that “there is no place in the church for priests who abuse minors. This means that I have always followed the church’s protocols that indicate that this (investigative) procedure must be followed under any accusation.”

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Strengthening law against child sex abuse

WEST VIRGINIA
Register-Herald

By Cody Neff
Register-Herald Reporter

Did you know that, if you’re over 18, you have to report any child sexual abuse you know of?

According to the executive director of the Just For Kids Child Advocacy Center, last year a law was put into place that changed the way child sexual abuse is reported.

“Every person over 18 years of age is a mandated reporter for child sexual abuse,” Scott Miller said. “There are a list of people who are mandated reporters for child abuse which includes clergy, teachers, coaches, and volunteers in child programs. Now, every adult is a mandated reporter for child sexual abuse.”

Miller said he hopes this will increase the number of children who can get help for abuse.

“Ideally, it means that there will be more reports of child sexual abuse,” he said. “If people take it seriously and recognize that they have the duty under the law to report something that they see or hear, then more people will do it. That is how it has played out.

“States have implemented similar laws and they have seen increases in the reports and in disclosures of sexual abuse. Only 1 in 10 children tell. It’s not their responsibility to tell so even if one more person reports something they hear or see, that’s one more child that will hopefully get the support they need to get help to reduce the trauma of the abuse.”

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Women still being seen as ‘outcasts’

IRELAND
Irish Mirror

Ciara Conway

As I sit to write this article, anger is growing at the terrible things that happened in mother and baby homes in our country.

Young women forcibly separated, first of all from their communities, then from any sense of pride or self-worth, then from their babies.

And their babies neglected, starved, illnesses untreated, labelled worthless, and ultimately buried in unmarked mass graves.

Left in the end without even an identity. We know now that that happened as a manifestation of official policy.

Young pregnant women were separated and confined in these brutal situations in order to enforce a stigma of shame. They were declared unequal – and treated accordingly.

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Questions unanswered for those born in Limerick City Home

IRELAND
Limerick Leader

by Mike Dwane
Published on the 23 June 2014

CITY archivist Jacqui Hayes says that to this day she receives inquiries from people born in the former City Home looking for information on their birth mothers.

Campaigners have criticised an indication from Minister for Children Charlie Flanagan that the former city and county homes will not form part of the commission of inquiry into mother and baby homes and forced adoptions.

While Limerick did not have a religious-run mother and baby home on the scale of St Mary’s in Tuam, revelations around which have resulted in the inquiry, unmarried mothers were sent by their families to local authority run institutions in the early days of independence.

There is also evidence that unmarried mothers in Limerick were hidden away from view behind the walls of Mount St Vincent, run by the Sisters of Mercy on O’Connell Avenue, and that after they had their children, women were sent to the Good Shepherd Laundry on Clare Street.

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Dan O’Brien: It was an age of monstrous behaviour for everybody

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Dan O’Brien
Published 22/06/2014

THE national discussion around the history of the Tuam mother and baby home until its closure in 1961, and more generally about the way in which unmarried mothers were treated in the past, has been strong on hyperbole.

One newspaper described the loss of life in the home as “Ireland’s Holocaust” and a panellist on a radio talk show wondered if there was something “innately” bad in Irish people to have made them behave so cruelly towards single mothers and their children in years gone by.

While the comparison with Nazi death camps is so absurd it does not warrant response, and the notion that a people is innately less virtuous than others has led down some very dark paths in the past, both observations at least attempt to put what happened into some sort of wider context. That context is how societies elsewhere treated unmarried mothers and their children in more socially conservative times.

Let’s start by making very clear that seeking context is in no way an attempt to downplay the awfulness of anything that happened in the past. Moreover, as a social liberal I see changes that have taken place in Irish society since then as extraordinary and very welcome progress.

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Pope’s zero tolerance pledge on child abuse is not enough

UNITED KINGDOM
National Secular Society

Posted: Mon, 23 Jun 2014 by David McClenaghan

Words are not enough: David McClenaghan argues that if the Church wants to deal with its record on child abuse it must root out both the offenders and enablers.

The church must not only root out offenders but also those who have allowed crimes to happen by covering them up.

Pope Francis’s zero tolerance policy for those in the Catholic Church who abuse children should be a statement of the obvious.

It is a sad indictment of the church that it is not; and that it is being treated as something to be celebrated. The reality is that zero tolerance of paedophile priests is the bare minimum that the church can do to protect vulnerable children and victims of abuse.

The Pope’s statement and recent apology for a number of sex scandals involving priests is not enough. He needs to take greater action and show not only zero tolerance towards those who have committed acts of abuse but to those who have protected paedophile priests. It is unacceptable to cover up abuse scandals in the misguided belief that protecting the reputation of the church is more important than protecting vulnerable children.

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Royal commission told Salvation Army on shaky ground with ‘1pc’ statistic on child abuse

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

The Salvation Army is back before the child abuse royal commission to respond to the damning evidence revealed during two separate public hearings and the recommended findings that have been delivered to the inquiry. The Salvation Army has again apologised to victims and again vowed to assist them, but the inquiry has been told that the Salvation Army is on shaky ground by claiming that only 1 per cent of children in its homes were abused.

Transcript

ELEANOR HALL: To the Child Abuse Royal Commission, and the Salvation Army is before the inquiry in Sydney today, to respond to the damning evidence revealed during two separate public hearings over the past six months.

The royal commission has already told Salvation Army leaders that they are on shaky ground with their claim that only 1 per cent of children in the organisation’s homes were abused.

But the chair of the inquiry said this morning, that it’s too early to establish a clear “causal link” between the sexual abuse of children and the harsh and punitive culture at the Salvation Army’s homes in New South Wales and Queensland.

The Salvation Army has again apologised to victims and again vowed to assist them.

Our correspondent Emily Bourke has been monitoring proceedings and she joins us again now.

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Hearings wind up

AUSTRALIA
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Canberra & Goulburn

23 June 2014

The Canberra hearings of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse have wound up after eight days of evidence. The commission will hear more evidence from former Marist Brothers provincial Br Alexis Turton, on his response to complaints of abuse by Kostka Chute at Marist College in Canberra, in Sydney from 30 June. Summaries of the hearings can be found here.

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The Salvation Army has sacked an officer …

AUSTRALIA
Daily Telegraph

The Salvation Army has sacked an officer accused of child abuse just months after publicly rewarding him

JANET DIFE-YEOMANS THE DAILY TELEGRAPH JUNE 23, 2014 1:01PM SHARE

THE Salvation Army has sacked an officer accused at the royal commission of child abuse — six months after giving him a silver award.

Major John McIver was dismissed last week and the allegations against him including sexually assaulting a boy have been referred to the police, the inquiry into institutional responses to child sex abuse has been told today.

The commission had heard shocking allegations from boys at two homes including that Mr McIver had whipped one boy’s genitals, burned another boy on the leg with a cigarette and dislocated another boy’s shoulder.

He had worked at the Bexley Boys Home in Sydney’s south from 1968 until he moved to become manager of the Akira Salvation Army home for boys at Indooroopilly in Brisbane in 1974. He left there in 1976.

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Salvation Army ‘profoundly sorry’ for sexual and physical abuse of children

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

Australian Associated Press
theguardian.com, Monday 23 June 2014

The Salvation Army said it was profoundly sorry for the abuse suffered by children in its care, and acknowledged that events revealed by the royal commission into child sexual abuse represented the greatest failure in its history.

But the organisation maintains sexual abuse was not widespread, after the commission heard evidence of more than 100 cases of children suffering horrendous abuse in homes run by the Salvation Army in Queensland and NSW in the 1960s and 70s.

As the royal commission moved to finalise its investigation into the church on Monday, counsel for the Salvation Army, Kate Eastman, challenged a statement from counsel assisting the commission that sexual abuse was “widespread” at boys’ homes it ran.

In an apology to survivors, Eastman read a statement from the Salvation Army saying the organisation was “profoundly sorry for failing to care for you as you deserved, for the neglect, hurt, abuse and deprivation of human rights that all children are entitled to”.

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Failures of UK’s ‘unscrupulous and abhorrent’ child protection services laid bare in report

UNITED KINGDOM
London Evening Standard

DAVID COHEN, CAMPAIGNS EDITOR

Published: 23 June 2014

Britain’s child protection and mental health services were today described as “unscrupulous”, “abhorrent”, “overwhelmed”, and “in crisis”, in a landmark report revealed by the Evening Standard.

It highlights the existence of large numbers of “horrifically” failed “lone children”, abused by their families and “unlawfully” turned down for help by children’s services.

The 400-page report by the Centre for Social Justice carries the testimony of 50 child protection experts from across the country as well as 20 children “abhorrently failed” by social services in London.

It concludes that the system is beyond repair and calls for a Royal Commission to oversee a “huge step change” and a “radical redesign”.

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SNAP hopes priest case encourages other victims (AUDIO)

MISSOURI
Missourinet

June 23, 2014 By Bob Priddy

A support organization for people abused by priests hopes resolution of an abuse case in Boonville last week encourages more people who’ve been harboring a secret to step forward.

A judge in Boonville has ruled that the statute of limitations had not run out on the man who was known as Father Jerry Howard, who is going to prison for 12 years for abusing three boys in the 1980s while serving as a priest in Boonville. Howard had left the state, which stopped the limitations clock from running. He was living in New Jersey when he was arrested.

Director David Clohessy of the Survivors Network for those Abused by Priests says the judge’s ruling should encourage other prosecutors to go after priests and other abusers whose acts were done decades ago.

Clohessy continues to accuse the Catholic Church of delaying actions and concealing information, saying any progress the church has made has been “painfully” small. But he says the Catholic Church is not the only faith group with abuse problems. “Every faith group could and should do a better job…Many denominations have fewer restrictions on who may become clergy and those denominations tend to be more open to kicking out bad apples,” he says.

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Silent witnesses to child abuse could be jailed – new Barbados law

JAMAICA
Jamaica Observer

BRIDGETOWN, Barbados (CMC) — Persons who may be aware of instances of child abuse, but do not inform the authorities, could be brought before the courts and face possible jail according to a looming law.

Child Care Board Director, Joan Crawford, says Cabinet is about to consider a proposal making it mandatory for school principals, church leaders, social workers, court officials, and media workers, among others to report knowledge of child abuse.

“There are no ifs or buts. It will be that you … are bound to report,” she said Thursday. “The only exception there is that lawyer-client privilege, but all others are not considered that way.”

Further explaining the proposal before the Cabinet she said, “Failure to report a suspected case should carry a sanction in the form of a fine, with the alternative of imprisonment”.

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Salvation Army admits abuse of boys is its greatest failure: inquiry

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

JUNE 23, 2014

Dan Box
Crime Reporter
Sydney

THE Salvation Army will review every compensation payment it has made to the victims of child sex abuse by its staff, after the royal commission unveiled evidence of the “greatest failure” in the church’s history.

During a submissions hearing today, the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse was told 19 Salvation Army staff are alleged to have abused around 115 boys living in four of the church’s childrens’ homes.

“The Salvation Army acknowledges that this is the greatest failure in its history in Australia. It acknowledges that many children entrusted to its care in the past suffered horrific abuse,” the church’s barrister, Kate Eastman, told the commission.

But she maintained it was not open to the commission to make a finding that widespread sexual abuse was perpetrated by many officers and employees – contrary to the suggestion of the counsel assisting the commission.

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GUEST COLUMN: Sexual abuse not worse in Catholic Church

UNITED STATES
Wicked Local Easton

By Stephen May
Posted Jun. 22, 2014

Sexual abuse of minors continues to be a grave problem in the United States, as well as the rest of the world. One serious misperception perpetrated by the media is that Catholic priests are among the most serious offenders. Many of the misinformed have come to believe that Church policies such as celibacy and retaining a predominantly male authority structure are to blame for this situation. Statistically speaking, this is far from the truth. The purpose of this article is not to excuse the actions of any priest who has committed such an offence (there is no excuse), but rather to juxtapose the crisis within the priesthood to the bigger problem of sexual abuse of minors within the public as a whole.

In its 2010 report on Child Maltreatment, the United States Department of Health and Human Services stated that there were 712,506 reported cases of sexual abuse against minors. This is equivalent to 9.8 percent of the number of Americans under the age of 18. Of these cases, 578,768 involved one or both of the child’s parents (81.3 percent). The majority of the other cases involved foster parents or other relatives close to the child.

According to the United States Department of Education in 2011, “nearly 9.6 percent of [pre-K through 12th grade] students are targets of educator sexual misconduct sometime during their school career.”

These are chilling statistics, clearly indicating that there is a very serious problem in the United States regarding the protection of children from their most trusted adult companions.

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Abuse ‘not widespread’, Salvos say

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

The Salvation Army has told a royal commission that child sexual abuse in its homes was not widespread, considering the sheer number of children it has cared for.

Counsel for the Salvation Army Kate Eastman made a submission to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse on Monday following public hearings held earlier this year.

In those hearings, survivors told of horrific physical and sexual abuse suffered at the hands of Salvation Army workers in children’s homes.

On Monday Ms Eastman said the church ‘acknowledges that this is the greatest failure in its history in Australia’.

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Royal commission: Salvos deny sexual abuse widespread

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

Rachel Browne
Social Affairs Reporter

The Salvation Army has denied that sexual abuse was widespread in the organisation, despite more than 100 survivors coming forward with horrendous tales of suffering allegedly endured at the hands of officers.

Kate Eastman, SC, the lawyer representing the Salvation Army, asked the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse not to make a finding of widespread sexual abuse within the organisation at a submissions hearing on Monday.

She said that two officers had been dismissed over abuse claims, including Major John McIver, who was sacked last week. Mr McIver has also been referred to the police over allegations he physically and sexually abused boys in two Salvation Army homes in the 1960s and ’70s.

Colin Haggar, the officer who attempted to shrug off his sexual assault of an eight-year-old girl in the 1980s by saying, “It wasn’t that serious … I only fingered her”, has also been dismissed.

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Pastor steps down after Nienstedt places limits on him for ‘boundary violation’

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: ANTHONY LONETREE , Star Tribune Updated: June 22, 2014

A new look at a claim that a Catholic priest engaged in inappropriate conduct with a minor has resulted in Archbishop John Nienstedt placing restrictions on the priest — and the priest’s resignation as pastor of a Dakota County church.

The Rev. Joseph Gallatin of the Church of St. Peter in Mendota had been on a leave of absence since December pending a review of the alleged “boundary violation.”

In a statement on the church’s website, Gallatin said Sunday that he was “truly sorry for the pain that this has caused the parish.”

Nienstedt is restricting him from any ministry involving minors as a result of a 1998 incident on a mission trip during which Gallatin rubbed a sleeping 17-year-old male’s chest and abdomen under the shirt “because the teen was snoring,” according to a posting on the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis website.

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Wolllongong Catholic leaders to give evidence in royal commission

AUSTRALIA
Illawarra Mercury

By KATE McILWAIN June 23, 2014

Some of Australia’s most senior Catholic leaders – as well as key Wollongong church figures – will appear before the royal commission into child sexual abuse’s investigation into Wollongong’s Catholic Diocese over the next two weeks.

The public hearing, which begins in Sydney on Tuesday, is the first time the actions of the Catholic Church in Wollongong have come under the microscope of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

It will focus on how the diocese and the Vatican responded to allegations of sexual assault against then Father John Gerard Nestor in the 1990s.

The witness list includes Adelaide Archbishop Phillip Wilson, who was Wollongong’s bishop from 1996 to 2000, and the general secretary of the Catholic Bishops Conference Father Brian Lucas.

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June 22, 2014

Mendota priest resigns from parish after board review; deacon steps aside

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

Peter Cox St. Paul, Minn. Jun 22, 2014

A Mendota priest has resigned from his parish after a Clergy Review Board reviewed a 1998 incident in which the priest allegedly touched a 17-year-old boy and considered other recent evaluations of the priest, Archibishop John Nienstedt announced Sunday.

In addition, the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis said a deacon is stepping aside temporarily while a sex abuse investigation is reopened.

In the first case, the Rev. Joseph Gallatin, 43, is being reassigned to limited ministry by Nienstedt, following the review board’s recommendation. He resigned as pastor at the Church of St. Peter in Mendota.

Learn more about Gallatin

Internal records reviewed previously by MPR News showed that Gallatin admitted he rubbed the chest of a teenage boy under his shirt while he slept in a bunk bed on the camping trip. Gallatin explained that he wanted the boy to stop snoring but later admitted that the incident provided sexual gratification.

The incident was investigated in 1998 by the Clergy Review Board, which recommended evaluation, therapy and monitoring. The archdiocese said today Gallatin has actively participated in those requirements since the initial recommendation was made.

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Bishop apologises for sex abuse and concealment of crimes

AUSTRALIA
Northern Star

Leah White | 23rd Jun 2014

THE Lismore Catholic Diocese has publicly apologised to the victims of child sexual abuse for the “heinous” crimes of the past, saying history would never repeat itself thanks to a range of new policies and procedures.

Bishop Geoffrey Jarrett, on behalf of the Catholic Schools Office of Lismore, wrote to the parents of St Carthage’s and Trinity school children in light of the recent revelations of past child sexual abuse by two Marist Brother predators employed at the schools.

“While the events that occurred are historic, they are nonetheless disturbing and unacceptable,” Bishop Jarrett wrote.

Through the mishandling and, in some cases, concealment of child sexual abuse, Church leaders have betrayed the trust of all people of faith and amplified the pain for victims

– Lismore Bishop Geoffrey Jarrett

“The emotional and psychological pain by the victims of the clerical child abuse and their families is real and acknowledged.

“Through the mishandling and, in some cases, concealment of child sexual abuse, Church leaders have betrayed the trust of all people of faith and amplified the pain for victims.”

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Statement Regarding Rev. Joseph Gallatin

MINNESOTA
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis

Date: Sunday, June 22, 2014
Source: Jim Accurso

From Archbishop John C. Nienstedt, Archbishop of Saint Paul and Minneapolis

At the recommendation of the Clergy Review Board and the Episcopal Vicar for Ministerial Standards, Very Rev. Reginald Whitt, O.P., I am placing restrictions on the ministry of Rev. Joseph Gallatin. Rev. Gallatin has been on a leave of absence as pastor of the Church of Saint Peter in Mendota since December 2013.

Beginning late last year, we have been reviewing the files of all clergy in the history of the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis. During that review, Rev. Gallatin’s file was referred again to the Clergy Review Board because of a single incident involving a boundary violation between him and a 17 year old male in 1998. It occurred on a mission trip when Rev. Gallatin rubbed the sleeping teenager’s chest and abdomen, under the shirt, because the teen was snoring. The teen told chaperones, and the matter was examined by the Clergy Review Board in 1998. At that time, the Board reviewed the matter and concluded Rev. Gallatin required evaluation, therapy and monitoring. He has actively participated in all requirements since that incident 16 years ago and, to my knowledge, we have received no other allegations of inappropriate behavior with a minor against Rev. Gallatin.

As part of the ongoing review of clergy files, the Clergy Review Board was asked to revisit the 1998 allegation. Law enforcement was informed, and charges have not been filed. The Clergy Review Board thoroughly examined the incident over the course of several months, and determined after consulting with multiple experts that the act did not violate the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People.

However, the Clergy Review Board did find the 1998 action and recent evaluations of Rev. Gallatin concerning enough to recommend to me that I place significant restrictions on his ministry. The Clergy Review Board took many factors into account, including Rev. Gallatin’s 16 years of good conduct and his current psychological assessments, as well as promoting a culture of abundant caution needed to restore trust.

The Clergy Review Board recommends Rev. Gallatin continue in the monitoring program, and that he be allowed to continue to serve in some limited ministry that does not involve minors. I have accepted the Board’s recommendation, and communicated it to Rev. Gallatin. Rev. Gallatin then offered me his resignation as pastor of the Church of St. Peter, which I accepted. Based on the Board’s recommendation, I will assign Rev. Gallatin to a new assignment, where he will not have any role in a parish setting or any other setting in which he will have vocational responsibilities that involve minors.
The Clergy Review Board is made up of clergy and lay people with expertise in sexual abuse, health care, mental health, law and education, and includes parents and victims of abuse. They serve as a confidential, advisory, consultative body that advises the archbishop and the Episcopal Vicar for Ministerial Standards in their assessment of allegations of sexual abuse of minors by priests and deacons.

Bishop Andrew Cozzens celebrated every Mass this weekend at the Church of Saint Peter in Mendota, and informed the parishioners of this decision.

Please keep all involved in your prayers.

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Statement Regarding Deacon Damiani

MINNESOTA
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis

Date: Sunday, June 22, 2014
Source: Jim Accurso

From Bishop Andrew H Cozzens

At the request of the Clergy Review Board, Archbishop John C. Nienstedt has temporarily removed Deacon Joseph Damiani from ministry while an investigation is reopened regarding a previous allegation of a sexual abuse of a minor. Deacon Damiani has consistently denied the accusation, which alleges abuse to have occurred more than 40 years ago, decades before he was ordained. The accusation was brought to local law enforcement, and no criminal charges were filed. To my knowledge, we have not received any allegation that Deacon Damiani has sexually abused a minor or engaged in any sexual misconduct during his ministry.

When the original allegation was received by the archdiocese, an investigation concluded that the claim could not be substantiated, and the matter was closed. However, as part of our ongoing review of clergy files, the Clergy Review Board has now requested the investigation be reopened, in order to make sure that some key facts are clarified and Deacon Damiani’s suitability for ministry established. It is the stated policy of the archdiocese that any priest or deacon with an accusation of sexual abuse of a minor that is not obviously false must not be in ministry pending a full investigation of the claim. This process was even followed with regard to Archbishop Nienstedt earlier this year, who stepped down from public ministry while an investigation into an allegation from a mandated reporter was completed. He has since returned to public ministry.

Deacon Damiani has served as the deacon at Annunciation Catholic Church in Minneapolis, and on staff at Gichitwaa Kateri Catholic Church in Minneapolis in the Office of Indian Affairs since 2009. The staffs of both Annunciation Catholic Church and Gichitwaa Kateri Catholic Church have been notified.

The Clergy Review Board is made up of lay people and clergy with expertise in sexual abuse, health care, mental health, law, education, and includes parents and victims of abuse. They serve as a confidential, advisory, consultative body that advises thearchbishop and the Episcopal Vicar for Ministerial Standards in their assessment of allegations of sexual abuse of minors by priests and deacons.

Anyone having knowledge of abuse of a minor should call civil authorities immediately.

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Archdiocese reopens two cases on alleged sexual conduct

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Raya Zimmerman
rzimmerman@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 06/22/2014

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis temporarily removed a deacon on Sunday after reopening a previous allegation of sexual abuse of a minor, and also placed restrictions on a priest from a boundary violation.

Archbishop John C. Nienstedt’s decision follows the Clergy Review Board’s investigation into reviewing the files of all clergy that started last fall regarding alleged sexual abuse.

Deacon Joseph Damiani, whose alleged abuse more than 40 years ago happened decades before he was ordained, has consistently denied the allegations, Bishop Andrew H. Cozzens said in a statement released Sunday.

Damiani has served as the deacon at Annunciation Catholic Church in Minneapolis and on staff at Gichitwaa Kateri Catholic Church in Minneapolis in the Office of Indian Affairs since 2009.

“To my knowledge, we have not received any allegation that Deacon Damiani has sexually abused a minor or engaged in any sexual misconduct during his ministry,” Cozzens said.

When the original allegation was received by the archdiocese, the claim wasn’t substantiated and the matter was closed, Cozzens said. The review board reopened the case to ensure “some key facts are clarified and Deacon Damiani’s suitability for ministry established.”

Any priest or deacon with an accusation of sexual abuse of a minor that is not obviously false must not be in ministry pending a full investigation of the claim, according to the review board’s procedure.

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New York Times as Opus Dei Beast PR Stunt of the Day: Catholics’ Stories as Antidote to Scandals. NYT sold its soul to Vatican Mammon Beast

UNITED STATES
POPE FRANCIS the CON-Christ.

June 21, 2014

Paris Arrow

The New York Times should do more for the good of mankind – by using its media platform – to end the corruption of the global Vatican Evil Empire and track down Pope Francis’ biggest heist in mankind’s history, read about it in our article, Hidden Heist in the Holy See. The SECRET biggest heist in the history of mankind! Pope Francis is the Greatest THIEF on earth. http://pope-francis-con-christ.blogspot.ca/2014/02/hidden-heist-in-holy-see-biggest-heist.html The New York Times should assist Pope Francis to make this world a better place by helping him achieve the 6 suggestions for Pope Francis, the Pharaoh of the Vatican Pyramid with three equal sides: corrupt politicians, corrupt businessmen, corrupt clergy http://popecrimes.blogspot.ca/2014/06/6-suggestions-for-pope-francis-as-he.html

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Pope Francis’ new clothes: Why his progressive image is white smoke and mirrors

UNITED STATES
Salon

SUNDAY, JUN 22, 2014

ANNA MARCH, THE WEEKLINGS

THE IMAGE OF Pope Francis is that he is a breath of fresh air, more progressive on social issues than his predecessor and a kinder, gentler pope. But when the facts are examined, you see that he is none of these things. There is an enormous disconnect between who the pope really is in terms of his policies and his public relations image, as crafted by the Vatican’s PR man, previously with Fox News. The current PR mission is all about reversing the incredible decline in fundraising under the last pope from the U.S. Catholic Church in particular. Pope Francis has made any number of statements that seem to indicate change and progress that are not reflected in policy. In fact, in the wake of such comments from Pope Francis, the Vatican often makes a point to explicitly state that no church policy has changed.

While the pope transmits a populist vibe—particularly about the economy— he is an old-school conservative who, despite his great PR, maintains nearly all of the socialpolicies of his predecessors and keeps up a hardline Vatican “cabinet.” He has done virtually nothing to change the policies of the church to match his more compassionate rhetoric. People excuse the pope, claiming that he doesn’t have much power to make changes, but this simply isn’t true. Further, it is ludicrous to suggest that a man who denies comprehensive reproductive health care (including all forms of birth control including condoms and abortion) and comprehensive family planning is a man who cares about the poor of this world. The bigotry of homophobia and sexism cloaked in religion are still bigotry and sexism. By giving to the church, American Catholics aren’t supporting “progress,” they are supporting oppression and in this way are complicit in the bigotry, sexism, and oppression of the church.

People in the U.S. have fallen hard for Pope Francis. According to polls conducted by The Washington Post/ABC and CNN, his approval ratings with Americans are sky high. “Seven-in-ten U.S. Catholics also now say Francis represents a major change in direction for the church,” according to a poll conducted by the Pew Research Center. In truth, while he is a PR darling, the new pope aligns closely on social issues with his predecessor, the wildly unpopular Pope Benedict XVI. …

The wheels were set in motion to change the perception of the church before Pope Francis was elected. In March of 2010, Pope Benedict XVI had only a 40 percent favorable rating in the United States. By June of that year, the U.S. Bishops were planning a PR campaign to soften their image and attract the younger generation. Shortly thereafter, the Vatican hired Greg Burke, a former Fox News correspondent, as a senior communications adviser reporting directly to the Vatican’s third-ranking official, Archbishop Giovanni Angelo Becciu. The New York Times points out that Mr. Burke had previously met Cardinal Timothy Dolan, the archbishop of New York, and “did not rule out that being known by the cardinal might have helped him get hired.” Clearly, the American cardinals have a great deal of influence over Vatican PR, given how much Vatican funding comes from the U.S. Burke is a traditionalist, a celibate, a member of the conservative catholic alliance Opus-Dei, and his spiritual practices reportedly include self-flagellation, in keeping with Opus Dei traditionalists.

In addition to Burke, the Vatican has also hired the consulting firm of McKinsey & Company. The consulting firm was engaged to “study the Holy See’s communications, with an eye to creating a more effective media operation.” The goal was that this hire, along with that of Burke the year before, would reverse the declining view of the Church caused, in part, by public relations miscues. …

Another critical area where Pope Francis has continued in the tradition of his predecessor Pope Benedict is the sexual abuse scandal in the Catholic Church. In addition to praising Pope Benedict’s handling of the scandal, Pope Francis also said in March of this year, “The Catholic Church is perhaps the only public institution that has moved with transparency and responsibility. No one has done more. And yet the church is the only one that has been attacked.” According to an AP report immediately after the Pope made those statements, the Vatican “still has no blanket policy telling bishops to report abusers to police or risk being sanctioned themselves, and to date no bishop has been punished for a cover up. In addition, the harshest penalty the church hands out to abusers is the ecclesial equivalent of firing the priest.” Pope Francis continues to engage in “…. more of what we’ve seen for decades — more gestures, promises, symbolism and public relations,” according to Joelle Casteix of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP.

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Church restricts priest’s ministry after review

MINNESOTA
San Francisco Chronicle

June 22, 2014

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis has restricted the ministry of a priest who has been on a leave of absence during a review of clergy files.

Archbishop John Nienstedt says he’s limited the Rev. Joseph Gallatin’s ministry so he won’t be involved with minors. Nienstedt says Gallatin resigned as pastor of the Church of St. Peter in Mendota and will be reassigned.

Gallatin didn’t immediately return messages seeking comment. He’s been on leave since December after he was accused of a boundary violation. The archdiocese says Sunday the incident stems from a 1998 mission trip in which Gallatin rubbed the chest of a snoring male teen.

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Salvos back in box at abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
SBS

AAP

As the royal commission considers finding that the Salvation Army failed in its duty of care to vulnerable children, more evidence will be heard on Monday.

The Salvation Army is back in the box at the child sex abuse royal commission on Monday to give evidence into its handling of allegations against its officers in NSW and Queensland.

The organisation has faced two commission hearings, the first in January which looked at its response to sexual abuse at boys’ homes in Indooroopilly and Riverview in Queensland and at Bexley and Goulburn in NSW.

A second hearing in March looked at how it handled further claims of sexual abuse by two officers.

In that hearing, Salvation Army leader James Condon gave evidence that he accompanied an officer, Colin Haggar, to a Sydney police station in 1990 to report Haggar’s abuse of an eight-year-old girl.

Mr Condon said they were told nothing could be done in response to their initiative unless the victim’s family came forward.

On Friday, the commission published recommended findings by counsel assisting, Simeon Beckett.

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Abusive Indiana pastor blames victim

UNITED STATES
The Freethinker (UK)

A US district who jailed an Indiana pastor for 12 years for having sex with an under-age girl is expected to consider an appeal against the sentence next month.

Former mega-church pastor Jack A Schaap, 56, (above) is asking judge Rudy Lozano to overturn his 12-year sentence:

Due to the aggressiveness of (the girl) that inhibited impulse control …

According to this report, Schaap is taking a risk with his appeal. Said one lawyer, who asked to remain anonymous:

Judge Lozano may give him more time.

Schaap pleaded guilty to transporting a female student of the church’s high school to Illinois and Michigan for sexual encounters. He also had sex with her in his church office in June and July 2012.
The girl wrote in her victim impact statement.

I was raised by my parents and teachers to trust and obey my pastor. He was a celebrity to me, a father figure and a man of God. As my pastor, I sought guidance and counseling from (Schaap) when I was in need of help.

Schaap is being held in the Federal Correctional Institute in Ashland, Kentucky, and he isn’t eligible for release until April 20, 2023.

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Anglican Church struggling for money in several dioceses as tough times add up

AUSTRALIA
Courier-Mail

JILL PENGELLEY THE ADVERTISER JUNE 22, 2014

THE Anglican Church is in “real financial strife” in up to a third of its 23 dioceses across Australia, a spokeswoman says.

Dr Muriel Porter says the finances will be discussed at the church’s General Synod in Adelaide, which starts on Sunday.

“We have quite a few dioceses that look to be on the brink of bankruptcy,” she said yesterday.

“That’s a huge game-changer.

“We have the second-largest church (after the Catholic Church) with a number of its dioceses in real financial strife.”

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Rev. Bruce MacArthur

TEXAS
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of San Antonio

The Archdiocese of San Antonio recently received a credible allegation of clergy sexual abuse from a woman who, as a minor, was abused at St. James Catholic Church in San Antonio in the late 1970’s. During the course of our investigation, we determined that Rev. Bruce MacArthur was at St. James from 1979-1980 and 1983-1984 and was at St. Dominic from 1980-1982. Our investigation further confirmed that Rev. MacArthur was convicted of attempted rape of a vulnerable adult prior to 1979, and of Sexual Intercourse with a Child and Indecent Behavior with a Child in Wisconsin in 2008. Rev. MacArthur is since deceased.

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Police dressed as priests catch erotic-tape blackmailers

ITALY
Inquirer (Philippines0

AFP

ROME — Italian police dressed as priests have ensnared two would-be blackmailers who were threatening to publish wiretaps of an erotic conversation with a clergyman, local media said Sunday.

Police in the Lombardy region of northern Italy donned priestly garb late Saturday to trap two Romanian men in the town of Lomellina who were trying to get the local church to pay them 250,000 euros ($340,000) not to hand the tape over to the media.

The recording allegedly captures an unnamed local priest having an erotic conversation with one of the two men, the reports said.

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Pope Benedict treated me unfairly, say sacked bishop Bill Morris

AUSTRALIA
WA Today

June 22, 2014

Ross Peake
Senior reporter for The Canberra Times

A sacked Catholic bishop will tell a Canberra audience this week he was treated unfairly by Pope Benedict.

“I was deprived of natural justice as I was in no way able to appeal the judgments or decisions that were made,” Bill Morris says.

He was forced out of his position in Toowoomba after a group of conservative “temple police” parishioners complained directly to the Vatican about his preaching which included discussion about ordaining women and married men.

He has written a book about his experience – Benedict, Me and the Cardinals Three – but says he has no bitterness.

Instead he has learnt to “breathe underwater”.

“That’s the freedom to be able to move with life in such a way that you can absorb the various difficulties, the good things, the bad things and all the time with a great respect for everything around you,” he said.

The book says he told Pope Benedict XVI in a personal meeting of a sex abuse case at a Toowoomba school but the Pope dismissed the bishop’s request to remain at his post to deal with it.

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We all bear shame for predator culture

AUSTRALIA
The Canberra Times

June 20, 2014

Jack Waterford
Editor-at-large, The Canberra Times

It’s been a humiliating week for the Marist Brothers and the Royal Australian Navy, each associated with terrible abuse of young people in their charge, and forced, in public, to confront the fact that all too little was done about it, whether at the time, or after its existence became clear and the devastating effects were obvious.

The shame washes over more than the perpetrators. It also goes on those, including myself, who had some inklings of what was going on and did all too little about it. Who played some role in cultures of denial, or who, in relation to physical abuse, sometimes even pretended that it was character-forming or bonding.

The royal commission into child sexual abuse has provided an opportunity for many victims to describe what happened and to give witness to their suffering. But its focus has been equally on how abuse became to a degree institutionalised, and how, sometimes, even ordinarily good men and women were in denial of the problem or its impact, covered up to protect the reputations or assets of the agencies concerned, treated victims as enemies, and, often, unwittingly or otherwise, allowed known violators the scope to carry on violating more and more victims.

In the cold light of day, it often emerges that perpetrators were themselves victims of just such abuse as they later inflicted upon others, or that there were aspects of their physical, social and moral development that help explain, without excusing, the enormities of their behaviour. It was sometimes embarrassing, over recent weeks, to hear authority figures from the Marist Brothers seem abysmally ignorant of matters sexual, and completely inept in discussing or dealing with it. Some of this seemed like prevarication and probably was, because that order, like others, behaved for a while shamefully. But, I suspect, some of the institutional deafness, blindness and silence arose from religious cultures simply unable to cope with and confront human sexual imperfection, however much it was inured and experienced at dealing with other aspects of the growth and development of children and adolescents.

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Government reminded local authorities of their obligation to report infant deaths in mother and baby homes in 1946

IRELAND
Journal

THE MINISTER FOR Local Government and Public health in 1946 warned local authorities to keep up with the administration of mother and baby homes.

A circular sent on behalf of the minister at the time, Fianna Fáil’s Seán MacEntee, stated that the minister had received “representations” that many local authorities were not “paying attention” to the administration of the registration of maternity homes under the Maternity Homes Act 1934.

Particular attention is drawn also to Section 11 of the Act regarding the obligation imposed on the person registered to report to the chief executive officer of the supervising authority any death which occurs in the home.

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Here’s a list of maternity homes in Ireland in 1947

IRELAND
Journal

MATERNITY HOMES OF the past have recently hit the headlines, with an inquiry now underway into mother and baby homes.

A number of state files were recalled from the National Archives by the Department of Health following the revelations about the deaths of almost 800 children at a mother and baby home in Tuam.

The department states that the documents were recalled for the Commission of Investigation that was announced by the Minister for Justice Frances Fitzgerald.

The documents recently recalled by the department include the registration documents of maternity homes for the years ending 1953, 1952, 1951, 1950, 1948-50, 1946-49, and maternity home exemptions 1946-47.

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Catholic Church needs candid friend like Mary McAleese

IRELAND
Sunday Independent

John-Paul McCarthy
Published 22/06/2014

FORMER President Mary McAleese made a welcome return to the national stage this week as she accepted UCD’s handsome Ulysses medal.

In deference perhaps to James Joyce’s own aversion to theocracy, our eighth president used the occasion to reflect on some recent rumblings from the Holy See.

By all accounts the current Pope is hoping to get some advice on family life from the next Catholic synod.

Mary McAleese responded by insisting: “The very idea of 150 people who have decided they are not going to have any children … so they have no adult experience of family life as the rest of us know it – but they are going to advise the Pope on family life; it is completely bonkers.”

These vigorous insights dovetail with her contribution to an important profile of Pope Francis in last December’s New Yorker magazine.

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Comic PJ Gallagher…:

IRELAND
Sunday Independent

Comic PJ Gallagher: ‘I was born in Bessborough but I got away with it. I feel guilty and lucky’

Mary-Elaine Tynan
Published 22/06/2014

IT’S unusual for much-loved funnyman PJ Gallagher to tweet about serious matters; normally he reserves his observations for hilarious comments about life and his passion for bikes and dogs.

Early this month, however, his followers were greeted with the unexpected tweet: “I was born in Bessbourough [sic] House, reading this has upset me more than a little this morning”.

The article attached described the unusually high death rate for children born in the Cork mother and baby home in the early Forties.

Until around 10 years ago, this statistic would have been almost irrelevant since all PJ knew about his life was that he was born in April 1975, was placed briefly in foster care and then adopted by his parents through a Dublin agency.

Until he was in his 20s, PJ’s family home in Clontarf doubled as a care facility for people with mental illnesses, many of whom had previously been in institutions. From his conversations with the people his mother cared for, PJ realised that most were still traumatised from those same institutions. And so, even before he learned the circumstances surrounding his own birth, he always felt great compassion for anybody in institutions.

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Sick priest Oliver O’Grady is ‘still a threat’

IRELAND
Irish Mirror

Jun 22, 2014 By Emma McMenamy

Film-maker Amy Berg: Oliver O’Grady must be closely monitored

The award-winning documentary maker who interviewed paedo ex-priest Oliver O’Grady has warned he still poses a serious threat to children.

O’Grady, 68, was dubbed the “Hannibal Lecter” of child sex attackers after it emerged he had abused up to 50 kids.

He was freed from Dublin’s Arbour Hill Prison in April after being convicted on child pornography charges.

The defrocked priest, who is originally from Limerick and served in dioceses in California in the 1970s, has claimed he no longer poses a danger to youngsters.

But Amy Berg, who directed the controversial 2006 Oscar-nominated documentary Deliver us from Evil, which centred on O’Grady, said he is not to be trusted.

Speaking to the Irish Sunday Mirror from her home in California, Ms Berg said O’Grady needs to watched closely by authorities.

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Mugabe vows to deal with child sexual abuse

ZIMBABWE
The Standard

June 22, 2014

President Robert Mugabe has called on youths to desist from engaging in early sexual activities, while also taking a dig at older people who are abusing children.

BY WINSTONE ANTONIO

Speaking during the official opening of the 22nd session of the Junior Parliament of Zimbabwe in Harare yesterday, Mugabe said government was concerned about the increasing cases of child abuse including the rape of minors.

“Something has gone wrong with the social and moral fibre of our society. The problems of child sexual abuse, child neglect and even infanticide now need to be addressed at all levels of the society,” he said.

“The government is going to intensify the necessary social and policing interventions in order to eradicate what is turning into an epidemic.”

Mugabe also opened up about his boyhood saying children must not rush into early sexual activities. The Zanu PF leader said when he was young, even his late mother Bona, was worried that he could not court girls because of his love for books which made him what he is today.

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The faithful under siege from religious leaders

ZIMBABWE
The Standard

Notwithstanding that Zimbabweans are of diverse religions and faith, our Constitution says we are a Christian nation.

CONELIA MABASA SUNDAY VIEW

The charter also provides for the right to freedom of worship. That we are a Christian nation makes the goings-on in churches matters of national interest.

Recently a group of men from an apostolic faith church made the news for all the wrong reasons after they beat up police officers who were escorts for an elder who wanted to ban their church for abuse of women and children.

While they have been granted bail on the case of assault, women’s groups and child rights activists are waiting for formal reports and investigations into the allegations of abuse, especially that fathers insert their dirty fingers into their daughters’ vaginas every week to test for virginity and give away daughters as compensation to men who married non-virgins. Virginity-testing is largely referred to as sexual assault, but I believe it must be upgraded to be treated as a form of rape.

Some sections of society also want to know if Johannes Ndanga [president of the Apostolic Christian Council of Zimbabwe] had the mandate to ban the church and if he used the right channels to carry out the mandate. His actions could have been interpreted as provocation and an infringement on the right of the vapostori’s freedom of worship. If any crimes were committed, then it is the role of the police to investigate and get the perpetrators to be prosecuted.

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Newark Archdiocese, Bergen prosecutor host child safety workshops

NEW JERSEY
The Record

JUNE 21, 2014
BY AARON MORRISON
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

WOODCLIFF LAKE – The Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office and the Archdiocese of Newark united Saturday for a daylong series of child-safety workshops, presented to adults who work with children within and outside of the parish.

More than 100 church-affiliated leaders, parents involved with scouting and coaches were registered for the programs — held in the recreation room of Our Lady of the Mother Church — on child sex abuse prevention, Internet safety and drug-abuse prevention.

Karen Clark, the archdiocese’s child-safety director, said the partnership with County Prosecutor John Molinelli, who’s a member of the parish, proves each other’s commitment to keeping the area’s children safe.

Last year, Molinelli had criticized the archdiocese over its follow-up monitoring of Michael Fugee, a now defrocked priest who had been accused of groping boys. But Molinelli and an archdiocese spokesman said last week that that the workshop partnership had nothing to do with the Fugee matter.

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Leading the way in spirit at St. Mary’s parish in Franklin

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Globe

By Hattie Bernstein | GLOBE CORRESPONDENT JUNE 22, 2014

On the Sunday before Memorial Day, the Rev. Brian F. Manning stood on the landing outside St. Mary Catholic Church in Franklin watching families hurry across the busy street and up the flight of granite steps, on their way to the 10:30 a.m. Mass.

“In American culture, people don’t run on time. There’s so much traffic, so many obligations. They’re doing the best they can,” said the pastor, not a trace of disdain in his voice.

It wasn’t like this in the 1950s when the priest was growing up in the Sacred Heart parish in Roslindale. In those days, 10 Masses were held on a Sunday, and rarely did you see anyone rushing into the church at the last minute, or the pastor, poised like God’s crossing guard, at the front door.

But on this day, people spill into the pews in the 900-seat church moments before the Rev. John Sullivan begins the service. …

The kind of attendance at St. Mary is rare in churches in the Boston Archdiocese, which in response to declining Mass attendance, a shortage of priests, and a corresponding drop in collections has closed and sold church properties, and consolidated parishes across the region in recent years.

For more than a decade a drumbeat of bad news about the church, including reports on sexual abuse by priests, has diminished the number of local Catholics active in their faith.

St. Mary has not been immune to the troubles.

In 2002, the Globe reported allegations that the Rev. Anthony J. Rebeiro had sexually abused a woman while a priest at St. Mary in 1983. The woman’s husband said he was rebuffed by the pastor at the time, a regional bishop, and then-archbishop Bernard Law when he complained in 1984 about the abuse. But the archdiocese paid for psychotherapy for the woman in 1994, according to the Globe.

Rebeiro was placed on administrative leave in 2002 after a report that he had molested a child at another parish in the 1970s, the Globe reported. He has denied all allegations.

“He remains on administrative leave and is not in ministry,” archdiocesan spokesman Terry Donilon said last week.

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June 21, 2014

‘Health scare’ confirms Pope Francis as church’s indispensable man

VATICAN CITY
Boston Globe

By John L. Allen Jr. | GLOBE STAFF JUNE 21, 2014

ROME — An old saying about the Vatican holds that the pope is never sick until he’s dead. It is a subject — pontiff’s health — on which Vatican officials come by their reputation for denial the old-fashioned way, because over the years they’ve certainly earned it.

On Aug. 19, 1914, for instance, the semiofficial Vatican newspaper L’Osservatore Romano published a stinging editorial denouncing unnamed commentators who had suggested the day before that the reigning pope at the time, Pius X, was suffering from a cold.

Less than 24 hours later, Pius X was dead.

More recently, despite the fact that speculation began to surface in the mid-1990s that Pope John Paul II might be suffering from the symptoms of Parkinson’s disease, the Vatican never officially confirmed the ailment until shortly before the pontiff’s death.

Even in John Paul’s twilight, the effort to make the pope seem stronger than he actually was continued.

After he underwent a tracheotomy in late February 2005, a Vatican spokesman claimed the next day that the pope had eaten a light breakfast including 10 cookies, leaving embarrassed physicians to correct the record; a patient with a tracheal tube, they said, would not be in a position to swallow cookies.

Needless to say, the media didn’t swallow the story either.

All this brings us to this week’s alleged “health scare” regarding Pope Francis, after news broke that the pontiff has canceled his general audiences and morning Masses for the month of July.

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Associated Press Apologizes for Its Coverage of the Irish Orphanage Story

IRELAND
Seasons of Grace

June 20, 2014 By Kathy Schiffer

Associated Press has issued an apology for its errant reporting regarding claims of a mass grave for children of unwed mothers on the grounds of Tuam Home, an Irish home for unwed mothers.

Since the disturbing story broke early this month regarding the Tuam Home for unwed mothers in Ireland, where 796 babies were purportedly “dumped into a septic tank”, the Patheos bloggers have been on the case.

I had, early on, been concerned that the facts might not be as reported. I didn’t blog about it here, but over on Facebook, we had a spirited discussion in which I encouraged people to relax and wait for facts: Had the Irish Sisters been simply overwhelmed, with no one available to help them bury the bodies of the children who died? Was the burial site, in fact, not a “septic tank” as AP reported, but a cylindrical brick burial chamber, common in Ireland at the time? Were there really “no more than 20″ babies buried at that site?

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Associated Press apologises for its ‘incorrect’ reporting of the Tuam babies scandal

IRELAND
Telegraph (UK)

By Tim Stanley
Last updated: June 21st, 2014

The Associated Press has issued an apology for its inaccurate reporting on the fate of the Tuam babies – 796 children at a home in Ireland who were reportedly “dumped” in a septic tank after they died (an accusation that I, along with several Catholic bloggers, called into question). T

hey were, said some commentators, victims of Church doctrine. The AP’s apology now suggests otherwise:

In stories published June 3 and June 8 about young children buried in unmarked graves after dying at a former Irish orphanage for the children of unwed mothers, The Associated Press incorrectly reported that the children had not received Roman Catholic baptisms; documents show that many children at the orphanage were baptized. The AP also incorrectly reported that Catholic teaching at the time was to deny baptism and Christian burial to the children of unwed mothers; although that may have occurred in practice at times it was not church teaching. In addition, in the June 3 story, the AP quoted a researcher who said she believed that most of the remains of children who died there were interred in a disused septic tank; the researcher has since clarified that without excavation and forensic analysis it is impossible to know how many sets of remains the tank contains, if any. The June 3 story also contained an incorrect reference to the year that the orphanage opened; it was 1925, not 1926.

Make no mistake: the Tuam children’s home was an awful place with terrible conditions that reflected an ignorantly low opinion of “illegitimate” children held across the so-called civilised world in the early 20th century. But what happened there was not a reflection of Catholic doctrine, which cherishes life.

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Correction: Ireland-Children’s Mass Graves story

IRELAND
Miami Herald

BY SHAWN POGATCHNIK
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

DUBLIN — In stories published June 3 and June 8 about young children buried in unmarked graves after dying at a former Irish orphanage for the children of unwed mothers, The Associated Press incorrectly reported that the children had not received Roman Catholic baptisms; documents show that many children at the orphanage were baptized. The AP also incorrectly reported that Catholic teaching at the time was to deny baptism and Christian burial to the children of unwed mothers; although that may have occurred in practice at times it was not church teaching. In addition, in the June 3 story, the AP quoted a researcher who said she believed that most of the remains of children who died there were interred in a disused septic tank; the researcher has since clarified that without excavation and forensic analysis it is impossible to know how many sets of remains the tank contains, if any. The June 3 story also contained an incorrect reference to the year that the orphanage opened; it was 1925, not 1926.

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Boston’s Opus Dei Beast PR Stunt of the Day: BBC video. Opus Dei Beast Plan to salvage Vatican Titanic in Boston epicenter of JP2 Army

UNITED STATES
POPE FRANCIS the CON-Christ.

Updated June 21, 2014

Paris Arrow

Pope Francis in his Vatican Radio homily the other day spoke that “Even some prelates are corrupt” . Unfortunately Catholic churches worldwide are corrupt because they are an equal part of the Vatican Pyramid – especially after all the crimes committed by evil bestial pedophile priests – revealed by the JP2 Army – John Paul II Pedophile Priests Army – and now their female counterparts, the Catholic Irish Nuns akin to Nazis, are also being revealed. No matter what the Opus Dei Beast PR Deceits Team try to do to salvage the Vatican Titanic sunken deep in the ocean of moral bankruptcy, all priests and all Catholic churches are part of that Vatican Pyramid Evil Empire. Read our 6 suggestions for Pope Francis, the Pharaoh of the Vatican Pyramid with three equal sides: corrupt politicians, corrupt businessmen, corrupt clergy http://popecrimes.blogspot.ca/2014/06/6-suggestions-for-pope-francis-as-he.html

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Winona diocese: We’re obligated to pay pedophile priest

MINNESOTA
St. Cloud Times

The Associated Press 5:28 p.m. CDT June 21, 2014

WINONA — The Diocese of Winona says the reason it’s still paying a monthly pension to a defrocked pedophile priest is because it’s legally obligated to do so, even though he committed “horrific crimes” against children.

Thomas Adamson acknowledged in a legal deposition that he sexually abused 12 teens as he was moved from one parish to another from the 1960s to the mid-1980s. He’s been laicized but he continues to receive a monthly pension of about $1,650 from the diocese.

A Winona Daily News report on Saturday says the diocese is now responding, a week after the revelations were made public by a law firm suing the diocese.

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Mary McAleese: a thorn in the church’s side?

IRELAND
Irish Times

Patsy McGarry

Fri, Jun 20, 2014

Some people have taken offence on behalf of Pope Francis because Mary McAleese, the former president, threw the word “bonkers” in his direction. One figure in the Catholic Church said it was unbecoming of a former head of state to speak this way. A letter writer to this paper described her remarks as terribly unfair.

Speaking at University College Dublin last Monday, to mark her receipt of the university’s Ulysses medal, McAleese criticised the pope’s plan to ask a synod of bishops next October to advise him about church teaching on the family.

There was “something profoundly wrong and skewed” about asking “male celibates” to review the church’s teaching on family life, she said. “The very idea of 150 people who have decided they are not going to have any children, not going to have families, not going to be fathers and not going to be spouses – so they have no adult experience of family life as the rest of us know it – but they are going to advise the pope on family life, it is completely bonkers.”

Last year the Vatican circulated a questionnaire to Catholics worldwide seeking feedback on pastoral issues of marriage and family. In her interview last Monday McAleese said: “I wrote back and said I’ve got a much simpler questionnaire, and it’s only got one question, and here it is: ‘How many of the men who will gather to advise you as pope on the family have ever changed a baby’s nappy?’ I regard that as a very, very serious question.”

It’s doubtful whether the plain-speaking Pope Francis would take offence at any of this. He may disagree with the substance of what McAleese said, but its manner of expression would hardly faze him. After all, this is the pope who advised his clergy to get down and dirty among the people so they smell of them and who has spoken about the narcissism of popes and theologians.

As for McAleese, she is just being consistent.

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Priest put on leave, but congregations’ wounds remain

ILLINOIS
Chicago Tribune

John Kass
June 22, 2014

Church should be a place of peace and understanding, where you go for answers.

But those are hard to come by as a Greek Orthodox priest in Glenview faces a felony charge in the theft of more than $100,000 from his former church in Milwaukee.

Two Greek Orthodox churches, in Glenview and Milwaukee, have been roiled in controversy. And late Friday, the Glenview priest, the Rev. James Dokos, was put on unpaid administrative leave from Sts. Peter and Paul Greek Orthodox Church in Glenview.

He won’t be singing the liturgy on Sunday, church officials said.

The whistleblowers who dared complain about the allegedly high-rolling priest have found themselves locked in an ugly battle with Bishop Demetrios of Mokissos, the No. 2 ranking official in the Greek Orthodox Metropolis of Chicago that administers several Midwestern states.

They accuse him, he accuses them.

“Has the Metropolis been harmed? No. But it is hurtful,” Bishop Demetrios told me. “These are reflective of the times we live in, and the brokenness of human nature is being played out in the press.”

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Detective, Church Official Speak About Pastor Arrested On Sex Charges

KENTUCKY
WBKO

ALLEN COUNTY, Ky. (WBKO) — An Allen County pastor was arrested Thursday night at a church in Scottsville.

Now, with the pastor is behind bars, detectives are trying to figure out how many victims are involved in this sex abuse scandal.

“He has been a faithful, dedicated pastor to the church. He’s worked hard. He’s worked at the church with no salary,” said Stephen Bratcher, the interim pastor at the church.

46-year-old Roy Yoakem has been involved with New Gospel Outreach Church for six years, but he won’t be preaching there Sunday after being arrested on several charges, including rape and sodomy.

“He’s a predator and he doesn’t need to be on the street. I’m glad we got him,” said Detective Chad Keen with the Allen Co. Sheriff’s Dept.

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Trust and the Church

BOSTON (MA)
BBC World Service

Pope Francis has reinvigorated the Catholic Church. His most recent apology for the “moral damage carried out by men of the Church” was considered his strongest statement on the worst crisis to hit the Church in centuries. We return to the epicentre of that crisis – the American city of Boston. In a profile of the city, we hear the personal faith journeys of Catholics whose faith was shaken by the deep betrayals that emerged from the sexual abuse crisis. Parish priests provide revelations on how they consoled their parishioners and tried to maintain their congregations. Survivors of abuse share their stories, including the first victim to meet Pope Benedict XVI. Everyday and extraordinary parishioners describe their agonising decisions to leave their spiritual home or stand by the Church.

In an intimate portrait of the shell-shocked city, we ask whether the Church can rebuild the all-important element of trust and bring Catholics back.

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