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.

November 20, 2014

Pope’s sex abuse czar tempers remarks on bishop accountability, says fair hearing also needed

VATICAN CITY
Star Tribune

Article by: NICOLE WINFIELD , Associated Press Updated: November 20, 2014

VATICAN CITY — The head of Pope Francis’ commission to fight clerical sex abuse is tempering his remarks about accountability for bishops accused of covering up for abusive priests, saying they deserve a fair hearing, too.

Cardinal Sean O’Malley, archbishop of Boston, told “60 Minutes” news program last week that the Vatican must “urgently” address the situation of Kansas City Bishop Robert Finn, the highest-ranking church official in the U.S. to be convicted of failing to take action in response to abuse allegations.

In a comment posted Wednesday on thebostonpilot.com, the website of the archdiocesan newspaper of Boston, O’Malley said that while bishops must be held accountable, they must be spared “crowd-based condemnations.”

“We need clear protocols that will replace the improvisation and inertia that has often been the response in these matters,” he wrote. “Bishops also deserve due process that allows them to have an opportunity for a fair hearing.”

His remarks reflected some concerns expressed by clerics that the Vatican in recent years has gone too far in ousting accused pedophile priests, and may go down the same path as it turns its attention to holding their bishops and superiors accountable.

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.

Marion Co. priest indicted on sex abuse charges to face trial next year

KENTUCKY
WDRB

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WDRB) — The case of a Marion County priest indicted on sex abuse charges will go to trial next year.

Father Joseph Hemmerle had nothing to say when leaving the courtroom.

A man made the claims this past May, saying it happened in the 1970s.

Hemmerle was a priest at St. Francis and Holy Cross Parishes in Marion County, and a teacher and coach at Trinity High School in Louisville. However, the alleged abuse took place in Meade County.

In September, Father Hemmerle was indicted on three counts of sexual abuse and six counts of sodomy involving a child under 12 years old.

He left the courtroom today without saying anything, but his three-day trial was set for next September.

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.

HIA: Rubane was ‘toxic mix’ of ‘orphaned boys and streetwise boys’

NORTHERN IRELAND
BBC News

Orphans sent to a County Down home were exposed to abuse by boys who “came through the justice or welfare systems”, a former resident told the Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry.

He described a “toxic mix” of “orphaned boys and streetwise boys”.

He said sexual activity at Rubane House was “very common” among boys.

But the man, now in his 50s, said his general experience at the Ards peninsula boys home had been “very, very good”.

The witness was at Rubane in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

He told the enquiry he had been sexually abused by other boys.

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.

CATHOLICS STILL NOT CONFIDENT ON ABUSE REPORTING

IOWA
Catholic Globe

By Joanne Fox
joannef@scdiocese.org

For three and a half years, members of several U.S. bishops’ committees have been trying to pinpoint what Catholics in the pew are thinking and why they accept or reject church teachings.

To this end, they have conducted multiple surveys and interviews of various groups of Catholics: fervent believers, Latinos, singles, parents, priests and church leaders. Although responses have varied, Bishop Walker Nickless was astonished to learn the faithful are still not satisfied that priestly misconduct among children has been addressed adequately.

“That really surprised me,” he said. “I thought we were doing a good job in our Safe Environment practices, but apparently, that is not the case.”

Bishop Nickless is one of only 26 U.S. bishops who have authorized auditors from StoneBridge Business Partners – the business firm the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops has chosen to perform safe environment audits – to visit Sioux City diocesan parishes and schools and insure compliance with the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People (Dallas Charter). The auditors were in the Diocese of Sioux City Oct. 28-30.

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

New Pope has opportunity to end Church coverup of child abuse: Guest viewpoint

UNITED STATES
The Republican

on November 20, 2014

By Robert Weiner and Florian Prommer

Pope Francis has just announced he will be coming to the U.S. next year for a conference on families. The new Pope is widely popular, but he and the Church must take stronger actions than ones to date on the victims and perpetrators of clerical child abuse. The Bishops’ two-week conference on family issues in the Vatican October 5-19, at which the Pope called for “candor”, discussed gay communion, divorce, and abortion – but not responsibility for priests’ child abuse.

According to a statement by Pope Francis reported by Reuters, “about two percent” of Catholic priests are “pedophiles.” He called the findings “very grave.” Yet they still preach all over the world, and the number could be an undercount.

In Springfield 59 individuals were determined to be abused before 2008, causing the resignation of Bishop Thomas Dupre, leader of the Diocese of Springfield, in 2004 even before the depth of the scandal came out largely by outstanding investigative reporting by The Springfield Republican. Unfortunately, the scandal and coverup continue in the U.S. and world.

Annual surveys commissioned by the United States Conference of Bishops state that between 1950 and 2013, 17,259 children were sexually abused. 6427 priests were accused but only 3,973 names have been made public. These numbers only cover the United States.

In July, the Pope met with abused victims to express “regret and concern” as have Popes Paul and Benedict. He conceded that priests and bishops “violated their priestly vocation” and committed “sins of omission”. The apology still leaves Vatican inaction to punish abusers.

According to his 2013 book, “On Heaven and Earth”, Pope Francis argued as archbishop of Buenos Aires to “take away the priest’s faculties” and “not permit him to exercise his priestly ministry again” when a priest gets convicted.

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.

Cardinal’s demotion helps Pope Francis quell ‘conservative backlash’ — for now

UNITED STATES
Fox News

By Adam Shaw
Published November 20, 2014

Pope Francis is drawing rock star raves for softening the Vatican’s image on such issues as homosexuality, capitalism and divorce, but his celebrated tolerance doesn’t seem to extend to dissenters within the church, whose conservative revolt came to a halt when the pontiff exiled their de facto leader to obscurity.

A recent meeting of bishops unleashed what one Vatican watcher called “a tsunami of conservative backlash” against the pope when it followed an agenda that sought to revisit long-held doctrine on controversial social issues. The most vocal critic was American Cardinal Raymond Burke, who described the Church under Francis as like “a ship without a rudder.” But as conservative bishops and lower-level clergy in the U.S. began to signal their agreement, Burke quickly found himself demoted from his powerful Vatican post to a purely ceremonial role.

The move sent a chill through the ranks of American conservative bishops, nearly two dozen of whom declined comment when contacted by FoxNews.com, despite many having previously expressed strong doubts about the church’s leftward swerve under Francis, who assumed the papacy in 2013. The Rev. John Zuhlsdorf, a leading conservative American blogger and an influential voice in the U.S. church, acknowledged that the bishops had been put back in line.

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.

Bishop to give evidence at abuse hearing

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

Friday, 21 November 2014

A former assistant bishop of the Anglican church in Tasmania will give evidence today at a sex abuse royal commission in Hobart.

Ronald Francis Stone was contacted in 1995 by a former student of Hobart’s prestigious boys’ school Hutchins, claiming he had been sexually abused by a headmaster in the 1960s.

The church has links to the Hutchins board, but Bishop Stone is reported to have told the complainant it had no legal authority in the running of the school.

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.

BILL COSBY ON THE ROAD

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Berger’s Beat

. .Five alleged clergy abuse victims are filing suit today against Fr. Gerald Funcheon who’s accused of molesting kids in Indiana, Minnesota and Hawaii. He’s now at St. John Vianney Renewal Center in Dittmer.

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.

Ex-youth minister in Channelview accused of sexual assault of underage girl

TEXAS
Click2Houston

Matt Aufdenspring, Web Managing Editor

HOUSTON –
A former Channelview youth minister has been arrested in New York City on sexual assault of a child charges in Harris County, and investigators believe there may be more victims.

The Harris County Sheriff’s Office said Jude Drayton Ramdial, a former youth minister at the Woodforest Worship Center Church of God, is accused of sexually assaulting a girl in the youth group in 2005. Deputies said the girl is now an adult and reported the assault to authorities recently.

Court documents state the girl alleges Ramdial kissed her on several occasions and sexually assaulted her while he drove her home after babysitting for him.

Ramdial is also accused of inappropriate touching by two other former youth members in 2005 and 2006, deputies 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.

Youth minister arrested for sexual assault of a child

TEXAS
Deer Park Broadcaster

HCSO RELEASE

A former Channelview youth minister has been arrested in New York City for the sexual assault of a child in Harris County. Investigators believe there may be more victims and if so, are asking them to please come forward.

Jude Ramdial, 33, was a former youth minister at the Woodforest Worship Center Church of God in Channelview. He’s accused of sexually assaulting a female member of the youth group. The victim is now an adult and recently reported the assault to the authorities. Ramdial is also accused by two other former youth members of indecency with a child.

Due to the alone time Ramdial had with members of the youth group, HCSO investigators believe there may be more victims who have yet come forward.

Ramdial moved to New York after his ministerial credentials were revoked by the church. There he and family members established the HopeNYC church where he served as ‘pastor’ until his arrest this week.

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.

México: Vaticano exonera a sacerdote de acusaciones de abusos sexuales

MEXICO
ACI Prensa

[The Tijuana archbishop said the Vatican has exonerated Father Benigno P. Medrano of abuse allegations that led to his suspension last May. He is restored to ministry. inconsistencies were found in the complaint, the archbishop said.]

MÉXICO D.F., 20 Nov. 14 / 10:37 am (ACI/EWTN Noticias).- El Arzobispo de Tijuana (México), Mons. Rafael Romo Muñoz, informó que la Santa Sede exoneró al P. Benigno Medrano de las acusaciones de abusos sexuales que provocaron su suspensión en mayo pasado, siendo ya restituido en su cargo pastoral.

“Se encontraron inconsistencias totales en la denuncia, con la respuesta liberadora de la supuesta víctima que dijo ‘yo no soy víctima, el P. Benigno y yo somos grandes amigos. Yo no tengo nada que achacarle ni sucedió lo que dicen que sucedió’”, indicó el Prelado a la prensa local.

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

Archdiocese of St. Paul & Minneapolis Faces Budget Deficit, Possible Bankruptcy

MINNESOTA
KEYC

By Mitch Keegan, Anchor, KEYC News

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis is reporting a $9.1 million operating deficit for fiscal year 2014 and says it’s considering filing for bankruptcy.

The archdiocese says the deficit can be partly attributed to $4.1 million spent to address allegations of clergy sexual abuse.

The archdiocese’s CFO say the archdiocese’s financial condition has become more uncertain due to potential liability from lawsuits. It’s unknown how many more may be filed before the three-year window to pursue abuse claims expires.

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

Archdiocese weighs bankruptcy

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: JEAN HOPFENSPERGER and TONY KENNEDY , Star Tribune staff writers
Updated: November 20, 2014

Citing growing financial trouble linked to clergy sex abuse cases, the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis officials Thursday raised the prospect that it will seek bankruptcy protection.

In its annual report in the Catholic Spirit online newspaper, archdiocese officials said the unfolding settlements of clergy sex abuse cases are a key factor.

The report says litigation claims are expected to grow beyond the $5.3 million the chancery has reserved for them.

“Due to the above there is substantial doubt regarding the Chancery Corporation’s being able to continue as a going concern,” the report says.

“We have settled only two of the legal cases involving clerical sexual abuse of minors,” Archbishop John Nienstedt wrote in his column. “There are 20 more trials that are scheduled. There is still another year and a half for the window created in May 2013, lifting the Statutes of Limitations. We have no idea how many more legal claims may be made against us.”

Archdiocese CFO Thomas Mertens said that the archdiocese would not use reorganization “as a tool to avoid compensating victims/survivors. It would be a way to respond to all victims/survivors by allowing the available funds to be equitably distributed to all who have made claims, not just those who have the earliest trial dates or settlements.’

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.

Trial date set for Catholic priest accused of sexual abuse

KENTUCKY
WLKY

[with video]

LOUISVILLE, Ky. —The trial date is now set for an area Catholic priest accused of sexual abuse.

Father Joseph Hemmerle is facing six counts of sodomy and three charges of sexual abuse.

The allegations date back decades, from the 1970s.

His accuser first came forward in May and Hemmerle was placed on leave from the ministry.

Hemmerle appeared in Meade County Court Thursday morning for a pre-trial conference.

Both the defense and prosecution agreed on a trial date of Sept. 23, 2015.

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.

OR–Group challenges archbishop on abuse

OREGON
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Group challenges archbishop on abuse
A twice-accused coach is still on the job
He was fired years ago for credible allegations
Central Catholic principal has kept this hidden
SNAP: “Archdiocesan officials should oust them both”
And they should “aggressively seek out to other victims witnesses & whistleblowers”
Organization also wants “user-friendly” list of predators’ names on church websites

What:
Holding signs and children’s photos at a sidewalk news conference, two leaders of a support group for clergy sex abuse victims will prod Portland’s top Catholic official to suspend two staff at the only archdiocesan high school. One is a coach who was fired once for child sex abuse allegations and twice faced criminal child sex abuse charges. The other is the principal who has apparently kept silent about the coach’s past.

The group also wants Portland’s archbishop to use church resources to

— Aggressively seek out others who may have seen, suspected or suffered the coach’s alleged crimes, and
— permanently post on his church websites – in an easily searchable format – the names of all proven, admitted and credibly accused child molesting clerics.

When:
Today, November 20, at 2:15 p.m.

Where:
On the sidewalk outside Central Catholic School, 2401 SE Stark Street in Portland OR

Who:
Two members of an international support group called SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAPnetwork.org), including a Missouri man who is the organization’s long time director. (He and his brothers were molested as a child by a priest. One of them grew up to become a priest and molested children himself.)

Why:

1 – Today’s Wilamette Week reports that Patrick Jay Wallace is a coach with the state’s number one high school football team despite having been fired once over – and charged twice with –crimes relating to his alleged abuse of a teenaged student. He works at Central Catholic under President John Harrington who, ironically, was the man who fired Wallace from another school in 1997.

At a bare minimum, SNAP believes this is “reckless, callous and deceitful” and wants both men suspended – Wallace for the risk he poses to children and Harrington for violating the church’s abuse policy which mandates “openness and transparency” in child sex cases. The group asks “Why take chances with children’s safety?”

SNAP also wants Portland Archbishop Alexander Sample to aggressively urge “anyone who may have seen, suspected or suffered crimes or cover ups” by school staff to contact law enforcement.

2 – For the safely of innocent kids and vulnerable adults, SNAP wants Sample to permanently post on the archdiocesan and parish websites the names of all proven, admitted and credibly accused child molesting clerics who have lived or worked in the Portland area. Over the past 12 years, roughly 30 bishops in the US have done this (almost always when facing harsh public criticism for proven or admitted cover ups.)

This is the “bare minimum” bishops should do, SNAP says, to “protect the vulnerable and heal the wounded” especially since bishops “recruit, educate, ordain, train, transfer and shield predator priests” and then often “cut them loose when they’re caught molesting kids but refuse to adequately warn the police, prosecutors or the public about them.” It is a “simple, inexpensive, common sense way to safeguard kids,” SNAP says.

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.

Alleged victims sue religious order, former priest for sex abuse in Minnesota, California

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: CHAO XIONG , Star Tribune Updated: November 20, 2014

Early in the former Rev. Gerald Funcheon’s career, a superior wrote of him: “Almost his sole interest is young boys.”

Five alleged victims are suing a former priest and a Catholic order for sexual abuse that occurred in the 1970s and ‘80s.

The two suits, filed Thursday against the former Rev. Gerald Funcheon and the Crosier Fathers and Brothers religious order, allege that Funcheon abused children while he worked at St. Odilia church in Shoreview and while he taught at Palma High School in Salinas, California.

The victims’ attorneys, Jeff Anderson and Mike Finnegan, released church documents about Funcheon that showed that leaders with the Crosiers and also the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis were aware of Funcheon’s interest in boys and the allegations of sexual abuse.

“In a conversation with the Bishop, Jerry [Funcheon] indicated that there may be around 50 victims with whom he engaged in mutual masturbation or improper touch which [sic] these young men were between the ages of 10 and 16,” wrote the Rev. Bob J. Rossi, a Crosier, in October 1992. “Bob Sell indicated that Jerry was having a hard time seeing improper touch as sexual abuse.”

Sell was chancellor of the Diocese of Lafayette, Indiana.

As a Crosier, Funcheon, now 76, worked in and outside the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, and was associate pastor at St. Stephen’s Parish in Anoka in 1985. He also worked in Indiana, Florida, Germany and Hawaii.

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.

CROSIER, GERALD FUNCHEON DOCUMENTS

MINNESOTA/CALIFORNIA
Jeff Anderson & Associates

Two lawsuits were filed on behalf of five survivors on November 20, 2014 naming the Crosier Fathers & Brothers and former priest Gerald Funcheon. The sexual abuse was alleged to have occurred at St. Odilia’s Church in Shoreview, Minnesota and Palma High School in Salinas, California.

Funcheon is believed to have abused over 50 children during his time in the priesthood and worked in several parishes and schools throughout the nation, including Indiana, Minnesota, Florida, Hawaii, and California. In March 2014 the Crosier Order released the names of 19 priests with credible allegations of child sexual abuse. To date, the Crosiers have not released any files of the credibly accused clerics.

Assignment History of Gerald Funcheon
Cantrell Summons and Complaint
Crosier List of Credibly Accused
Doe 41-44 Summons and Complaint
Gerald Funcheon Archdiocese File
Gerald Funcheon Crosier Priest File Part 2
Gerald Funcheon Key Docs
Timeline of Gerald Funcheon

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.

Cardinal O’Malley repeats: Church needs to discipline bishops over sex abuse

UNITED STATES
Religion News Service

David Gibson | November 20, 2014

(RNS) Following up on remarks to “60 Minutes” about the clergy sex abuse crisis and other controversial topics, Boston Cardinal Sean O’Malley has stressed that the Catholic Church needs a system to hold bishops accountable and must “avoid crowd-based condemnations.”

“We are all aware that Catholics want their leaders to be held accountable for the safety of children, but the accountability has been sporadic,” O’Malley wrote in a column posted Wednesday night (Nov. 19) at the website of the archdiocesan newspaper. “We need clear protocols that will replace the improvisation and inertia that has often been the response in these matters.”

“Bishops also deserve due process that allows them to have an opportunity for a fair hearing,” he added.

O’Malley’s column was responding to both praise and criticism of his CBS interview broadcast Sunday (Nov. 16) in which he said the Vatican needs to respond “urgently” to cases like that of Missouri Bishop Robert Finn, who remains in office despite a conviction in 2012 for failure to report concerns about a priest, the Rev. Shawn Ratigan, who was later convicted of federal child pornography charges.

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.

Chancery Corporation Financial Report Released Today

MINNESOTA
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis

Date: Thursday, November 20, 2014

Source: Anne Steffens, Interim Director of Communications

Statement from Thomas Mertens, Chief Financial Officer
Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis Chancery Corporation

“Today, the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis is releasing the full audited financial report for the Chancery Corporation for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2014.

Net assets of the archdiocesan Chancery Corporation were $32,540,508, which is $8,949,087 less than a year earlier. The financial outcome of Chancery Corporation operating activities in 2014 resulted in a deficit of $9,120,676. The deficit can be attributed to significant expenses that are not anticipated to be ongoing in the long-term, including special issues expense, the transition of the Catholic Services Appeal (CSA) to a separate non-profit, and the write-off of software.

The special issues expense of $4,180,228 incurred by the Chancery Corporation during the year ended June 30, 2014 related to addressing issues arising primarily from the lifting of the civil statute of limitations on sexual abuse. Third party professional services were needed for review of priest files, investigation of insurance coverage and analysis of financial options. The CSA transition to a separate non-profit organization on January 1, 2014 resulted in a net negative impact to our operating activities of approximately $3.7 million. This CSA transition will result in a reduction of administrative expense for the Chancery Corporation going forward. The Chancery Corporation wrote off $993,642 of software that did not meet specifications identified in the Report and Recommendations of the Safe Environment and Ministerial Standards Task Force. New software to meet these needs has been developed, implemented and continues to be enhanced.

This year, for the first time, the Chancery Corporation did not receive an unqualified opinion from our auditors. The independent certified public accounting firm of CliftonLarsonAllen LLP issued a disclaimer of opinion and a going concern qualification. This is solely because we were not able to provide the auditors with an estimate of our liability related to ongoing litigation and claims arising under the Minnesota Child Victims Act and the potential impact of the liability on our future financial stability.

All options are being considered in order to resolve the number of claims we are facing due to the lifting of the statute of limitations. Our first concern is fairness: fairness for victims of clergy sexual abuse and fairness for the faithful whose stewardship has made archdiocesan ministry possible. Reorganization under the bankruptcy code would be a way to respond to all victims/survivors by allowing the available funds to be equitably distributed to all who have made claims, not just those who have the earliest trial dates or settlements. No decision regarding whether to pursue reorganization has been made. …

The financial statements, footnotes to the statements, and the independent auditors’ report, as well as an article from The Catholic Spirit analyzing the report are posted on the Administration and Finance page of the archdiocesan website.

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.

Citing priest file reviews, Archdiocese sees $9M deficit for fiscal 2014; bankruptcy an option

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: AMY FORLITI , Associated Press Updated: November 20, 2014-

MINNEAPOLIS — The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis reported a $9.1 million operating deficit for fiscal year 2014 and said Thursday that it is considering filing for bankruptcy as its financial condition has become more uncertain due to the growing potential for more lawsuits by victims of clergy sexual abuse.

The archdiocese released its financial information in its newspaper, The Catholic Spirit, more than a week after it announced it was cutting its budget by 20 percent and making unspecified staff cuts. Archbishop John Nienstedt called the situation “disheartening,” but assured the faithful that the finances won’t directly affect parishes or other Catholic institutions.

“I am determined to see that the ministries and essential services provided by the Chancery Corporation will continue and that we will strive to minimize the impact of cutbacks on our Catholic people and the larger community,” he wrote.

The archdiocese said the operating deficit can be partly attributed to $4.1 million spent to address allegations of clergy sexual abuse since May 2013, when a three-year window opened up for abuse victims to file claims that were otherwise barred under the statute of limitations.

Chief Financial Officer Thomas Mertens said outside professionals were brought in to provide legal, investigative and financial expertise, and the majority of expenses were related to a review of priest files, investigation of insurance coverage and analyzing financial options.

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

‘Paedophile priests’ acted like sect: report

SPAIN
The Local

The priests in Granada who are being investigated for sexual abuse after a letter sent to Pope Francis allegedly drew young boys into church activities before ruthlessly convincing them to engage in sexual activities, investigators have learned.

Quoting sources from the criminal investigation underway, Spanish national daily El País has reported that the Granada Catholic circle — the group of priests in Granada accused of sexually abusing at last one child — behaved like a sinister sect, trapping young boys within their circle and grooming them for sex.

Of the 10 priests and two laypersons who have been accused by one alleged victim, with the possibility that more witnesses may come forward, the group is said to have had a leader, specifically one of the three priests suspended from their duties on Monday in light of the court investigation.

Investigators are focusing on a parish church in the Granada district of Zaidín, where, the newspaper explains, the group leader worked and boys were allegedly drawn into the paedophiles’ sphere of influence by being taken on as altar boys or assistants.

According to the court sources, the priests would try to brainwash these children in secret meetings, at which sexual matters were discussed and the boys encouraged to perform sexual acts with the adults, who assured them that there was no sin in such encounters. The case notes also describe how the adult members of the group also engaged in sexual activity among themselves.

The religious group, known locally as Los Romanones, a reference to the name of their alleged leader, would transport the minors to flats and a house in Granada, as well as several coastal properties, to carry out their alleged crimes.

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.

‘Sick of pedophiles’ teacher quit

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

DAVID KILLICK MERCURY NOVEMBER 21, 2014

A FORMER teacher at Hobart’s Hutchins School has told a royal commission he walked away from his career in his 20s because he was sick of working with pedophiles.

Geoffrey Ayling, 75, said he now knew that up to eight ped­o­philes were employed at the school during the mid-1960s — at a time when staff numbers were usually about 16-17.

He gave evidence to a hearing of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in Hobart yesterday.

“I knew of four, including [former headmaster David] Lawrence, plus two more,” he said. “Yesterday, I heard of two more.”

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.

End of the thin blue line for Fox, retiring after 36 years

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

A retiring Hunter Valley police officer is questioning why no one has been charged in the wake of the Special Commission of Inquiry into child sexual abuse within the Catholic Church.

Detective Chief Inspector (DCI) Peter Fox, whose allegations of church cover-ups helped spark the Newcastle inquiry and subsequent Royal Commission, is officially retiring from the police force today after more than 36 years.

He said he is ready to move on with his life and intends to spend more time with his immediate and extended family.

But he remains concerned that six months after commissioner Margaret Cunneen found evidence warranting the prosecution of a senior church official, nothing has happened.

“The commission made that recommendation back in May, and I’m asking the question,” he said.

“I’m not suggesting it’s the police force dragging their feet on it, but someone somewhere in the chain certainly is.

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.

Cunneen child sex findings ‘flawed’: Shoebridge

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By Joanne McCarthy Nov. 20, 2014

A NSW report into Hunter child sex allegations was ‘‘fundamentally flawed’’ after key evidence about ‘‘culpable arrangements’’ between NSW Police and the Catholic Church was not explored, NSW Parliament has been told.

The NSW Special Commission of Inquiry did not consider allegations last year about police involvement in the church’s Professional Standards Resource Group (PSRG) between 1998 and 2005.

This was despite a submission by Hunter detective Peter Fox to expand the inquiry to investigate the PSRG, and the production of police documents to the inquiry in June last year by NSW Greens justice spokesman David Shoebridge.

‘‘These are matters of the utmost seriousness with profound implications for public confidence in the administration of justice in NSW,’’ Mr Fox told the NSW Special Commission of Inquiry in a six-page submission on June 22, 2013.

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Tre indagati per omicidio colposo

ITALIA
Rete L’Abuso

[Three under investigation for manslaughter]

Caso Bonello: c’è un terzo indagato con l’accusa di omicidio colposo. Si tratta dell’ispettore della polizia postale Alberto Bonvicini, che dopo quella di circonvenzione d’incapace ora dovrà rispondere anche dell’accusa di omicidio colposo in concorso. Insieme a lui sono indagati per la stessa ipotesi di reato anche due medici, il marito di Luisa Bonello, il dottor Mauro Acquarone, e la dottoressa Noemi Donati (interrogata la scorsa settimana).

A loro il pubblico ministero Giovanni Battista Ferro contesta di non aver impedito che alla dottoressa (trovata senza vita nella sua casa del quartiere Valloria lo scorso 19 ottobre) venisse rinnovato il porto d’armi sportivo: la tesi degli inquirenti è che, essendo a conoscenza delle condizioni psicofisiche di Luisa Bonello, i tre avrebbero dovuto informare le autorità competenti per evitare che la donna continuasse a detenere nella sua abitazione le armi, una delle quali utilizzata per togliersi la vita. Di qui l’accusa di non aver impedito la morte del medico savonese.

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What can non-believing child advocates learn from the grandson of the Rev. Billy Graham?

UNITED STATES
Religious Child Maltreatment

[with video]

Boz Tchividjian is an Evangelical Christian, a law professor at Liberty University, and the grandson of the Rev. Billy Graham. What could he possibly have to say that would resonate with atheists, agnostics, humanists, and freethinkers? Well, plenty, when it comes to protecting children from abuse and neglect.

Boz founded Godly Response to Abuse in the Christian Environment (GRACE). Since its inception, GRACE has conducted unflinching investigations into religious organizations accused of ignoring or covering up crimes of child sexual abuse. Consequently, these organizations have taken meaningful steps to right those wrongs and to try to prevent abuse from happening in the future.

Please click the video image to learn what Boz has to say about how we all can help protect children from being victimized.

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Off-Field Pursuits

OREGON/IDAHO
Willamette Week

November 19th, 2014 BETH SLOVIC

Seventeen years ago, David Douglas High School fired its varsity girls’ softball coach after a 16-year-old player accused him of sexually assaulting her during a trip to a summer tournament in Idaho.

The coach, Patrick Jay Wallace, then 37, declined to answer questions from school officials about the incident. David Douglas’ principal oversaw the investigation, and the district fired Wallace after concluding his behavior constituted “poor judgment” and created “an opportunity for inappropriate behavior and the appearance of impropriety.”

The reason for Wallace’s firing, while rumored at the school, was never made public. A municipal prosecutor in Post Falls, Idaho, charged Wallace with battery, a misdemeanor, but later dropped the charge.

Today, Wallace is on the coaching staff of the Central Catholic High School football team, ranked No. 1 in the state.

And the man who runs Central Catholic, President John Harrington, was the David Douglas principal whose investigation of Wallace in 1997 led to the coach’s firing.

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Archdiocesan Parishes Seek Independent Representation For Abuse Cases

MINNESOTA
Canonical Consultation

11/19/2014

Jennifer Haselberger

Noting that ‘the interests of individual parishes are distinct from those of the Archdiocese’, two diocesan priests have taken the bold and, to my mind, unprecedented step of securing independent legal counsel for their parishes, with the goal of working out a separate global resolution to liability claims against individual parish communities.

In one sense, this is the fullest expression of canon 532, which states ‘in all juridic affairs the pastor represents the parish according to the norm of law.’ I am not as confident that the bylaws of the parish corporations offer a similar level of support for this position. Under Minnesota law, parish corporations are governed by a Board of Directors consisting of five members- the Archbishop, the Vicar General, the Pastor of the parish, and two lay trustees (Minnesota Statutes, Section 315.15). While the pastor and the trustees have the authority to transact daily business on behalf of the parish, proxies from the Archbishop and Vicar General must be sought for acts of extraordinary administration, including resolving individual or aggregate claims by financial settlement. Moreover, certain acts require the consent of either a majority of directors or the unanimous consent of all of the members, including some contracts for services.

Historically, adopting this structure for parishes was thought to guarantee that the bishop (or Archbishop) always retained the upper hand, while at the same time the assets of the parishes were protected by the veil of indirect control. In other words, the administration of the corporation was entrusted to an ‘independent’ board of directors, despite the fact that the bishop is both a member of the board and has the authority to remove, effectively, all the other members should their ‘independent’ judgment conflict with his own.

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Mater Ecclesiae College will close

RHODE ISLAND
Valley Breeze

By MELANIE THIBEAULT, Valley Breeze Staff Writer

SMITHFIELD – The Legion of Christ announced last month that it will be closing its doors on the Mater Ecclesiae College in Greenville at the end of the academic year, leaving residents to wonder what will become of the 44-acre property at 60 Austin Ave., which town records assess at $6.5 million.

Representing the Legion of Christ in Rhode Island, attorney Daniel Stone told The Valley Breeze & Observer that plans for the property are still under consideration.

“It’s not presently for sale,” he said.

Jim Fair, spokesman for the Legion, told The Observer that poor enrollment is one reason for the college’s closing in June 2015.

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Crosier Order, Gerald Funcheon, Named in Two Lawsuits …

MINNESOTA/CALIFORNIA
Jeff Anderson & Associates

Media Advisory
November 19, 2014

Crosier Order, Gerald Funcheon, Named in Two Lawsuits Filed in Minnesota Involving Five Sexual Abuse Survivors

Abuse is alleged while Funcheon worked at St. Odilia’s in Shoreview, Minnesota and Palma High School in Salinas, California

WHAT: At a news conference Thursday, survivors and their attorneys, Jeff Anderson and Mike Finnegan, will:

• Announce the filing of two civil lawsuits involving five survivors. Defendants named in the lawsuit include the Crosier Fathers & Brothers and former priest Gerald Funcheon for sexual abuse at St. Odilia Church in Shoreview, Minnesota and Palma High School in Salinas, California.
• Release video testimony of Gerald Funcheon from 2012 admitting to the sexual abuse of several children. Funcheon is believed to have abused over 50 children during his time in the priesthood and worked in several parishes and schools throughout the country including Indiana, Minnesota, Florida, Hawaii, and California.
• Discuss and provide key documents from Funcheon’s priest files obtained from the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis and the Crosiers.
• Encourage the Crosiers to release files on all known offenders including the 19 priests and brothers named in March, 2014 who had credible allegations of child sexual abuse. Several of the offenders, including Funcheon, worked in states including Minnesota, Arizona, Indiana, Michigan, California and New York.

WHEN: Thursday, November 20, 2014, at 11:00AM CT

WHERE: Jeff Anderson & Associates
366 Jackson St. Suite 100
St. Paul, MN 55101

NOTES: Funcheon’s priest file, video statement, and key documents will be available on our website tomorrow and we will live stream the press conference online at www.andersonadvocates.com.

Contact Jeff Anderson: Office/651.538.5049 Cell/612.817.8665
Contact Mike Finnegan: Office/651.538.5049 Cell/612.205.5531

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Collusion ‘helped’ NSW pedophile priest

AUSTRALIA
9 News

There was collusion between pedophile priest John Sidney Denham and a principal who allowed sexual and sadistic abuse at a NSW school, a court has heard.

When one of the boys abused at St Pius X College in the Hunter region between 1975 and 1979 complained to principal Father Tom Brennan, he was yelled at and caned.

Judge Helen Syme told the Sydney District Court, where Denham faced a hearing on Thursday, this assisted the former Catholic priest in his abuse.

Denham, 71, was jailed for a maximum of almost 20 years in 2010 for his “sadistic” indecent and sexual assault of boys as young as five.

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Former teacher claims Hutchins School board turned a blind eye to reporting of sexual abuse

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

A teacher who tried to alert the Hutchins School board to child sexual abuse allegedly occurring at the school in the 1960s will front the royal commission hearings in Hobart today.

It is the second day of public hearings in Tasmania of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

On the opening day, four former students gave evidence of the sexual abuse they allegedly suffered as boys at the hands of four staff members, including former headmaster David Lawrence.

In his opening address, counsel assisting the commission Angus Stewart SC said there was evidence the school board was aware of the abuse at the time and did nothing.

This morning, former Hutchins teacher Geoffrey Ayling will give evidence at the commission about a conversation he overheard between Mr Lawrence and another teacher, only known as AOC, who had just been dismissed.

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School turned ‘blind eye’ to abuse

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

The sexual abuse of boys at an elite Hobart school in the 1960s was common knowledge but attempts to raise the alarm were stifled, a national royal commission has been told.

A third of senior teachers at The Hutchins School, including headmaster David Ralph Lawrence, had an interest in boys at the time, former science master Geoffrey Ayling said.

‘Although the experience of these students was common knowledge, everyone just turned a blind eye,’ the 75 year old told a commission hearing in Hobart on Thursday.

He recalled the sudden dismissal of a teacher in 1964 after a school nurse walked in on a ‘three-dimensional trigonometry’ lesson.

‘He had been found committing an act of buggery with a student,’ Mr Ayling said by way of explanation.

On another occasion he overheard a conversation of Mr Lawrence, which led him to believe the principal ‘shared a common interest in boys’ and so he didn’t raise his concerns in-house.

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Child sex abuse inquiry: Ex-headmaster admits failing to question staff, pupils over paedophilia claims

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Rosemary Bolger and Linda Hunt

A former headmaster of a prestigious Hobart boys’ school has admitted he failed to interview former students and teachers over paedophilia claims against another former headmaster.

John Bednall, who was headmaster at Hutchins School in the 1990s, was giving evidence at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

In 1993, a former student, known as AOA, wrote to Dr Bednall seeking an apology from the school for the abuse he allegedly suffered at the hands of former headmaster David Lawrence in the 1960s.

Dr Bednall conducted a five-week investigation into AOA’s allegations and found there was no supporting evidence that he was abused.

When asked at the inquiry whether he had interviewed any staff members or anyone from the Hutchins School Board, Dr Bednall replied: “No”.

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Former teacher tells inquiry elite Hobart school covered up abuses

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Australian Associated Press
Wednesday 19 November 2014

The father of the Tasmanian premier told a teacher to keep quiet about alleged sexual abuse at an elite Hobart school in the 1960s, an inquiry has been told.

The royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse heard that sexual abuse at the Hutchins school in the 1960s was common knowledge.

Geoffrey Ayling, a science teacher, resigned in 1966 and changed careers after his attempts to raise the alarm were stifled, he told the commission in Hobart on Thursday.

He consulted his friend and lawyer Michael Hodgman, who was a Hutchins old boy. Hodgman was later a Tasmanian politician and is the father of the premier, Will Hodgman.

“Mr Hodgman’s advice to me was to me was that I should say nothing,” Ayling recounted. Hodgman died in 2013.

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Cupich to get firsthand look at archdiocese’s biggest ills

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tribune

By Manya Brachear Pashman,
Chicago Tribune

Archbishop Blase Cupich will make the first of three visits to ethnic parishes across the city this Sunday, when he celebrates Mass at the predominantly African-American St. Agatha Catholic Church.

The visit will bring him face to face with some of the biggest issues within the archdiocese. At St. Agatha, the largest African-American congregation on the West Side, Cupich will see how one parish has grappled with violence in its surrounding neighborhood, clergy sex abuse by one of its own and a struggling school that will be downsized to an early childhood center next school year.

“His emphasis on violence, anti-violence, immigration, the sex abuse stuff all hits home here in Chicago,” said the Rev. Larry Dowling, pastor of St. Agatha, who said he didn’t know why Cupich chose to make the parish his first stop. “In a lot of ways it makes some sense if he’s going to make a statement symbolically. Our parishioners are interpreting it as affirmation of what we have been through and moving forward.”

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Victim Ready To Testify Against Priest Charged With Sexual Assault

MINNESOTA
Valley News Live

[with video]

By Neil Carlson, Reporter/Photographer

A former Greenbush, Minnesota priest, who was just extradited from his home in India was formally charged with 3 counts of criminal sexual conduct in Roseau. Joseph Jeyapaul is charged with sexually assaulting 2 females, who were 14 and 16 years old at the time of the attacks in 2004 and 2005.

Jeyapaul remains in jail on a bond of 2-million dollars cash if he doesn’t want any conditions placed on his release.

However, it’s not the kind of thing folks expect to have to talk about in a small, tight knit Community like Greenbush.

Fifty-nine year old Joseph Jeyapaul was a priest at this church. In one incident, he’s charged with having a 16-year old girl touch his genitals at his nearby home.

He’s also charged with forcing a second victim, a 14-year old girl to perform oral sex on him. Jeyapaul allegedly told that victim that he would kill her family if she told anyone. He also told the girl that she was a bad person and she should kill herself.

However, Prosecutor Karen Foss says that victim is ready and willing to testify against Jeyapaul.

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Star power ‘bewitches’ those vulnerable to abuse, says human rights lawyer

UNITED STATES
CNN

By Henry Hullah, CNN

We must monitor people with power in order to protect the vulnerable, human rights lawyer Geoffrey Robertson told Christiane Amanpour on Wednesday.

An expert on the “culture of silence” surrounding abuse in the Roman Catholic Church in Ireland, Robertson explained the common theme that ran through the church, the media and beyond.

“The revelations started with the Catholic Church in Ireland,” he told the program.

“Then we discovered it in celebrities here and a number of them have been convicted and now we’re finding other examples.”

“And what comes across to me, having studied it is the utter vulnerability of seven, eight, nine year olds to power.”

“[In] a sense, in the Catholic Church, the priest as the representative of God – any command is unflinchingly obeyed. The star, entering the star’s dressing room at the BBC, it’s an enormous power.”

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Vatican’s point man on sexual abuse says commission hitting its stride

VATICAN CITY
Crux

By Inés San Martín
Vatican correspondent November 19, 2014

ROME — Almost a year after the Vatican announced plans for a new papal commission to lead the charge for reform on the Church’s child sexual abuse scandals, the chief of staff for the group says it’s now hitting its stride.

“We’re talking about changing Catholic structures, collecting what we’ve done in the past 12 years,” said the Rev. Robert Oliver, referring to reforms adopted since the abuse scandals erupted in the United States in 2002.

The commission, Oliver said, wants to lead the universal Church in “learning from the best practices as well as our mistakes, sharing this knowledge with those who need it, and discussing how we can work to make sure that our children will be safer.”

Oliver, a former advisor to Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley of Boston on sexual abuse matters, is Secretary of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors announced last December. He sat down for an exclusive interview with Crux at the commission’s new Vatican headquarters.

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Boys’ abuse at school ‘common knowledge’

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

The sexual abuse of boys at an elite Hobart school in the 1960s was common knowledge but attempts to raise the alarm were stifled, a national royal commission has been told.

A royal commission has heard sexual abuse of boys at an elite Hobart school in the 1960s was common knowledge.

Science teacher Geoffrey Ayling resigned from The Hutchins School in 1966 and changed careers.

“I no longer wanted to work in the school … because of the prevalence of pedophiles among teaching staff,” Mr Ayling, now 75, told a commission hearing in Hobart on Thursday.

At the time there were six teachers among the senior staff of about 16 whom he believed had an interest in boys.

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“I Am Father Jorge”: Pope Phones A Sex-Abuse Victim and Causes a Stir in Spain

SPAIN
Aleteia

Many media outlets have reported this Tuesday on a supposed phone call from Pope Francis to a young man in Granada (Spain) who suffered from sexual abuse when he was a minor. A group of priests are implicated in the case.

According to the Religión Digital website, Francis called the victim this past August, asked him for forgiveness in the name of the Church, and committed himself to following the case through to the end to ensure justice is done. For the moment, the archbishop of Granada has removed from ministry several priests who are implicated in this case.

Various media outlets have published the Pope’s supposed conversation with the young man, who has been given the alias “Daniel.” This is the account:

“Who is it?” Daniel answers. “Am I speaking with Daniel?” comes the reply from the other end of the phone, in a strangely familiar voice. “Yes, it’s me. Who’s calling?” “Good afternoon my son, I am Fr. Jorge.” “I’m sorry,” Daniel responds, “you must have the wrong number. I don’t know any Fr. Jorge.” And he is astonished when he hears, “Well, I’m Pope Francis.”

For a few seconds, Daniel can’t even make a sound. On the other end, his interlocutor thinks that he has hung up. “Are you still there?” His tone of voice is unmistakable. It’s the Pope!

“My son, calm down. I read your letter several times. I couldn’t help being moved, and feeling profound sorrow when I read your story. I want to ask you for forgiveness in the name of the whole Church of Christ. Forgive this grave sin and very serious crime which you have suffered. These wounds make the whole Church suffer.” Tears run down Daniel’s face. He can’t stop crying, nor say a single word.

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Cardinal O’Malley in CBS 60 Minutes launches propaganda for Pope Francis to ensnare idiots Catholics to donate millions to Vatican Mammon Beast

UNITED STATES
POPE FRANCIS the CON-Christ.

Paris Arrow

“If” is the most powerful word of con-men, lay or religious con-men.

Con-artists always use the word “if” with the promise of a fairy tale ending in tomorrow (which never comes). Cardinal Sean O’Malley spoke with a classic Vatican poker face and as a Franciscan con-artist using the big conniving word “IF” in CBS 60 Minutes – when he declared his new famous Catholic religious fairy tale, “If I started a church, I’d love to have women priests” – thereby deceiving idiots Americans particularly stupid Catholic women. O’Malley’s con line sounds similar to that of a married man telling his mistress, “If I started as a single guy and if I wasn’t married, I’d love to marry you”. Notice the nonchalant use of the word “love” by both con-artists – one is a religious cardinal and the other a layman.

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Reflections on my ’60 Minutes’ interview

BOSTON (MA)
Crux

By Cardinal Seán P. O’Malley
The Pilot
November 19, 2014

Last Sunday evening I was privileged to be featured on the CBS television program “60 Minutes,” which is actually three 20 minute segments. I was featured in segment two of the broadcast. The whole experience was fascinating. I was very impressed by the entire team, their work ethic, professionalism and dedication. Those 20 minutes are distilled out of many hours of hard work. Correspondent Norah O’Donnell and producers Frank Devine and Magalie Laguerre-Wilkinson are all Catholics. Their faith and their regard for the Church was evident. Frank is a very well-informed Catholic who can engage in theological debate about “internal form” or any aspect of the life of the Church.

From the beginning of the process I was aware that the questions would not be about the weather and the Red Sox. The program’s interviews include difficult questions that are often on many people’s minds. For some people, being featured on 60 Minutes would be exhilarating, but television interviews are not at the top of my list of favorite things to do. Newscasts these days can be about sound bites and quick messaging. In contrast, 60 Minutes does a good job of trying to go deeper into the topics they address. My interview touched on three provocative issues that are seldom addressed by members of the hierarchy, but which once raised capture everyone’s attention. These matters call for more time and consideration than can be given in a 20 minute broadcast segment.

Not surprisingly, Norah asked a question about Bishop Robert Finn of the Diocese of St. Joseph-Kansas City and accountability. While it is the case that the sexual abuse policies adopted by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops would preclude someone convicted of not reporting a crime from teaching religious education or having any position supervising children, some of the advance reporting about this matter did not reflect the nuances of my answer to the question. In response to Norah, I said that the Vatican must attend to this situation. The Holy Father is aware of this need, and recently an Episcopal Visitator was sent to Bishop Finn’s diocese. The Holy See had the sensitivity to send a Canadian bishop to conduct the visitation.

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Child sex abuse inquiry …

AUSTRALIA
7 News

Child sex abuse inquiry: Ex-headmaster admits failing to question staff, pupils over paedophilia claims

By Rosemary Bolger and Linda Hunt
November 20, 2014

A former headmaster of a prestigious Hobart boys’ school has admitted he failed to interview former students and teachers over paedophilia claims against another former headmaster.

John Bednall, who was headmaster at Hutchins School in the 1990s, was giving evidence at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

In 1993, a former student, known as AOA, wrote to Dr Bednall seeking an apology from the school for the abuse he allegedly suffered at the hands of former headmaster David Lawrence in the 1960s.

Dr Bednall conducted a five-week investigation into AOA’s allegations and found there was no supporting evidence that he was abused.

When asked at the inquiry whether he had interviewed any staff members or anyone from the Hutchins School Board, Dr Bednall replied: “No”.

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Palma to be named in sex abuse suit

CALIFORNIA
Monterey Herald

By Julia Reynolds, Monterey Herald
POSTED: 11/19/14

SALINAS >> Palma High School in Salinas is being sued over alleged sexual abuse of several former students by a priest who taught at the school in the 1980s, attorneys announced Wednesday.

The Minnesota law firm of Jeff Anderson and Associates, which has pursued clergy sexual abuses cases nationwide, announced it will hold a press conference Thursday morning to outline details of the allegations against the Rev. Gerald Funcheon and Crosier Fathers & Brothers, over abuse they say occurred at Palma and St. Odilia’s School in Minnesota.

Funcheon is a former chaplain and teacher at the school. Palma president Brother Patrick Dunne said late Wednesday he couldn’t comment because he hadn’t seen the lawsuit.

Last year, nine former Palma students joined some 400 people who are sharing a $16.5 million settlement with the Irish Christian Brothers for sexual abuse they suffered at schools affiliated with the order in the United States and Canada.

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November 19, 2014

BISSCHOP ROEPT “PEDOPRIESTER” TERUG

BELGIE
VTM

[The West Flemish priest – now operating in Brazil – who has been accused of abusing at least two minors more than 20 years ago, has been asked to return to Belgium. Bishop Jozef De Kesel of Bruges decided today to recall the priest after consultation with several experts.]

De West-Vlaamse priester (54) die op dit moment in Brazilië werkt en beschuldigd wordt van misbruik van minstens twee minderjarigen meer dan twintig jaar geleden, moet naar België terugkeren. Dat heeft de bisschop Jozef De Kesel van Brugge vandaag beslist, nadat hij over de zaak verschillende deskundigen heeft geraadpleegd. Het opvangpunt voor klachten van seksueel misbruik zal hem zo vlug mogelijk ondervragen.

In 2011 dienden twee slachtoffers, een man en een vrouw, een klacht in tegen de priester. Ze vertelden, onafhankelijk van elkaar dat ze door de man waren misbruikt. Hij was toen nog leerkracht in een middelbare school in Brugge. De priester zat toen al in Brazilië. Het parket van Brugge heeft hem naar België laten komen om hem te kunnen ondervragen, maar ze konden alleen vaststellen dat de feiten verjaard waren. Daarna kon de priester, met goedkeuring van de bisschop, terugkeren naar Brazilië. Daar gaf hij onder meer les aan straatkinderen.

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Abuse allegations were addressed immediately, Spanish archbishop says

SPAIN
Catholic News Agency

Granada, Spain, Nov 19, 2014 / 04:11 pm (CNA).- The Archdiocese of Granada, Spain, has defended its response to the case of three priests accused of abusing an underage boy over a decade ago, offering solidarity to the alleged victim.

“From the moment credible reports of the accusations were filed before the Holy See by a young man from Granada alleging sexual abuse by a group of priests of the diocese, this archdiocese has scrupulously followed the procedures established by canonical discipline for these cases, which is available to all on the home page of the Holy See’s own website,” the archdiocese said in a statement this week.

The alleged sexual abuse took place approximately a decade ago, when the alleged victim was an adolescent. The now 24-year-old man recently filed a lawsuit against the priests.

“Once it was learned the lawsuit had been filed, the archbishop made himself available to civil authorities to collaborate in whatever way necessary, which he has done up to now,” the archdiocese said.

In response to reports in the media that he did not act soon enough in the case, Granada Archbishop Javier Martinez Fernandez told reporters in Madrid during the Spanish Bishops’ fall assembly that in mid-October the alleged victim asked him for a pause in ecclesial action against the priests in order to allow civil authorities to proceed with their case. He said civil authorities made the same request.

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Detective Chief Inspector Peter Fox retires from police after sparking royal commission into child sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
Yass Tribune

By JOANNE McCARTHY Nov. 19, 2014

DETECTIVE Chief Inspector Peter Fox will leave the NSW Police Force at midnight on Thursday – exactly 36 years, seven months and three days after walking in.

He feels vindicated by evidence at last month’s inquiry into police involvement with a Catholic Church child sexual abuse reporting group, and relieved to leave without disciplinary action against him over the November 2012 television interview that led to a royal commission, but ended his career.

And he’s not going quietly.

‘‘When the hell are they going to do something about charging someone?’’ he said about the key recommendation of the NSW Special Commission of Inquiry report in May this year that slammed him, but found there was ‘‘sufficient evidence warranting the prosecution of a senior Catholic Church official in connection with the concealment of child sexual abuse’’ by the late Hunter priest Jim Fletcher.

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Los presuntos abusadores de Granada se hacen llamar El Clan de los Romanones

ESPANA
El Diario

[Granada: The alleged abusers call themselves The Clan of Romanones and are named for one of the leaders. The group includes a dozen people, ten of them priests. The priests do not wear clerical collars, have high economic level and many have flats and a duplex in the center of the beach.]

Jesús Bastante
19/11/2014

Se hacen llamar “el clan de los Romanones”, en honor de uno de sus líderes. Son una docena, diez sacerdotes y dos laicos. Ultraconservadores de pensamiento, aunque con formas y prácticas muy modernas. Ellos son los presuntos abusadores y encubridores del caso de abusos sexuales que el Papa Francisco ordenó investigar en la diócesis de Granada, y cuyo proceso judicial está a punto de concluir, detenciones incluidas.

Los sacerdotes no usan alzacuellos, tienen un alto nivel económico y disponen de muchos bienes, repartidos por Granada y la provincia, donde cuentan con diversas propiedades, amplias parcelas, incluso un dúplex en la playa. En todos estos lugares se produjeron, presuntamente, los abusos denunciados por Daniel y padecidos por varias víctimas más en los últimos años. Algunos son sacerdotes en parroquias de la capital y uno forma parte incluso de la Curia diocesana.

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Italy promises to return 23 million euros to Vatican bank

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

Cindy Wooden Catholic News Service | Nov. 19, 2014

VATICAN CITY
In what the Vatican bank described as recognition that it has established serious measures to prevent money laundering, it announced the Italian government has promised to return 23 million euros (U.S. $29 million) that had been blocked for more than three years.

Even though the Italian government in 2011 said it was releasing the funds, the Italians believed “issues regarding customer due diligence remained unsolved” and so held on to the funds, said a statement Tuesday from the Institute for the Works of Religion, the formal name of what is commonly called the Vatican bank.

The Italian treasury police seized the funds, which the institute had deposited in a Rome bank, during a money-laundering investigation. The Vatican repeatedly insisted the deposit was legitimate and that the Vatican bank was committed to “full transparency” in its operations.

“The repatriation” of the funds was possible thanks to “the introduction of a fully fledged anti-money laundering and supervisory system in the Holy See in 2013,” Tuesday’s statement said.

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Past headmaster in stand for abuse hearing

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

A former Hobart school headmaster who investigated reports of student sexual abuse will give evidence at a royal commission.

John Bendall was the principal at elite boys’ school Hutchins in the early 1990s when reports were received from men claiming to have been groomed and sexually assaulted while students at the
school in the 1960s.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has been told that while Dr Bendall found at least three staff members had ‘an unhealthy interest in boys’ in the 1960s, the school board refused to acknowledge the claims of abuse or issue an apology.

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MN–Bail is $1 million for predator priest

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, Nov. 19

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314 503 0003, SNAPdorris@gmail.com )

Bail has been set at $1 million for a twice-accused predator priest. For the safety of kids, we hope he stays behind bars until trial. And we hope others will call Roseau County law enforcement agencies now if they have any inklings or information about Fr. Joseph Jeyapaul’s crimes.

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Storied Jewish Paper Called a Mouthpiece for Pedophiles

NEW YORK
Courthouse News Service

By ADAM KLASFELD

MANHATTAN (CN) – Once the Yiddish paper known as the “conscience of the ghetto,” the now-bilingual Jewish Daily Forward sparked righteous fury from a Brooklyn father who claims the paper smeared him with illegal wiretaps because he blew the whistle on rape in a devout and insular community.

The defamation complaint that Samuel Kellner, of Borough Park, filed Friday stems from allegations that cantor Baruch Lebovits sexually abused Kellner’s 12-year-old son and other children.

Indicted in 2008, Lebovits was convicted in Brooklyn two years later, but he was freed on appeal because of evidence withheld from his lawyers. The disgraced cantor then went after Kellner with allegedly doctored recordings depicting him as an extortionist.

For a time, the Brooklyn District Attorney’s office sought to retry Lebovits while simultaneously prosecuting his accuser. The charges against Kellner were ultimately dropped as shaky, while Lebovits copped to lesser counts that shuttled him in and out of prison within 86 days this year.

Before Lebovits pleaded guilty, his family allegedly tried to revive the case against Kellner by leaking illicitly recorded tapes – including lawyer-client communications – to The Forward’s Paul Berger, who ran excerpts in a November 2013 article.

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WA–Controversy continues over two Seattle predator priests

WASHINGTON
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, Nov. 19

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

Controversy continues to swirl around decisions by Seattle Catholic officials that victims and concerned parishioners consider deceitful, hurtful and reckless.

Today, the National Catholic Reporter writes about the recent cases of Fr. Harold Quigg and the defrocked and recently deceased Fr. David Jaeger.

Parishioners link the two cases, “viewing both as indicative of a lack of archdiocesan diligence in regard to priests found to be credibly accused of sexual abuse of children,” NCR reports.

Regarding Quigg: It’s not enough to say “oops, we let a credibly accused predator priest keep ministering.” Someone must be disciplined. Otherwise, nothing changes.

Regarding Jaegar: Honoring admitted predators also discourages other victims, witnesses and whistleblowers from reporting offenders and preventing crimes. This kind of selfish, callous church event is one reason clergy sex crimes and cover ups keep happening.

Here’s the bottom line: Clerics can make it harder or easier for people to disclose suspected child sex crimes. The two or three dozen clerics involved in these controversies are making it harder.

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Federal judge says no to ex-priest’s claim in Archdiocese of Milwaukee bankruptcy case

MILWAUKEE (WI)
The Republic

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
November 19, 2014

MILWAUKEE — A former priest accused of sexual abuse won’t be getting any money from the Archdiocese of Milwaukee in its bankruptcy case.

Federal bankruptcy Judge Susan Kelley has tossed out a claim from Marvin Knighton, who says he was wrongly defrocked and money he contributed to his retirement account should be returned to him.

Knighton was charged with child sexual abuse in 2002 but acquitted by a jury the next year. The church still removed him from the priesthood, however, saying its investigation found two allegations against him had merit.

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Extradited Priest Accused of Assaulting 2nd Person in Minn.

MINNESOTA
KAAL

A judge has set bond at $1 million cash for a Roman Catholic priest extradited from his native India on accusations of sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl in Minnesota.

The Rev. Joseph Jeyapaul was arraigned on criminal sexual conduct charges in Roseau County District Court Wednesday. Prosecutors also charged the 59-year-old priest with assaulting a second victim.

Prosecutors say he raped a girl multiple times in 2004 and 2005, starting when she was 14. Jeyapaul has denied the allegations.

Jeyapaul came to Minnesota in 2004 and served at the Blessed Sacrament Church in Greenbush at the time of the alleged abuse.

He returned to India in 2005 and while he was overseas, the Diocese of Crookston received allegations that he had an inappropriate relationship with a 16-year-old girl.

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Large funeral Mass for admitted abuser priest raises concerns in Seattle

WASHINGTON
National Catholic Reporter

Dan Morris-Young | Nov. 19, 2014

An overflow funeral Mass with some 20 celebrants and choir at St. Joseph Parish in Seattle followed by a catered reception for a former priest who admitted to sexually abusing boys has left some parishioners confused and angry and Seattle Archbishop J. Peter Sartain talking about revisiting archdiocesan protocols for funerals of priests removed from ministry for child sex abuse.

Those supportive of the liturgy and previous evening’s vigil for admitted abuser David Jaeger, 70, emphasized church teaching on mercy and forgiveness, honoring a friend, hope in the Resurrection, and paying respect for Jaeger’s pastoral work, notably his ministry to the gay and lesbian community and people with AIDS.

The vigil and Mass were held July 28-29 at St. Joseph after family and planners received permission from its pastor, Jesuit Fr. John Whitney. Whitney said they had told him that Seattle’s other Jesuit-staffed parish where Jaeger attended, St. Ignatius, would be too small to accommodate the number of people expected. (St. Joseph seats about 700.)

The Vatican accepted Jaeger’s petition to be laicized in 2005 after it had been revealed he admitted to sexually exploiting up to 10 boys. Jaeger died July 22 from complications of Alzheimer’s disease, according to an obituary in The Seattle Times.

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$1 million bail set for accused Minnesota priest

MINNESOTA
DL-Online

By Kevin Bonham

ROSEAU, Minn. – Cash bail of at least $1 million was set today for a Roman Catholic priest who fled to his native India eight years ago to avoid facing felony criminal sexual conduct charges stemming from incidents involving teenage girls between 2004 and 2005.

The Rev. Joseph Jeyapaul is facing two counts of first degree criminal sexual conduct, each of which carries a maximum penalty of 30 years imprisonment or $40,000 fine, or both. He also is facing one count of fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct, which is subject to a maximum penalty of 10 years or a $20,000 fine.

He is accused of sexually assaulting a parish member in Greenbush, Minn., when the victim was 14 and 15 years old, in 2004 and 2005. At the time, Jeyapaul was administrator of Blessed Sacrament Catholic Church in Greenbush, as well as St. Joseph’s Catholic Church in Middle River, Minn., and St. Edward’s Catholic Church in Karlstad, Minn.

In 2007, the charges were amended to include similar allegations involving a second girl who was 16 during the same time period.

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Massenexodus lateinamerikanischer Katholiken zu Evangelikalen

LATEINAMERIKA
Katholisches

[Mass exodus of Latin American Catholics to Evangelicals]

(New York) Die Katholische Kirche erlebt in Lateinamerika einen ungeahnten Aderlaß. Es findet ein Massenexodus statt. Das Phänomen einer starken Fluktuation ist aus den USA bekannt. Jeder dritte getaufte US-Katholik kehrt der Kirche im Laufe seines Lebens den Rücken und wechselt die Konfession oder Religion. Umgekehrt findet eine Zuwanderung aus anderen Konfessionen und Religionen statt. Getaufte Katholiken und Konvertiten machen zusammen ein Drittel der US-Bevölkerung aus. Tatsächlich als Katholiken bekennen sich aber nur 24 Prozent.

In Lateinamerika ist das Phänomen neuer, weshalb auch von einer US-Amerikanisierung die Rede ist. Richtig sichtbar wurde das Phänomen seit den 80er Jahren, als evangelikale Gruppen aus den USA Lateinamerika überschwemmten. Es hieß, die USA wollten sich nach dem Ende der Militärdiktaturen neue zuverlässige Partner aufbauen und dazu grundlegende Strukturen der lateinamerikanischen Gesellschaft verändern. Inzwischen gibt es nach US-amerikanischem Vorbild eine Vielzahl eigenständiger lateinamerikanischer evangelikaler Gemeinschaften, die Katholiken anziehen. Die Entwicklung wird im Zusammenhang mit soziopolitischen Veränderungen gesehen, die mit dem wirtschaftlichen Aufstieg einiger Länder, vor allem Brasiliens einhergehe. Es sei der Wohlstandsprotestantismus, der die aufstrebende Mittelschicht anspreche und jene Teile der Unterschicht, die den Anschluß an die Mittelschicht suchen, ganz unabhängig von den realen Aussichten.

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Investigan si los sacerdotes que cometieron abusos sexuales tuvieron cómplices

ESPANA
RAGAP

[Government official Santiago Perez said police are planning two lines of public inquiry to shed light on the degree of involvement of clergy and other church workers in allegations of child sexual abuse. Potential accomplices are also being investigation. However, all facets of the investigation are currently under a gag order.]

El pasado lunes, RAGAP informaba sobre el escándalo que sacudía a la Iglesia por un abuso sexual gay de varios sacerdotes y personas laicas a un chico que, cuando sucedieron los hechos, era menor de edad.

Ahora, el subdelegado del Gobierno en Granada, Santiago Pérez, ha informado que existen dos líneas de investigación policial con la intención de arrojar luz al grado de participación de los religiosos. Igualmente, se está investigando a los posibles cómplices de los hechos, así como si puede haber otros afectados, aunque de momento todo está bajo secreto de sumario. De momento, se habla de una docena de detenidos, los cuales vivían en diversos puntos de la provincia de Granada.

Los periodistas preguntaron a Pérez si se cree que pudiese haber una red de pederastia, a lo que éste respondió que “se ha abierto el proceso de investigación y todo está bajo secreto de sumario, pero no me atrevería a decir tanto, simplemente hay unas conductas que se están investigando y a partir de ahí tendremos resultados bastante pronto”, ha explicado, según recoge Europa Press.

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Victim tells …

AUSTRALIA
Courier-Mail

Victim tells of 20-year wait for apology as Royal Commission hears of sex abuse claims at exclusive school

A  VICTIM of child sexual abuse at Hobart’s Hutchins School has told a royal commission he was insulted when the school sent him an apology just weeks ago — after more than 20 years of requests.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse yesterday held its first day of public hearings into the exclusive boys’ school.

The witness, known by the pseudonym AOA, repeatedly fought tears as he recounted how he was repeatedly sexually abused by headmaster David

Ralph Lawrence during private French tutoring in the mid-1960s.

AOA was one of four former Hutchins students who gave evidence that such abuse, involving multiple members of staff, was rife at the school during the 1960s.

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El Papa, preocupado por el mayor escándalo de pederastia en España

ESPANA
RIA Novosti

Diez religiosos y dos seglares de la diócesis de Granada han sido apartados de sus funciones tras la intervención directa del papa Francisco tras una denuncia de pederastia.

El escándalo afecta a 12 personas, 3 sacerdotes sobre los que pesa una acusación de abuso sexual a menores, 7 religiosos y 2 seglares que están acusados de encubrir el delito.

Se trata, hasta el momento, del mayor escándalo de abusos sexuales del clero descubierto en España y la reacción del Papa no se ha hecho esperar.

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Pope intervenes in Granada abuse case after alleged victim sends letter

SPAIN
El Pais

VALME CORTÉS
Granada 17 NOV 2014

The Archbishop of Granada has removed 10 priests from their duties after they were accused of sexually abusing a young man when he was a minor.

The case was reported directly to the Vatican by the alleged victim, prompting a personal response from Pope Francis, and is now being investigated by a Granada court.

According to website Religión Digital, the young man had spent years “trying to bury the horror of all of that [abuse] in the depths of his memory.” But motivated by “the possible damage” that “other boys and girls could be suffering,” he wrote a five-page letter to the pope.

Then, on August 10, “Daniel” (not his real name) received a phone call from an unknown number while he was driving. “Who is this?” asked the man, now in his 20s. “Good afternoon son, this is Father Jorge,” the voice on the phone said, according to a number of sources with whom Religión Digital spoke. “Sorry, you must have made a mistake, I don’t know Father Jorge.” “Well, it’s Pope Francis.”

Perhaps unsurprisingly, the man was left dumbstruck by the call. “Are you still there?” the pope asked. “Son, calm yourself, I have read your letter a number of times. I couldn’t be more upset about it and feel huge pain on reading your story. I want to ask forgiveness in the name of all of the Church of Christ. Forgive this terrible sin and terrible crime that you have suffered.”

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From the Mixed Up Files of a Roman Congregation: the Lost Case of Father Curtis Wehmeyer

MINNESOTA
Canonical Consultation

11/18/2014

Jennifer Haselberger

Yesterday, Emily Gurnon of the Pioneer Press reported that Father Curtis Wehmeyer was charged in Chippewa County, WI, with second-degree sexual assault arising from contact with an unconscious boy while on a camping trip in 2011. I was not surprised to learn that additional charges had been filed against Father Wehmeyer, who pleaded guilty in 2012 to charges related to his molestation of two minor males, as well as to seventeen counts of possession of child pornography. It has long been anticipated that additional victims would come forward.

I was not even surprised to learn that the new charges involved sexual contact alleged to have occurred during the time in which the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis was supposedly monitoring Father Wehmeyer’s behavior, and at approximately the same time that Father Kevin McDonough was opining that Father Wehmeyer was ‘not really all that interested in an actual sexual encounter’.

What I did find surprising, however, was the final paragraph of the article, which stated,

‘The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis has requested that
he [Father Wehmeyer] be defrocked. Local leaders are awaiting
a decision from the Vatican.’

This, I find mind-boggling. How can it be possible that this case has been languishing in Rome for two years, without a determination?

It is not as though there is an unresolved question as to his guilt. Father Wehmeyer pleaded guilty- with a straight plea- and the transcript of his plea allocution was included in the materials sent to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith in November of 2012. At that court appearance, which occurred earlier in the same month, Father Wehmeyer admitted to the acts of which he had been accused, the criminal nature of those acts, and acknowledged that the victims were minors at the time that the abuse occurred. Furthermore, he denied that there were any mitigating circumstances that might have impacted his culpability.

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«Mi molestò da bambina»

ITALIA
Corriere della Sera

[Father Marco Ghilardi, former parish priest in Serina, is accused of sexually abusing a country girl who is now 19. The first hearing is scheduled for June 24. He is accused of molesting the girl since she was age 6.]

Si difenderà a processo don Marco Ghilardi, ex curato della parrocchia di Serina, accusato di abusi sessuali su una ragazza del paese che oggi ha 19 anni. Difeso dall’avvocato Roberto Bruni, il sacerdote ha sempre proclamato la sua innocenza. La prima udienza è stata fissata per il 24 giugno.

Fu la ragazza a denunciarlo poche settimane dopo aver compiuto i 18 anni. Lo accusa di averla molestata da quando aveva 6 anni, nel 2001, un anno dopo che lui era arrivato a Serina, fino al 2008, nei primi anni delle scuole medie.

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El Papa acorrala al arzobispo

ESPANA
El Mundo

[The pope corners the archbishop.]

Estaba convencido de que, como siempre, los trapos sucios se iban a seguir lavando en casa. Pero, esta vez, la estrategia del ocultamiento le falló al arzobispo de Granada, Francisco Javier Martínez, y la bomba del mayor escándalo de abusos sexuales del clero en España le estalló por sorpresa: el caso de las 12 personas, 10 religiosos y dos seglares, apartadas de sus funciones tras la intervención del Papa. De todas ellas, tres son curas, sobre los que pesa la acusación de de ser los autores de los abusos. Otros siete religiosos y dos seglares serían los encubridores.

Ante la tormenta, la reacción de monseñor Martínez ha sido enrocarse y expresar victimismo. No da la cara. Ni ante los medios, a los que quiso acallar con un simple comunicado repleto de medias verdades. Ni ante los propios obispos. Ayer, sus compañeros en el episcopado, reunidos en asamblea plenaria, lo esperaban para que los informase a fondo de todo lo sucedido, sus causas y sus consecuencias, en la «reservada», una reunión totalmente secreta que mantuvieron los prelados.

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Nota de prensa del Arzobispado de Granada

ESPANA
Archidiocesis de Granada

Ante la información publicada el lunes 17 de noviembre en algunos medios de comunicación.

Desde el momento en que se tuvo noticia fehaciente de la acusación presentada ante la Santa Sede por un joven de Granada, de haber sufrido abusos sexuales por parte de un grupo de sacerdotes de la diócesis, este arzobispado ha seguido escrupulosamente el procedimiento previsto para estos casos por la disciplina canónica, que está a disposición de todos en la Home Page de la página web de la propia Santa Sede.

De acuerdo con esa praxis, se han seguido los trámites establecidos en la misma para verificar si la mencionada acusación tenía verosimilitud. Apenas llevada a cabo esa investigación preliminar, que no tiene aún carácter judicial, este arzobispado impuso las medidas cautelares a los sacerdotes directamente acusados de los abusos, retirándolos del ejercicio del ministerio sacerdotal.

Igualmente remitió las conclusiones de la investigación a la Santa Sede. Al mismo tiempo, y dado que el denunciante es hoy persona mayor de edad, y que por tanto sólo él tenía capacidad para formular denuncia judicial, una vez se supo que ésta había sido interpuesta, el arzobispado se puso a disposición de la autoridad judicial para colaborar en lo que fuese necesario, lo que ha venido haciendo hasta el momento.

El arzobispado, al igual que la multitud de fieles cristianos, es consciente de que la inmensa mayoría de los sacerdotes vive ejemplarmente el ejercicio de su ministerio, y dan un precioso testimonio, a veces heroico, de entrega a Dios y a los hermanos. Al cuerpo entero de la Iglesia le hieren y le duelen inmensamente que se puedan producir escándalos de esta naturaleza, cuya certeza y alcance tendrá que determinar finalmente la autoridad judicial en la investigación abierta.

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Tres sacerdotes suspendidos por presuntos abusos sexuales en Granada

ESPANA
ACI Prensa

MADRID, 18 Nov. 14 / 11:28 am (ACI).- El Arzobispado de Granada (España) ha informado que tres sacerdotes de la diócesis han sido suspendidos “a divinis” tras haber sido acusados por un joven mayor de edad que habría sido víctima de abusos sexuales hace unos diez años. En la investigación que se ha iniciado ya, habría otras siete personas involucradas.

“Desde el momento en que se tuvo noticia fehaciente de la acusación presentada ante la Santa Sede por un joven de Granada (España), de haber sufrido abusos sexuales por parte de un grupo de sacerdotes de la diócesis, este arzobispado ha seguido escrupulosamente el procedimiento previsto para estos casos por la disciplina canónica, que está a disposición de todos en la Home Page de la página web de la propia Santa Sede”, afirma una nota del Arzobispado de Granada.

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Mehrere Priester in Spanien suspendiert

SPANIEN
Blick

Madrid – Papst Franziskus setzt den Kampf gegen den sexuellen Missbrauch von Kindern in der Kirche fort. Nach einem Klagebrief eines Missbrauchsopfers an den Papst wurden in Spanien mehrere Priester suspendiert.

Nach jüngsten Beschuldigungen eines heute erwachsenen Mannes aus Granada habe man intern ermittelt und die Betroffenen entpflichtet, teilte die Erzdiözese Granada im Süden des Landes am Montagabend mit.

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Watch: Father Charles Fenech in court

MALTA
Malta Independent

Dominican priest Father Charles Fenech this morning was seen entering and exiting the law courts building to attend a case separate from the one of alleged sexual abuse.

According to sources, the priest has attended many sittings for this particular case of defamation.

However, he has failed to appear three times to be charged of alleged sexual abuse, presenting medical certificates on each occasion of absence.

The Church Response team had known about the alleged sexual abuse claims for eight years but no outcome had been reached.

The next sitting in which Father Fenech is expected to appear in court on the sexual abuse charges is scheduled for 17 December.

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Former West Fargo Priest Still On The Run

NORTH DAKOTA
Valley News Live

By Ashley Bishop

Those involved with the justice system in North Dakota continue to look for a former West Fargo priest, who faces two charges of allegedly touching 11 and 14-year-old boys. Former West Fargo priest Fernando Sayasaya fled the country after the allegations came out more than 15 years ago.

The sexual abuse charges against Fernando Sayasaya were filed in December of 2002. This was five years after he started serving at Blessed Sacrament Church in West Fargo. He is believed to have fled the United States in 1998.

Cass County State’s Attorney Birch Burdick says they have an idea where Sayasay is.

“We believe him to be in the Philippines and there is an extradition treaty with the Philippines,” said Burdick.

Burdick says his office has taken the actions needed to extradite Sayasaya. The federal government is now in charge of finding the former priest and Burdick is playing the waiting game.

“We’re waiting to hear that he has been found and he can be extradited back and in the control of authorities. As far as we know that has not happened. When they locate him they will notify us,” said Burdick.

Burdick says he gets updated about Sayasaya search periodically; his last update was in September.

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Top Hobart school admits to 1960s sex abuse cases

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

NOVEMBER 20, 2014

Matthew Denholm
Tasmania Correspondent
Hobart

AN elite Hobart boys’ school has apologised to victims of sexual abuse by four teachers in the 1960s, but is accused of “covering up” and “whitewashing” the crimes for decades.

The Hutchins Anglican School yesterday admitted to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse that four former students who gave evidence “were sexually abused by members of staff in the 1960s”.

However, evidence yesterday suggested many more boys may have been abused, with one witness referring to concerns a “pedophile ring” had operated.

The commission heard detailed allegations of sexual abuse by four former teachers, including ex-headmaster David Lawrence, and claims of inappropriate conduct by two others.

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Defamation case against Fr Charles Fenech heard behind closed doors

MALTA
Malta Today

Fr Charles Fenech, the priest accused of sexually abusing a woman, today appeared in another court case brought against him, heard behind closed doors.

The criminal defamation case, filed on a report by Edgar Bonnici Cachia, is also being heard behind closed doors.

Upon emerging from the court, Fenech refused to reply to questions put to him by the press as to whether he had any comments to make on the grave accusations filed against him.

Fenech is facing charges of violent sexual abuse against a mentally unstable patient and holding the woman against her will and committing indecent acts in public.

One of Fenech’s alleged victims who spoke to MaltaToday on condition of anonymity, said that though the Church has known about the allegations for years, Fenech has never been removed from his position as director of the Kerygma Movement.

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‘It is a disgrace’: Victims reject apology for Retta Dixon home abuse horror

AUSTRALIA
9 News

The head of a religious group running services for Aboriginal people in the Northern Territory for 20 years knew nothing of horrendous abuse at one of its homes until a national inquiry was underway.

The conduct of Reverend Trevor Leggott, general director of Australian Indigenous Ministries (AIM) was roundly criticised on Monday by two barristers representing people who were horribly abused at the Retta Dixon home for Aboriginal children in the 1960s and 70s.

The sex abuse royal commission in September uncovered horrendous sexual, psychological and physical abuse of Aboriginal children – some of them very young – at the home.

But Rev Leggott admitted he was not really aware of the abuse until he read witness statements before the commission.

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Ballarat child abuse survivors hope UN committee acknowledges harm

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

A group which represented Ballarat survivors of child abuse at the United Nations hopes the UN acknowledges the harm survivors have suffered.

Earlier this month, the Care Leavers Australia Network (CLAN) spoke to the UN committee against torture, which is due to hand down its report next week.

CLAN alleges children in care were used for experiments and suffered electric shocks.

The group’s Leonie Sheedy said it was important the UN acknowledged the various forms of abuse inflicted upon children in care.

“I want them to acknowledge in their final report that we do have the royal commission about sexual usage but there are more ways to harm children than sexual usage – it’s the brutality, it’s the beatings, it’s the unpaid labour,” she said.

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Child sex abuse royal commission focuses on elite school

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

NOVEMBER 19, 2014

SIX teachers at Hobart’s elite Hutchins boy school engaged in sexual abuse of, or inappropriate conduct involving, young students in the 1960s, a royal commission has heard.

The allegations, and complaints of cover-up and stonewalling by the Anglican school, were detailed during a hearing earlier today of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

In response, counsel for the exclusive school, Neil Clelland QC, told the commission it now accepted that four former students due to give evidence “were sexually abused by members of staff in the 1960s”.

“The current (school) board wishes to apologise for the hurt and distress caused,” Mr Clelland told the commission.

Mr Clelland also offered a particular apology to a victim, known only as AOA, for the school’s failure to adequately respond to his claims that he was groomed and sexually abused by the school’s then-headmaster David Ralph Lawrence.

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Royal Commission starts at Hutchins School

AUSTRALIA
The Advocate

It took twenty years of requests for an elite Hobart school to apologise to a student who was sexually abused by its headmaster in the 1960s, a Royal Commission has been told.

Sitting in Tasmania for the first time, the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse was told the Hutchins School initially denied of a former student’s plea for an apology.

The former student, known as AOA, was sexually abused by former headmaster David Ralph Lawrence, and maintained contact with him after leaving the school and the state, counsel assisting the commission Angus Stewart, SC, said.

Mr Stewart said the school had only apologised to AOA last month, despite reporting the abuse in 1993, as well as media reports and the assistance of federal MPs.

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Pope names president of Vatican financial agency

VATICAN CITY
Catholic Culture

Pope Francis has named René Brülhart the president of the Financial Information Authority, a Vatican body created in 2010 to combat illegal financial activities.

Brülhart directed Liechtenstein’s financial intelligence until 2012, when he was appointed the Financial Information Authority’s director.

In November 2013, Pope Francis assigned the authority three functions: “prudential supervision and regulation of those entities that carry out professionally a financial activity; supervision and regulation for the prevention and countering of money laundering and financing of terrorism; [and] financial intelligence.”

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NAPAC: UK should adopt zero tolerance approach to people who abuse children

UNITED KINGDOM
Press TV (Iran)

[with video]

Founder of NAPAC says the UK should adopt a zero tolerance approach to people who abuse children.

Chief executive of National Association for People Abused in Childhood Peter Saunders says that Britain needs to have a complete revision in child protection policies and procedures.

Saunders adds it’s good to have a child protection ministry or a child protection dedicated police force, abusing children is a massive social problem.

A report, published by a group of British lawmakers working on the Rotherham exploitation scandal, said on Tuesday child protection systems in Britain must be reviewed.

11 British MPs are investigating allegations of child sex abuse in Rotherham.

Their report described Rotherham Council’s protection policies as “divorced from reality”, thus enabling abusers to continue their crime.

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Trust fund planned for Montana church abuse victims

MONTANA
KAJ18

Sanjay Talwani – MTN News

HELENA – The Catholic Diocese of Helena and several creditors have has taken a step that could settle hundreds of allegations of sexual abuse.

A joint filing in federal bankruptcy court on Monday by the Diocese and a committee of creditors indicated the church plans to set up a $16 million trust fund for victims that would ultimately be administered by an agent of the court.

Most of that money will come from insurance. In two different lawsuits, 362 people have alleged abuse at the hands of church employees. The Diocese declared bankruptcy in January.

The plan still requires final approval from other creditors with claims against the Diocese as well as from Montana’s bankruptcy judge.

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Montana Catholic diocese seeks to pay abuse victims $16.4 million

MONTANA
Reuters

BY LAURA ZUCKERMAN
Tue Nov 18, 2014

(Reuters) – A Montana Roman Catholic diocese has asked a judge to approve a bankruptcy reorganization plan that includes a $16.4 million settlement for hundreds of adults claiming childhood sexual abuse by clergy and lay workers, attorneys said on Tuesday.

The Helena diocese, serving some 44,500 Catholics in 57 parishes and 38 missions in western Montana, including the state capital, is the 11th U.S. diocese to file for Chapter 11 protection since 2004 due to liabilities stemming from abuse claims.

Under the agreement, which must be approved by a U.S. bankruptcy court, the church would contribute $2 million and its insurance carriers $14.4 million to settle claims brought by 362 people who filed two lawsuits against the diocese in 2011, said Dan Fasy, an attorney with one of four firms representing the plaintiffs.

The settlement was reached after years of negotiated mediation between the church and victims of childhood sexual abuse.

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Vatican communication reform underway, but no decisions yet

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Agency

Vatican City, Nov 18, 2014 / 09:01 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Though the Vatican’s communications reform committee met last week, it is still to be seen how the committee’s proposals will be incorporated within a larger reform of the Roman Curia.

The committee met for three days last week, and began an exploration of the Vatican’s media branches; but no official communication on the meeting has been delivered.

According to sources, the committee, which is chaired by Chris Patten and includes both curial officials and external experts, has visited Vatican Radio, Vatican Television, Libreria Editrice Vaticana, and L’Osservatore Romano.

At the present time, the reform idea is one of integration and consolidation, so as to streamline procedures, and to generate greater revenue.

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Spanish-speaking victims of domestic violence and sexual assault are special-need cases

UNITED STATES
Prensa Latina

By Federico Martínez, La Prensa Contributor

The call arrived late afternoon: A 15-year-old Latina in Toledo had been brutally, sexually assaulted. She was suffering from severe trauma and to make the situation more challenging, she didn’t speak English.

Jessica Torres-García, whose job as an outreach coordinator for the YWCA of Northwest Ohio’s H.O.P.E. Center is to try and help sexual assault victims in the Latino community, rushed out of her office to meet the victim and her mother at a local hospital.

“When I get to the hospital I’ll talk to the victim and her mother to find out what happened,” said Mrs. Torres-García, who notes Lucas County, lacks trained bilingual health care providers and law enforcement officials. “I will serve as a translator for the police and hospital staff.”

Mrs. Torres-García will also make sure the victim and her mother are aware of their legal rights, what community resources are available to them and if they desire, she’ll accompany them to follow up doctor visits and help them fill out police reports. There is also a women’s shelter at the YWCA.

According to national figures only 40 percent of all rapes are reported to law enforcement. Incidents of rape are even less likely to be reported in the Latino community. Lucas County does not record the number of Hispanic women who are sexually assaulted. Those statistics only include categories for white and black people. …

“There’s still such a stigma to sexual assault in the Latino community,” said Mrs. Torres-García. “Religion plays a role in it – the Catholic Church puts an emphasis on being pure so if a woman gets raped they are often too embarrassed or ashamed to tell anybody.

“Victims tend to turn to family members,” said Mrs. Torres-García, but most rapes are conducted by family members and relatives, so there is often pressure by the family to keep quiet.

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Retrial opens in molestation case linked to Concord Baptist church

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Concord Monitor

By JEREMY BLACKMAN
Monitor staff
Monday, November 17, 2014
(Published in print: Tuesday, November 18, 2014)

A former Concord man with ties to Trinity Baptist Church who is accused of molesting his stepdaughter two decades ago went on trial again yesterday in Merrimack County Superior Court, five months after his first appearance ended in a mistrial.

Daniel Leaf, 55, of Tilton is charged with two counts of aggravated felonious sexual assault. His stepdaughter, Tina Anderson, claims he abused her between 1990 and 1992, beginning when she was about 9 years old. Anderson disclosed the abuse in 2010 during a rape investigation involving a fellow congregant of the Concord church.

County prosecutor Wayne Coull told jurors yesterday that Anderson had tried to come forward when she was young, but she was told by church officials “essentially to shut up.” Leaf’s attorneys counter that he had no contact with Anderson after 1991, and that Anderson has previously denied the abuse.

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Witnesses recount abuse at Hobart school

AUSTRALIA
7 News

By Andrew Drummond
November 19, 2014

A schoolboy partially blinded by smoke in Tasmania’s worst bushfires needed one-on-one tuition.

In the shadow of Black Tuesday in 1967, sexual abuse began for a Year 6 student at Hobart’s elite Hutchins boys’ school, a royal commission has been told.

Now aged 60 and giving evidence under the pseudonym AOE, the man has told how music teacher Ron Thomas touched and rubbed against him while the pair sat at a piano.

“I would try to get up and run away but Thomas would catch me and hold me on the floor face down,” AOE said.

It was just one of many stories heard by the Royal Commission Into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, which opened its first public hearing in Hobart on Wednesday.

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No cap on damages sought in child rape

OHIO
Columbus Dispatch

By Randy Ludlow

Columbus lawyer John K. Fitch calls it “a horrific injustice for children who are raped or otherwise sexually abused.”

If victims and their parents turn to court seeking pain-and-suffering damages from their assailants, and those who enabled them, they are limited by Ohio law to the recovery of $250,000.

“A child could be raped 50 times and limited to $5,000 per rape under Ohio law. It’s outrageous,” Fitch said.

He is asking the Ohio Supreme Court to rule that state law unconstitutionally deprives childhood sexual-abuse victims of adequate compensation for mental trauma that could last a lifetime.

His appeal involves a case last year in which a Delaware County jury awarded $3.5 million in “ non-economic” damages to a woman who was 15 years old when she was raped by her pastor at Delaware Grace Brethren Church in Sunbury.

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Archbishop Cupich speaks of protecting children, holding others accountable

CHICAGO (IL)
Daily Herald

By Don Babwin
Associated Press

Blase Cupich became the archbishop of Chicago on Tuesday after his predecessor handed him a bishop’s staff and relinquished the chair that symbolizes the leadership of the nation’s third-largest diocese.

During a Mass at Holy Name Cathedral, the transfer of power was completed as Cardinal Francis George, who is battling cancer, stepped aside to retire after being the spiritual leader of more than 2 million Catholics since 1997.

Later, Cupich, 65, spoke forcefully on the sexual abuse scandal that has plagued the church, including Chicago’s archdiocese. In one of his last official acts, George released files on three dozen priests who had been accused of sexual abuse in the last 60 years and whose crimes were in many cases concealed by the archdiocese.

“Working together to protect children, to bring healing to victim survivors and to rebuild the trust that has been shattered in our communities by our mishandling is our sacred duty,” he said, “as is holding each other accountable, for that is what we pledge to do.”

As he comes to an archdiocese that has shrunk in recent years and been forced to close schools amid declining enrollment, Cupich also spoke of the “formidable task” of passing on the faith to the next generation and his desire to bring young people back to the faith.

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Sexual abuse by Hutchins School staff widely known, royal commission told

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Sam Ikin and Rosemary Bolger

A national investigation into child sexual abuse has heard it was widely known that sexual abuse was occurring at a Hobart private boys school in the 1960s.

At the first public hearings in Tasmania for the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, witnesses have broken down giving evidence.

They spoke about the abuse by former staff at Hutchins School and their anger at the school for not dealing with the issue.

One told the hearing that as late as last year, the school was attempting to whitewash what had happened.

Four former students gave evidence about the sexual abuse they suffered at the hands of school staff, including former headmaster David Lawrence.

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Letter to Pope uncovers pedophile network in Spain

VATICAN CITY
Crux

By Inés San Martín
Vatican correspondent November 18, 2014

ROME — A letter sent to Pope Francis has triggered Spain’s largest clerical sex abuse scandal to date, leading to charges being filed against 10 priests after a college professor wrote to the pontiff to describe sexual abuse he claims to have suffered as a child.

Upon receiving the letter, Francis reportedly telephoned the victim on Aug. 10. In Spanish media accounts, the victim is identified as “Daniel”; his real name has been withheld for privacy reasons.

In the victim’s Aug. 10 conversation with Francis, according to media reports, the pontiff apologized in the name of the Church for the abuse he suffered and encouraged the victim to file civil charges against the priests who he said abused him.

According to Spanish reports, a subsequent police investigation uncovered a criminal network of pedophiles that involves at least 12 people among priests and laity from different parishes in the Spanish city of Granada.

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‘For I Have Sinned’ Delivers a Memorable Pageturner

UNITED STATES
Huffington Post

Greg Archer

We live in an entertainment era filled with overdoses of testosterone. Let’s face it, even Stallone, Schwarzenegger and Willis refuse to let go of the bravura that catapulted them toward stardom decades ago, and female protagonists — really strong and embraceable ones — are often overshadowed by their male counterparts. We have made glorious headway in television, however — Viola Davis, Julianna Margulies and Edie Falco are among the ladies who have captured our attention in the last decade.

And, of course, we can always find compelling female characters in books, in all the forms they arrive in these days.

That said, it’s refreshing to discover a noteworthy female protagonist in Cate Harlow. She’s the fiery private investigator in author Kristen Houghton’s latest endeavor, For I Have Sinned, a memorable read peppered with sass, shame and the sex controversies surrounding Catholic priests. That may sound like a tall order to fill, but Houghton manages to thread together an engaging and often suspenseful outing.

Only those who’ve had their ears clogged with unholy water during the last three decades would be surprised to learn of the brouhaha surrounding Catholic sex abuse cases. Numerous allegations, investigations, trials and convictions of these child sex abuse cases first began chipping away at the church’s spiritual foundation decades ago, but it wasn’t until 2002, when the Boston Globe, began a deep investigation into the matter, that the scandals involving priests and other Catholic officials, spawned more headlines and regularly made the evening news. That a bevy of cases were brought against certain titans of the Catholic church who never reported sexual abuse allegations, preferring to, instead, save face and move abusive priests to other parishes, is yet another sin could forget — or forgive. Since 2001, however, we’ve uncovered more news that over the last 50 years, there have been allegations of roughly 3,000 priests.

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Lawsuits allege sexual abuse by priests

NEW MEXICO
ABQ Journal

By Olivier Uyttebrouck / Journal Staff Writer
PUBLISHED: Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Lawsuits filed against the Archdiocese of Santa Fe this week allege that four men, ages 46 to 52, and a 54-year-old woman, were abused by priests as children.

The five priests named all were the subject of previous lawsuits dating to the 1990s, including Jason Sigler, 76, who returned to Albuquerque last year after completing a prison term in Michigan.

The new actions bring to 30 the total number of lawsuits filed against the archdiocese by Albuquerque attorney Brad Hall since October 2011. Of those, 14 have been settled for undisclosed amounts, he said.

Each lawsuit alleges that the archdiocese “knew or should have known” that the priest had been accused of prior sexual misbehavior, but church leaders did nothing to prevent attacks or warn parishioners.

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November 18, 2014

Los Banos priest remains under investigation, new pastor appointed

CALIFORNIA
Merced Sun-Star

BY ROB PARSONSRPARSONS@MERCEDSUNSTAR.COM
11/18/2014

LOS BANOS

Parishioners of St. Joseph’s Catholic Church in Los Banos expect a new pastor to take the reins of the parish next month, replacing the Rev. Robert Gamel, who remains under investigation by the Los Banos Police Department for possible possession of child pornography.

The Rev. Efrain Martinez will transition into the Los Banos church formally by Dec. 15, according to Teresa Dominguez, chancellor for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fresno. Dominguez confirmed the appointment Tuesday in an interview with the Merced Sun-Star.

Dominguez stopped short of calling the appointment “permanent,” saying a shortage of priests in California makes it difficult for church officials to keep all positions filled.

“But it’s for the stability of the parish and the appointment is definitely expected to last for an extended amount of time,” Dominguez said.

Few details were available Tuesday regarding the new pastor, but Dominguez said he has been ordained for several years and is moving to the area from Selma.

News of the appointment came about three months after the Los Banos Police Department confirmed an investigation into Gamel, the parish’s former leader. Gamel, 64, has been under investigation for allegedly possessing nude photographs of a teenage parishioner on at least two occasions.

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Sex Abuse Victim Sues Archdiocese of Miami

FLORIDA
NBC Miami

The Archdiocese of Miami is being sued for negligence after a Catholic high school teacher was convicted for having a sexual relationship with a student who was 16 years old at the time.

John Farrell, a former CGHS math teacher, is currently doing jail time after being convicted on 20 counts of unlawful sexual activity with a minor.

The lawsuit, filed by the now 18-year-old victim, alleges the Archdiocese of Miami, Archbishop Thomas Wenski and Cardinal Gibbons High School were negligent in supervising Farrell and other administrators who engaged in similar activities. According to the lawsuit, Farrell knew that various CGHS administrators had engaged in sexual relationships with other students and that one of those administrators had married a former student. The lawsuit claims Farrell engaged in the relationship knowing that he would not be reprimanded by the school.

“Farrell believed that other teachers were having relationships with students or had had them in the past and that the administration looked the other way, so that it was okay for him to do it,” said Jeff Herman, the victim’s attorney. “Obviously, that’s a big concern.”

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Moses, Solomon And The Monsignor

PENNSYLVANIA
Big Trial

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2014

By Ralph Cipriano
for Bigtrial.net

Under a stained glass dome and bronze statues of Moses and Solomon, the state’s highest court this morning debated the fate of Msgr. William J. Lynn.

“God save the Commonwealth and this honorable court,” the court crier shouted in the packed, ornate chambers of the state Supreme Court on the fourth floor of the state Capitol in Harrisburg.

Up at the raised mahogany bench, Chief Justice Ronald D. Castille got things rolling by announcing, “The issue here was this application of the [child] endangerment statute.”

That really is the issue in the Lynn case. The other justices, however, did not seem to want to stick to that script as they fired one extraneous shot after another at Thomas A. Bergstrom, the monsignor’s defense lawyer.

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Pennsylvania justices hear case of Catholic official in abuse case

PENNSYLVANIA
Reuters

BY DAVID DEKOK
HARRISBURG Pa. Tue Nov 18, 2014

(Reuters) – Pennsylvania’s top court on Tuesday heard arguments in the case of Monsignor William Lynn, weighing whether the highest-ranking clergyman convicted in the U.S. Roman Catholic Church child sex abuse scandal should be returned to prison.

Lynn was convicted in 2012 of covering up child sex abuse by priests in Philadelphia, but a three-judge panel later ruled that the abuse law applied only to those with direct responsibility for the care and welfare of children.

Lynn, 63, was a former secretary of the clergy for the Philadelphia Archdiocese who oversaw the work of 800 priests.

He was found guilty of covering up sex abuse, often by transferring predatory priests to unsuspecting parishes.

Prosecutors want his conviction reinstated and Lynn returned to prison. He had served 18 months of a three- to six-year sentence before his conviction was overturned last year.

Hugh Burns, arguing for the Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office, said there was sufficient authority in the law and various court rulings to convict Lynn.

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Cupich becomes leader of Chicago archdiocese…

CHICAGO (IL)
Newser

Cupich becomes leader of Chicago archdiocese, speaks forcefully about sexual abuse scandal

By DON BABWIN | ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHICAGO (AP) — Blase Cupich became the archbishop of Chicago on Tuesday after his predecessor handed him a bishop’s staff and relinquished the chair that symbolizes the leadership of the nation’s third-largest diocese.

During a Mass at Holy Name Cathedral, the transfer of power was completed as Cardinal Francis George, who is battling cancer, stepped aside to retire after being the spiritual leader of more than 2 million Catholics since 1997.

The installation of Cupich — who was bishop of the Diocese of Spokane, Washington, when he was selected by Pope Francis to succeed George — marks the first time in the history of the Chicago archdiocese that a new archbishop assumes leadership while his predecessor is still alive.

It also represents the pope’s first major American appointment, and sends a message by replacing a leading conservative cardinal with the more moderate Cupich that the pope wants more focus on mercy and compassion instead of divisive social issues.

Cupich, 65, spoke forcefully Tuesday on the sexual abuse scandal that has plagued the church, including Chicago’s archdiocese. In one of his last official acts, George released files on three dozen priests who had been accused of sexual abuse in the last 60 years and whose crimes were in many cases concealed by the archdiocese.

“Working together to protect children, to bring healing to victim survivors and to rebuild the trust that has been shattered in our communities by our mishandling is our sacred duty,” he said, “as is holding each other accountable, for that is what we pledge to do.”

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‘Francis effect’ seen in Blase Cupich’s selection as Chicago archbishop

UNITED STATES
Omaha.com

POSTED: MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2014
By Michael O’Connor / World-Herald staff writer

On a hot day in August, Bishop Blase Cupich traveled three hours, pulled a folding table from the trunk of a car and used it as an altar to say Mass at a farmworker camp in rural Washington state.

The Omaha native and bishop of the Spokane Diocese had arrived to offer spiritual healing after wildfires swept through the area, destroying migrant worker camps.

Cupich (pronounced SOO-pitch) is said to carry the heart of a pastor — a trait many believe drew the attention of Pope Francis, who this fall named him as the next leader of the powerful Archdiocese of Chicago. Observers say the pontiff’s selection of Cupich as Chicago’s archbishop is the clearest indication yet of the direction Francis wants to steer American church leaders. Cupich himself isn’t so sure. …

One of the biggest controversies during his Spokane tenure involved the fallout he inherited from a previous bishop’s decision to seek bankruptcy protection over sex abuse claims.

David Clohessy of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests said Cupich could have been more open about the abuse cases tied to the bankruptcy.

Cupich disputed the group’s characterization of his actions, noting that the bankruptcy was filed before he arrived in Spokane.

The Rev. Michael Savelesky, vicar general of the Spokane Diocese, said Cupich showed compassion toward victims and understood they were still hurting emotionally.

“He made sure promises made to them for counseling and healing were followed through with,” Savelesky said.

Joe Mudd, assistant professor of religious studies at Gonzaga University, a Catholic institution in Spokane, said Cupich has carried out his duties with an eye toward people who feel broken or on the fringes of society and the church.

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The Top Ten…

UNITED STATES
Hamilton and Griffin on Rights

The Top Ten Religious Tenets or Practices that Have Endangered Our Children and that State Legislators Need to Know Before Voting for Extreme Religious Liberty Statutes Like the State RFRAs

It is an odd juxtaposition in history: Believers are demanding more “religious liberty” in the states (as in more than the First Amendment ever provided) when, at the same time, we have cascades of child sex abuse scandals in one religious organization after another and Islamic fanatics, untethered by law or human rights, beheading even converts on chilling videos. It is not as though we can any longer pretend that all religious actors are benign and praiseworthy. Some are downright scary.

Yet, religious lobbyists are demanding state Religious Freedom Restoration Acts (RFRAs) with abandon, making it possible for believers to challenge and overcome unnamed laws to protect unnamed practices—even those that protect our children. And they are not satisfied with the vanilla version of RFRA, but rather push for an extraordinary burden on the government that virtually guarantees the law will not be applied to them.

The following describes ten religious beliefs that have contributed to the abuse, neglect, abandonment, and death of children and should be known by state legislators if they consider supporting a misleadingly named and misguided RFRA.

No “religious liberty” statute should ever make it easier for any adult–including believers–to abuse, neglect, abandon, or kill children or for religious organizations to perpetuate the same. No legislator should vote for child endangerment.

1. Refusing ordinary medical care to sick children based on faith, leading to their permanent disability or death from diabetes, meningitis, pneumonia, diseases otherwise prevented by vaccination like measles and mumps, or leukemia, among other ailments.

Faiths: Followers of Christ, Church of Christian Science, Church of the New Born, Jehovah’s Witnesses (belief against blood transfusions), Amish and Mennonite (failure to get immunizations), among others

2. The rule against “scandal” in the context of clergy sex abuse promulgated in 1922 and 1962 mandated secrecy by the hierarchy and clergy who learned about it and even the victims themselves.

Faith: Roman Catholic Church

3. Mesirah, the belief that Jews should not turn other Jews into the authorities, which has meant that numerous pedophiles were not reported to the police and, therefore, had more opportunities to abuse more children

Faith: Orthodox and ultra-Orthodox Judaism

4. Shunning and/or banishment by their lifetime family and friends when victims disclose sex assaults by siblings

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’60 Minutes’ Once Again Blasts Church Over Old Abuse Story, Boston’s Cardinal O’Malley Obliges With Interview

UNITED STATES
TheMediaReport

David Pierre

It was only a couple years ago that CBS’ 60 Minutes fêted Ireland’s Archbishop Diarmuid Martin as he took the Church to task over decades-old abuse claims in Ireland. Indeed, 60 Minutes has a long and storied record of outright hostility against the Catholic Church.

So we were surprised that Archbishop of Boston’s Cardinal Seán O’Malley agreed to appear on 60 Minutes and assist them in once again rehashing the sex abuse story and hammer the Church.

And it was a further surprise to see Cardinal O’Malley agree with host Norah O’Donnell that Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph Bishop Robert W. Finn should be expelled over his alleged mishandling of a priest later convicted of child pornography. In two previous posts (1, 2), we noted that the Finn case might be among the most misreported stories of the entire Church abuse narrative, and we highly suspect that O’Malley himself is not very much aware of the particulars of this distorted tragedy.

We now wonder how O’Malley’s appearance could have possibly fulfilled his role of spreading the Gospel.

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