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.

March 11, 2015

Father Andy’s Big Gamble Pays Off

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Big Trial

By Ralph Cipriano
for Bigtrial.net

Before he went to trial for a second time, Father Andrew McCormick had a big decision to make.

The district attorney, according to sources, was offering a pretty sweet deal: if Father Andy would plead guilty to the charges, he would have been put on probation for five years but not have to serve any jail time. He would, however, have to register as a sex offender under Megan’s Law.

Father Andy was facing long odds. He was a Roman Catholic priest accused of sexually abusing a 10-year-old altar boy 18 years ago. If convicted on five sex charges, the 59-year-old priest was looking at a jail term of 25 to 50 years, meaning he was going to die in jail.

Father Andy, according to sources, turned down the deal, saying he was innocent and that his fate was in God’s hands. So the priest took a big gamble and elected to go to trial a second time. No wonder Father Andy and his supporters, which included a couple of nuns in full habits, were often seen in the hallway outside Courtroom 1102 in a prayer circle saying the rosary.

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.

Jury again unable to reach verdict in priest’s sex-abuse trial

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

JOSEPH A. SLOBODZIAN, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
LAST UPDATED: Wednesday, March 11, 2015

For the second time in 12 months, a Philadelphia jury was unable to reach a verdict in the trial of Catholic priest accused of sexually assaulting a 10-year-old altar boy almost 18 years ago in a Bridesburg parish.

The Common Pleas Court jury of 10 women and 2 men hearing the trial of Rev. Andrew McCormick, 58, announced Wednesday that it was hung. The mistrial came one day shy of a year since the last mistrial.

McCormick’s face reddened as he heard the jury foreman respond “no verdict” to each of the five counts against him: involuntary deviate sexual intercourse, sexual assault, child endangerment, corruption of a minor, and indecent assault of a minor under 13.

But afterward, the priest of 33 years seemed upbeat, wishing court staff a happy Easter as he signed a subpoena to appear at an April 10 hearing. That is the date when the District Attorney’s Office must decide if it will try McCormick a third time.

Until then, Judge Gwendolyn N. Bright refused to lift the gag order barring Assistant District Attorney Kristen Kemp and defense attorney Trevan Borum and the principals and witnesses from speaking to reporters.

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.

Retrial of Philadelphia priest ends in another mistrial; DA to decide next month on 3rd trial

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
The Republic

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
March 11, 2015

PHILADELPHIA — The retrial of a suspended Philadelphia priest accused of having molested a young boy almost two decades ago has once again ended in a hung jury.

The Philadelphia Inquirer (http://bit.ly/1AgAfv2 ) reports that jurors were unable to reach agreement Wednesday on the charges against The Rev. Andrew McCormick.

McCormick was accused of having assaulted an 11-year-old altar boy in a Bridesburg rectory bedroom in 1997. The now-27-year-old victim alleges that the abuse later led him to attempt suicide. McCormick has denied the allegations.

Jurors began deliberating Friday and said they were deadlocked Tuesday, but tried to reach agreement again Wednesday without success.

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.

Local youth pastor charged with rape appears in court

KENTUCKY
WPSD

By Robert Bradfield

MCCRACKEN COUNTY, KY –
A McCracken County youth pastor charged with raping a teenager was in court on Wednesday.

McCracken County deputies arrested 44-year-old Michael Parsons Tuesday.

Parsons is a youth pastor at Milburn Chapel Cumberland Presbyterian Church.

He has 24 total charges, including two counts of third degree rape.

Deputies say the minister began a relationship with the girl in the spring of 2013 when she was 16.

It allegedly continued through 2014.

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.

Convicted Minnesota priest removed from clerical state

MINNESOTA
National Catholic Reporter

Brian Roewe | Mar. 11, 2015

One of the primary priests that triggered the now more-than-yearlong clergy sex abuse scandal in the St. Paul-Minneapolis archdiocese has been laicized.

The archdiocese announced Wednesday afternoon that the Vatican has removed Curtis Wehmeyer from the clerical state. The decision bars him from presenting himself as a priest or exercising priestly ministry. In addition, he cannot teach or hold a leadership role in any Catholic institution.

Wehmeyer is currently serving a five-year prison sentence. In November 2012, he pleaded guilty to 20 felony charges for the sexual abuse of two minors and possession of child pornography; he was sentenced the following February. He was charged in November in Wisconsin of second degree sexual assault of a teenage boy in relation to a summer 2011 camping trip.

In a statement, Twin Cities Archbishop John Nienstedt said that Wehmeyer has been notified of the decision, as have all the archdiocese’s priests and parishes.

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

Former Blessed Sacrament pastor Curtis Wehmeyer is defrocked

MINNESOTA
Lillie News

By: Patrick Larkin

Following a clergy sexual abuse scandal that rocked the East Side’s Blessed Sacrament Catholic Church, the priest in question, Curtis Wehmeyer, has been officially been removed from the clergy.

According to a statement from the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis issued Wednesday, March 11, the Vatican has defrocked Wehmeyer.

Archbishop John Nienstedt said that “the effect of this decision is that Wehmeyer has been permanently and definitively barred from presenting himself as a priest or exercising priestly ministry.”

In February 2013, Wehmeyer was convicted in Ramsey County of 20 felony charges for sexually abusing two boys and for possessing child pornography. He was sentenced to 60 months in prison and is incarcerated at the state correctional facility in Lino Lakes.

Additionally, the 50-year-old Wehmeyer was charged last November in Chippewa County, Wisconsin, with second-degree sexual assault for an alleged incident that occurred in 2011.

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

Vatican defrocks St. Paul priest convicted of sexually abusing two boys

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: JEAN HOPFENSPERGER , Star Tribune Updated: March 11, 2015

The Rev. Curtis Wehmeyer, a St. Paul priest convicted in 2013 of sexually abusing two boys at his church, has been permanently removed from the priesthood by the Vatican.

The decision bars Wehmeyer from presenting himself as a priest or “exercising priestly ministry,” according to the Archdiocese of St. Paul-Minneapolis, which made the announcement Wednesday. It also bars him from teaching or taking a leadership role in any Catholic institution, the archdiocese said.

Wehmeyer is currently serving a five-year prison term in connection with the sexual abuse of two brothers in a camper parked outside Blessed Sacrament Church in St. Paul, where he lived and worked as the parish pastor. He was also charged with possession of child pornography. The boys were age 12 and 14 at the time.

The priest had a history of attempted sexual encounters with young men, including approaching young men for sex at a local bookstore, but parishioners at Blessed Sacrament were not notified.

In November 2014, Wehmeyer faced additional charges — second-degree sexual assault of a teenage boy while on a camping trip to a Wisconsin state park.

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.

St. Paul priest who molested boys defrocked by Vatican

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Elizabeth Mohr
emohr@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 03/11/2015

Curtis Wehmeyer, a priest convicted of molesting two boys, has been defrocked, the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis said Wednesday.

Wehmeyer, 50, is serving a five-year prison term for molesting two brothers from the Parish of the Blessed Sacrament on St. Paul’s East Side while he was pastor there in 2010. He also was convicted of possessing child pornography.

Wehmeyer was charged in November in Chippewa County, Wis., with sex assault for alleged sexual contact with a teenage boy who passed out after drinking alcohol and smoking marijuana in 2011. No plea has been entered in that case, according to online court records.

The Twin Cities archdiocese requested that Wehmeyer be defrocked.

Archbishop John Nienstedt announced the Vatican’s decision in a statement, saying Wehmeyer is now “permanently and definitively barred from presenting himself as a priest or exercising priestly ministry.”

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

Former CFO of JP school facing sex abuse allegations was also boy scout leader

MASSACHUSETTS
Fox Boston

JAMAICA PLAIN, Mass. (MyFoxBoston.com) — A small group stood outside the Italian Home for Children in Jamaica Plain Wednesday advocating for sex abuse victims amid allegations that the home’s former finance director abused a child there decades ago.

FOX25 spoke exclusively with the attorney for the accuser, who claimed the school’s former CFO George Forte, Jr. sexually abused him at the Italian Home for Children over a period of three years.

“My client got to know George Forte, was groomed by George Forte, given gifts – things like that,” said Mitchell Garabedian, a lawyer known for his previous cases involving sexual abuse and the Catholic Church.

Garabedian spoke exclusively to FOX25, saying that his client was just 6 years old when he went to the Italian Home in the early 1980s. He was an orphan with a troubled past. The home confirms Forte worked there from 1980 until November of 2014 when he resigned, which is about the time the alleged victim came forward.

The Italian Home declined to interview, but sent a statement that read in part: “The allegation was brought to the organization’s attention in 2014, and we immediately hired outside counsel to oversee an investigation. This investigation found no evidence to support the allegation.”

FOX25 went to Forte’s North Attleboro home and called him, but got no response. We also learned his involvement with children goes beyond the Italian Home. He volunteered with local boy scout troops in 2013. His scouting days are now over.

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.

Minnesota Priest who Molested Boys is Removed from Priesthood

MINNESOTA
KAAL

Pope Francis has removed from the priesthood a former St. Paul priest who pleaded guilty in Minnesota to molesting two boys.

Archbishop John Nienstedt of the St. Paul-Minneapolis Archdiocese announced the Vatican’s action against Curtis Wehmeyer on Wednesday.

Nienstedt says Wehmeyer has been made aware of the pope’s decision, and that all priests and parishes in the archdiocese have been notified.

Wehmeyer is serving a five-year prison term for sexually abusing the boys and possessing child pornography. He served as pastor at the Parish of the Blessed Sacrament on St. Paul’s east side.

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.

Mistrial Declared In Retrial Of Suspended Philadelphia Priest

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
CBS Philly

Steve Tawa

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) – For the second time in two years, a mistrial has been declared in the sexual assault trial of a suspended Philadelphia priest. He was accused of abusing a 10-year-old altar boy in 1997, in the rectory of a parish in the Bridesburg section.

After about 20 hours of deliberations over three days, Judge Gwendolyn Bright declared a mistrial, after the jury foreman, for the second time in two days, told her jurors were “unable to reach unanimous verdicts on any of the charges” against Father Andrew McCormick.

That, after the judge asked whether she could clarify points of law, or if a read back of testimony would aid jurors in their deliberations. The foreman replied “no,” there was “no probability of reaching a unanimous verdict.”

The judge thanked them for their service and excused jurors.

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 DOLAN & CEMETERY FUNDS

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Berger’s Beat

March 11, 2015

In a blow to Cardinal Timothy Dolan, a Chicago appeals court has ruled that the Milwaukee archdiocese (where Dolan went after leaving St. Louis) can’t claim “freedom of religion” and put $57 million in a cemetery trust fund so it’s off limits in settlement talks with the 575 alleged victims that have come forward in recent years. Writing to Vatican officials several years ago, Dolan said, “I foresee an improved protection of these funds from any legal claim and liability.” But he claims he wanted to protect the cemetery’s future, not stiff-arm the victims.
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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.

Minnesota priest who molested boys removed from priesthood

MINNESOTA
KTTC

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) – Pope Francis has removed from the priesthood a former St. Paul priest who pleaded guilty in Minnesota to molesting two boys.

Archbishop John Nienstedt of the St. Paul-Minneapolis Archdiocese announced the Vatican’s action against Curtis Wehmeyer (WAY’-my-ur) on Wednesday.

Nienstedt says Wehmeyer has been made aware of the pope’s decision, and that all priests and parishes in the archdiocese have been notified.

Wehmeyer is serving a five-year prison term for sexually abusing the boys and possessing child pornography. He served as pastor at the Parish of the Blessed Sacrament on St. Paul’s east side.

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.

MN–Notorious MN predator priest defrocked

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, March 11

Statement by Frank Meuers of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 952-334-5180, frankameuers@gmail.com )

Father Curtis Wehmeyer has apparently been defrocked by the Vatican. The recklessness and callousness shown by Twin Cities Catholic officials in this case is among the most egregious that we’ve seen in the past decade.

This move is a decades-late drop in the bucket. When church officials defrock predator priests, it’s less about safeguarding kids. It’s more about church damage control. Still, we are grateful that Wehmeyer has been ousted from the priesthood. Without that Roman collar and the respect that accompanies it, he will find it a bit harder to win the trust of parents, gain access to kids, and sexually assault them after he is released from prison.

It’s crucial to remember that basically no Catholic supervisors have been punished, worldwide, for enabling and hiding horrific clergy sex crimes. The Pope must start defrocking clerics who cover up sex crimes (like Nienstedt), not just clerics who commit them (like Wehmeyer). Until that happens, little will change.

So why the alleged increase in defrocked pedophile priests in recent years? It’s likely because more victims across the globe are gaining the strength and courage to come forward and are reporting to (and pressuring) church officials because archaic, predator-friendly secular laws prevent most victims from seeking justice in court. And it’s likely because more bishops are convincing Vatican officials that defrocking predators is a smart public relations and legal defense strategy. Cutting all ties with the most egregious serial sex offender clerics helps convince Catholics that progress is being made.

Catholic officials pretend that once a child molesting cleric is defrocked, their duty is over. It’s not. Bishops’ duty to protect others from these dangerous men does not end when they are defrocked. Nor does their duty to seek out more victims end when predator priests are defrocked.

It’s irresponsible for Catholic officials to recruit, educate, ordain, train, transfer and protect predator priests, then defrock them when they’re caught and the heat gets too intense. Catholic officials should help make sure child molesting clerics are criminally prosecuted. If that can’t happen, then Catholic officials should house them in remote, secure treatment centers. And Catholic officials should lobby for, not against, reforming outdated, secular laws that enable many who commit and conceal child sex crimes to escape punishment.

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.

ME–Victims beg others to come forward on trial’s eve

MAINE
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, March 11

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 )

Soon a cleric accused of child sex crimes will go on trial, and it’s never too late for those who saw, suspected or suffered his wrongdoing to step forward. We hope more victims, witnesses and whistleblowers will find the courage to call law enforcement about Adam Metropoulos of Bangor.

[WABI]

All too often, when one family summons the strength to call police about a predator, others with helpful information stay silent, assuming that prosecutors will prevail and the criminal will be convicted. That’s irresponsible. It’s the duty of every adult to do what he or she can to safeguard kids. And it’s the duty of every citizen to share what they know or suspect about child sex crimes to law enforcement.

We beg anyone who has knowledge or suspicions about Metropoulos to get off the sidelines, show some spine, grab the phone and call police or prosecutors now.

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.

KY–New Lexington bishop may be named tomorrow

KENTUCKY
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, March 11

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314-503-0003, bdorris@SNAPnetwork.org )

A noted Vatican observer and blogger, Rocco Palmo, says that tomorrow the Vatican will name a new Catholic bishop for the Lexington Diocese.

We call on him to immediately take practical steps to protect the vulnerable, heal the wounded and expose and punish those who commit and conceal clergy sex crimes and misdeeds. Specifically, we hope he will permanently and prominently post, on diocesan and parish websites, the names, photos, whereabouts and work histories of every proven, admitted and credibly accused child molesting cleric who lives or works (or has lived or worked) in the diocese in any capacity.

Roughly 30 US bishops have done this. It’s a bare minimum public safety step. It should have happened long ago in Lexington. We hope it will happen soon.

Bishop Ronald Gainer, Lexington’s last prelate, has a dismal record on children’s safety.

[SNAP]

But Lexington citizens and Catholics should not assume the new bishop will be better. Complacency protects no one. Only vigilance protects kids.

No matter who fills this slot, we urge anyone who sees, suspects or suffers clergy sex crimes or cover ups in eastern Kentucky to call the independent, experienced professionals sin law enforcement, not the self-serving amateurs in church offices.

According to BishopAccountability.org, an independent, Boston-based archive group, there are seven publicly accused Lexington diocese predator priests: Fr. William J. Fedders, Fr. Stephen Gallenstein, Fr. John B. Modica, Edward Francis Murray, Fr. Leonard B. Nienaber, Fr. William G. Poole, and Fr. Carl C. Schaffer. We suspect there are at least a dozen more whose crimes remain hidden.

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.

Wehmeyer, convicted of sexual abuse, removed from the priesthood

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

Peter Cox Mar 11, 2015

A former St. Paul priest — now serving a five-year prison sentence for sexually abusing two boys —

Curtis Wehmeyer, 50, was sentenced in 2012 for abusing a 12-year-old and 14-year-old boy and possessing child pornography while serving at St. Paul’s Church of the Blessed Sacrament. In November 2014, he was charged with second-degree sexual assault in Wisconsin.

In a written statement Wednesday, the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis said Pope Francis dismissed Wehmeyer, who has been “permanently and definitively barred from presenting himself as a

Wehmeyer served in several St. Paul area churches from 2001 to 2011

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 of ex-Greek Orthodox priest on sex charges set for Monday

MAINE
Bangor Daily News

By Judy Harrison, BDN Staff
Posted March 11, 2015

BANGOR, Maine — The jury-waived trial of a former Greek Orthodox priest on sex charges will be held next week at the Penobscot Judicial Center.

Adam Metropoulos, 52, has pleaded not guilty to four counts of sexual abuse of a minor, one count each of possession of sexually explicit materials and violation of privacy.

His trial before a judge is scheduled to begin at 1 p.m. Monday and conclude Tuesday. A judge has not been assigned to hear the case, according to the Penobscot County District Attorney’s Office.

Metropoulos remained Wednesday at the Penobscot County Jail unable to post bail of $50,000 cash or $100,000 surety.

The former pastor at St. George Greek Orthodox Church in Bangor was arrested Sept. 15 for allegedly possessing child pornography and for surreptitiously photographing a woman taking a shower in his bathroom.

A subsequent investigation led the Penobscot County District Attorney’s Office to seek charges alleging the sexual abuse of a minor.

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.

Jury again unable to reach verdict in priest’s sex-abuse trial

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

JOSEPH A. SLOBODZIAN, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
POSTED: Wednesday, March 11, 2015

For the second time in 12 months, a Philadelphia jury was unable to reach a verdict in the trial of Catholic priest accused of sexually assaulting a 10-year-old altar boy almost 18 years ago in a Bridesburg parish.

The Common Pleas Court jury of 10 women and 2 men hearing the trial of Rev. Andrew McCormick, 58, announced Wednesday that it was hung. The mistrial came one day shy of a year since the last mistrial.

McCormick’s face reddened as he heard the jury foreman respond “no verdict” to each of the five counts against him: involuntary deviate sexual intercourse, sexual assault, child endangerment, corruption of a minor, and indecent assault of a minor under 13.

But afterward, the priest of 33 years seemed upbeat, wishing court staff a happy Easter as he signed a subpoena to appear at an April 10 hearing. That is the date when the District Attorney’s Office must decide if it will try McCormick a third time.

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

Catholic Church Claims It Can Refuse To Pay Victims Of Sex Abuse Because Of Religious Freedom

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Think Progress

BY IAN MILLHISER POSTED ON MARCH 11, 2015

The Catholic Archdiocese of Milwaukee sought to insulate $55 million of its funds from lawsuits brought by victims of priestly sex abuse, according to a letter penned by then-Archbishop of Milwaukee Timothy Dolan, so it transferred those funds into a separate trust set up to care for the archdiocese’s cemeteries and mausoleums. Once the sexual abuse victims sought those funds in a bankruptcy proceeding, however, the archdiocese claimed that it had a religious liberty right not to use that money to compensate victims of abuse.

Though a federal district judge agreed with the archdiocese that its religious freedom includes this right not to compensate victims in 2013, a bipartisan panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit reversed that decision on Monday. The Seventh Circuit noted that “the issue of whether the Archdiocese actually made a fraudulent, preferential or avoidable transfer is not before us,” so it remains to be seen whether the abuse victims will be compensated out of the $55 million worth of funds. Nevertheless, the Seventh Circuit’s decision means that the archdiocese will not be able to hide behind claims of religious liberty in order to avoid liability for the actions of its clergy — or, at least, it means as much so long as it is not reversed on appeal.

At least 45 Milwaukee priests face allegations of sexual abuse, including one priest who was accused of molesting close to 200 deaf boys. The cemetery trust was created after the archdiocese agreed to a $17 million settlement involving ten victims who alleged that they were abused by priests in California, but the $55 million worth of funds were not transferred to that trust until after a Wisconsin Supreme Court decision which allowed other lawsuits by alleged victims of priestly abuse to move forward. Dolan, who is now a cardinal and the Archbishop of New York, wrote to the Vatican regarding the $55 million in funds that “[b]y transferring these assets to the Trust, I foresee an improved protection of these funds from any legal claim and liability.”

The archdiocese declared bankruptcy in 2011, in part due to the financial burden of the lawsuits brought by alleged abuse victims.

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 to Start Against Bangor Priest Accused of Sex Crimes

MAINE
WABI

MAR 11, 20151

The jury-waived trial of a priest accused of sex crimes against children will start on Monday in Bangor…

52-year-old Adam Metropoulos is charged with sexual abuse of a minor, possession of sexually explicit materials and violation of privacy.

He was suspended from his duties at Saint George Greek Orthodox Church after his arrest in September.

Police say a woman staying at his home told them Metropoulos used a hidden camera to record her in the shower.

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.

Italy and Vatican to uncover secret banking

ITALY
The Local

Negotiations are underway between the Holy See and the Italian government to share financial information, paving the way to put an end to secrecy at the Vatican bank, the pontiff’s secretary of state said on Wednesday.

Following rumours that top Vatican and Italian officials were discussing a deal, Cardinal Pietro Parolin on Wednesday confirmed “negotiations are underway” between the two states.

The Holy See is working towards “a process of better transparency and of better collaboration with Italy in the fiscal spheres,” Parolin told journalists.

“We hope that we can soon arrive at a conclusion that I think could be beneficial for everyone,” the secretary of state added.

Parolin would not be moved on precisely when a deal would likely be reached, although said the two governments were “working at a good pace”.

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At Long Last: Pope Francis Dismisses Curtis Wehmeyer from the Clerical State

MINNESOTA
Canonical Consultation

[with document]

03/11/2015

Jennifer Haselberger

Per notice today from the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis, the Holy Father has approved the dismissal of Curtis Wehmeyer from the clerical state. This decision comes more than two years after Wehmeyer pleaded guilty to multiple charges of criminal sexual conduct and possession of child pornography in Ramsey County District Court. Additional charges have also been filed in Wisconsin.

It is unclear why it took so long for a decision to be reached in this matter. Per the Archdiocesan statement, Wehmeyer remains incarcerated.

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

Statement Regarding Curtis Wehmeyer

MINNESOTA
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis

Date: Wednesday, March 11, 2015

Source: Anne Steffens, Interim Director of Communications

From Archbishop John Nienstedt, Archbishop of Saint Paul and Minneapolis

I have been informed by the Holy See that our Holy Father, Pope Francis, has dismissed Curtis Wehmeyer from the clerical state. The effect of this decision is that Wehmeyer has been permanently and definitively barred from presenting himself as a priest or exercising priestly ministry. He is also prohibited from exercising a teaching or leadership role in any Catholic institution. This decision is the final resolution of Wehmeyer’s status as a priest.

In February 2013, Wehmeyer was convicted in Ramsey County of 20 felony charges for sexual abuse of two minors and possession of child pornography. He was sentenced to 60 months in prison. On November 7, 2014, Wehmeyer was also charged in Chippewa County, Wisconsin, with second degree sexual assault regarding an incident that occurred in the summer of 2011. Wehmeyer remains incarcerated.

Wehmeyer has been made aware of the decision, and all priests and parishes of the Archdiocese have been notified.

I am deeply saddened and have been profoundly affected by the stories I continue to hear from victims/survivors of clergy sexual abuse. My focus, and the focus of the Archdiocese, is to do all we can to keep children safe while offering resources for help and healing.

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

NEWS RELEASE: CURTIS WEHMEYER DEFROCKED BY VATICAN

MINNESOTA
Jeff Anderson & Associates

The former Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis priest was served with laicization paperwork today to formally remove him from the priesthood

(St. Paul, MN) – Today’s announcement of Curtis Wehmeyer’s removal from the clerical state by the Vatican is met with a mixed view from sexual abuse survivors and their advocates. While it is comforting to know a child molester is behind bars and will never be placed in a position of trust as a cleric again, questions still remain.

• Why haven’t more offenders been removed by the Vatican?

• Why haven’t more clerics been prosecuted given the volume of information that has been provided to prosecutors by reason of the Child Victims Act, including tens of thousands of pages of files, depositions, and testimony taken under oath in the civil cases?

Answers to these questions are needed by the many survivors who have courageously come forward and the survivors who continue to live in silence and shame and were harmed by these offenders.

Curtis Wehmeyer is currently serving a five-year prison term for the sexual abuse of two boys in Minnesota and for possession of child pornography. In November 2014, Wehmeyer was charged with second-degree sexual assault of a teenage boy he abused while on a camping trip to Brunet Island State Park in Wisconsin.

Contact: Jeff Anderson: Office/651.227.9990 Cell/612.817.8665
Mike Finnegan: Office/651.227.9990 Cell/612.205.5531

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11.03.15 Status zum Prozess Pater G.

DEUTSCHLAND
Chronik

[We are of the opinion that a suspended sentence is not a punishment.]

Wir sind der Meinung, dass eine Strafe auf Bewährung keine Strafe ist. Dieses Strafmaß bestärkt Täter nach dem Motto: “Wenn man erwischt wird muss man halt aufhören”. Alle Erzieher und Leitenden, die Kinder und Jugendliche betreuen, brauchen ein klares Signal, dass Übergriffe unter keinen Umständen toleriert werden.

Die Auflage einer Therapie für Pater G. ist sicher sinnvoll. Einige von uns befinden sich auch heute noch in Therapie, obwohl die Vorfälle bereits Jahrzehnte zurückliegen. Wer ist hier mehr bestraft?

Zehn Jahre hat Pater G. die Klostergemeinschaft angelogen und seit fünf Jahren die Betroffenen genarrt. Junge Männer, die in dem Alter sich nicht mit Missbrauch, sondern mit Beziehungen beschäftigen sollten. Als wir so alt waren dachten wir auch, wir hätten keinen Schaden geommen.

Der Prozess zeigt auch, dass die Aufdeckung sexueller Straftaten sehr schwierig ist. Die Täter binden die Kinder emotional, die betroffenen Kinder erzählen nichts, die Verantwortlichen in der Einrichtung können nur wenige verdächtige Anzeichen wahrnehmen. Es ist viel Zivilcourage notwendig einen Täter aufzuspüren und aufgrund meist weniger Verdachtsmomente aus einer Einrichtung zu entfernen.

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MO–More Catholic abuse records to be turned over

MISSOURI
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, March 11

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 )

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314-503-0003, bdorris@SNAPnetwork.org )

Last year, a St. Louis judge ordered the Catholic archdiocese to turn over to a victim’s lawyer church abuse and cover up records over a 20 year span.

[BishopAccountability.org]

Now, a different judge in a different case involving a different predator is ordering Archbishop Robert Carlson to turn over more records.

[St. Louis Post-Dispatch]

Thanks to the ruling last year, we know local Catholic officials received at least 240 complaints against 115 church employees. We suspect these numbers are artificially low. Still, they are sobering.

(An independent website called BishopAccountability.org, started by Boston area Catholics, lists names of 54 publicly accused St. Louis archdiocesan predator priests. This figure is also very low, we believe.)

We applaud this ruling. But we’re sad that it’s necessary and worried it may not really make kids safer because the information is likely to be deceptive and incomplete and remain hidden from public view.

It would be so refreshing to see Archbishop Carlson voluntarily disclose information about predators and enablers, instead of repeatedly being forced to do so by persistent victims and smart judges.

Every single step towards more openness about those who commit and conceal child sex crimes is positive. We’re grateful that the brave, wounded family in this lawsuit is making progress towards justice and that more judges realize that the on-going secrecy about child sex crimes by church officials is dangerous.

Finally, we applaud the brave mom and dad who are pursing this case on behalf of their son who committed suicide after having been sexually assaulted by Fr. Bryan Kuchar. (In 2003, Kuchar was convicted of molesting a South County boy. He’s since been defrocked.)

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Cardinal Óscar Rodríguez Maradiaga…

OHIO
WCPO

Cardinal Óscar Rodríguez Maradiaga: Pope Francis’ closest friend, top advisor speaks in Cincinnati

CINCINNATI – If the Dos Equis man is the “most interesting man in the world,” Cardinal Óscar Rodríguez Maradiaga might be No. 2.

The man they call the “Vice-Pope” – because he’s a close friend and top advisor to Pope Francis – plays the sax, flies helicopters and has armed guards 24-7 to protect him against drug cartels he opposes in his homeland of Honduras.

“He is a very fascinating person,” said Rev. Benedict O’Cinnsealaigh, president and rector of the Athenaeum and Mount St. Mary’s Seminary, who arranged the Cardinal’s visit here this week.

Cardinal Rodriquez will address “The Vision of Pope Francis for the Church” at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday night at the Athenaeum, 6616 Beechmont Ave., in Mount Washington. The event is free and open to the public as part of the LeBlond Lecture series. You can watch online at www.athenaeum.edu.

Chairman of the newly established Council of Cardinals, Cardinal Rodriquez will also speak at a news conference at 1:30 p.m. at the Athenaeum.

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Kevil youth pastor charged with rape

KENTUCKY
KFVS

Written by Christi Reynard

MCCRACKEN COUNTY, KY (KFVS) –
A McCracken County youth pastor has been charged with rape, accused of inappropriate sexual relations with one of the youth students at the church.

McCracken County Sheriff’s deputies arrested Michael E. Parsons, 44, of Kevil, Ky. on March 10 shortly after opening their investigation. Deputies say he confessed.

Investigators say Parsons is a youth minister at Milburn Chapel, and that his relationship with the girl began in the spring of 2013 and continued through 2014.

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McCracken County Youth Pastor Accused Of Having Sexual Relationship With Minor

KENTUCKY
Lex 18

Deputies have arrested a McCracken County youth pastor accused of having a sexual relationship with a teenager.

Deputies say they opened an investigation after receiving a tip that Michael E. Parsons, 44, of Kevil, had engaged in a sexual relationship with one of the youth at Milburn Chapel Cumberland Presbyterian Church. Investigators say the girl was 16 years old when the relationship began in 2013. Deputies say it continued through 2014. Investigators say Parsons had sex with the girl during youth group meetings and when he took her home. They say there were additional sexual encounters at Parson’s home.

Deputies also say Parsons exchanged explicit photos and videos with the teen via text message.

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Ein Jahr und zehn Monate auf Bewährung für Pater

DEUTSCHLAND
BR

[The priest accusted of abusing minors at Ettal monastery has been sentenced to a suspended one year and ten months on probation but agreed to compensation.]

Im Missbrauchs-Prozess von Ettal ist der angeklagte Pater zu einer Bewährungsstrafe von einem Jahr und zehn Monaten verurteilt worden. Der Angeklagte hatte sich am Vormittag auch zu einer finanziellen Entschädigung bereit erklärt.

Mit dem Urteil blieb das Gericht, wie erwartet, am unteren Ende des zuvor zwischen den Beteiligten ausgehandelten Rahmens, wenn auch nicht ganz. Die Absprache hatte dem Angeklagten eine Strafe zwischen einem Jahr und neun Monaten und zwei Jahren in Aussicht gestellt. Nun lautet das Urteil also ein Jahr und zehn Monate, ausgesetzt zur Bewährung.

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Paprocki Defends Diocese

ILLINOIS
Alton Daily News

[with audio]

By Will Stevenson – Illinois Radio Network

Springfield Bishop Thomas John Paprocki Tuesday defended the handling of sex abuse cases involving church personnel, and said that a news conference held last week by two groups critical of the diocese caught him off guard. Paprocki also said that the Litchfield phone number assigned to six priests withdrawn from their Chicago parishes that appeared in an Official Catholic Directory in the 1990s was apparently a data-entry or computer-generated error. He said the priests were never assigned to the Springfield diocese nor were they ever licensed by the bishop for the ministry in this diocese.

He criticized the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) for its approach to what it considered a potential danger, saying he wasn’t contacted before the group’s news conference to explain the phone number.

“There was no advance notice of this press conference,” he said. “They did not ask for an explanation beforehand or at all.”

David Clohessy, director of SNAP, said the diocese wasn’t contacted beforehand because “typically and unfortunately, Bishop Paprocki previously has ignored our letters and wouldn’t respond to our requests.”

“What works is making direct, public appeals to victims,” Clohessy said.

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University of Arizona Investigates Allegations That a Campus Church Group Is an ‘Insidious’ Cult

ARIZONA
AlterNet

By Tom Boggioni / Raw Story March 9, 2015

The University of Arizona has opened up an investigation into an on-campus church after former members and staffers have come forward accusing the church of being a cult, according to Arizona Daily Star.

Faith Christian Church, which rose out of the ashes of former Tucson chapter of Maranatha Christian Church, has been operating on the UA campus since its founding in 1990.

In an investigation led by the Star, former members and staffers accused the church of hitting infants with cardboard tubes to encourage submission, using financial coercion to hold onto members, compelling alienation from parents, and public shaming of members, including shunning former members who leave the church or question its leadership.

Former members claim they suffer from panic attacks, depression, anxiety, and other symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder after escaping the clutches of the church.

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75 years: Abuse files to be secret

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

By Fiachra Ó Cionnaith
Irish Examiner Reporter

A child abuse survivor has criticised the Government’s decision to lock the personal witness statements victims gave to state investigations away for 75 years as “very extreme” and “odd”.

Andrew Madden made the remarks after the Cabinet confirmed it is to withhold the evidence for privacy and legal advice reasons.

The decision not to make the files publicly available is based on recommendations in the Ryan report. It was put forward yesterday by Jan O’ Sullivan, the education minister, and will see the files withheld for almost twice as long as State papers are normally kept.

The Labour TD is now due to draft legislation based on the decision to keep the records private for 75 years, although she has stressed she is open to making some of the information more readily available if reasons are given.

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Youth Home: Sex Claims Against Former CFO Unfounded

MASSACHUSETTS
NECN

The former CFO of a home for at-risk youth in Boston is under investigation for alleged sexual abuse.
Officials at “Italian Home of Children” in Jamaica Plain tell necn that though the allegations are 30-year-old, they are taking the allegations very seriously.

They were notified about the allegation last year and hired a counsel to investigate the claims.

Officials have issued a statement, saying in part, “This investigation found no evidence to support the allegation. Italian Home for Children is wholly devoted to the safety and well-being of the children in our care, and does not condone any behavior at odds with our all-important mission.”

In a news release, “Road to Recovery Inc.,” a non-profit organization that offers compassionate counseling and referral services to survivors of clergy sexual abuse, identifies that former CFO is George Forte.

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Religious leader reacts to change in MO funeral protest law

MISSOURI
KFVS

[with video]

Written by Kadee Brosseau

CAPE GIRARDEAU, MO (KFVS) –
It’s a law put in place mainly to prevent groups like Westboro Baptist Church from protesting at things like military funerals, but now the American Civil Liberties Union of Missouri has challenged the ruling and won, calling the law unconstitutional.

ST. LOUIS (AP) – The U.S. Court of Appeals has ruled that the House of Worship Protection Act, which bans anyone for intentionally disturbing the order or solemnity of a house of worship through profane discourse, rude or indecent behavior, is a violation of the First Amendment.

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch (http://bit.ly/1B05GJc ) reports that the Missouri court ruled Monday against the state law after the American Civil Liberties Union of Missouri filed a lawsuit challenging the law in 2012.

The law put in place in 2012 stopped protests those of the Westboro Baptist Church at military funerals these from happening around churches. It was a move Brother David Migliorino, principal at Notre Dame High School, said helped ensure respect inside and outside a church.

“There is a time and a place to protest and disrupting someone’s worship service is not the time or the place,” Migliorino said.

However, the measure didn’t only stop Westboro. The law banned anyone from intentionally disturbing the order or solemnity of a house of worship through profane discourse, rude or indecent behavior.

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Chasidic Abuse Whistleblower Suing Dershowitz Brothers

NEW YORK
The Jewish Week

03/10/15
Hella Winston
Special Correspondent

Four years after his life was turned upside down by charges he committed extortion and bribery, chasidic sex abuse whistleblower Sam Kellner is fighting back against those he thinks wronged him in the press. Late last year he sued The Jewish Daily Forward for defamation. And last week he filed papers initiating a defamation action against Alan and Nathan Dershowitz, the high-profile lawyers who represented, Baruch Lebovits, who Kellner alleges sexually abused his son.

Kellner, who brought allegations of his son’s abuse by Lebovits to the police in 2008, worked closely with law enforcement to bring forward additional Lebovits victims. Lebovits was convicted in 2010 and sentenced to 10 ½ to 32 years in prison. A year later, in 2011, Kellner was arrested.

In 2012, Lebovits’ conviction was vacated on appeal because of a prosecution error, and a new trial was ordered. Lebovits ultimately pleaded guilty in May of 2014, avoiding a second trial. (He was sentenced to two years but because of time served and what’s called “good time” credits, he ended up serving only a few months.) For his appeal and subsequently, Alan and Nathan Dershowitz were part of Lebovits’ defense team.

The case against Kellner — which included allegations that he paid one man to falsely testify in a grand jury that he was abused by Lebovits and also sent emissaries to attempt to extort the Lebovits family for hundreds of thousands of dollars in exchange for a promise he could persuade the witnesses against him to drop their charges — was based virtually exclusively on evidence brought directly to the former Brooklyn District Attorney Charles Hynes’ Rackets Division by members of the Lebovits family, their supporters and paid agents. Kellner’s attorneys and others have argued that the charges against Kellner were fabricated in order to get Lebovits out of jail and undermine the district attorney’s ability to retry him.

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St. Louis archdiocese must turn in sex abuse claims records

ST. LOUIS (MO)
WGEM

ST. LOUIS (AP) – A judge says the St. Louis archdiocese must turn over internal records on sexual abuse allegations spanning two decades as part of a civil lawsuit.

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch (http://bit.ly/1b1godn ) reports a Florissant man’s parents are suing the archdiocese, claiming his 2009 suicide was the result of sexual and emotional abuse by priest Bryan Kuchar.

Defense lawyers say the documents won’t be made public and only will be used in the trial. They will cover 20 years of any allegations prior to the man’s suspected abuse.

A message seeking comment was left with the archdiocese Wednesday.

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1712 luistert nu ook naar slachtoffers van gedwongen adoptie

BELGIE
Kind en Gezin

9 maart 2015

De commissie Welzijn, Volksgezondheid en Gezin in het Vlaams Parlement hield drie hoorzittingen over de problematiek ‘gedwongen adopties’. In navolging daarvan keurde het parlement een resolutie over gedwongen adoptie unaniem goed. Daarin werd onder meer gevraagd dat slachtoffers van deze praktijken bij 1712 terecht zouden kunnen met hun hulpvraag.

Op deze vraag wordt nu ingegaan. Vanaf 9 maart 2015 kunnen slachtoffers van een gedwongen adoptie naar 1712 bellen om hun verhaal te doen.

De medewerkers van de hulplijn zullen luisteren naar de slachtoffers en kunnen hen toeleiden tot de nodige hulp. Dit kan gaan over psychologische ondersteuning of begeleiding maar ook over concrete hulp bij een zoekvraag. De ondersteuning is dus niet alleen bedoeld voor geboorteouders die onder dwang afstand deden van hun kind maar ook voor geadopteerden die (vermoeden dat ze) onder dwang werden afgestaan.

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Dossiers gedwongen adopties samengebracht bij Kind en Gezin

BELGIE
Weliswaar

Op een overlegvergadering tussen de bisschoppenconferentie en de vzw Mater Matuta werd dinsdagnamiddag beslist dat alle dossiers over mogelijk gedwongen adopties verzameld worden bij Kind en Gezin.

Dat vertelden Tommy Scholtes, de woordvoerder van de Bisschoppenconferentie en Marleen Adriaens, voorzitter van Mater Matuta na afloop van de vergadering. Het Belang van Limburg bracht vorige week het verhaal van wanpraktijken in het Lommelse tehuis Tamar. Daar zouden in de jaren 70 honderden vrouwen door kloosterzusters gedwongen zijn tot adoptie. Volgens de krant werden de kinderen voor grof geld aan adoptieouders verkocht. “Het gaat niet enkel om de kerk”, verduidelijkt Marleen Adriaens. “Dit gebeurde vermoedelijk ook bij andere van de 84 adoptiediensten in Vlaanderen, waarvan er veel door leken werden geleid.” Toch geven de bisschoppen alle informatie uit handen om alle schijn van partijdigheid te vermijden.

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Vzw Mater Matuta vraagt overlevers van gedwongen adoptie om zich te melden

BELGIE
De Redactie

[Members of the Mater Matuta association have launched an appeal to all survivors of forced relinquishment and adoption to call the helpline 1712 if they have questions or want advice.]

Leden van de vzw Mater Matuta hebben in het justitiepaleis van Antwerpen een oproep gelanceerd aan alle overlevers van gedwongen afstand en adoptie om de hulplijn 1712 te bellen als ze vragen hebben of advies willen. De hulplijn is sinds gisteren ook voor hen bedoeld en dus niet alleen voor wie vragen heeft over geweld, misbruik of kindermishandeling.

Ella, Monica, Heidi en Ritje droegen in het justitiepaleis witte maskers, die ze een voor een afzetten om hun verhaal te doen. Alle vier zijn het overlevers van gedwongen afstand en adoptie die lotgenoten willen overtuigen om uit de anonimiteit te treden.

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Plädoyers und Urteil gegen Pater erwartet

DEUTSCHLAND
BR

[A verdict is expected today in the case of the priest accused to abuse at Ettal monastery.]

Im Missbrauchs-Prozess gegen einen Benediktiner und früheren Internatslehrer in Kloster Ettal werden heute die Plädoyers und das Urteil erwartet. Nach dem Geständnis des Paters rechnen Beobachter mit einem Deal.

Am Vormittag werden Staatsanwaltschaft und Verteidigung ihre Plädoyers halten, anschließend soll das Urteil fallen.

Im Laufe des Prozesses hatte der Pater ein umfassendes Geständnis abgelegt. Er gab zu, zwei Schüler sexuell missbraucht und es bei zwei weiteren versucht zu haben. Dem Angeklagten wurde daraufhin eine Gefängnisstrafe von nicht mehr als zwei Jahren in Aussicht gestellt, die für vier Jahre zur Bewährung ausgesetzt werden könne. Der Pater erklärte sich mit der Auflage einer ambulanten Sexualtherapie einverstanden. Am ersten Prozesstag hatte er noch alle Vorwürfe abgestritten.

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Die katholische Kirche und der Missbrauchsskandal

DEUTSCHLAND
Das Erste

[The Catholic Church and the abuse scandal.]

Gut fünf Jahre ist es her, dass Missbrauchsfälle in großem Umfang in der katholischen Kirche bekannt wurden. Die Kirche hat seit dem “Aufklärung und Transparenz” versprochen. Sie wolle den Opfern gerecht werden und den Kindesmissbrauch rückhaltlos aufklären. Aber tut sie das wirklich? Hält sie ihr Versprechen? Die Dokumentation “Das Schweigen der Männer” (Montag, 16. März, um 23.30 Uhr im Ersten) hat mit Missbrauchsopfern, Bischöfen und Wissenschaftlern gesprochen.

Matthias Katsch war Mitte der 70er Schüler am Berliner Canisius-Kolleg, unter der Obhut katholischer Patres vom angesehenen Jesuitenorden. Er war 14 Jahre alt, als er von einem Pater missbraucht wurde. Für die ARD-Dokumentation besucht er seine ehemalige Schule. “Wir haben den ganzen Tag hier drinnen verbracht,” erinnert sich Katsch, “er hat mich mit verschiedenen Gegenständen und auch mit der bloßen Hand geschlagen. Ich musste mich ausziehen, hab mich über so eine Bank da gebeugt. Das war der finsterste Ort für mich.”

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Kirchen kassieren Steuern in Rekordhöhe

DEUTSCHLAND
Frankfurter Allgemeine

[Despite declining membership: The revenue of the Catholic Church 2014 once again skipped the five-billion mark. The Protestant church reached a record.]

Trotz Mitgliederschwunds: Die Einnahmen der katholischen Kirche haben 2014 abermals die Fünf-Milliarden-Grenze übersprungen. Auch die evangelische Kirche verzeichnete einen Rekord. Das hat zwei Gründe.

Die katholische und die evangelische Kirche in Deutschland haben im vergangenen Jahr einen neuen Rekord bei den Kirchensteuereinnahmen erzielt. Das gaben die Pressestellen der Deutschen Bischofskonferenz in Bonn und der Evangelischen Kirche in Deutschland (EKD) in Hannover am Dienstag bekannt.

Demnach übersprangen die Einnahmen bei der katholischen Kirche 2014 mit rund 5,68 Milliarden Euro zum dritten Mal in Folge die Fünf-Milliarden-Grenze. Gegenüber 2013 bedeutet das ein Plus von 4,24 Prozent. Die EKD verzeichnete erstmals Einnahmen von mehr als 5 Milliarden Euro, was einem Plus von 4,8 Prozent gegenüber dem Vorjahr entspricht. Experten begründeten das Rekordergebnis mit der guten Konjunktur und der hohen Zahl von Katholiken und Protestanten in regulären Arbeitsverhältnissen.

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Attackers delivered beatings, death threats to force a divorce, victim testifies in Lakewood rabbi trial

NEW JERSEY
NJ.com

By MaryAnn Spoto | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com
on March 10, 2015

TRENTON —A Brooklyn man testifying Tuesday in the trial of a Lakewood rabbi accused of orchestrating forced divorces said he was ambushed and beaten until he agreed to divorce his wife.

The daylong testimony of Yisrael Meir Bryskman in federal court in Trenton did not connect Rabbi Mendel Epstein or his three codefendants to the 2010 attack but it set the stage for prosecutors’ main witness who could provide more potentially damning evidence in the trial.

Bryskman, a 40-year-old Israeli national who fled his state to avoid warrants for his arrest for refusing to grant a divorce, described for jurors how he was beaten over several hours at the Lakewood home of David Wax, a man he thought was going to give him a job.

Wax, who is scheduled to testify on Wednesday, is the prosecution’ main witness linking Epstein, his son and two other rabbis to the beatings.

But defense attorneys contend that Wax, who faces life in prison for Bryskman’s kidnapping, concocted the allegations against Epstein, his son David “Ari” Epstein and rabbis Binyamin Stimler and Jay Goldstein to receive a reduced sentence.

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Baldwin County District Attorney Hallie Dixon says subpoena she ignored was invalid

ALABAMA
AL.com

By Brendan Kirby | bkirby@al.com
on March 10, 2015

Lawyers seeking to hold Baldwin County District Attorney Hallie Dixon in contempt failed to follow proper procedure regarding a subpoena, the prosecutor said Tuesday.

Attorneys representing a former St. Pius X Catholic School student accusing administrators of allowing her to be bullied are seeking a court order sanctioning Dixon for failing to appear at a deposition on Friday. They wanted to ask her questions about allegations her office reviewed involving the pastor of St. Pius. The pastor, the Rev. Johnny Savoie, oversees the school principal.

Dixon said on Tuesday that the subpoena was invalid because rules governing civil cases require plaintiffs to file a notice of their intent to question a non-party and then give other lawyers in the case 15 days to object.

“The lawyers who filed that motion and gave those comments need to read the Rules of Civil Procedure and educate themselves about what the Rules of Civil Procedure are,” she said. ‘Their motion not only does not have any merit, it’s exactly against what the Rules of Civil Procedure are.”

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An enigmatic soul

NEW YORK
The Economist

SUNDAY services at Saint Patrick’s Cathedral in New York featured a portrait at the altar of Edward Cardinal Egan, who died on March 5th. After the funeral today his body will be interred in a crypt at the cathedral. The ceremonies in tribute to his life and work have been fairly subdued. This is perhaps apt. Cardinal Egan, who presided over New York’s archdiocese from 2000 to 2009, may have had an imposing presence and a powerful baritone voice, but he kept a low profile. He was rarely in front of a camera. He hardly ever gave interviews. Indeed he was an enigmatic figure for many New Yorkers and a polarising leader among Catholics. He was not universally loved by his flock.

Cardinal Egan arrived in New York in 2000 with an impossible task: to fill the shoes of John Cardinal O’Connor, his beloved predecessor. New York’s cardinals tend to be a charismatic bunch, but Cardinal O’Connor was uniquely powerful. As the unofficial head of the Catholic Church in America, he was courted by presidents. He was not afraid to take on politicians, even well-known Catholics. He threatened to excommunicate Geraldine Ferraro, a vice-presidential nominee, and Mario Cuomo, a former governor, for their pro-choice stance in the abortion debate. Presidents attended his funeral and thousands of ordinary New Yorkers queued to view his remains. He was dubbed the patron saint of the working poor. But while witty and gregarious, Cardinal O’Connor was a poor administrator. He could not balance a budget to save his life. …

His response to the sexual-abuse scandal in 2002 also won few fans among the clergy or the faithful. Connecticut newspapers, including the Hartford Courant, reported that when he was bishop of Bridgeport he knowingly transferred priests accused of paedophilia to different parishes and postings. He denied this, saying he actually sent accused priests to a well-respected psychiatric institution for evaluation. He claimed that priests were permitted to return to pastoral duty only when the institution recommended it—despite evidence of known offenders working within the church. He eventually said in a letter read from pulpits that “if in hindsight we also discover that mistakes may have been made as regards prompt removal of priests and assistance to victims, I am deeply sorry.” For many in the church, and especially the victims of sexual abuse, this apology seemed insincere. To prevent another abuse scandal, the US Conference of Bishops in 2002 set up a review board of laypeople to serve as a watchdog for the church in America. The cardinal reportedly took issue with this body, however, as he did not believe lay people should have oversight over a bishop.

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Gelzinis: Tragedy drives revs into action

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Herald

By: Peter Gelzinis

To hear Rev. Mark Scott speak about his “Clergy Deployment Plan,” you might think he drafted the whole thing over the weekend, as a response to the rogue clergy­man, Shaun O. Harrison, who allegedly shot a young drug dealer execution-style — an English High student he was supposed to be “mentoring.”

Truth is, Mark Scott, of the Ella J. Baker House in Dorchester, has been working for more than a year on his idea to have ministers create a partnership with police, social workers, probation officers and street workers.

It’s a back-to-the-future idea — back to the days of the so-called Boston Miracle and operations dubbed “Nightlight” and “Homefront,” when teams of ministers, cops, probation officers and school police quite literally made sure that the kids they were tracking were at home, if not in bed.

The father of probation in Dorchester District Court, William J. “Billy” Stewart, one of the architects of the Boston Miracle, was once asked what happened to the Miracle and the TenPoint-Coalition of black clergy.

“It’s quite simple actually,” Billy replied. “One TenPoint Coalition turned into 10 one points.”

In other words, success bred egos determined to do their own thing. And two decades later we have an anti-gang preacher in the arraignment dock accused of attempted murder and facing a slew of drug and weapons charges.

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Clergymen Condemn Sexual Abuse Against Children

JAMAICA
The Gleaner

Allegations of sexual abuse against children by some church leaders have triggered strong condemnation from at least two clergymen, who have urged victims to report the perpetrators to the police.

The Reverend Dr Clinton Chisholm, lecturer at the Jamaica Theological Seminary, described the allegations as appalling, arguing that he lacked sympathy for anyone who violated the innocence of a child sexually.

“Apart from going to the police, which would be the primary resort, a report should be made to the leadership of the local church where the person is a pastor, so that they are aware of the misdeed that has been done,” Chisholm said.

According to the theologian, people are scared of saying things about pastors who wield a lot of power over their congregation. He said people can be intimidated into thinking that if you speak against clerics, judgment would befall you. However, he argued that there should be no fear of judgment from God when a wrong has been perpetrated against a child and the matter is reported to the authorities.

“They intimidate people’s minds by saying, ‘Touch not the Lord’s anointed,’ as if in their badness they should still be regarded as anointed. It is really abominable,” Chisholm added.

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Yeshivah abuse victims frustrated at lack of action after royal commission

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Melissa Davey
@MelissaLDavey
Wednesday 11 March 2015

Four weeks after giving evidence before a royal commission, victims of child sexual abuse within the Orthodox Jewish Yeshivah centres in Melbourne say they are frustrated by a lack of action by senior centre staff.

In an open letter directed to Yeshivah management in Melbourne and published on Wednesday, 11 abuse victims said they were dismayed by a lack of resignations following the hearings, during which it was revealed senior staff knew about the abuse, but did nothing.

Last month, the royal commission into institutional responses into child sexual abuse held public hearings at Melbourne’s county court to examine the way the Yeshivah centres, which run schools, religious activities and youth groups in Sydney and Melbourne, responded to child sex abuse in their community.

“It is astounding and a further indictment on the Yeshivah Centre that no genuine public action has been taken to date by your institution in response to the royal commission public hearing,” the letter said.

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Media Release – Tuesday, March 10, 2015

MASSACHUSETTS
Road to Recovery

Italian Home for Children in Jamaica Plain, MA employed an alleged sexual abuser of children, George P. Forte, Jr. despite knowing about charges of sexual abuse of at least one minor child who alleges he was sexually abused from approximately 1980-1983. According to corporate records, George P. Forte, Jr. became Chief Financial Officer of the Italian Home for Children

Italian Home for Children was run by the Archdiocese of Boston until 1981 when at least one minor child was sexually abused there by George P. Forte, Jr.

Archdiocese of Boston and Italian Home for Children have covered up sexual abuse of children by George P. Forte, Jr., and refuse to help as least one sexual abuse victim of the Italian Home for Children heal

What
A demonstration and press conference alerting the neighborhood surrounding the Italian Home for Children, especially parents of minor children, and the general public that the Italian Home for Children and Archdiocese of Boston covered up at least one case of sexual abuse of minor children by George P. Forte, Jr.

When
Wednesday, March 11, 2015 from 11:00 am until 12:30 pm

Where
On the public sidewalk outside the Italian Home for Children, 1125 Centre Street, Jamaica Plain, MA 02130-3495 – 617-524-3116

Who
Robert M. Hoatson, Ph.D., Co-founder and President of Road to Recovery, Inc., a non-profit charity that assists victims of sexual abuse and their families; supporters, and friends

Why
Until 1981, the Archdiocese of Boston administered the Italian Home for Children in Jamaica Plain, MA. A minor child was sexually abused by an employee, George P. Forte, Jr., during that time, but the Archdiocese of Boston refuses to take responsibility for the healing and recovery of that minor child, now an adult. The Archdiocese of Boston has told that man to take a hike. Demonstrators will call on the Archdiocese of Boston and the Italian Home for Children to follow the lead of Pope Francis and take responsibility for the sexual abuse of at least one minor child who has courageously reported sexual abuse by George P. Forte, Jr.

Contacts
Robert M. Hoatson, Ph.D., Road to Recovery, Inc., 862-368-2800
Attorney Mitchell Garabedian, Boston, MA, 617-523-6250

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Former CFO of Italian Home for Children in JP accused of sexual abuse

MASSACHUSETTS
Fox Boston

[with video]

JAMAICA PLAIN, Mass. (MyFoxBoston.com) — The former Chief Financial Officer of a home for troubled youth is under scrutiny amidst allegations of sexual abuse.

Tuesday, FOX25 spoke exclusively with the attorney for the accuser, who claimed George Forte, Jr. sexually abused him at the Italian Home for Children in Jamaica Plain over a period of three years.

“My client got to know George Forte, was groomed by George Forte, given gifts – things like that,” said Mitchell Garabedian, a lawyer known for his previous cases involving sexual abuse and the Catholic Church.

Garabedian said his client was 6 years old when he first came to the Italian Home for Children, an orphan with a troubled past.

“My client was lonely. He didn’t have any parents in his life, he didn’t have any love. He looked to George Forte for that,” Garabedian said.

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Bob Jones University issues response to GRACE report

SOUTH CAROLINA
Greenville News

Lyn Riddle, lnriddle@greenvillenews.com March 10, 2015

Bob Jones University President Steve Pettit said Tuesday that the weeks since school leaders were criticized for the way they counseled victims of sexual abuse have not been easy on anyone.

“It has been particularly difficult on a few,” he told students during a chapel service in which he spent 16 minutes responding to a yearlong investigation by Godly Response to Abuse in the Christian Environment.

He did not name those he was talking about, but the two most harshly criticized by the GRACE report were Bob Jones III, the chancellor and grandson of the founder, and Jim Berg, who handled most of the counseling during almost 30 years as dean of students.

GRACE found that students who reported abuse were blamed for bringing it on themselves and that proper authorities had not been notified. The organization said Jones, as the president from 1971 until 2005, and Berg, who stepped down as dean in 2010, were primarily responsible.

The report recommended that Jones be disciplined and that Berg be banned from both counseling and teaching counseling and that the school no longer use or sell his books or DVDs.

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Targeting the trust fund: Court puts nearly $60 million back in play in Archdiocese bankruptcy case

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Fox 6

[with video]

READ IT: Statement from Archdiocese of Milwaukee.

READ IT: Statement from SNAP – Survivors Network for Those Abused by Priests

Federal Appeals Court Entire Decision on Archdiocese Cemetery Trust

Appeals Court Decision on Archdiocese’s Cemetery Trust

MARCH 10, 2015, BY MIKE LOWE

MILWAUKEE (WITI) — A federal appeals court has issued a ruling that puts nearly $60 million back in play. It’s cash that could be paid to victims in the Catholic clergy sex abuse scandal. It is a blow to the Archdiocese of Milwaukee’s bankruptcy case and it could have wide-ranging effects.

With the clergy sex abuse scandal creeping closer to church coffers, then-Milwaukee Archbishop Timothy Dolan set aside millions in a cemetery trust fund. He then fought to protect that money from abuse lawsuits in bankruptcy court.

“What this did is delay, by years, the place we already should have been at the beginning,” Peter Isley, Midwest Director of SNAP – the Survivors Network for Those Abused by Priests said.

The timeline looks like this:

* 2007: Archdiocese of Milwaukee creates the trust.
* 2008: The Vatican approves the transfer of $57 million.
* 2009: Timothy Dolan becomes the Archbishop of New York. He is now Cardinal Timothy Dolan.
* 2011: Archdiocese of Milwaukee files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.
* 2013: A bankruptcy judge rules against the diocese. Six months later, federal appeals Judge Rudolph Randa said the church could protect the money, but now the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals has reversed that decision — making the money fair game.
* July 2013: Archbishop Jerome Listecki defends the trust fund.

FOX6’s Mike Lowe: “You know, the accusation is that he was trying to shield assets from lawsuits.”

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Archdiocese of St. Louis ordered to produce …

ST. LOUIS (MO)
St. Louis Post-Dispatch

Archdiocese of St. Louis ordered to produce 20 years of documents on sexual abuse

By Lilly Fowler

A judge has ordered the Archdiocese of St. Louis to produce two decades worth of internal documents on sexual abuse allegations.

Thomas J. Prebil is only the second judge to attempt to compel the archdiocese to hand over such an extensive number of records.

The order, released earlier this week, is part of a civil lawsuit filed in St. Louis County Circuit Court involving the parents of a man from Florissant who sued the archdiocese over the suicide of their son.

The parents argue their son’s suicide in 2009 was the result of sexual and emotional abuse by Bryan Kuchar, a Roman Catholic priest at Kenrick-Glennon Seminary in Shrewsbury.

The documents are needed in order to show that the archdiocese had a pattern of reassigning problem priests, plaintiff lawyers argue.

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Catholic church in Italy under fire to bring pedophile priests to justice

ITALY
Press TV (Iran)

Max Civili
Press TV, Rome

Two kids who were victims of sexual abuse by a priest, are among four civil plaintiffs who have joined proceedings against Father Giovanni Desio, a clergyman of 53 years of age.

The former parish priest of a village in the Emilia Romagna region, was arrested in April last year. He is facing charges of having sex with four minors under his care.

A children’s protection association and the local diocese have also been admitted among the civil plaintiffs after a pre-trial hearing held in the city of Ravenna early this week.

Recently the church has come under increasing attack for not doing enough to prevent sexual abuse by clergymen. In February victims of sexually abusive priests from across the Americas joined forces issuing a letter addressed to Pope Francis saying that “words are not enough” and urging the Argentine pontiff to allow civilian justice to punish pedophiles and those who covered up their crimes.
Last week over a thousand lay faithful from Chile asked Pope Francis to rescind the appointment of a bishop accused of covering up a prominent priest sanctioned by the Vatican in 2011 for sexually abusing minors.

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March 10, 2015

Bishop Paprocki Responds To SNAP

ILLINOIS
WICS

Bishop Thomas Paprocki is responding to calls from snap for greater transparency from the Springfield diocese about two predator priests the group alleges spent time here decades ago and six others who had Litchfield phone numbers dating back to the 1990s. The allegations came down from the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP).

“They did have contact with this diocese, yes. But Father Martinez as I mentioned served only very briefly as a hospital chaplain and that was before any known allegations about him,” said Paprocki. “And Father Fitzgerald was here before he was a priest.”

The diocese did release some of its findings, showing some of the 265 priests with the same Litchfield number. Paprocki said it belonged to the private home of another priest, who had no allegations against him, calling it a computer error.

“We did say repeatedly last week, there might be some innocent explanation for why these six Chicago priests had a 217 area code,” said David Clohessy, a SNAP spokesman. “I hope they didn’t spend even a day in the Springfield diocese if that in fact is true.”

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Vatican removes controversial image from council website

VATICAN CITY
Irish Times

Patsy McGarry

The Vatican has removed the controversial Venus Restored (1936) by Surrealist artist Man Ray from the website of its Pontifical Council for Culture. The image, a plaster cast of a nude torso – with no head or face, no arms and no legs – tightly bound with rope, was intended to draw attention to its annual plenary assembly on Women’s Culture: Equality and Difference. It succeeded more than expected.

The assembly took place last month, between February 4th and 7th.

The image provoked international outrage from Catholic women’s groups in particular, who saw it as reflecting what Bishop Bridget Mary Meehan of the Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests says is “the Vatican’s patriarchal, dysfunctional view that holds women in spiritual bondage”.
s women’s bodies and souls and reflects a deep misogyny in need of healing and transformation.”

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Old boys of Knox Grammar …

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Old boys of Knox Grammar, like me, will always be marked by how close we came to the abuse there

Adam Brereton
@adambrereton
Tuesday 10 March 2015

The abuse at Knox Grammar is not ancient history. Not for me. Craig Treloar, Adrian Nisbett and Barrie Stewart were all teachers at the school when I started school there, in year five, in 1999. It wasn’t until 2009 that they were arrested after decades of child abuse, three years after I graduated.

We all remember those teachers and now, with the royal commission, we remember the students, too. To see their faces contort in the witness box is a reminder that being an “Old Knox Grammarian” – whether or not you paid the old boys’ association’s membership fee – is to be forever marked by a closeness to abuse. As the inquiry into Knox started to gear up, I sent a text to my Mum: “Just so it’s clear, I was never abused.” Having to send that message depleted the last of my goodwill about my schooldays.

We never really owned our experiences at Knox, anyway, I’ve come to feel. Our academic success belonged to the outstanding teachers, whose brilliance we still feel bound to pay tribute to, even as we wonder just how much they knew. Knox’s famous musicals manufactured Hugh Jackman, as far as the school is concerned. The hundreds-strong cadet unit – to which my mother and stepfather, both serving Australian Defence Force members, gave their time and expertise – was rightly a source of pride for Knox, but was often seen merely as a component of the school’s leadership program. The school celebrated its foresight in having kept it alive after Gough Whitlam ceased funding military training for students. Whitlam was himself a former student (see, Knox produces leaders!) but the school rarely mentions how little time he spent there.

In an analogue of the school’s Uniting Church faith, it was if the student could achieve nothing of virtue without the irresistible grace of the institution. Similarly, the student body was shot through with a sense of predestination – the recurring names in the yearbooks, decade after decade, and the smiles in the old boys’ publications – that is hard to understand from the outside. My family was part of that. I would regularly appear in the sons and grandsons of old boys photos, although it always seemed to me an accident, rather than fate that sent me there; I started at Knox a few years after my father’s death, when my mother remarried and we moved to Sydney.

The central question the royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse has been driving at is the right one: whether the legendary former headmaster of the school, Ian Paterson, who led the place from 1969 until 1998, put the school’s reputation ahead of the wellbeing of abused students. The correct question, posed wrongly, because Knox Grammar during Paterson’s tenure was an extension of the man’s ego. The school’s reputation was not something external that could be defended or prioritised.

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IL–Victims respond to full Bishop Paprocki statement

ILLINOIS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, March 10

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 )

Springfield Bishop Thomas Paprocki blasted our group and the news media today, twice deceptively using the phrase “rumors and gossip” and accusing journalists of reporting “without question” allegedly “false and defamatory claims.” (We’ve just now gotten a copy of his statement.)

Again, he’s being disingenuous.

Paprocki knows that our information came directly from the Official Catholic Directory. Not the Official SNAP Directory. Not the “Make It Up Yourself” Directory. The Official Catholic Directory. Maybe he should complain to the publishers of the Official Catholic Directory about “rumors and gossip” and “false and defamatory claims.”

Paprocki also knows that media outlets don’t report “rumors and gossip” and that mistakes, even by the Official Catholic Directory, are not “defamatory.”

He’s trying, again, to deflect attention away from his irresponsible refusal to

—be more honest about the 12 publicly accused predator priests who have been in his diocese,

—post their names on his diocesan website and in his parish bulletins, and

—aggressively reach out to anyone who may have been hurt in the Springfield area by Fr. Frank R. Martinez or Fr. J. Vincent Fitzgerald.

With these two clerics, Paprocki splits hairs. Accusations against one of them happened before he was in Springfield, he says. Accusations against the other happened after he left Springfield, he says. But who cares?

The simple fact is that both priests were in this area, both are credibly accused predators, and Paprocki’s responsible for the well-being of his flock. It doesn’t matter at all in which hemisphere or decade they committed their crimes. What matters is that in this diocese, there may be a woman who gets drunk every night or a man who is suicidal. And the cause of their pain may well be Fr. Martinez or Fr. Fitzgerald or one of the other ten publicly accused Springfield area predator priests (who were raised here and ordained here and worked here and mostly molested here).

Paprocki could reach out to these wounded victims. Instead, he attacks our support group and local journalists. He should be ashamed of himself.

Finally, he goes on at length about the procedures and policies of the diocese, neglecting to mention that these are all national church requirements. It’s as if he pretends the income tax he pays is a voluntary donation to the government. The weak, small, grudging and belated steps being taken in Springfield, and other dioceses, are public relations and legal defense maneuvers forced on recalcitrant bishops by decades of horrific scandal, criminal prosecutions, civil lawsuits, scathing editorials and outraged parishioners.

Bishop Paprocki, stop being thin-skinned. Start being warm-hearted. Take off your lawyer hat. Put on your shepherd’s hat. Quit being whiny. Start being compassionate. Use your skills, smarts and vast diocesan resources to seek out and help that one struggling, traumatized man or woman who was assaulted years ago by a pedophile priest, and be the bishop you were meant to be.

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Journalist or Spokesperson for SNAP? St. Louis Post-Dispatch’s Fowler Promotes Claim That Church Should Stalk Its Ex-Priests

MISSOURI
TheMediaReport

David Pierre

In a recent article sparse on reason and logic, Lilly Fowler of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch promotes the novel idea that the Catholic Church is now somehow responsible for hunting down and shadowing every past employee accused of abuse, and then constantly publicizing their whereabouts, no matter how long ago the alleged abuse occurred.

There is no doubt that former priest Gary P. Wolken committed disgraceful crimes and was a shame to the priesthood. Yet it was Church officials who first discovered the abuse and immediately reported it to the police. Police arrested and charged Wolken, and after Wolken pleaded guilty to his crime and went to jail, the Church expelled him from the priesthood.

No good deed goes unpunished

Yet Fowler completely fails to report that it was Church officials who put a quick stop to Wolken’s crimes.

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Jurors in priest trial say they’re at an impasse; judge orders them back to work

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

After announcing it was at an impasse, a Philadelphia jury agreed to resume deliberations Wednesday in the trial of the Rev. Andrew McCormick, the Catholic priest accused of sexually assaulting a 10-year-old altar boy almost two decades ago in Bridesburg.

The Common Pleas Court jury was almost through its second full day of deliberations Tuesday when it told Judge Gwendolyn N. Bright it was deadlocked. Bright then instructed the jury to keep trying; about 90 minutes later the jurors said they wished to return the next day.

This is McCormick’s second trial on the charges. Last year, another Common Pleas Court jury hung after 29 hours of deliberations. McCormick, 58, is accused of luring the boy in 1997 to his bedroom in the rectory of St. John Cantius Church, undressing him, and attempting to force him to perform oral sex

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Priest abuse retrial jurors announce impasse, to keep trying

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Lancaster Online

Posted: Tuesday, March 10, 2015

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Jurors in the retrial of a suspended Philadelphia priest accused of having molested a young boy almost two decades ago have reported an impasse but agreed to resume deliberations in the case Wednesday.

The Philadelphia Inquirer (http://bit.ly/1FHGpYP ) reported that the jurors in their second full day of deliberations Tuesday were told to keep trying to reach a verdict. They said about an hour and a half later that they wished to return the next day.

The Rev. Andrew McCormick is accused of having assaulted an altar boy in a rectory bedroom in 1997. The 27-year-old victim alleges that the abuse started when he was 11 and later led him to attempt suicide. McCormick has denied the allegations.

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Man arrested for sex crimes on juveniles

CALIFORNIA
Inland News Today

CORONA – (INT) – The Corona Police Department was contacted by multiple male adults who stated that they had been victims of sexual abuse as juveniles.

Detectives began an investigation into the allegations and on Monday, arrested Shawn Edward Shaffer, 54 years old of Corona, for multiple counts of sexual molestation on a juvenile under 16 years of age.

Police said that Shaffer may have been conducting youth bible studies in his home in Corona and that he frequents local skateboard parks.

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Bible Study Teacher Arrested On Multiple Counts Of Sexual Molestation

CALIFORNIA
CBS LA

CORONA (CBSLA.com) — A Bible study teacher is in custody Tuesday on multiple counts of sexual molestation on a juvenile under 16, police said.

Shawn Edward Shaffer, 54, of Corona, was arrested Monday and is being held in the Robert Presley Detention Center on $3 million bail, Corona police officials said.

Several men had reported to Corona police investigators Friday they were victims of sexual abuse as juveniles in the city of Corona.

Shaffer may have been conducting youth Bible studies in his home in Corona, and that he frequents local skate parks, Corona police said.

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Court: Milwaukee archdiocese can’t use First Amendment to protect against claims in bankruptcy

MILWAUKEE (WI)
National Catholic Reporter

Marie Rohde | Mar. 10, 2015

MILWAUKEE In a decision that could have far-reaching implications, the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the Milwaukee archdiocese can’t rely on the free exercise of religion clause in the First Amendment or the Religious Freedom Restoration Act as protections against claims in its bankruptcy case.

The key question in the Milwaukee case of whether approximately $55 million placed in a trust for the care of cemeteries can be used to pay off the archdiocese’s debts in bankruptcy was not answered in the decision. Mounting legal fees — now at least $16 million but possibly as high as $20 million — raise the question of whether much will be available to pay debts and compensate those who claim to have been sexually abused.

The appellate court decision issued late Monday is not a final decision. The court also found that U.S. District Judge Rudolph Randa, who ruled in the archdiocese’s favor, should have stepped aside because of a conflict of interest. A new judge will have to be appointed to decide the issue of the trust fund based on the appellate findings that the First Amendment and Religious Freedom Restoration Act do not apply.

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Sex Abuse Victims May Dig Into Cemetery Fund

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Courthouse News Service

By JACK BOUBOUSHIAN

CHICAGO (CN) – The Archdiocese of Milwaukee’s $55 million cemetery trust fund is not off limits to claims filed by clergy sex abuse victims against the church’s bankruptcy estate, the 7th Circuit ruled.

The archdiocese declared Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2011, declaring that it did not have the funds to pay the amounts sought by clergy sexual abuse victims in court.

It proposed a bankruptcy reorganization plan that would give 128 victims $4 million, but leave 450 other claimants with nothing.

However, the archdiocese transferred $55 million out of its general fund, and earmarked the money for the upkeep of cemeteries, claiming it was off-limits to creditors.

A creditors’ committee composed of abuse victims protested this move in court, asserting that this one-time transfer of $55 million was a blatant attempt to prevent victims from recovering money from the archdiocese.

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Former youth minister arrested for sex with 15-year-old

FLORIDA
Fox 13

LAKELAND (FOX 13) –
A former church youth minister has been arrested for having sex with a 15-year-old member of a local congregation.

The Polk County Sheriff’s Office arrested 30-year-old Phillip Kendrick II Tuesday on three counts of lewd battery and other charges after the current pastor of Mt. Tabor Baptist Church called and reported the relationship.

Investigators learned Kendrick and the young girl had sex at least three times and exchanged nude photos of one another over a course of three months, between October of 2014 and January of 2015.

Deputies said the church pastor told them that Kendrick stopped serving as a youth minister in October, but he still attended the church.

According to detectives, Kendrick met the 15-year-old victim in a church youth group during his time as a youth minister about four years ago.

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Polk County Sheriff’s Office Detectives Arrest Former Youth Pastor for Having Sex with a Minor

FLORIDA
Daily Ridge

On Tuesday, March 9, 2015, PCSO detectives charged 30-year-old Phillip Kendrick II of Lakeland with three counts of lewd battery, one count of transmitting material harmful to a minor, and one count of the use of a two-way communications device to commit felony.

On Monday, PCSO detectives were contacted by the pastor of Mt. Tabor Baptist Church. He told deputies a church member told him that the church’s former youth pastor, Kendrick, had sex with a 15-year-old girl sometime between November and January 2015. According to the church Pastor, Kendrick was no longer employed as a youth minister as of October, 2014, though he still attended the church.

During the investigation detectives learned the 15-year-old victim met Kendrick when he was a youth minister approximately four years ago while attending a youth group at the church. In an interview with deputies, the victim said she viewed Kendrick as a trusted source of support. Over the course of four years, the victim told deputies that the relationship between the two turned from a ministerial relationship to more of a personal friendship. In October 2014, Phillip told the victim he had “strong feelings” for her.

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Former Youth Pastor Accused of Having Sex With Teen

FLORIDA
The Ledger

LAKELAND | Sheriff’s detectives arrested a former Lakeland youth pastor today on three counts of lewd battery for incidents involving a 15-year-old girl he met at church while he was a pastor.

Phillip Kendrick II, 4090 Knights Station Road, is accused of having sex with the girl between November and January, according to the Polk County Sheriff’s Office. Kendrick, 30, also is being held on felony counts of transmitting material harmful to a minor and using a two-way communication device to commit a felony.

Detectives started investigating about 9 p.m. Monday when Matthew Gilmore, pastor of Mount Tabor Baptist Church, told deputies that a church member had told him Kendrick was having sex with the 15-year-old girl.

Kendrick was the youth pastor at Mount Tabor Baptist Church until October, the Sheriff’s Office said. About that time, Kendrick told the girl he had “strong feelings” for her.

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Former Polk youth pastor accused of sex with girl, 15

FLORIDA
Tampa Tribune

A former youth pastor in Lakeland is being held without bond after deputies say he had sex with a 15-year-old girl on multiple occasions.

Deputies say 30-year-old Phillip Kendrick II, of Lakeland, had sex with the girl for two months starting in November 2014, one month after he stopped serving as youth minister at the Mt. Tabor Baptist Church.

According to deputies, the victim met Kendrick — who still attended the church — about four years ago while attending youth group.

Over those four years, the victim told deputies the relationship became more personal, and in October, Kendrick told her that he had “strong feelings” for her.

Detectives determined Kendrick had sex with the victim on three separate occasions, and they traded inappropriate pictures of each other.

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Youth pastor accused of having sex with teen

FLORIDA
WTSP

10 News Staff and Tammie Fields, WTSP

Lakeland, Florida — A former youth minister at a Lakeland church has been arrested for allegedly having sex with a 15-year-old girl sometime between November of last year and January.

On Monday, the pastor of Mt. Tabor Baptist Church told Polk Sheriff’s detectives a church member told him that Phillip Kendrick II had sex with a young church member he’d met four years ago at the church.

“I never believed something like this would ever happen,” said Pastor Matt Gilmore. “We’re saddened, shocked and we’re providing care to both his family and to the victim and her family as well.”

Pastor Gilmore says they have 80 to 100 members at the church. He says he’s known Kendrick for 11 years and served with him at two different churches, but not now.

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Catholic Diocese apologises over historic child sex abuse allegations at Bellambi school

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

The Wollongong Catholic Education Office has apologised to victims of abuse after a priest was charged over an alleged historical event.

It’s alleged a 15 year old boy was assaulted at Holy Spirit College in Bellambi north of Wollongong in 1988.

In a statement the Director of Schools, Peter Turner says the Catholic Education Office has been fully co-operating with Police in regard to the matter.

Spokesperson Tim Gilmour says they are committed to the protection of young people and will investigate any allegations raised.

“Our director on behalf of the Bishop offers his most sincere apologies to any people who have suffered abuse by any particular person who was associated with the Diocese of Wollongong or Catholic schools in the name of the Diocese of Wollongong,” he said.

Mr Gilmour says the Catholic Education Office is committed to investigating any allegations raised against people associated with catholic schools in the region.

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Father Andy Jury At Impasse

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Big Trial

By Ralph Cipriano
for Bigtrial.net

Shortly before 3 p.m. today the jury in the Father Andy sex abuse trial sent a note to the judge saying they were at an impasse and could not reconcile their differences.

When the jury assembled in front of Judge Gwendolyn N. Bright, she asked if there was any confusion in their minds about the law that she could address.

“I do not believe so,” the jury foreman said.

The judge asked if the jury were to continue deliberating was there any chance that they could reach a unanimous verdict?

“I would not believe so,” the foreman said.

The judge instructed the jury to try again.

She told them they had only been deliberating for a total of 14 hours over three days. But she cautioned the jurors not to do anything that would “do violence to their individual judgement” or force them to surrender their “honest convictions.”

So the jury filed out of the courtroom. Within the hour, the jury sent another note to the judge that said they had reached “the end of our discussion for today,” the judge said.

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Minister Charged With Shooting Facing More Charges

BOSTON (MA)
NECN

A Boston minister who also worked at a city high school before he was charged with trying to a kill a 17-year-old student is now facing drug and gun charges.

Authorities on Monday charged the Reverend Shaun Harrison Jr. with cocaine, marijuana and gun offenses based on a search warrant executed at his home following the shooting last week. He faces a March 17 arraignment.

Authorities say the 55-year-old Harrison was leading a “double life,” as a youth minister and anti-violence activist, even as he was allegedly involved in the drug trade.

Harrison is being held on $250,000 bail. Prosecutors say he shot a 17-year-old boy he had enlisted to sell pot for him following a dispute.

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SJV Responds to Commonweal

MINNESOTA
Canonical Consultation

03/10/2015

Jennifer Haselberger

Earlier today, the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis circulated the attached response to Paul Blaschko’s article ‘Inside the Seminary‘. Although the response makes liberal use of the pluralis majestatis, the name that appears as author of the response is that of the current rector of Saint John Vianney Seminary, Father Michael Becker.

Father Becker was not the rector of Saint John Vianney during the time to which the Blaschko article refers. Moreover, Father Becker’s response does not dispute those aspects of formation that Paul wrote of. Instead, his response attempts to frame those incidents within a larger context.

Ironically, perhaps, that larger context is the formation program outlined in the Program for Priestly Formation (PPF). As I have mentioned before, the current edition of the PPF, which is in use at seminaries throughout the United States, was the ‘labor of love’ (his term, not mine) of none other than Archbishop John Nienstedt. In light of the ongoing, year-long investigation into the conduct of the Archbishop (which is at what stage now, exactly?), and especially in light of allegations uncovered during that investigation of inappropriate behavior towards seminarians under his authority (including seminarians in the Twin Cities), I think Father Becker’s response does little to refute the idea that there are very real reasons we we should be worried about priestly formation.

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Garda on trial for forging DPP letter lying ‘to the point of no return’

IRELAND
Irish Times

Lawyers for the State have told a jury that a garda on trial for allegedly forging a letter from the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) was lying to the point of no return.

Wicklow Det Garda Catherine McGowan (48), who is based at Bray Garda station, has pleaded not guilty at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court to one count of forgery on January 15th, 2009 at Bray Garda station and two counts of using a false instrument at Bray Garda station and at Harcourt Street Garda station between June 21st and 22nd, 2011.

The instrument is alleged to have been a letter from the office of the DPP, dated January 14th, 2009, directing that there be no prosecution in a clerical child abuse case.

The letter read: “Dear Sir, I (illegible) to yours. In (illegible) the statement of the complainant…could not possibly form the basis of a prosecution given that the complainant’s allegation of rape is only conjecture.”

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Paprocki defends diocese’s record on sex abuse claims

ILLINOIS
State Journal-Register

By Chris Dettro
Staff Writer

Posted Mar. 10, 2015

Bishop Thomas John Paprocki of the Springfield Catholic diocese on Tuesday defended its handling of sex abuse cases involving church personnel and said that a news conference held last week by two groups critical of the diocese caught him off guard.

Paprocki also said that the Litchfield phone number assigned to six priests withdrawn from their Chicago parishes that appeared in an Official Catholic Directory in the 1990s was apparently a clerical or computer-generated error. He said the priests were never assigned to the Springfield diocese nor were they ever licensed by the bishop for the ministry in this diocese.

He criticized the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) for its approach to what it considered a potential danger, saying he wasn’t contacted before the group’s news conference to explain the phone number.

“There was no advance notice of this press conference,” he said. “They did not ask for an explanation beforehand or at all.”

David Clohessy, director of SNAP, said the diocese wasn’t contacted beforehand because “typically and unfortunately, Bishop Paprocki previously has ignored our letters and wouldn’t respond to our requests.”

“What works is making direct, public appeals to victims,” Clohessy said.

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African Bishop Allegedly Hypnotizes, Then Rapes Woman As Part Of Exorcism Ritual

ZIMBABWE
Inquisitr

A church bishop in Zimbabwe, accused of raping a churchgoer under hypnosis, was brought to Harare’s Victim Friendly Court last week.

Danmore Magorimbo, 45, a bishop for the Abundant Life Global Ministries in Harare, reportedly approached the woman in the prayer room and offered his counsel. According to All Africa, Magorimbo told the churchgoer that her husband transmitted evil spirits to her through sex and that she must avoid coitus with him immediately.

“He told me that my husband was satanic and most times he would order me not to be intimate with him. I was to be cleansed of the evil spirits deposited by my husband in my womb but I had no idea how,” the alleged rape victim said in her testimony.

Shortly after Magorimbo denounced the woman’s “satanic” husband, the bishop, together with an accomplice, reportedly performed a ritual that allowed them to hypnotize her, making her less resistant to sexual advances. The woman said, “When Magorimbo touched my forehead during prayers I would lose control, dance or move with closed eyes but not hitting anything.”

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UPDATED | Clerical abuse victims to file Constitutional case

MALTA
Malta Today

Matthew Agius 10 March 2015

One of the clerical sex abuse victims who, yesterday had a request to have their case heard by another judge, only to have that request denied by the same judge whom they were accusing of having a conflict of interest, will be filing a Constitutional case.

This morning, judge Joseph R. Micallef ruled their request would result in an abuse of the judicial process under the guise of protecting the right to a fair hearing, pointing out that the test of impartiality, even as interpreted by the European Court of Human Rights, requires an objective basis of verifiability.

In an exclusive account given to MaltaToday, a visibly distressed Lawrence Grech said he is certain that judge Joseph R. Micallef “had been against us since day one,” describing what he claimed to be an air of secrecy and intrigue surrounding the case.

“The Church had insisted that hearings be conducted behind closed doors as it would negatively affect children in Church care homes” said Grech. The ten plaintiffs had suggested that if public scandal was the issue, they could testify behind closed doors, but the Bishop and directors of St. Agatha testify in open court. The judge, he said, also refused this request.

“He was only interested in closing the case as quickly as possible and would often pass remarks to this effect, during sittings,” said Grech of the judge. This allegation could not be independently verified as the media and public had been barred from attending sittings, however.

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Clerical abuse case – Judge decides to continue to hear case

MALTA
Times of Malta

The judge presiding over the case filed by clerical sex abuse victims, who are claiming financial compensation from the Church, turned down the victims’ request to abstain from hearing the case because he is the president of the local Radio Maria Association.

Mr Justice Joseph R Micallef ruled there was no valid reason at law why he should step down from hearing the case.

Mr Justice Micallef, who is presiding over the victims’ case for financial compensation against the Church and two priests defrocked from the Missionary Society of St Paul, is the president of the local Radio Maria Association.

The association, which forms part of an international family spreading the five continents, promotes the “promulgation of the evangelical message of joy and hope… according to the teaching of the magisterium of the Catholic Church, with a clear and rich Marian spirituality”.

The case for compensation started in October 2013 after former priests Godwin Scerri, 77, and Charles Pulis, 68, were found guilty and sentenced to five and six years’ imprisonment respectively for abusing 11 boys in their care at St Joseph Home in Santa Venera in the 1980s and 1990s.

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Former Illawarra priest charged with indecent assault

AUSTRALIA
Illawarra Mercury

By BREE FULLER March 10, 2015

A former Holy Spirit College priest has been arrested after claims of abuse in the 1980s.

Father Patrick Kervin, 58, was arrested in Sydney on Monday afternoon and charged with one count of indecent assault.

Police allege the Catholic priest assaulted a 15-year-old boy while he was a chaplain at the Bellambi school in mid-1988.

Catholic Diocese of Wollongong director of schools Peter Turner said on Tuesday he was ‘‘deeply saddened’’ to hear of an alleged historical assault in one of the region’s Catholic schools.

‘‘The Catholic Education Office has been co-operating fully with the police and will continue to assist as needed to help bring this matter to a just resolution,’’ Mr Turner said.

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Federal court: Trust fund not off limits in Milwaukee archdiocese bankruptcy case

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Superior Telegram

Chuck Quirmbach, Wisconsin Public Radio

A federal appeals court ruled on Monday that a $58 million Catholic cemetery trust fund may have to go into a pool of money available to clergy abuse victims in Milwaukee.

The Chicago-based U.S. 7th Circuit Court of Appeals said that Milwaukee-based federal judge Rudolph Randa was wrong to keep the cemetery trust fund out of the four-year Milwaukee archdiocese bankruptcy case.

Peter Isely of the Survivor’s Network of Those Abused by Priests said the appellate ruling is like hitting the reset button for the bankruptcy case.

“We’re hoping that this decision, and what’s going to come from it, is going to reverse the direction that we’ve seen so far, which has been very, very against survivors,” said Isely.

He said he also hopes the ruling will help shed more light on why New York Cardinal Timothy Dolan and the Vatican set up the trust fund when Dolan was Milwaukee’s archbishop.

A lawyer representing the cemetery trust says the appellate decision casts a shadow over religious freedom.

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What the Michelangelo ransom demand reveals about Vatican culture

VATICAN CITY
Crux

John L. Allen Jr.
Associate editor
@JohnLAllenJ

March 10, 2015

Every now and then a story comes along that perfectly captures a couple of aspects of the Vatican’s internal culture, points that often aren’t well understood, but that are essential to grasping what makes the place tick.

This week’s revelation that a former employee apparently is trying to ransom back a couple of stolen letters by Michelangelo is a classic example.

In a nutshell, a Roman newspaper reported over the weekend that a letter personally penned by Michelangelo had gone missing almost two decades ago, although that loss was never disclosed. Recently, someone approached a senior Vatican official to offer to return the stolen property for a payment of 100,000 Euro, or a little more than $100,000.

On Sunday, a Vatican official confirmed the story, adding that two letters were actually stolen, not just one, while insisting the Vatican has no intention of paying any ransom because taking the documents was a crime.

In brief, here are two elements of Vatican culture the story illustrates:

* Never air your dirty laundry in public.
* On the inside, the system traditionally has put much more emphasis on trust than vigilance.

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Church Protesters Get Court to Topple MO Law

MISSOURI
Courthouse News Service

By JOE HARRIS

ST. LOUIS (CN) – Siding with protesters of the Catholic church, the 8th Circuit on Monday struck down Missouri’s restrictions on demonstrations near places of worship.

Missouri’s House of Worship Protection Act prohibits intentionally disturbing a “house of worship by using profane discourse, rude or indecent behavior … either within the house of worship or so near it as to disturb the order and solemnity of the worship services.”

The law came under fire in 2012 from several protesters, including Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests (SNAP), a group that often gathers outside of a Catholic friary in St. Louis that is home to a priest accused of child molestation.

SNAP and Call to Action, a group that wants the church to ordain women and accept gay parishioners, among other things, challenged Missouri’s law under the First Amendment.

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U.S. Court rightly nixes Missouri ban on ‘profane, rude, indecent’ speech outside houses of worship

MISSOURI
Religion News Service

Brian Pellot | Mar 10, 2015

If America banned rudeness, most of New York would be behind bars.

The Midwest’s friendlier reputation doesn’t somehow give Missouri the right to ban rude or profane behavior outside houses of worship, a federal court rightly ruled on Monday.

The Washington Post’s Eugene Volokh breaks down the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit’s decision in Snap v. Joyce concerning Missouri’s somewhat sloppy House of Worship Protection Act, enacted in 2012.

The law criminalizes “intentionally and unreasonably” disturbing or disquieting houses of worship “by using profane discourse, rude or indecent behavior.” Nowhere in the Act are these vague and subjective adjectives defined.

Who determines what is profane, rude or indecent? The protester outside the church, mosque, temple or synagogue? The easily offended worshippers within? In any case, these restrictions are clearly based on the content of the expression, which raises a host of red flags when we’re talking about the First Amendment.

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Protesters Can Use “Profane Speech”…

MISSOURI
Riverfront Times

Protesters Can Use “Profane Speech” Near Worship Services, Says U.S. Court of Appeals

By Danny Wicentowski Tue., Mar. 10 2015

It takes a hell of a good reason to limit the First Amendment.

Flexible and elegant, its provisions uphold the rights of people praying to their preferred God in their preferred house of worship, while at the same time ensuring that a pack of blasphemers can picket on the sidewalk outside.

These broad powers of free speech work well most of the time, which is why regulating the First Amendment, as former Missouri GOP Representative Rob Meyer tried to do in 2012, can turn out to be very tricky business. Signed into the law at the time by Governor Jay Nixon, Meyer’s House of Worship Protection Act criminalized “using profane discourse, rude or indecent behavior…as to disturb the order and solemnity of the worship services.”

On Monday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit ruled that the law is too vague, too broad and too subjective — basically, it conflicts with the First Amendment. The decision follows legal challenges from ACLU of Missouri and SNAP, the St. Louis-based Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, a group that regularly protests outside churches.

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Attorney: Elgin cleric likely to plead not guilty to sex charges

ILLINOIS
Daily Herald

The new attorney for an Elgin cleric charged with aggravated battery and sexual abuse said he “anticipates a plea of not guilty to all the charges,” when his client is arraigned, possibly next month.

Prosecutors did not announce an indictment against Mohammad Abdullah Saleem, 75, during his appearance Tuesday in a Rolling Meadows courtroom. That will likely occur during Saleem’s next appearance March 19, providing a Cook County grand jury approves the indictment against Saleem, the founder and former head of the Institute of Islamic Education, an Elgin Islamic school for students in sixth through twelfth grades.

Saleem, a native of India and a naturalized U.S. citizen, was charged last month with sexually abusing a 22-year-old office employee at the school from October 2013 through April 14, 2014.

Saleem’s accuser claimed he repeatedly hugged her, touched and massaged her against her will in her office at the Elgin school.

The Muslim community continues to support the school and Saleem, said defense attorney Raymond Wigell. To that end, Saleem remains a leader at the mosque, Wigell said.

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Indictment Pursued Against Islamic School Head

ILLINOIS
NBC Chicago

An assistant Cook County State’s Attorney said he expects a grand jury to return an indictment against the head of a suburban Chicago Islamic school who is charged with sexual assault.

David Shin told the Chicago Tribune he will present evidence to a grand jury later this week in the case of 75-year-old Mohammad Abdullah Saleem of Gilberts.

Saleem appeared in a Rolling Meadows courtroom on Tuesday on charges of sex abuse and battery of a female school employee. Those charges were filed last month.

Saleem’s new attorney, Raymond Wigell, said his client was “doing fine.”

“We anticipate a plea of not guilty to all charges, all counts involved,” Wigell said.

The prominent Islamic scholar head of the popular Institute of Islamic Education in Elgin posted a $25,000 bond last month and was released. Wigell said he’s maintained a presence in the community.

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VOTF conference set for March 14

CONNECTICUT
CT pOST

Posted on March 10, 2015 | By Michael P. Mayko

FAIRFIELD-Voice of the Faithful will conduct their 13th annual conference March 14 and feature The director of Fairfield University’s Catholic studiespro gram

Paul Lakeland will speak on “A Place of Mercy Freely Given: the Church in the Vision of Pope Francis.

The event will run from 8:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. In the Dolan School of Business.

Voice of the Faithful was formed in 2002 to address the crisis of pedophile priests in the Catholic Church. They offer support to the victims of pedophile priests and priests if integrity. The group also works to shape structural changes in the church.

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High-profile Calgary Muslim cleric’s lawyer says …

CANADA
Calgary Sun

High-profile Calgary Muslim cleric’s lawyer says his client disputes sexual assault charges out of the U.S.

BY BILL KAUFMANN, CALGARY SUN

Charged with sexual assault in the U.S., a high-profile Calgary Muslim cleric is ready to face the accusations but has been stymied, his lawyer said Monday.

Abdi Hersy, 46, is accused of fondling two female patients when he worked as a respiratory therapist in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area in 2006.

He was stripped of his licence to practise in Minnesota and came to Calgary, where he’s operated the Abu Bakr Mussallah and been most visible as a spokesman for the Somali community.

But Hersy’s attempts to address the charges were foiled when he voluntarily returned to Minnesota in 2010 and was sent by U.S. authorities back to Canada, said his Calgary lawyer Raj Sharma.

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Imam Wanted for Molesting Women Loves Sharia, Hitler, Hates Jews

CANADA/UNITED STATES
Frontpage Mag

March 10, 2015 by Daniel Greenfield

Imam Hersy is not a very nice man.

The 46-year-old Somali national, who runs the Abu Bakr Mussallah place of worship in southeast Calgary, was charged with criminal sexual conduct after he spent time working at a hospital in the Twin Cities suburb of Woodbury, Minn.

Two female patients allege Hersy fondled them while they were recovering from medical procedures.

The second woman who came forward said Hersy fondled her under her gown, telling her it was part of a medical procedure, and said he “wanted to have sex with her,” according to documents obtained from the Minnesota Board of Medical Practice.

That is indeed part of medical practice… in Hersy’s native Somalia where they also use hyenas to treat mental patients. But due to the Islamophobia of the authorities… the Imam went to Canada where he fights “radicalization” and promotes Hitler.

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Abdi Hersy, Calgary imam, wanted in U.S. on sex assault charges

CANADA
CBC News

By Allison Dempster, CBC News

A prominent voice in Calgary’s Somali community is wanted in the United States on sexual assault charges, CBC News has learned..

Imam Abdi Hersy denies the allegations that he sexually assaulted two women while working as a respiratory therapist in the United States in 2006, but says he has not been able to clear his name because of immigration issues.

“In Canada, and in U.S.A., I am to be treated as being innocent until proven guilty,” Hersy said in a statement.

“Since being in Canada, he has become a pillar of his community, working with the [Calgary Police Service] and [Chief] Rick Hanson, to deal with criminalization and radicalization within his community,” said lawyer Raj Sharma, who represents Hersy.

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The Rosary Outside Courtroom 1102

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Big Trial

By Ralph Cipriano
for Bigtrial.net

In the hallway outside Courtroom 1102 at the Criminal Justice Center, a couple of nuns in full habit and some devout Catholics were praying the rosary with “Father Andy.”

While a jury deliberates the priest’s fate, Father Andrew McCormick and his loyal supporters maintained a prayer vigil, sending up plenty of Hail Marys.

Early today, it looked like Father Andy would need a miracle to stay out jail.

The jury came back with a question for the judge that sent panic through Father Andy’s supporters. The jury asked Judge Gwendolyn N. Bright if the testimony of the alleged victim alone would be sufficient to convict Father Andy of sex abuse charges. The judge responded that if the jury believed the alleged victim’s testimony beyond a reasonable doubt it would be sufficient to convict the defendant.

Defense lawyer Trevan Borum looked shaken as he left the courthouse but hovered at a hotel across the street in case the jury had any more bombshells to drop.

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Der Unberechenbare

VATIKAN
Frankfurter Allgemeine

[Pope Francis from the beginning had the sympathy on his side. Then followed a gaffe after another.]

Papst Franziskus hatte von Anfang an die Sympathien auf seiner Seite. Dann folgte ein Ausrutscher nach dem anderen. Allmählich ahnen auch seine größten Fans, dass daran nicht zuletzt einer schuld ist. Er selbst.

10.03.2015, von MARKUS GÜNTHER

Die letzten Wochen im Vatikan sind vergleichsweise gut gelaufen: Ein Dementi und eine kleine Richtigstellung, eine scharf formulierte Protestnote des mexikanischen Außenministers und eine prompte Entschuldigung vom Heiligen Stuhl, schließlich ein versöhnlicher Brief des Kardinalstaatssekretärs und herzliche Grüße des Heiligen Vaters an das mexikanische Volk – aber sonst ist der Papst ganz gut durchgekommen. Das liegt auch daran, dass er zwischenzeitlich in Klausur war, in den jährlichen Exerzitien, zu denen sich der Papst traditionell zu Beginn der Fastenzeit gemeinsam mit den führenden Mitarbeitern der Kurie zurückzieht. Deshalb gab es zuletzt nur wenige öffentliche Äußerungen des Papstes

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Calgary imam Abdi Hersy wanted in Minnesota on sexual assault charges

CANADA
Global News

By Melissa Ramsay
Online Reporter

CALGARY – A Calgary imam wanted in the United States on outstanding criminal charges is denying the allegations.

A warrant has been issued for the arrest of Imam Abdi Hersy in connection to two alleged sexual assaults.

A search of his case records through the Minnesota Judicial Branch confirms six charges were laid against Hersy in 2006, including two charges of 4th degree criminal sexual conduct, two charges of criminal abuse and two charges of 5th degree criminal sexual conduct.

Abdi tells Global News he surrendered himself to the sheriff’s office in Minnesota but was deported back to Canada before being able to answer to the charges.

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Abdi Hersy, Calgary Imam, Denies U.S. Sex Assault Allegations

CANADA
Huffington Post

By Rhianna Schmunk

Posted: 03/09/2015

A Calgary imam, who was granted refugee status in Canada, is denying allegations of sex assault in the United States.

Abdi Hersy, 46, is a high-profile imam who runs the Abu Bakr Mussallah place of worship in Calgary, and is often quoted as a representative of the Somali community in Calgary.

In 2006, Hersy was charged after allegations that came from his time working as a respiratory therapist in Woodbury, Minn., according to Global News.

Two women allege that Hersy groped them under their hospital gowns, saying it was part of the standard medical exam. One of the victims claimed that Hersy said he wanted to have sex with her, reported the Twin Cities News.

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Imam sex abuse charges prompt calls for greater transparency

ILLINOIS
WBEZ

[with audio]

March 10, 2015
By: Odette Yousef

As the criminal trial gets underway for a prominent Islamic scholar charged with sexual assault, some Chicago-area Muslims are calling for an investigation into what community leaders may have known about prior allegations of misconduct.

Mohammed Abdullah Saleem, 75, has been criminally charged with assaulting a female employee at the Institute for Islamic Education, a religious school he founded in west suburban Elgin, Ill. Additionally, Saleem has also been accused in a civil lawsuit of assaulting three other females who were students at the school.

“A lot of people depended upon his advice,” Dr. Mohammed Kaiseruddin said of Saleem. Kaiseruddin is chairman of the Council of Islamic Organizations of Greater Chicago, the largest coalition of Muslim institutions in Illinois. “So right now we are dealing with a dilemma that this person who is teaching the Quran to everybody was violating (the) Quran himself.”

When the allegations first surfaced in early December, a number of people both inside and outside the leadership ranks, called on the Council to act. After much back and forth between members of its House of Representatives, a body made up of leaders of its member organizations and former Council chairmen, it issued a statement.

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IL–Victims predict Springfield bishop’s criticism

ILLINOIS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, March 10

Statement by David Clohessy of SNAP ( 314 566 9790, SNAPclohessy@aol.com )

In his news conference today, we suspect that Springfield Bishop Thomas Paprocki will criticize our group for raising concerns about what he’ll call “old” cases.

If he does, we hope citizens and Catholics will ask him about these more recent cases:

–Why, just last week, did Paprocki try to evade responsibility for out-of-state predator priests who spent time in the Springfield diocese, and claim that other Catholic officials should be more forthcoming about these predators, not him?

[State Journal-Register]

–Why, 1.5 years ago, did Paprocki let a priest who’s accused of child sex crimes temporarily resign, instead of suspending him? (That’s what the US bishops pledged to do when credible child sex abuse reports surfaced. That’s what the US bishops’ official sex abuse policy mandates.)

–Why, 1.5 years ago, did Paprocki keep the allegations against that priest, Fr. Robert “Bud” DeGrand, secret for weeks, giving Fr. DeGrand plenty of time to destroy evidence, intimidate victims, threaten witnesses, discredit whistleblowers, fabricate alibis and even flee the country?

[State Journal-Register]

(Remember: Every day a child sex abuse report is kept hidden, a child sex abuser is free to keep abusing. Every day of secrecy and delay makes it harder for police and prosecutors to pursue child predators.)

–Why, 1.5 years ago, did Paprocki refuse to even respond to our pleas that he personally go to parishes in Jacksonville, Winchester, Bluffs, Granite City, and other places where Fr. DeGrand worked?

–Why in 2013 did Paprocki remove two thing from his diocesan website: a report on clergy sexual misconduct (and financial misdeeds) in the diocese by ex-U.S. attorney J. William Roberts and any hint that Bishop Daniel Ryan “engaged in illicit sex or otherwise did anything improper” which Roberts’ report had found?

[State Journal-Register]

–Why, that same year, did Paprocki not address allegations that the diocesan panel “that once screened candidates for the seminary is no longer active, according to one panel member.”

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.

Imam accused of sex abuse of employee has court date, faces indictment

ILLINOIS
Chicago Tribune

By George Houde
Chicago Tribune

Grand jury indictments will be sought against the founder of an Islamic school in Elgin after he was arrested in February on charges he sexually abused a female employee, Cook County authorities said.

In a separate proceeding, Mohammed Abdullah Saleem, 75, is scheduled to appear in court in Rolling Meadows on Tuesday morning on the sex abuse and battery charges.

Assistant State’s Attorney David Shin said he will present evidence to the grand jury later this week.

Saleem, of Gilberts, was arrested after a 23-year-old woman told police he sexually abused her while she was working at the Institute of Islamic Education in April.

Shin said Saleem posted bond shortly after his arrest and was released from custody while he awaits trial. He was ordered not to have contacted with the alleged victim or anyone under age 18 and had to surrender his passport. Saleem’s attorney has denied the allegations.

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.