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.

May 15, 2015

Archbishop Naumann revises assignments made by Finn days before resignation

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

Brian Roewe | May. 15, 2015

KANSAS CITY, MO. Reversing course on an earlier decision to uphold 23 pastoral assignments made by Bishop Robert Finn days before his resignation, Kansas City, Kan., Archbishop Joseph Naumann has revised 14 of those assignments for the Kansas City-St. Joseph, Mo., diocese.

News of his decision came Friday morning in an email from Kansas City-St. Joseph spokesman Jack Smith to the diocese’s priests.

“After prayerful deliberation and consultation with his advisors, Archbishop Naumann has decided to modify some of the assignments previously made,” he wrote.

During an April 23 meeting with Naumann, current administrator of the diocese, two days after Finn resigned as head of the Kansas City-St. Joseph diocese, priests asked the archbishop to reconsider the appointments. Naumann replied that he had prayed over the decisions and chose to let them stand.

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.

Voyeurism Sends Rabbi Away for 6-Plus Years

WASHINGTON (DC)
Courthouse News Service

By DAN MCCUE

WASHINGTON, D.C. (CN) – A once-prominent Georgetown rabbi who admitted to secretly videotaping dozens of women in a Jewish ritual bath was sentenced to 6 1/2 years in prison on Friday.

Rabbi Bernard “Barry” Freundel acknowledged as part of a plea agreement in February that he secretly recorded more than 150 women over several years.

Prosecutors were barred by the statute of limitations to charge him in connection with every recording, but he ultimately pleaded guilty to 52 counts of voyeurism.

Friday’s three-hour sentencing hearing Friday involved more than a dozen women telling the D.C. Superior Court of how they’ve suffered since learning of the rabbi’s betrayal.

Judge Geoffrey Alprin called Freundel ‘s actions “a classic abuse of power and violation of trust.”

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.

‘Peeping rabbi’ Barry Freundel sentenced to 6.5 years in prison

WASHINGTON (DC)
Haaretz

The disgraced cleric was sentenced to 45 days for each of 52 counts of voyeurism. The courtroom cheered the decision and Freundel was taken into custody immediately.

By The Forward | May 15, 2015

Rabbi Barry Freundel was sentenced to 6-1/2 years for secretly videotaping dozens of women naked in the mikveh of his high-profile Washington D.C. synagogue.

The disgraced cleric was sentenced to 45 days for each of 52 counts of voyeurism. The courtroom cheered the decision and Freundel was taken into custody immediately

D.C. Judge Geoffrey M. Alprin called Freundel’s sex spree at the Kesher Israel ritual bath a “classic case of abuse of power and violation of trust.”

Dozens of women wore orange to the hearing to back a prison sentence for the rabbi, whom they say violated their trust and trampled on common decency.

Freundel pleaded for his freedom, claiming that he was a changed man and hoped to make amends.

“I am horrified and disgusted by how I acted,” he told the court.

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.

Mikvah-peeping rabbi sentenced to 6.5 years

WASHINGTON (DC)
JTA

WASHINGTON (JTA) — Rabbi Barry Freundel was sentenced to six and a half years in prison for videotaping dozens of nude women at a ritual bath.

“You repeatedly and secretly violated the trust your victims had in you, and you abused your power,” Senior Judge Geoffrey Alprin of D.C. Superior Court said at the sentencing, the Washington Post reported. Alprin also fined Freundel more than $2,000.

Prosecutors had sought 17 years after Freundel, the former spiritual leader of a prominent Washington Orthodox synagogue, pleaded guilty in February to 52 counts of misdemeanor voyeurism. Freundel’s lawyers sought community service. Each count carried a maximum penalty of one year in prison and fines of $1,000 to $2,500.

Freundel was given 45 days for each of the 52 counts. He will serve the sentences successively, amounting to nearly six and a half years.

The rabbi, now 64, was arrested last October and charged with six counts of voyeurism after investigators found hidden cameras in the National Capital Mikvah’s shower room and in his home. He was fired from Kesher Israel, the congregation he had led for 25 years and which abuts the ritual bath, or mikvah, soon after his arrest.

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.

Rabbi who videotaped women undressing at Jewish ritual bath sentenced to 6 ½ years

WASHINGTON (DC)
WJLA

By The Associated Press, Joce Sterman
May 15, 2015

WASHINGTON (AP) – A once-prominent Orthodox rabbi who secretly videotaped scores of women undressing and using a changing room at a Jewish ritual bath in Washington has been sentenced to approximately six-and-a-half years in prison.

Bernard Freundel was sentenced Friday during a hearing in D.C. Superior Court. Prosecutors had asked that a judge sentence Freundel to approximately 17 years in prison. His attorney argued community service was an appropriate sentence.

Freundel acknowledged as part of a plea agreement in February that he secretly recorded more than 150 women over several years by setting up hidden recording devices in a changing and showering area of The National Capital Mikvah, a ritual cleansing bath he worked to have built. Prosecutors said his recordings captured women undressing, using the toilet and entering and exiting a 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.

Washington ‘peeping Tom’ rabbi sentenced to six-and-a-half years in prison

WASHINGTON (DC)
GlobalPost

By John Clarke

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – A prominent Washington rabbi who pleaded guilty to secretly videotaping dozens of women naked during ritual baths was sentenced to 6 1/2 years in prison on Friday.

Rabbi Barry Freundel, 63, pleaded guilty in February to 52 misdemeanor counts of voyeurism. He admitted recording the women between March 2012 and September 2014 using devices installed in changing rooms.

District of Columbia Superior Court Judge Geoffrey Alprin handed down the sentence before a packed courtroom.

Prosecutors had sought a 17-year prison term, and Freundel’s attorney Jeffrey Harris had asked for a community service sentence.

Freundel was the head of the Kesher Israel synagogue, one of the U.S. capital region’s most prominent Orthodox congregations, for 25 years. He also held various academic positions, including as a lecturer at Washington’s Georgetown University.

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.

‘Peeping Tom’ rabbi sentenced to more than 6 years

WASHINGTON (DC)
Religion News Service

Lauren Markoe | May 15, 2015

WASHINGTON (RNS) A D.C. Superior Court judge on Friday (May 15) sentenced a prominent Orthodox rabbi to nearly 6 1/2 years in prison for secretly videotaping dozens of naked women in a mikvah, or Jewish ritual bath.

Rabbi Barry Freundel pleaded guilty in February to 52 counts of voyeurism, one for each of the 52 women who prosecutors said were the victims of Freundel’s spying with a hidden camera during the three years for which the statute of limitations applies.

“The defendant repeatedly and seriously violated the trust and abused his power,” Judge Geoffrey Alprin said Friday, according to news reports. “The conduct is despicable. There is no justification. The defendant lured victims to the mikvah and secretly recorded them undressed without their knowledge or permission.”

Freundel’s attorney had asked for a sentence of community service, saying that the rabbi’s career and reputation had been destroyed and that he was in intensive therapy to combat his voyeurism. Prosecutors, meanwhile, had asked for 17 years behind bars.

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 youth pastor sentenced to 15 years for abuse

ALABAMA
Baptist News

By Bob Allen

A former Southern Baptist youth pastor sentenced to 15 years in prison for sexual abuse of minors criticized his victims for not forgiving him.

“If they are unwilling to forgive, then God can’t forgive them,” Mack Allen Davis, 74, former youth minister at Lakeside Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala., said in court May 15, according to the Birmingham News. “That’s in the Bible.”

Davis, charged with 15 counts of child sexual abuse in three Alabama counties, pleaded guilty in December to six counts in Jefferson County Court in Birmingham. He was arrested after two adults came forward claiming Davis molested them 30 years ago.

The two men claimed the abuse occurred multiple times over a decade from the late 1970s through the late 1980s. They said they were abused in multiple locations, including Davis’ church office, Shocco Springs Baptist Camp in Talladega, Ala., and Ridgecrest Baptist Conference Center in North Carolina.

Davis was hired in 1977 by Lakeside Baptist Church as minister of youth and recreation and the following summer named director of the church’s summer camp. He retired in 1999 at age 59.

One of the alleged victims claimed the pastor at the time knew about the abuse but kept it quiet to protect the church’s reputation. The pastor, Mike McLemore, who went on to become executive director of the Birmingham Baptist Association, denied wrongdoing, and an investigation by the association’s executive committee found no “information to support the charge that Dr. McLemore knowingly protected a pedophile during his tenure as pastor of Lakeside Baptist Church.”

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 Lakeside Baptist youth minister gets 15 years for sex abuse, blames victims

ALABAMA
AL.com

By Greg Garrison | ggarrison@al.com
on May 15, 2015

Mack Allen Davis, 74, a former youth minister at Lakeside Baptist Church in Birmingham, was sentenced in Jefferson County Court today to 15 years in prison for sexual abuse of minors.

Davis spoke in court and blamed his victims for not forgiving him.

“If they are unwilling to forgive, then God can’t forgive them,” Davis said. “That’s in the Bible.”

Davis pleaded guilty to six charges of sexually abusing minors in Jefferson County on Dec. 1.

The Jefferson County indictment charged Davis with three counts of second degree sex abuse of a minor between the ages of 12 and 16, one count of first degree sodomy, and two counts of first-degree sexual abuse.

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.

Key Reporters Bust Pope’s Balloon: Can Francis Still Fly In The USA?

UNITED STATES
Christian Catholicism

Jerry Slevin

* Former longtime NY Times religion reporter, Peter Steinfels, and Italy’s L’Espresso’s Sandro Magister, key journalists with decades of experience on Vatican reporting and analysis, appear to have broken free from the “herd mentality” of so many opportunistic journalist cheerleaders on Pope Francis matters. They are piercing through the Vatican’s smokescreens and raising for me serious questions about the growing gap between Pope Francis’ deeds and his words and spin. This spin is too readily accepted by a media looking for an easy story that gullible audiences looking for scarce heroes seem to love to hear.

* Magister recently observed [my italics], “The Francis of the Media and the Real Francis — Farther and farther apart from each other. The public narrative continues to depict the pope as a revolutionary. But the facts prove the contrary . When it comes to Pope Francis, there are now two of these who are ever more distant from each other: the Francis of the media and the real one.

* Magister adds, “The first [of the media] is exceedingly well-known and has been making the news since his first appearance on the loggia of the basilica of Saint Peter’s… . The Francis of the media is also to some extent a creation of his own, and brilliantly so, in the span of one morning miraculously overturning the image of the Catholic Church from opulent and decadent to “poor and for the poor.”

* Magister continues, ” … But as soon as one grapples with what the pontificate of Francis has brought that is truly new, the music changes. … . But when, at the synod last October, he saw that among the bishops the resistance to this reform was much stronger and more widespread than foreseen, he corrected his aim and from then on has not said a single word in support of the innovators. On the contrary, he has gone back to hammering on the controversial themes of abortion, divorce, homosexuality, contraception, without swerving a millimeter from the strict teaching of his predecessors Paul VI, John Paul II, and Benedict XVI. … . In spite of everything, the media continue to sell the story of the “revolutionary” pope, but the true Francis is farther and farther away from this. …”

* Please see Magister’s compelling examples showing this gap between the pope’s media spin and his deeds, here, The Francis of the Media and the Real Francis – Chiesa, and here, The Closed Door of Pope Francis.

* Peter Steinfels has pointedly focused here, Contraception & Honesty , on the important gap raised by the papal Family Synod’s failure to address seriously the papal ban on contraception. In an accompanying video here, Peter Steinfels explains what prompted him to write “Contraception & Honesty” and talks more about the issues he raises in it.

* Steinfels observes [my italics], “For not a few [of the Synod’s] bishops, self-censorship has become second nature, especially when speaking publicly with other bishops, and infinitely so when in the earshot of the pope. … . But could ingrained inhibition have accounted for the glaring gap in the synod’s work? I refer to the apparent lack of attention to the question of contraception. Why did the synod appear to treat so perfunctorily the issue that was, and is, the starting point for the unraveling of Catholic confidence in the church’s sexual ethics and even its credibility about marriage? To which, of course, one could add further questions about this baffling silence: Does it even matter? And if it does matter, are there grounds for hoping that the bishops who will be gathering in Rome next fall to complete the synod’s work can do better?”

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.

Rabbi who taped women sentenced to 6.5 years in prison

WASHINGTON (DC)
Fox DC

WASHINGTON –
A once-prominent Orthodox rabbi who pleaded guilty to secretly videotaping scores of women in a changing room of a Jewish ritual bath was sentenced to six and a half years in prison.

More than a dozen women taped by Rabbi Bernard Freundel testified before the judge announced his sentence Friday afternoon.

Freundel acknowledged as part of a plea agreement in February that he secretly recorded more than 150 women over several years. A statute of limitations would have barred prosecutors from charging Freundel for every recording, and he pleaded guilty to 52 counts of voyeurism. Each count is punishable by up to a year in jail.

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 Georgetown Rabbi Sentenced to 6.5 Years on Voyeurism Charges: Report

WASHINGTON (DC)
Patch

By MARY ANN BARTON (Patch Staff)
May 15, 2015

By Elizabeth Janney

Former Georgetown Rabbi Barry Freundel was sentenced Friday to 6.5 years in jail for recording dozens of women in a ritual Georgetown bath as they were undressing, according to a report by The Washington Post.

He was sentenced to 45 days in jail for each of the 52 counts of voyeurism, according to WJLA.

Prosecutors had originally proposed approximately four months for each victim of the videotaping, which occurred between 2009 and 2014, The Washington Post reported.

When the sentence was announced, those attending the hearing applauded, according to WTOP. Freundel was immediately taken into custody.

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.

Rabbi Barry Freundel Sentenced to Nearly Six and a Half Years in Voyeurism Case

WASHINGTON (DC)
NBC Washington

A once-prominent Orthodox rabbi who admitted to secretly videotaping scores of women in a changing room at a Jewish ritual bath was sentenced to nearly six and a half years in prison Friday.

Rabbi Bernard “Barry” Freundel was sentenced in D.C. court Friday, after a long line of victims spoke against him, calling him a “pervert” and a “predator” in impact statements given to prosecutors before the sentencing.

Freundel was sentenced to 45 days on each of 52 counts of voyeurism.

“He used his power over us at our most vulnerable,” one said.

“His manipulation was pre-meditated and calculating,” said another.

“The defendant repeatedly and seriously violated the trust and abused his power,” Judge Geoffrey Alprin said. “The conduct is despicable. There is no justification. The defendant lured victims to the mikvah and secretly recorded them undressed without their knowledge or permission.”

The women were recorded while taking ritual baths associated with rites of family purity and conversion at the National Capital Mikvah, a ritual bathhouse affiliated with Freundel’s former synagogue in Georgetown.

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.

Rabbi who taped women sentenced to prison

WASHINGTON (DC)
WBAL

WASHINGTON —A once-prominent Orthodox rabbi who pleaded guilty to secretly videotaping scores of women in a changing room of a Jewish ritual bath was sentenced Friday to nearly 6 1/2 years in prison.

More than a dozen women taped by Rabbi Barry Freundel spoke before the judge announced his sentence.

Freundel acknowledged as part of a plea agreement in February that he secretly recorded more than 150 women over several years. A statute of limitations would have barred prosecutors from charging Freundel for every recording, and he pleaded guilty to 52 counts of voyeurism. Each count is punishable by up to a year in jail.

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.

Rabbi Sentenced To 78 Months For Secretly Videotaping Women

WASHINGTON (DC)
CBS Baltimore

WASHINGTON (WJZ) — A once-prominent Orthodox rabbi who pleaded guilty to secretly videotaping scores of women in a changing room of a Jewish ritual bath was sentenced to 78 months behind bars on Friday.

Between early 2009 to October 2014, Rabbi Bernard Freundel used hidden cameras including one hidden in a clock radio, to record women in a shower area. Video clips show him setting up the cameras.

Prosecutors say he recorded more than 150 women labeling video clips with their names and initials.
On Friday, the judge ordered 45 days behind bars for each of the 52 counts against him.

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

Georgetown rabbi gets 6 1/2 years for voyeurism

WASHINGTON (DC)
WUSA

WASHINGTON (WUSA9) — A rabbi who admitted to secretly videotaping dozens of women in a Jewish ritual bath was sentenced to six and a half years Friday.

Rabbi Bernard “Barry” Freundel pleaded guilty to 52 voyeurism charges in February.

Prosecutors want Freundel to be sent to prison for at least 17 years. Freundel’s lawyer has asked that his client only do community service, not go to prison.

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.

School athletics coach convicted of child sex offence

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

TESSA AKERMAN THE AUSTRALIAN MAY 16, 2015

An athletics coach to national champions, with extensive links to one of the country’s elite Catholic schools, has been convicted of a child sex offence.

Peter Kehoe, 60, of Eaglemont in Victoria, was convicted last month of grooming a child under the age of 16. Kehoe has been placed on the register for sex ­offenders.

Kehoe volunteered for 38 years as athletics coach at St Kevin’s College in Toorak in Melbourne, coaching the school’s cross-country team and distance aspects of its track and field team.

He claims to be a member of St Kevin’s College Athletics Hall of Fame.

The offending occurred last year and Kehoe’s online profile claims he stopped formally coaching St Kevin’s schoolchildren in March 2013.

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

Police search St. John’s Abbey for Hoefgen files

MINNESOTA
St. Cloud Times

David Unze, dunze@stcloudtimes.com May 15, 2015

An investigator from the Hastings Police Department served a search warrant last week at St. John’s Abbey as part of the prosecution of former abbey monk Fran Hoefgen.

The investigator was seeking personnel records the abbey had on Hoefgen, who is accused of abusing a former altar boy between 1989 and 1992 when Hoefgen was a priest at a Hastings church.

Hoefgen, 64, is scheduled to stand trial Monday on the charges in Dakota County.

The investigator requested the same files from the attorney representing Hoefgen, but received copies that had certain documents removed because they were “personal, private or privileged,” according to the search warrant filed in Stearns County District Court.

Investigator Christopher Nelson then sought the warrant to get from the abbey the “complete, original, un-redacted personnel, personal, historical, incident” and any other files related to Hoefgen for “evidence related to the alleged incidents of sexual assault,” according to the warrant.

The warrant’s inventory receipt, which shows what investigators collected during the search, shows that Nelson left with seven file folders. Five of the folders had Hoefgen’s name on them and were listed as being personnel records and canonical and personal files.

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 seminary ‘abuse’ – the key questions

UNITED KINGDOM
Channel 4

Allegations of sexual abuse at a Catholic seminary school in Yorkshire have surfaced this week, after a British man confronted a priest in Italy.

Mark Murray (pictured above), 59, secretly filmed an encounter with Father Romano Nardo, 73, from the Verona Fathers, who, he says, sexually abused him at Mirfield trainee school for priests in Yorkshire in the 1970s.

The short clip was posted online by Italian newspaper La Repubblica and you can hear Mr Murray tell Father Nardo: “You have had a massive, negative impact on my life and my family and my children. I tried many times to meet with you.

“Romano Nardo, do you know who I am? I think you do. Mark Murray. Do you remember me?”

In the video, you can hear Father Nardo mumble: “If it is my fault that you bear a heavy cross, I believe I should ask the Lord for forgiveness. I’m sorry. I’m very sorry.”

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

A grand deception: The successful response of sex offenders

UNITED STATES
Religion News Service – Rhymes with Religion

Boz Tchividjian | May 15, 2015

“I’m ready to be put this all behind me and to continue reaching for my dreams of filmmaking and in music.”

Those were the recent words of Brandon Milburn, a former youth minister, as he pleaded with a judge for a lenient sentence after being convicted of seven counts of child sexual abuse involving two eleven year old boys. His pleas were echoed by supporters who came to court to proclaim his innocence. One even remarked, “I do not believe he is a predator. I love Brandon; my children love Brandon. If Brandon was released today, he would be welcome to come and live in my home.”

Fortunately, the prosecutor reminded the judge, “In the sentencing advisory report, the defendant minimizes his activities, his offenses against the boys in this case, and actually denies there are other victims.” Ultimately, the judge decided that Brandon Milburn should spend the next 25 years reaching for his dreams inside the walls of a prison.

Sexual offenders have perfected a grand deception that sadly seems to work all too well inside faith communities. This deception twists truth, minimizes abuse, and exploits guilt in order to create a fictional narrative that paints the offender as the victim and those who accuse and confront as perpetrators of injustice. Unfortunately, too many fail to realize that this deceptive narrative is fiction.

A few months ago, I had a conversation with a couple, who recently learned that their son had been sexually victimized by a popular young man in the church. Upon confronting the offender with this crime, these parents came face to face with this grand deception. Here is how it works:

Step One – “I am a victim.” When confronted about sexually abusing a child, offenders will immediately and tearfully disclose that they too were victimized as a child and never had the opportunity to get help. In an effort to sound credible, the offender may not necessarily be referring to sexual abuse since the objective is simply to be seen as a victim. Do you see the grand deception at work? Offenders simultaneously take the spotlight off of their own wretched acts while subtly eliciting sympathy from their confronters. Sadly, this initial step of the grand deception can be extremely successful, especially with the broader congregation. Being seen as a victim will all too often fuel the needed sympathies and doubts of congregations who struggle with accepting a reality that seems all to dark and unbelievable.

Step Two – “It’s not as bad as it sounds.” The next step of the grand deception is to minimize the wrongfulness of the acts committed. If the victim is younger, offenders may acknowledge the behavior as “inappropriate”, but certainly not criminal. Furthermore, they will argue that these “inappropriate” actions were certainly not a result of an evil or lascivious motive, but out of a misguided love and care for the child that may be rationalized using their own childhood abuse. With older victims, offenders will similarly acknowledge the inappropriateness of their behavior, but will make a subtle attempt to paint the victim as a consenting party to the unlawful acts. Statements like, “I never did anything he didn’t want me to do” or “Though I agree I should have acted more responsibly, I never did anything without his [victim] consent.” Do you see the grand deception at work? Sympathetic childhood abuse is the foundation that facilitates the deception that any alleged harmful behavior with the child was unintentional and perhaps even consensual. Sometimes this step concludes with statements such as, “Though I’ve made some mistakes, I’m certainly no child molester.” The stage has now been set to begin turning the tables on the accusers.

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.

Bishops must support the children of priests

IRELAND
The Tablet (UK)

15 May 2015 by David Weber

The Irish bishops have pledged to fund all counselling needed by clients of a new support group for the children of Irish Catholic priests, Coping International. Dublin Archbishop Diarmuid Martin added: “I pray that Coping will be able to find ways which will bring the children of priests and their natural parents together for the benefit of both.” David Weber, the son of a priest, says globally thousands of people are affected

While much justified coverage has been devoted to child abuse by members of the Catholic clergy, a different issue, with again children as the main victims, has been largely neglected by the media and governments: the discrimination faced by children whose father is or was a Catholic priest.

Many rights thought to be basic in any modern society – the right to know one’s father and be able to have open contact with him, the right to receive child support not attached to conditions, and the right to inherit from one’s father, are being denied to children of priests, resulting in a discrimination that has consequences long into adulthood.

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 Tagle will be a force in Catholicism for a long time

UNITED STATES
Crux

By John L. Allen Jr.
Associate editor May 15, 2015

Right now, the Irish betting firm Paddy Power has Cardinal Luis Antonio “Chito” Tagle of the Philippines as the favorite to be the next pope, giving him 11/2 odds. Already dubbed the “Asian Francis,” Tagle got another boost this week with his election to lead a global federation of Catholic charities.

(For the record, Paddy Power has Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley of Boston as the American with the best odds, at 10-1.)

Granted, such forecasts don’t have a particularly good track record. Papal elections occur only when the incumbent either dies or resigns, and at the moment Francis seems perfectly healthy with no sign of slowing down. Between today and whenever a conclave might occur, any number of things can happen to change the landscape.

That dose of caution, however, rarely stops “next pope” rumors from being the Church’s favorite parlor game. So if we’re going to go down that route, there’s a great deal to be said for Tagle, who would make a strong runner if the key issue next time is continuity with Francis.

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700 Sundays in a row, Boston clergy abuse vigil happens

BOSTON (MA)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Statement by David Clohessy of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, 314 566 9790, davidgcohessy@gmail.com

This Sunday marks the 700th consecutive vigil held outside the Cathedral in Boston by an amazing group of caring individuals.

That’s no typo. They’ve been out there for 700 Sundays in a row.

In rain.
In heat.
In cold.
In sleet.

Led by members of Speak Truth to Power, these brave, and compassionate souls have endured taunts and insults and tons of cold-shoulders from Catholic clerics, employees and church members. Why? Because their peaceful presence reminds people of the horror inflicted on thousands of children by clerics who committed and concealed heinous crimes.

These folks are heroes.

Who are these incredible activists? Among others, they are Paul Kellen ( 781-385-3628 paulkellen@aol.com), Kathy Dwyer, Ruth Moore, Ken Scott, Bob Sidorowicz, Rosemary Morgan, RIchard Orareo, Eileen Doherty, Stan Doherty, Steve Sheehan, Sheldon Daley, Robert Costello, Lillian Albert, Steve Burke and Ben Murphy.

On behalf of survivors, we in SNAP salute them for their incredible witness for kids, for victims, for deterrence, for prevention and for truth.

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.

D.C. rabbi faces sentencing today for voyeurism

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Post

By Keith L. Alexander May 15

Sentencing for Barry Freundel, the once-influential Orthodox rabbi who pleaded guilty to secretly videotaping dozens of women as they prepared for a ritual bath, is scheduled for Friday in D.C. Superior Court.

The hearing is expected to be an emotional one as many of the victims are expected to speak to Senior Judge Geoffrey Alprin on the impact of Freundel’s crime on their lives.

Freundel, 64, was arrested in October on charges that he videotaped six women in the nude while he was at Kesher Israel synagogue in Georgetown. Prosecutors said a review of his computer equipment revealed that many more women had been recorded by Freundel as they prepared for the bath known as a mikvah — used as part of a purification ritual.

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.

Rabbi who taught at Towson to be sentenced in mikvah voyeurism case

WASHINGTON (DC)
The Baltimore Sun

By Alison Knezevich
The Baltimore Sun

An Orthodox rabbi and former Towson University professor who admitted to secretly videotaping women as they prepared for a ritual bath is scheduled to be sentenced today on voyeurism charges.

Barry Freundel pleaded guilty in February to 52 counts of voyeurism, admitting he taped women at the National Capital Mikvah in Washington, D.C.

He is scheduled to be sentenced in D.C. Superior Court at 1 p.m. Prosecutors recommended a 17-year-sentence, saying his case “falls on the extreme end of the voyeurism spectrum.”

His defense lawyer plans to argue for community service, according to court documents.

All the voyeurism counts are misdemeanors. Each carries a penalty of up to a year of incarceration and up to a $2,500 fine.

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.

Rabbi who taped women at bath to learn voyeurism sentence

WASHINGTON (DC)
Sacramento Bee

The Associated Press

A once-prominent Orthodox rabbi who pleaded guilty to secretly videotaping scores of women in a changing room of a Jewish ritual bath will learn his sentence.

More than a dozen women taped by Rabbi Bernard Freundel are expected to speak before the judge announces his sentence Friday.

Freundel acknowledged as part of a plea agreement in February that he secretly recorded more than 150 women over several years. A statute of limitations would have barred prosecutors from charging Freundel for every recording, and he pleaded guilty to 52 counts of voyeurism. Each count is punishable by up to a year in jail.

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Statement of the LCWR Officers on the CDF Doctrinal Assessment and Conclusion of the Mandate

UNITED STATES
Leadership Conference of Women Religious

Issued by Sister Sharon Holland, IHM (LCWR President); Sister Marcia Allen, CSJ (LCWR President-Elect); Sister Carol Zinn, SSJ (LCWR Past President); and Sister Joan Marie Steadman, CSC (LCWR Executive Director)

We have been asked by our members and the public for our thoughts and reflections regarding the completion of the mandate of implementation issued by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) after its doctrinal assessment of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR). We do so here, but emphasize that these are only preliminary personal observations and reflections. We will not have the opportunity to reflect on the experience in its entirety with the members of the conference and hear their insights until the LCWR assembly in August 2015.

From the time of the 2012 public issuance of the findings of the doctrinal assessment of LCWR, we had serious concerns about both the content of the assessment and the process by which it was prepared. We believed that the sanctions called for in the CDF mandate were disproportionate to the concerns raised and we feared the sanctions could compromise the ability of the LCWR officers and members to fulfill the mission of the conference. Furthermore, we were deeply saddened that the report caused scandal and pain throughout the Catholic community. We, along with our members, felt publicly humiliated as the false accusations were re-published repeatedly in the press.

Beginning with our first meeting with LCWR’s board of directors in May 2012 shortly after the issuance of the mandate, we situated all discussions of the assessment and mandate in a context of communal contemplative prayer. This involved acknowledging the depth of our feelings about the actions of CDF; careful listening to all perspectives on the matter; engaging in honest conversations with one another about not only LCWR and its work, but our own faith journeys; communally sitting in silence to ponder all we heard; and bringing our insights to God in prayer. We continued to utilize contemplative processes each time we gathered as the executive officers of the conference, as a board, and as an assembly to discuss the mandate. We believe this approach strengthened our capacity to hear and better understand the concerns of CDF as well as clarify and strengthen our own convictions about the mission and purpose of LCWR. The processes in which we engaged as a conference became a profound source of personal growth for each of us and deepened and strengthened the bonds that exist among us as women religious.

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LCWR evaluates end of mandate

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

by Dawn Cherie Araujo May. 14, 2015

Related stories and resources:

Statement of the LCWR officers on the CDF doctrinal assessment and conclusion of the mandate
Q & A with Sr. Sharon Holland, president of LCWR
LCWR statements about doctrinal assessment, 2009-2015
Timeline of LCWR / CDF interactions 2008-present by NCR

In a statement released this morning, the Leadership Conference of Women Religious acknowledged the sadness and public humiliation they experienced during the six years they were under Vatican review, but they said they hoped the process would be a valuable learning experience for both the wider church and community.

This is the first time LCWR has spoken publicly since last month’s conclusion of the Vatican oversight of their group. They had maintained public silence on the matter for 30 days, per the Vatican’s request.

“We believed that the sanctions called for in the CDF mandate were disproportionate to the concerns raised and we feared the sanctions could compromise the ability of the LCWR officers and members to fulfill the mission of the conference,” LCWR leaders wrote in their statement, adding that were times of darkness when “a positive outcome seemed remote.” But they did ultimately get that positive ending, encouraged, in part, by the prayers of their supporters around the world.

LCWR, an association for the elected leaders of women religious communities in the United States, has more than 1,500 members and represents almost 80 percent of Catholic sisters in the country.

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Grynhaus jury told to reach unanimous verdict

UNITED KINGDOM
The JC

The judge in the trial of Todros Grynhaus has told the jury only an unanimous verdict will be accepted.

The panel have begun their deliberations after two weeks of evidence.

Mr Grynhaus, 50, a well-known figure in the Salford strictly Orthodox community, is accused of five counts of indecent assault and two counts of sexual assault against two girls when they were aged around 14 and 15.

He denies the charges.

Mr Justice Holroyde warned the jury at Manchester Crown Court that only a verdict on which they all agreed would be acceptable, unless he directed otherwise.

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Former North Catholic teacher to be sentenced on sex abuse charges

PITTSBURGH (PA)
WPXI

[with video]

MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA — A Marianist brother who worked at the former North Catholic High School in Pittsburgh’s Troy Hill neighborhood has pleaded guilty to sex charges in Australia and will be sentenced there, according to an Australian newspaper.

Brother Bernard Hartman, 75, abused three children in Melbourne in the 1970s and 80s. He taught science at North Catholic until 1997.

The Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh alerted North Catholic alumni to the allegations last year.

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Victim wins six-figure payout …

UNITED KINGDOM
Yorkshire Post

Victim wins six-figure payout from Church of England over abuse by paedophile Leeds priest

The victim of a paedophile priest has criticised the Church of England after finally winning justice over abuse he suffered more than 20 years ago.

Rev Terence Reginald King, who was vicar at St Mary The Virgin Church in Dewsbury Road, Woodkirk, Leeds, for 22 years, hanged himself in 2002 while he was being investigated by West Yorkshire Police over a string of child sex abuse allegations.

Now in his 30s, one of King’s alleged victims, who was abused over several years from the age of 12, has won a six-figure compensation sum from the Anglican Church.

But the man said his ordeal had a lasting impact and he continued to feel let down by the Church.

He said: “They not only let me down by employing a paedophile, but did nothing to rectify this after King committed suicide even though they knew the abuse had taken place.

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Former Local Roman Catholic Brother Convicted Of Sexual Assault In Australia

PITTSBURGH (PA)
CBS Pittsburgh

[with video]

Christine D’Antonio

PITTSBURGH (KDKA) – A Roman Catholic brother, who taught in Pittsburgh for years, has been convicted of sexual abuse in Australia.

Brother Bernard Hartman taught at North Catholic High School for parts of the 60’s and late 1970’s. However, he held a more permanent role in a Troy Hill school from 1986-97

Hartman was accused of sexually abusing a student while at North Catholic and was the subject of a credible allegation of abuse.

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The Nuns Spoke Out, but the Archbishop Listened

UNITED STATES
The New York Times

By LAURIE GOODSTEIN
MAY 15, 2015

When 25 leaders of the largest organization of American nuns met for the first time with Archbishop J. Peter Sartain of Seattle in 2012, after the Vatican appointed him to lead an overhaul of their group, they expected conflict.

The nuns were hurt and confused when the Vatican accused them a few months earlier of straying from Catholic teaching and promoting “radical feminist themes incompatible with the Catholic faith.” And for many Catholics, the appointment of Archbishop Sartain and two other bishops amounted to a hostile takeover.

“Things were still quite raw,” said Sister Carol Zinn, the past president of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, which represents about 80 percent of American nuns. “Our board members were saying to him, ‘What do we say to them, Archbishop, what do we say to our sisters?’”

But instead of lecturing the nuns — women who had dedicated their lives to teaching, health care, academia and social justice — Archbishop Sartain listened. “That continued for the next two years,” Sister Zinn said, and it helped lead to a breakthrough: Last month, the leaders of the group say, they were stunned to find themselves at a cordial meeting in the Vatican with a smiling Pope Francis, talking with him for nearly an hour about religious life and their calling to care for the poor and suffering.

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A Sydney priest abused eight children, police allege

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

A retired Catholic priest (now aged 70) is listed for Sydney’s Parramatta Local Court on Thursday 14 May 2915, where he is to be charged with 19 offences relating to the sexual and indecent assault of children while he was ministering (in parish work or, at one stage, as a full-time chaplain for some disadvantaged people) in the Sydney archdiocese during the 1970s and 1980s and 1990s. The case number is 2015/00126145.

According to an announcement by the New South Wales police on 28 April 2015, the investigation began in 2014 when police from the Blue Mountains Local Area Command and the New South Wales Sex Crimes Squad received information relating to the alleged assault of a young girl by this Sydney priest during a visit to the Blue Mountains region in 1986.

Detectives made inquiries into the 1986 matter and identified seven more children who had allegedly been sexually or indecently assaulted by this priest in Sydney, or during visits elsewhere in New South Wales, between 1975 and 1992.

Throughout the time of the offences, the man was practising as a Catholic priest.

On 28 April 2015, following their inquiries, detectives arrested the 70-year-old man at a private house in Granville (in Sydney).

He was taken to Parramatta Police Station, where he was charged with:
*Two counts of sexual assault; and,
*17 counts of indecent assault.

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This priest assaulted boys in Wollongong NSW, police allege

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

A former Catholic priest, Father Peter Lewis Comensoli, now aged 76, will stand trial in the New South Wales District Court accused of molesting two boys in separate incidents while this priest was working in the Wollongong diocese, south of Sydney, in the 1960s.

Peter Lewis Comensoli entered pleas of not guilty in Port Kembla Local Court on 6 May 2015 to three charges (called “indecent assault of a male”), allegedly committed against two teenage boys while Comensoli was a priest in the Wollongong diocese:

1. Police allege that Comensoli assaulted one of the alleged victims multiple times in 1966 during visits to the boy’s family at their home at Ingleburn. It is alleged he would play a wrestling game with the boy and, while on top of him, squeeze his genitals. The man reported the alleged assaults to the church in 1999, but the information was not passed on to police until January 2014.

2. Comensoli is accused of assaulting the other boy in 1968, while working at the Shellharbour parish. It is alleged that the boy became close to Comensoli through the priest’s role as leader of a fellowship group for children who attended the parish. This alleged victim disclosed the alleged incident to a psychologist in 2012, who urged him to go to police.

The incidents with both boys allegedly happened on church premises.

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A Christian Brother pleads guilty to some of the charges in court

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher (article updated 13 May 2015)

Christian Brother William Peter Standen (known as Brother “David” Standen), who has taught at Catholic schools in Sydney and regional New South Wales, appeared in court on 13 May 2015 to answer 32 charges of indecent assault, allegedly committed against 18 schoolboys. Standen pleaded Guilty to 11 charges and Not Guilty to 15 charges, while the remaining six charges were withdrawn.

Standen submitted his pleas to a magistrate in the Goulburn Local Court in south-western New South Wales. The charges had been laid by detectives at Goulburn, where one of Brother Standen’s former schools (St Patrick’s College) was located. Police alleged that the offences were committed against boys at this school between 1978 and 1981.

All of Standen’s pleas, including the Guilty and Not Guilty ones, will be referred now to the Sydney District Court, where the Standen case is scheduled to have a procedural mention on 5 June 2015. Those charges for which Standen has pleaded Not Guilty would necessitate a trial and therefore the case would be put on the District Court’s waiting list for when a time-slot becomes available on the District Court’s schedule.

After the District Court trial is completed, Standen would be sentenced by the District Court for any charges on which he will have been found guilty, including those on which he has already entered a Guilty plea.

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Slander trial of Freeport man over abuse at Haiti orphanages set for July

MAINE
Bangor Daily News

By Judy Harrison, BDN Staff
Posted May 14, 2015

PORTLAND, Maine — The jury trial of a Freeport man being sued for slander over allegations of sexual abuse of boys at a Haitian orphanage is set to begin July 8 in U.S. District Court.

The trial was delayed after Michael Geilenfeld, a former Catholic brother, was detained in Port au Prince beginning Sept. 5 while a criminal investigation into abuse allegations was conducted, according to court documents. He was released April 29 after being exonerated.

Geilenfeld and Hearts with Haiti, a North Carolina-based nonprofit that raised money for the orphanages he ran, in February 2013 sued Paul Kendrick, 65, of Freeport. The plaintiffs alleged that Kendrick’s false allegations that Geilenfeld has sexually abused children has defamed the organization and caused fundraising events in the U.S. to be cancelled.

They are asking U.S. District Judge John Woodcock to order Kendrick to stop making the statements and to remove all those that have been published on the Internet. The lawsuit also is seeking unspecified compensatory and punitive damages.

It took 237 days for Geilenfeld to be cleared of the allegations in Haiti.

“After full prosecution in the Haitian criminal justice system, the criminal court in Haiti entered judgment in his favor on all charges,” according to a document filed this month in federal court in Portland. “Most of the charges were dismissed before trial after investigation by the investigative judge, based on insufficient evidence; one charge for alleged ‘public indecency’ under Haitian criminal law was found in Geilenfeld’s favor after trial by the Haitian criminal trial judge.”

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Man Accused of Extorting Former Sharon Rabbi Held on $400,000 Bail

MASSACHUSETTS
Patch

By DANIEL LIBON (Patch Staff)
May 14, 2015

A Quincy man accused of extorting over $400,000 from former Temple Israel Rabbi Barry Starr will be held on bail.

Nicholas Zemeitus, 30, of Quincy, was ordered held on $400,000 bail according to the Boston Globe. A lawyer for the defendant sough a bail of $5,000 to $7,000.

On Tuesday, Zemeitus was arraigned on seven counts of larceny over $250, two counts of receiving stolen property over $250, one count of larceny under $250, and one count of extortion.

According to court records, Zemeitus met Sarr after discovering a sex ad on Craig’s List for an older woman. Zemeitus ended up Starr’s home where he found the rabbi in drag.

E-mails show that Zemeitus attempted to blackmail Starr into giving him money, threating to make a sexual relationship with Zemeitus’ non-existent teenage brother public.

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Message from Ballarat Bishop, Paul Bird

AUSTRALIA
Truth, Justice and Healing

Ballarat Bishop, Paul Bird has written to all local parishes in the central Victorian regional town calling on all Catholics to keep in their thoughts and prayers the survivors of child sexual abuse who will be giving evidence at the Commission hearing over the coming three weeks.

“The hearings will be very stressful for survivors and their families and for people across our region. People will be deeply upset by the accounts of crimes against children and by the failings of church leaders in responding to these crimes. I encourage you to support one another through these difficult days,” Bishop Bird wrote.

Read Pastoral letter here

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Abuse victims want national redress scheme

AUSTRALIA
9 News

AAP

The federal government’s rejection of a national redress scheme for people abused in institutions is the ultimate slap in the face and could lead to more deaths, a victim says.

Peter Blenkiron, who was abused in a Victorian Catholic school in 1974, blasted the Abbott government for rejecting the scheme as too costly and too complex to implement.

“It was the ultimate slap in the face,” the Ballarat man told AAP.

He said victims were losing hope and he feared more may commit suicide, with a high number of suicides and premature deaths among people who were abused as children in the Ballarat diocese.

“Not every one of the survivors out there needs it but the ones that do, if they don’t get some practical help they’ll be dead,” he said.

“We need to put a system in place to stop the deaths and if you don’t, the bubble of hope will burst and people will die. People are dying today.”

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The Francis of the Media and the Real Francis

ROME
Chiesa

Farther and farther apart from each other. The public narrative continues to depict the pope as a revolutionary. But the facts prove the contrary

by Sandro Magister

ROME, May 15, 2015 – When it comes to Pope Francis, there are now two of these who are ever more distant from each other: the Francis of the media and the real one.

The first is exceedingly well-known and has been making the news since his first appearance on the loggia of the basilica of Saint Peter’s.

It is the narrative of the pope who revolutionizes the Church, who lays down the keys of binding and loosing, who does not condemn but only forgives, or rather who does not even judge any more, who washes the feet of the female Muslim inmate and the transexual, who abandons the palace to plunge into the peripheries, who opens the workshop on everything, on the divorced and remarried as on the Vatican’s finances, who closes the checkpoints of dogma and throws open the doors of mercy. A pope who is a friend of the world, who is already being praised for his upcoming encyclical on “sustainable development” even before seeing what will be written there.

In effect there is a great deal, in the words and actions of Jorge Mario Bergoglio, that lends itself to this narrative.

The Francis of the media is also to some extent a creation of his own, and brilliantly so, in the span of one morning miraculously overturning the image of the Catholic Church from opulent and decadent to “poor and for the poor.”

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Catholic bishop faces child sex charges

AUSTRALIA
The West Australian

Elle Farcic
May 15, 2015

A Catholic bishop will stand trial in August charged with historic child sex offences.

Max Leroy Davis has been charged with four counts of committing indecent practices between males in public and four counts of unlawfully and indecently dealing with a child under 14.

In Perth Magistrate’s Court this morning, defence lawyer Seamus Rafferty entered pleas of not guilty to all of the charges.

It is understood the charges relate to two complainants.

Bishop Davis, 68, allegedly abused the boys in 1969 when he was teaching at St Benedict’s College in New Norcia.

He is believed to be the first Australian bishop and the most senior Australian church official to be charged with child sex offences.

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Australian Defence Force bishop to stand trial in WA on historic child sex charges

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Joanna Menagh

Australian Defence Force Bishop Max Davis has been committed to stand trial in Western Australia on child sex charges dating back almost 50 years.

Davis is facing four charges of committing indecent practices in public, and four charges of indecently dealing with a child.

The alleged offences date back to 1969 before he was ordained as a priest, when was teaching at Saint Benedict’s College in New Norcia.

Davis’s lawyer, Seamus Rafferty, told the Perth Magistrates Court his client would be pleading not guilty to all charges.

Davis lives in Canberra and was not required to attend today’s hearing.

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Catholic bishop Max Davis, 68, faces historic child sex charges

AUSTRALIA
Perth Now

PHIL HICKEY PERTHNOW MAY 15, 2015

THE head of the Catholic Church’s military diocese will stand trial in the West Australian District Court over child sex offences dating back more than 40 years.

Bishop Max Leroy Davis, 68, is alleged to have indecently dealt with a boy under the age of 14 and committed indecent practices between males in public in 1969 when he was teaching at St Benedict’s College in New Norcia, northeast of Perth.

Davis, who was not an ordained priest at the time of the alleged offences, is understood to be the first Australian bishop and the most senior Australian church official to be charged with child sex offences.

He will face a trial in August.

Man, 66, charged over 1980s child sex assaults
Police have charged an elderly man with 33 child sex offences relating to six alleged victims dating back to 1980.

Child Abuse Squad detectives arrested and charged the 66-year-old man in South Australia on Thursday and extradited him to Western Australia.

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Haredi principal sued for years of sexual abuse in Australia

ISRAEL
Ynet

Tali Farkash, Aviel Megnazi
Published: 05.14.15

While extradition proceedings are taking place in Israel to bring the former principal of an ultra-Orthodox Jewish school in Melbourne to trial in Australia on suspicion of sexually abusing three of her students, Victoria’s Supreme Court has begun hearing a civil claim filed by one of the girls.

“She liked to hug me like a baby, and rock me. She said I should consider her like a mother who loved me, and that I was special,” the former student, who is now in her 20s, told the court, according to the Herald Sun.

Malka Leifer, a mother of eight children who ran the Adass Israel school for girls in Melbourne, is at the center of the civil suit. She escaped to Israel two days after details were revealed about 74 sexual offenses she allegedly committed against three sisters. The school was also sued for not passing the student’s complaint to the authorities. The principal was updated on the complaint, which allowed her to immediately flee Australia.

She was arrested last August and placed under house arrest until the completion of the extradition proceedings. In Australia, she is expected to face criminal charges in addition to the civil trial. The Australian authorities filed to extradition request with the Israeli authorities in July 2013. The Australian request noted that Leifer is facing trial for 47 indecent act offenses, 13 offenses of indecent assault of a minor, 11 rape charges and three additional charges.

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‘Leifer was Adass school’, court told

AUSTRALIA
The Australian Jewish News

Adass Israel teacher Malka Leifer was employed by the Adass congregation, not its school, its barrister said today, in closing arguments in a lawsuit before the Supreme Court of Victoria.

The Israeli educator, who has been back in Israel since 2008, is fighting extradition to Australia to face criminal charges over her alleged sexual abuse of several Adass students.

The ultra-Orthodox Adass school in Melbourne is fighting the lawsuit against it by a former student who claimed the sexual abuse she suffered had marred her life.

The court has heard evidence of Leifer’s alleged sex abuse, and how she was rushed back to Israel after the allegations were presented to an emergency meeting of the Adass board in March 2008.

Counsel for Adass, Christopher Blanden SC, argued to the court today that the Adass school provided a general education and Leifer had been hired in 2000 by the congregation to provide a separate Jewish education, so the school was not liable for her alleged offences.

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COMMUNICATING CONCERNS

IOWA
Catholic Globe

By Colleen Sulsberger
Protecting the Innocent

Communicating concerns about someone’s behavior without causing additional angst or creating more problems is difficult and uncomfortable. When we come to this part of the Virtus training class, I often find it difficult to get participants to share their thoughts. Yet, it’s one of the most important parts of the steps we all must take to protect children. Many children have been rescued by courageous caregivers who set their fear and discomfort aside and spoke up when they noticed something that didn’t seem right to them. Let’s go one step further to discuss how someone in a supervisory capacity can have an effective conversation to relay the communicated concern.

Some of you may be thinking of not reading any further. After all, you are not “in charge” of anything at the parish or school; you are just supervising the playground or helping with religious ed. But everyone has the responsibility to keep their eyes and ears open when kids are around, watching the interactions between them, between the adults and the kids, and all of the issues we will address are relevant to situations at work, at community events, in committee activities, or even for someone who is in charge of cleaning the kitchen after a church dinner. At some time or other, most of us have some responsibility for other adults who are working with us, or are in situations where children are working or playing nearby where we can observe. This article is intended to help you be better prepared for those situations.

A common problem arises when concerns about behavior, which may be genuine and sincerely meant to foster safer environments, create stress for the supervisor who needs to communicate them, fearing that delivering this message could cause someone to quit the volunteer program. No one likes to feel they are being accused, so this reaction is understandable, but it underscores the importance of having everybody on your team current on their Virtus training. In that way, supervisors can remind everyone that as adults, we all take the responsibility for keeping an eye on each other and letting our teammates know if we are doing something that causes concern.

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VIRTUS TRAINING IS INVALUABLE

IOWA
Catholic Globe

By Colleen Sulsberger
Protecting the Innocent

Spring is just around the corner, and that means lots of outdoor activities for kids are gearing up. Scouting, team sports, gymnastics, and dance classes are just a few of the programs that are available for children and young people. Regardless of how much or how little extracurricular activity is part of a child’s life, one thing is certain – safety first must be the motto of parents, guardians, and other caring adults when choosing program activities for kids.

Knowing that, what is the best way for caring adults to make sure that those who supervise programs are doing all they can do to make sure that young people have a safe and enjoyable experience?

In Step 3 of Virtus training, we recommend that adults and organizations “Monitor All Programs.” For the most part, the emphasis in this step has been on overseeing programs on the premises of the church or school. However, as we begin to consider a broader range of activities for the children in our lives, there is an opportunity to apply the principles of Virtus in the investigation and evaluation of other programs and activities for our children.

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ROOT CAUSE ANALYSIS: CREATING A HIGHLY RELIABLE CULTURE

IOWA
Catholic Globe

Root cause analysis: This is a fairly new term making its way around the world of Safe Environment leadership and the U.S. Bishops Secretariat for Child and Youth Protection.

Root cause analysis is used to create a highly reliable culture, by reporting all violations, all “near misses,” and all incidences where established rules and protocols were not followed. By examining what went wrong, or almost went wrong, we can determine weaknesses in our system and correct them. Highly reliable cultures must operate under trying or complex conditions and maintain few or no accidents or breaches in their systems (think airlines, nuclear power plants, and hospitals).

Everyone within these systems understands and follows all the rules all the time, and everyone reports every event that goes against established protocol, because failure to do so could endanger everyone. Leadership in a highly reliable culture is focused on eliminating failure, and encourages everyone to focus on that as well. There is no room for error when a jet is attempting to land, or when a patient in undergoing major surgery, just as there is no room for error when a child’s well-being is at stake.

Since 2002, the number of credible allegations of child sexual abuse reported to dioceses has continued to decline, and that is good news. However, everyone will agree that even one credible report of a child being abused in our church is one too many. Our goal is to eliminate child sexual abuse completely – from every parish and every school, period.

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Former teacher at North Catholic sentenced in Australia on sexual abuse charges

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Tribune-Review

By Michael Hasch
Thursday, May 14, 2015

A Marianist brother will be sentenced in Australia for his conviction on charges of sexually abusing three children in Melbourne, an Australian newspaper reported this week.

Brother Bernard Joseph Hartman, 75, who once taught science at the former North Catholic High School in Troy Hill, pleaded guilty to four counts of indecent assault and was convicted on an additional count of indecent assault and two counts of common law assault, the Maribyrnong & Hobsons Bay Star Weekly reported Tuesday.

Hartman was charged in Melbourne with sexually abusing two boys and two girls in the 1970s and 80s.

He pleaded guilty to molesting two girls between the ages of 8 and 11, the newspaper reported. He was convicted of molesting one of the boys in the 1980s and acquitted of abusing the second.

Hartman is a former biology teacher at North Catholic, now known as Cardinal Wuerl North Catholic High School in Cranberry.

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Church in six-figure abuse claims payout

UNITED KINGDOM
The Press

THE Church of England has made a six-figure payout to a man who says he suffered years of physical and psychological abuse at the hands of a retired York vicar.

The man, whose identity is protected, received the undisclosed sum 13 years after the Rev Terence King committed suicide on October 31, 2002, while under investigation by West Yorkshire Police over child sex abuse.

Mr King, who was 69 and from Abbey Street, Clifton, was found dead in his garage on October 31, 2002 – the day after he walked out of The Retreat in Heslington Road, York, where he had been receiving treatment.

The man says Mr King made his life hell for eight years when he was a child and Mr King was a vicar at St Mary the Virgin Church at Woodkirk, near Morley, West Yorkshire.

He says the sexual, physical and mental abuse he suffered in the church and vicarage has had a lasting impact on his life.

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May 14, 2015

Media Release – Bill Cosby and Fr. Roy Alan Drake, SJ

NEW YORK
Road to Recovery

Helen Gumpel, retired successful fashion model and actress, who thwarted a sexual attack in Bill Cosby’s dressing room on the set of “The Cosby Show,” and currently an advocate for women who were sexually abused by Bill Cosby, will join her husband, Hollywood screenwriter Neal E. Gumpel, at Fordham University, Bronx, New York, to draw attention to the sexual abuse of her husband when he was a minor child.

Neal E. Gumpel is a clergy sexual abuse victim of Fr. Roy Alan Drake, SJ, a deceased Jesuit priest and professor at Fordham University, Bronx, NY, and Maine Maritime Academy, Castine, Maine, where Fr. Roy Alan Drake, SJ, sexually abused Neal E. Gumpel when he was a minor child.

Fordham University and the Northeast Province of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits), who staff Fordham University and were responsible for Fr. Roy Alan Drake, SJ for decades until his death, refuse to acknowledge and bear responsibility for the allegation of sexual abuse against Fr. Roy Alan Drake, SJ in Maine and give any assistance to Neal E. Gumpel, settle and validate his claim, and help him heal.

What
A press conference and leafleting alerting the media and general public that the Northeast Province of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) and Fordham University refuse to help a clergy sexual abuse victim of one of its priests, Fr. Roy Alan Drake, SJ heal by validating his claim of sexual abuse as a minor child.

When
Friday, May 15, 2015 from 11:00 am until 1:00 pm
Saturday, May 16, 2015 8:00 am until 11:00 am (Graduation at 10:00 am)

Where
On the public sidewalks outside the motor vehicle entrance to Fordham University, Bronx, New York, across from the New York Botanical Gardens in Southern Boulevard.

Who
Hollywood screenwriter Neal E. Gumpel, a resident of Connecticut who has alleged that he was sexually abused as a minor teenager by Fr. Roy Alan Drake, SJ; Helen Gumpel, wife of Neal E. Gumpel, former successful fashion model and actress who appeared in an episode of “The Cosby Show” and thwarted a sexual assault by Bill Cosby in his dressing room; and members of Road to Recovery, Inc., a non-profit charity that assists victims of sexual abuse and their families.

Why
Neal E. Gumpel, whose mother (Jane Gumpel) and father (Dr. Roy Gumpel) are both graduates of Fordham University, was an unsuspecting high school minor teenager when his brother invited him to spend a weekend at Maine Maritime Academy in Castine, Maine. Rev. Roy Alan Drake, SJ was a Jesuit priest from Fordham University who was working at the time at Maine Maritime Academy and invited Neal E. Gumpel to his residence on or near the campus, served him alcohol, and sexually abused him. Demonstrators will call on Fordham University and the Northeast Province of the Society of Jesus to do the right thing and help Neal E. Gumpel heal.

Contacts
Robert M. Hoatson, Ph.D. – Fordham University Ph.D. ’88 – 862-368-2800
Attorney Mitchell Garabedian, Boston, MA – 617-523-6250

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Steve Doocy Doesn’t Get Why Catholic Students Don’t Want Cardinal Dolan As Commencement Speaker

NEW YORK
News Hounds

NY Cardinal Timothy Dolan is BFFs with Roger Ailes and his “angel” Catholic wife who raises lots of money for Dolan’s charities. In turn,, Fox provides a platform for conservative Catholic teachings. Fox is also a place where Cardinal Dolan is defended from criticism and, on today’s Fox & Friends, Steve Doocy did his sacred duty.

After the “Fight for Faith” visual and tense music, devout Catholic Steve Doocy seemed apoplectic as he reported that “students at a Catholic university, here in NY state have launched a petition urging the administrators to disinvite or uninvite” Dolan because he, according to the petition “just doesn’t represent their values.” He shook his head when he quipped “really?” He grinned as he informed us that LeMoyne College officials aren’t backing down. The banner framed the message as a patented Fox controversy: “Commencement Controversy.”

After introducing his guests Le Moyne College President Linda LeMura and Father. David McCallum, her special assistant, Doocy asked “who is behind” the petition. Doocy twitched as LeMura explained that the petition was launched by students. Despite the fact that Dolan will still be the speaker, the banner read “Removed Without Reason, Petition Fails to Include Any Wrongdoing” – a statement that is a BIG FAT FOX LIE because the petition states that “Cardinal Dolan has been involved with sexual abuse scandals dealing with clergy of the church, homophobic comments.”

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Contraception & Honesty

UNITED STATES
Commonweal

Peter Steinfels
May 14, 2015

Perhaps the most important moment of last October’s Extraordinary Synod on the Family occurred at its very beginning—when Pope Francis insisted that “speaking honestly” was the bishops’ basic responsibility: No topics or viewpoints should be out of bounds. “It is necessary to say all that, in the Lord, one feels the need to say: without polite deference, without hesitation.”

I doubt that everyone present was able to live up to that plea. For not a few bishops, self-censorship has become second nature, especially when speaking publicly with other bishops, and infinitely so when in the earshot of the pope.

Fortunately, that was not true in many cases, or the synod would not have made headlines with the several highly controversial topics served up and batted back and forth: reception of Communion by the divorced-and-remarried, cohabitation, even same-sex relationships. But could engrained inhibition have accounted for the glaring gap in the synod’s work? I refer to the apparent lack of attention to the question of contraception. Why did the synod appear to treat so perfunctorily the issue that was, and is, the starting point for the unraveling of Catholic confidence in the church’s sexual ethics and even its credibility about marriage? To which, of course, one could add further questions about this baffling silence: Does it even matter? And if it does matter, are there grounds for hoping that the bishops who will be gathering in Rome next fall to complete the synod’s work can do better?

A lot rests on the answers to these questions. A synod that grabs headlines about remarried or cohabiting or same-sex Catholic couples but says nothing fresh about the spectacularly obvious rift between official teaching and actual behavior in Catholic married life is an invitation to cynicism. It could prove to be a crucial test of Pope Francis’s papacy.

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Six-figure payout for man abused by Yorkshire vicar

UNITED KINGDOM
ITV

A man who suffered a horrifying catalogue of sexual abuse at the hands of a West Yorkshire vicar has spoken of his ordeal for the first time.

The man, whom we are calling David, endured eight years of physical torment and years more of psychological trauma, but it’s only decades later that he has just won a six-figure payout from the Church of England.

His abuser, the Reverend Terence King, escaped justice just as he was about to be unmasked.

He killed himself in his retirement home in York after David finally went to the police.

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Protesters ordered to vacate Scituate church

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Herald

Thursday, May 14, 2015

By: Owen Boss

Parishioners of the St. Francis X. Cabrini church in Scituate — who have been holding a “protest vigil” ever since the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston announced it would be closed in 2004 — must vacate the premises by May 29, a state judge ruled today.

In his order, Norfolk Superior Court Judge Edward P. Leibensperger noted that the “defendants and those individuals in active concert with them, are unlawfully and intentionally committing a trespass by the continuation of their protest vigil on the premises of the church.”

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Lawyers delay mediation decision in archdiocese’s bankruptcy case

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

By Annysa Johnson of the Journal Sentinel May 14, 2015

Lawyers for the Archdiocese of Milwaukee and creditors in its bankruptcy have postponed until June a decision about whether to seek mediation in a lawsuit over the estimated $66 million it holds in a trust to care for its cemeteries.

At a brief hearing Thursday, U.S. District Judge Lynn Adelman offered to mediate the lawsuit or find a retired magistrate to do so.

James Stang, attorney for the creditors committee, which is composed of clergy sex abuse victims but represents all creditors, said he was open to Adelman’s offer.

But archdiocese attorney Frank LoCoco suggested the parties remain too far apart for negotiations to be successful.

“We’re not convinced that further mediation at this time would be fruitful,” LoCoco told Adelman.

The Archdiocese of Milwaukee filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in January 2011 to address its sexual abuse liabilities dating back decades.

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Newspaper Ad Invites Support For SF Archbishop Cordileone At Family Picnic Event

CALIFORNIA
CBS San Francisco Bay Area

by Carlos E. Castañeda
May 14, 2015

SAN FRANCISCO (CBS SF) — A group of Catholics is showing its support for the embattled Archbishop of San Francisco with a fundraiser and planned family picnic this Saturday, publicized by a newspaper ad.

The group San Francisco Catholics was formed in response to a open letter published in the San Francisco Chronicle by another group of prominent Catholics calling on Pope Francis to replace Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone.

On its website, the group characterizes itself as “a grass-roots organization of Catholics in the San Francisco Archdiocese who appreciate the efforts of Archbishop Cordileone to keep our Catholic schools Catholic.”

The group is organizing a ‘Family Picnic Day’ at Sue Bierman Park just west of The Embarcadero on the 200 block of Drumm St., publicized by a sixth-page advertisement in Thursday’s Chronicle, as well as on Facebook and Twitter. The group also said a special Mass would be held at 9:30 a.m. at the nearby National Shrine of Saint Francis of Assisi (Columbus Ave & Vallejo St.) before the 11:00 a.m. event.

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Scituate group seeks stay of order to end church vigil

MASSACHUSETTS
Wicked Local Scituate

By Jessica Trufant

SCITUATE – Parishioners who have occupied the closed St. Frances Xavier Cabrini Church in Scituate for 10 years will seek to have a judge’s order that they leave the church by May 29 suspended pending the outcome of an appeal.

Judge Edward Leibensperger on Thursday ruled that the Friends of St. Frances must end their vigil and vacate the Hood Road church by May 29.

Mary Elizabeth Carmody, a lawyer representing the parishioners, on Thursday said they are still absorbing the court’s decision, but she disagrees with the findings and is disappointed in the ruling.

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Scituate: Group to Appeal Order to End Church Vigil

MASSACHUSETTS
WATD

BY ERIN DALE – POSTED ON MAY 14, 2015

A judge has ruled that Scituate parishioners must end their decade-long, 24-hour vigil.

The Friends of St. Frances Cabrini are ordered to leave the church within 15 days, by May 29.

They’ve occupied the parish building in a 24-hour vigil since Oct. 26, 2004. The Boston Archdiocese gave the group and its leaders notice to vacate Feb. 3 of this year, bringing a charge of civil trespass against some of the group’s members.

Norfolk County Superior Court Judge Edward Liebensperger heard from both sides in a five-hour bench trial on May 5 and issued his decision today.

Friends of St. Frances spokesperson John Rogers said that while his group is “extremely disappointed,” they still “believe that the scope of the trial was so narrow, that the whole truth wasn’t heard. And I think it’s imperative for not only us, but everybody else out there, that the whole story gets told.”

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Buried In Baltimore: The Mysterious Murder Of A Nun Who Knew Too Much

BALTIMORE (MD)
Huffington Post

Laura Bassett
lbassett@huffingtonpost.com

On a frigid day in November 1969, Father Joseph Maskell, the chaplain of Archbishop Keough High School in Baltimore, called a student into his office and suggested they go for a drive. When the final bell rang at 2:40 p.m., Jean Hargadon Wehner, a 16-year-old junior at the all-girls Catholic school, followed the priest to the parking lot and climbed into the passenger seat of his light blue Buick Roadmaster.

It was not unusual for Maskell to give students rides home or take them to doctor’s appointments during the school day. The burly, charismatic priest, then 30 years old, had been the chief spiritual and psychological counselor at Keough for two years and was well-known in the community. Annual tuition at Keough was just $200, which attracted working-class families in deeply Catholic southwest Baltimore who couldn’t afford to send their daughters to fancier private schools. Many Keough parents had attended Maskell’s Sunday masses. He’d baptized their babies, and they trusted him implicitly.

This time, though, Maskell didn’t bring Wehner home. He navigated his car past the Catholic hospital and industrial buildings that surrounded Keough’s campus and drove toward the outskirts of the city. Eventually, he stopped at a garbage dump, far from any homes or businesses. Maskell stepped out of the car, and the blonde, freckled teenager followed him across a vast expanse of dirt toward a dark green dumpster.

It was then that she saw the body crumpled on the ground.

The week prior, Sister Cathy Cesnik, a popular young nun who taught English and drama at Keough, had vanished while on a Friday-night shopping trip. Students, parents and the local media buzzed about the 26-year-old’s disappearance. People from all over Baltimore County helped the police comb local parks and wooded areas for any sign of her.

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OH–New state Supreme Court ruling

OHIO
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, May 14, 2015

Statement by Barbara Blaine of Chicago, President of SNAP, Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 312-399-4747, bblaine@snapnetwork.org )

We are grateful for the court’s ruling that gives those victimized in state institutions more time. For decades, Ohio archaic, predator friendly statute of limitations have protected both those who commit and conceal child sex crimes. This is a belated but welcome step forward.

If Ohio kids are to be substantially safer lawmakers must reform these arbitrary deadlines, giving child sex victims more chances to expose more molesters in court. In particular, Ohio lawmakers should follow the lead of Delaware, California, Minnesota and Hawaii and adopt a civil window which lets anyone victimized as a child by anyone to seek justice and expose wrongdoers.

[The Columbus Dispatch]

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Big News! …

UNITED STATES
Christian Catholicism

Jerry Slevin

Big News! Guilty Monsignor’s Family Lay Crimes Against Children On Cardinals: Will Pope Now Act On Cardinal Rigali?

The family of convicted child endangerer, Monsignor William Lynn, now say, in pertinent part, reportedly that Lynn’s criminal trial was about ” … charging an underling with the crimes of his former superiors who could not or would not be prosecuted.”

Lynn must have confirmed this with his family, no? How else could they otherwise have known of the “crimes of his former superiors”, principally Philadelphia Cardinals Justin Rigali and Anthony Bevilacqua. For years Lynn has avoided pointing the fingers at his bosses. At his sentencing, the trial judge told him, in effect, that he should have stood up to the cardinals.

Why is Lynn’s finger pointing now through his family? Will he soon say more and say it directly and publicly? Will Pope Francis seek to find out the facts about this statement mentioning cardinals’ crimes against children? Will the pope ask Lynn about this when he visits Philadelphia this summer? Since Rigali is apparently still honored at Vatican events, Francis should at a minimum speak to Lynn, no? Will the Catholics of Philadelphia demand the pope do so or just go along like docile sheep with the pope’s latest charade?

Please see also my related “Pope Francis’ Mess: The Media, The USA Threat, The Vatican & The Democratic Era “.

Lynn had served 18 months of a 3 to 6 year sentence before Pennsylvania’s intermediate Superior Court overturned on appeal his trial court conviction. He then spent the last 16 months under house arrest under terms of release imposed by Common Pleas Court Judge M. Teresa Sarmina, who presided over Lynn’s 2012 trial and conviction by a jury.

After Pennsylvania’s highest court, the Supreme Court, reversed the Superior Court’s reversal of Lynn’s conviction, Judge Sarmina revoked bail and ordered Lynn back to jail. When Lynn appeared in Judge Sarmina’s courtroom on a motion by the to revoke his bail, Lynn’s family was noticeably absent from the proceedings.The monsignor’s family subsequently released a statement that reportedly says, in pertinent part:

We, the family of Msgr. Lynn, chose to forgo the proceedings as we were confident of what the outcome would be, … . We firmly believe that abuse of a child by any individual should not be tolerated. Sadly this trial was not about justice for victims but about establishing political platforms by charging an underling with the crimes of his former superiors who could not or would not be prosecuted. (my emphasis).

Who incidentally is paying for all of Lynn’s appeals? Are Lynn and his lawyers trying to send Philly’s current leader, Archbishop Charles Chaput, through Lynn’s family, a message that Lynn may be considering finally disclosing details about crimes alleged of the two cardinals he worked for? What is really going on here? Let us hope Pope Francis tries to get to the bottom of this disgraceful mess.

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Former North Catholic teacher faces sentence …

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Former North Catholic teacher faces sentence after sexual abuse convictions in Australia

By Peter Smith / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

A Roman Catholic brother who taught for years at North Catholic High School in Pittsburgh is facing sentencing in Australia after his recent convictions in Melbourne for sexual abuse there, according to an Australian news report.

Brother Hartman, now 75, faces a July 8 court date related to his sentencing, according to County Court records for the Australian state of Victoria.

He pleaded guilty recently in County Court in the Australian state of Victoria to four counts of indecent assault and was found guilty by the court of an additional count of indecent assault and two counts of common law assault, according to the Maribyrnong & Hobsons Bay Star Weekly in Victoria.

A Victoria County Court judge on Tuesday lifted a suppression order that had previously forbidden the release of any information on the case by court officials or by Australian media, according to the newspaper. The lifting of the order came after the last of a series of trials involving Brother Hartman that began in April.

Brother Hartman, a member of the St. Louis-based Marianist Province of the United States, was convicted for actions during his time as a teacher at a Catholic high school in Victoria in the 1970s and 1980s, before and after his time in Pittsburgh.

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NY–Syracuse bishop will keep hiding predators

NEW YORK
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, May 14

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

In perhaps the most disingenuous way possible, Syracuse’s Catholic bishop is keeping names of proven, admitted and credibly accused predator priests secret. He’s blaming victims for his recklessness, callousness and cowardice.

[Syracuse.com]

Bishop Robert Cunningham will keep withholding names of potentially dangerous clerics from the public. He claims some victims don’t want child molesting clerics to be exposed. This is disingenuous. Frankly we doubt he’s telling the truth. But even if he is, Cunningham should have the courage to put the actual physical safety of children above the supposed wishes of an adult to shield an adult who assaults kids.

In the world’s oldest and most rigid hierarchy, in which bishops wield virtually limitless power and parishioners have virtually none, Cunningham pretends to be ‘democratic’ and claims he’s essentially letting victims vote on whether police, prosecutors, parents, parishioners and the public should

And since there’s supposedly a virtual tie, Cunningham will continue with the same self-serving secrecy about predators that has led to 6,300 US priests being accused of assaulting more than 100,000 children.

(For citations, see BishopAccountability.org)

In an equally disingenuous move, Cunningham claims he will confirm a predator priest’s name if a victim discloses it first. He knows full well that a victim can rarely “disclose” a predator’s name without a criminal case or a civil lawsuit, both of which are extremely rare and difficult under New York’s archaic, predator-friendly laws with extremely tight deadlines.

Our hearts go out to Kevin Braney and everyone who was and will be sexually violated by Syracuse priests. We hope that every single one of them – plus every witness, whistle-blower and concerned church member – will find the courage to try to protect kids and expose those who omit and conceal child sex crimes by calling police, lawyers, therapists and groups like ours.

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Milwaukee Federal judge Lynn Adelman offers to mediate church bankruptcy, victims respond

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Statement by Peter Isely, SNAP Midwest Director (Milwaukee)
CONTACT: 414.429.7259

Survivors of rape and sexual assault by clergy of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee today are grateful that Milwaukee Federal Judge Lynn Adelman, in an unusual impromptu hearing today, has directly offered to mediate the deteriorating four year old Milwaukee Archdiocese bankruptcy case involving some 575 victim cases.

The case has been handled so far by bankruptcy Judge Susan V Kelley and it is to Kelley that Adelman said he first made the offer.

Survivors especially welcome the move if it means that Adelman will cut through the legal wrangling and stonewalling by the archdiocese so that survivors and legal experts can finally examine what they have long maintained is a fraudulently constituted $57 million dollar “cemetery trust” created by former Archbishop Timothy Dolan and the Vatican.

A “smoking gun” letter surfacing among the bankruptcy documents and written by Dolan asks direct permission from the Vatican to establish the trust. Dolan writes that the trust would specifically be created to shield the archdiocese from compensating victims of priest sex abuse by US courts. Not long afterwards, Dolan was promoted to Cardinal of New York and the Milwaukee Archdiocese filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy.

Not surprisingly, Adelman’s mediation offer comes just days after the lead lawyer for the archdiocese, Frank LoCoco, told the bankruptcy court that the church was prepared to deplete all its funds before compensating a single victim of clergy sex crimes.

LoCoco’s remarks, which he characterized at the time as “candid,” represent, one can assume, the sentiments of current Archbishop Jerome Listecki. They are utterly consistent with the plan the archdiocese has had all along: to use bankruptcy court to dodge accountability for a decades long pattern and practice of shielding and transferring known child sex offenders without providing restitution to those harmed.

Four years ago, Listecki publically urged victims to come forward to file cases and promised that the church, with the court, would provide restitution and healing. Yet, the very day after the period of time for survivors to file cases was reached, LoCoco and his team immediately sought to dismiss victim cases. For four long years, and thousands of billable hours later, they have been doing little else. The result: church lawyers, court and other costs are now soaring towards $20 million dollars while victims have received no relief whatsoever. In fact, the archdiocese claims it has only $4 million dollars to help victims, four times less than it’s been paying out to lawyers and for other related costs.

There is something terribly wrong with this picture. Maybe Adelman or someone can figure it out and fix it. If not, the bankruptcy court has been little else than a profitable chess game for church lawyers. And it will be victims who will once again have to pay the price for the crimes and sins of the church.

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Barry Freundel is still violating women’s privacy

UNITED STATES
Haaretz

By The Forward and Bethany Mandel | May 13, 2015

I follow the Barry Freundel case quite closely, closer than most. I have a dog in the race: I’m a confirmed victim (though the videos he took of me inside the preparation room at the mikveh was recorded outside the statute of limitations). When news broke yesterday of a defense memo I immediately got my hands on an unredacted version. The Washington Post soon published a redacted copy, obscuring the identities of several women who were named by the defense expressing sympathy or confusion about the prominent rabbi’s arrest.

Why did the Washington Post remove their names? They were protecting their privacy, because it wasn’t clear to editors that their remarks were made public with their permission. The section of the defense memo in question is named “Internet Posting (sic) of Women Congregants of Rabbi Freundel.”

The instincts of the editors of the Washington Post were correct. I spoke to four out of the five women named by the defense and they all confirmed they were neither asked or told by the defense that their remarks would be used. The fifth didn’t return my request for comment. All said they had not been contacted by Freundel or his lawyer before their statements, taken from Facebook immediately after the arrest took place and without context, were placed in a sentencing request for leniency by the court. Of the four that returned my request for comment, none of them would have granted consent had they been asked.

Freundel’s lawyers asked for community service, in stark opposition to the prosecution’s request for 17 years incarceration, one-third of the maximum allowed by law for the 52 charges (another 100 videos fall outside of the statute of limitations).

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Why it’s OK not to forgive peeping rabbi Freundel

UNITED STATES
Haaretz

By Rabbi Elianna Yolkut | May 14, 2015

My Washington D.C. community has been engaged in impassioned debates over how severe a punishment Rabbi Barry Freundel deserves for spying on women in the mikveh (Jewish ritual bath), since prosecutors recommended he be sent to prison for 17 years for 52 counts of misdemeanor voyeurism.

“Murderers and rapist don’t even get that much time,” one congregant insisted.

“Are you kidding me? He was a rabbi; he shamed people. It’s like murder,” another interjected.

Back and forth the arguments flew, growing louder as congregants contradicted and agreed with one another. Listening to the conversation, I wondered: What does Judaism teach us about those who exploit others: do we have a right to seek a severe punishment, or must we strive for leniency, in an effort to exhibit compassion?

Teshuvah (repentance) and forgiveness are central elements of Jewish thought. In the Talmud is the famous phrase, “Human beings should be pliant as a reed, not hard like the cedar,” in granting forgiveness (Taanit 20a). This phrase, and others, is often used to describe a victim’s responsibility to be soft and flexible in their ability to offer forgiveness. In Shabbat 133b we are taught, “Just as it is in the nature of God to be merciful to His creatures, so man in attempting to imitate the ways of God should be forgiving toward those who have injured them.”

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How do we forgive the ‘Peeping Tom’ rabbi? Can we? (COMMENTARY)

UNITED STATES
Washington Post

By Alana Suskin | Religion News Service May 14

When I was in grad school on the path that would eventually lead me to become a rabbi, I took a class in the philosophy of Jewish law. The teacher was clear and interesting, if not terribly personable. When the semester ended and I wanted to learn more seriously about the body of Jewish text called Mishnah, I asked the professor if he would help.

He agreed but specified that our study had to take place over the phone. I thought it odd, but knew that philosophy departments are full of eccentric personalities, and I was grateful that he was willing to take the time. I didn’t think much of it, but now, I wonder if even back then Rabbi Barry Freundel was already fighting his demons.

The story of Rabbi Freundel is notorious: a nationally known figure, the rabbi of an important Orthodox congregation in Washington, who was disgraced after he secretly recorded women immersing in the mikvah ritual bath. It is a sad story, one that certainly reveals the truth of the Talmudic comment: “When anyone commits a transgression in secret, it is as though he thrust aside the feet of the Divine Presence.”

In the Washington area, where I live, there is shock over the Freundel scandal. I myself have struggled with what to tell people who ask me about how we should respond as a community. As a former student, I, too, was shocked.

But after much reflection, I think there are two primary responses: one personal, one communal.

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Msgr. Lynn’s Lawyer Seeks Hearing In Superior Court

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Big Trial

MONDAY, MAY 11, 2015

By Ralph Cipriano
for Bigtrial.net

A lawyer for Msgr. William J. Lynn filed two motions in state Superior Court today, seeking to argue an appeal for a new trial before the same panel of judges that previously overturned Lynn’s conviction.

On Dec. 26, 2013, state Superior Court Judges John T. Bender, Christine L. Donohue and John L. Musmanno issued an opinion that reversed Lynn’s June 22, 2012, conviction in Common Pleas Court for endangering the welfare of a child.

On April 27, 2015, the state Supreme Court entered an opinion reversing the Superior Court’s reversal.

In his motion seeking a new briefing before the Superior Court, Thomas A. Bergstrom, Lynn’s lawyer, noted that the state Supreme Court only addressed one narrow issue, namely whether Lynn was considered an “other person supervising the welfare of a child” under the state’s original 1972 child endangerment law.

The law states: “A parent, guardian or other person supervising the welfare of a child under 18 years of age commits an offense if he knowingly endangers the welfare of a child by violating a duty of care, protection or support.”

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Clergy Abuse Plaintiff Seeks Judgment…

PENNSYLVANIA
The Legal Intelligencer

Clergy Abuse Plaintiff Seeks Judgment Based on Lynn Conviction

P.J. D’Annunzio, The Legal Intelligencer
May 14, 2015

The plaintiff in a civil clergy sex-abuse case is asking the court for summary judgment against the Archdiocese of Philadelphia and Monsignor William Lynn based on the reinstatement of Lynn’s criminal conviction.

Billy Doe, who alleged that he was sexually abused by priests as a minor, claimed in court papers that Lynn, in his role as an archdiocese administrator, knowingly shuffled priests accused of misconduct from parish to parish across the state where they could come into contact with children. The plaintiff in the case is proceeding under the pseudonym “Billy Doe.”

The Supreme Court’s April reinstatement of Lynn’s criminal conviction of endangering the welfare of children means that the archdiocese and Lynn can be held civilly liable, Doe claimed.

Lynn’s attorney, Thomas Bergstrom of Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney, said he had not yet had a chance to review Doe’s motion, but he would file a response sometime before the deadline in early June. He declined to comment further.

Doe’s lawyer, Slade McLaughin, and the archdiocese’s attorney, Nicholas Centrella of Conrad O’Brien, did not return calls seeking comment.

Lynn is the first Catholic Church administrative official convicted of endangering the welfare of children abused by other priests.

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Chicago Archdiocese sues for return of jewelry removed from church shrine

ILLINOIS
Chicago Tribune

By Meredith Rodriguez
Chicago Tribune

Dozens of gold chains, wedding bands and gold crosses used to adorn statues were illegally removed from Our Lady of Mount Carmel, a Catholic church in Melrose Park, according to a suit filed Wednesday in Cook County Circuit Court.

The Catholic Bishop of Chicago filed a lawsuit against three people it alleges took the items from a church shrine before and during 2013. The three were members of the Society of the Shrine of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, according to the suit.

The removed jewelry included roughly one dozen large 14-carat gold chains from 16 to 36 inches long, roughly five gold crosses on small chains as well as crowns, pins, precious jewels and broaches. Jewels were also taken from a safe deposit box at a bank, according to the suit. Removed gowns included two infant cream-colored dresses with matching capes, a 1940s-era cream-colored cape and wigs.

The value of the items is “not ascertainable,” but it is more than $100,000, according to the suit.

After written and oral demands were made to return the items, the Archdiocese of Chicago sent a letter last July and another one last month demanding that the items be returned, the suit said.

“Despite the demands for its return, the property has not been recovered and is being unlawfully retained,” according to the suit. “… The property has not been taken for any tax, assessment or fine levied by virtue of any law of this state against the property of the Archdiocese of Chicago, nor seized under any lawful execution or attachment, or held by virtue of any order of replevin against Plaintiff.”

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Judge Orders St. Frances X. Cabrini Parishioners To Leave Closed Church

MASSACHUSETTS
CBS Local

SCITUATE (CBS) — A Norfolk Superior Court judge has ruled that the friends of St. Frances must end their decade-long vigil.

The judge said that parishioners occupying the closed Scituate church must leave by May 26. A counter claim that was filed by parishioners has been dismissed.

A group of parishioners has held vigil at the church for the last 10 years, after the Boston Archdiocese ordered it closed as part of its 2004 reconfiguration.

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Childhood sex-abuse victims have 12 years — not 2 — to sue state

OHIO
The Columbus Dispatch

By Randy Ludlow
The Columbus Dispatch • Thursday May 14, 2015

A divided Ohio Supreme Court ruled today that children sexually assaulted at state institutions have 12 years — instead of two years — to sue state agencies for damages.

In a 4-3 decision, the court majority ruled that the 12-year statute of limitations for filing sexual-assault claims from age 18 overrides a law requiring lawsuits against the state to be filed within two years.

Those victimized by teachers, coaches, clergy, local juvenile-detention-center employees and others have until age 30 to sue their molesters and their private- or public-sector employers for damages.

But those molested by state employees in state institutions had only until age 20 to file lawsuits in the Court of Claims prior to today’s ruling.

The justices heard arguments a year ago that the differing deadlines — from the time victims become adults — shield state agencies from damage claims filed by victims who often need years to “process” the trauma they suffered.

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Fox News interviews Le Moyne College president about Cardinal Dolan protest

NEW YORK
Syracuse.com

By Marnie Eisenstadt | meisenstadt@syracuse.com
on May 14, 2015

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Le Moyne College President Linda LeMura appeared on Fox News this morning to talk about how some on campus asked that Cardinal Timothy Dolan be uninvited as the college’s commencement speaker.

During the interview, LeMura said that the group represented a small percentage of the college community. She heard their concerns about Dolan’s actions regarding the priest sexual abuse scandal and suggested the students do more research about what happened.

“Many of our students, faculty and alumni are very pleased,” LeMura said. “He’ll be great.”

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Clerical abuse compensation case put off indefinitely

MALTA
Times of Malta

A compensation court case filed by the victims of clerical abuse was today put off indefinitely until a separate case appealing a decision by a judge not to abstain from hearing the case is heard.

In a very short sitting today, Mr Justice Joseph Micallef upheld a request for the case to be postponed and put on hold pending a hearing of an appeal against the judge’s decision not to abstain from hearing the case.

Lawyers Patrick Valentino and Franco Vassallo said this would allow them to also file a request before the Constitutional Court.

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St. Joseph’s Home abuse victims file …

MALTA
Malta Independent

John Cordina

Proceedings on a compensation claim filed by 10 victims of sexual abuse at St Joseph’s Home in Santa Venera have been suspended after they filed a constitutional appeal in their bid to have the case assigned to a different judge.

Two former priests, Carmelo Pulis and Godwin Scerri, were jailed for six and five years respectively in August 2011 after they were found guilty of sexually abusing boys in their care. Mr Scerri was acquitted of violently raping a boy on a technicality: the incident did occur, but not in the location mentioned in the charge sheet.

A third defendant facing similar charges, Br Joseph Bonnet, died months before proceedings were concluded. The two priests were defrocked following their conviction, and while they appealed the case, the sentence was confirmed on appeal.

The 10 victims sought financial compensation, but meetings with the Malta Archdiocese put paid to the possibility of an out-of-court settlement. The Curia rejected legal responsibility for the sexual abuse carried by two of its priests, although it said it was willing to provide counselling to the victims.

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Author to discuss Vatican money trail

MICHIGAN
C and G Newspapers

By Terry Oparka
Published May 13, 2015

Author Gerald Posner has investigated some high-profile issues for the 12 books he’s written.

An attorney and former chief investigative reporter for The Daily Beast, he’s written books about Motown, as well as the assassinations of President John F. Kennedy and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

Posner said he has wanted to research Vatican finances since ’84, when he was doing pro bono work in Argentina researching Nazi Joseph Mengele — known as the “Angel of Death” for his torture of men, women and children at the Auschwitz concentration camp during World War II — for a lawsuit he brought on behalf of surviving twins from Auschwitz.

While in the Argentine federal police archives, Posner said, he came across files on a priest and a bishop who had helped Nazis after World War II.

He’s been working on his book, “God’s Bankers,” which he said is an in-depth examination of Vatican finances, since 2005.

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Pro-reform groups rail against creating ‘alienating’ mega-parishes to solve shortage of priests

UNITED KINGDOM
The Tablet

14 May 2015 by Sarah Mac Donald

Leaders of more than 20 international reform groups have written to Pope Francis criticising the trend towards “mega-parishes” as a response to the decline in priest numbers.

The letter is signed by 24 groups whose representatives attended last month’s reform conference in Limerick. It warns the Pope that bishops are responding to the priest shortage by creating “anonymous and unmanageable superstructures”.

In these new mega-parishes, personal contact between people and ministers is lost, says the letter, leaving the faithful “alienated, unsettled and insecure” as priests are increasingly focused on administration instead of caring for souls.

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Rev. Robert DeGrand responds to his removal as pastor

ILLINOIS
Effingham Daily News

Bill Grimes

SIGEL — Defending himself against his removal as pastor of four local Catholic parishes, the Rev. Robert “Bud” DeGrand said he’s been judged guilty without a fair hearing, and that the actions of the Springfield Diocese “felt more like a witch trial than any real search for truth.”

The ousted priest’s comments were made this week in a letter addressed to “My dear brothers and sisters in Christ.” Although he did not return a message from a reporter seeking comment, DeGrand sent the letter to the Effingham Daily News. Its authenticity was verified by George Nuxoll, a former trustee at St. Michael the Archangel Church in Sigel.

Bishop Thomas John Paprocki on May 2 removed DeGrand from his parishes in Sigel, Neoga, Green Creek and Lillyville, citing a Diocesan Review Board finding that allegations of sexual misconduct against DeGrand were “credible.” Those allegations stemmed from an alleged incident in 1980 while DeGrand was serving a parish in Jacksonville.

The priest has never been charged with a crime.

DeGrand had served the so-called “Four Parishes” for 16 years, and was removed despite what some members call his almost universal support.

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‘America’s Changing Religious Landscape’

MINNESOTA
Canonical Consultation

05/13/2015

Jennifer Haselberger

Yesterday there was grim news coming from the Pew Research Center for Religion and Public Life. The 2015 Pew report, like its 2007 predecessor, suggests an upheaval in religious life in America with a decided trend towards the ‘nones’ (religiously unaffiliated individuals). Of Catholicism in particular, the Pew report states:

Nearly a third of all U.S. adults (31.7%) were raised Catholic, and most of them continue to identify as Catholics today. But nearly 13% of all Americans are former Catholics – people who no longer identify with the faith despite having been raised in the Catholic Church. By comparison, there are far fewer converts to Catholicism; 2% of all U.S. adults now identify as Catholics after having been raised in another religion or without a religion. This means that there are more than six former Catholics for every convert to Catholicism. No other religious group analyzed in the survey has experienced anything close to this ratio of losses to gains via religious switching.

Now, I have a certain ambivalence towards such research, mainly because I am aware of its margin of error and its potential misuse. For instance, the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis consistently states that it is home to 825,000 Catholics, when in fact the actual Catholic population is significantly lower. The number 825,000 came about by multiplying the percentage of the population identifying as Catholic as articulated in the Pew studies (which in itself is based on a sample of 35,000) with the total population of the 12 county Archdiocesan territory as identified by census, and then adjusting that number upwards so that the Archdiocese appears to have a large enough population to require an auxiliary bishop or two, but not large enough to increase its required financial contribution to the USCCB. By way of contrast, any any attempts to quantify the number of Catholics in the Archdiocese using empirical data (such as attendance at Mass, membership rolls, numbers of baptisms, numbers of people who have formally defected from the faith, etc) never resulted in numbers above 450,000 to 550,000 Catholics. This inconsistency was repeatedly mentioned to Archbishop Nienstedt, but he was strongly in favor of using the higher, clearly incorrect number, and apparently continues to be so inclined.

At the same time, anyone who cares about the Catholic Church should be concerned about the trends identified in the Pew study. While I realize that there are some that believe, as Pope Benedict XVI did, that historical forces would combine to restructure the Catholic Church into a far smaller,
‘simpler and more spiritual’ entity, I am not of the opinion that this prophecy or its apparent fulfillment is something we should celebrate. I think this is especially true given the reasons articulated by many so-called ‘millennials’ (those under 30) for being disaffiliated. In an interview with MPR yesterday, Rachel Held Evans, a blogger and contributor to the Washington Post had this to say about the inability of traditional churches to appeal to her generation.

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Israelis ‘keen’ to get Leifer to Melbourne

AUSTRALIA
The Australian Jewish News

ADASS Israel Congregation’s former president Benjamin Koppel was quizzed in the Supreme Court of Victoria yesterday about how closely the appointment of teacher Malka Leifer was vetted.

Leifer, a former senior teacher at the school – and allegedly the principal –fled to Israel in 2008 with the assistance of the Adass board, after allegations surfaced that she had sexually abused some of her students.

Leifer is under house arrest in Israel, with an application underway by Australian authorities to have her extradited to face criminal charges relating to her employment at Adass.

A lawsuit against Adass and Leifer, brought by one of her alleged victims, is in process.

The court heard that a subcommittee of the Adass congregation was tasked with finding a Jewish Studies teacher and that Israeli David Rosenbaum, who lived in Australia at the time, was asked to make inquiries about candidates.

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Child abuse victims launch ‘unprecedented’ court action against former Ballarat bishop

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Louise Milligan

Ten victims who were abused by notorious paedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale have begun proceedings in the Victorian Supreme Court against a former Bishop of Ballarat.

They accuse Bishop Ronald Mulkearns and the Diocese of Ballarat of negligence for allegedly failing to protect them and other victims, despite being aware of complaints against Ridsdale.

The lawyer representing the victims, Viv Waller, said the case was unprecedented because it bypassed the Catholic Church’s so-called Ellis defence – where the church cannot be sued because, technically, it does not exist as a legal entity.

“The Catholic Church itself has no continuing legal personality, so it’s not like a company,” Ms Waller told the ABC’s 7.30.

“So, unless the individuals responsible for the act or alleged mission are still alive, there’s no-one against which you can actually commence proceedings.”

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A Mid-Year Report on Child Sex Abuse Victims’ Access to Justice in 2015

UNITED STATES
Verdict

Marcia A. Hamilton

There is good news and bad news for victims of child sex abuse who seek to enter the justice system in 2015. As a general matter across the United States, we are on the right track and headed in the right direction. But there is a great deal of work left to do.

The most remarkable leap forward: Georgia. Before May 5, 2015, the date when Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal signed into law the Hidden Predator Act (HPA), Georgia was among the five worst states in the country for child sex abuse victims’ access to justice. The statutes of limitations (“SOLs”) in the civil context shut down all claims by age 23 and on the criminal side, only opened the door for crimes after July 1, 2012. That meant civil suits and prosecutions for child sex abuse have been rare occurrences in Georgia.

That changes on July 1, 2015, when the HPA goes into effect. The HPA moves Georgia into one of the better states in the country. It creates a two-year window (during which defendants do not have the benefit of the statute of limitation as a defense) for the victim to sue the perpetrator. It also institutes a new discovery rule, which permits victims to sue perpetrators and/or institutions for abuse and cover ups. Victims will have two years from the date they understand that their current problems were caused by the childhood sexual abuse to go to court. While there are better SOL laws in the country, and most specifically, Delaware and Minnesota, which have eliminated civil and criminal SOLs for all defendants, and given victims a window, it still catapults Georgia ahead of the other four deplorable states on this issue, New York, Michigan, Alabama, and Mississippi.

A more predictable result: Utah. Utah also made some progress, though it is all against the perpetrator. As of March 2015, for all abuse into the future, civil claims will not be subject to an SOL against the perpetrator. The bill started out as one against perpetrator and institution. Yet, as expected, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ensured that the same civil extension could not be applied to institutions that employ pedophiles or that cover up for them. The same age 22 limit that was in place before remains, making Utah one of the most restrictive regimes for bringing institutions that harbor abusers to justice.

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More Ballarat clergy victims: advocate

AUSTRALIA
7 News

Megan Neil
May 14, 2015

Many victims who haven’t come forward decades after being abused by clergy and religious in Ballarat might be prompted to speak up when the abuse royal commission sits in the Victorian town, a victims’ advocate hopes.

Ballarat Centre Against Sexual Assault manager Shireen Gunn says she has no doubt there are more victims who could be empowered by the commission hearings starting next week, as occurred after Victoria’s child abuse inquiry.

“We believe that there’s others who haven’t come forward yet, that are still in the wings,” Ms Gunn told AAP.

“If out of this intensive focus on our area, if more are able to see others have told their story and that gives them a sense that they come forward, that will be really good.”

Some of the men – aged in their 40s, 50s and 60s – who sought help after the Victorian parliamentary inquiry were speaking about their abuse for the first time.

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Sneinton vicar admits possessing child porn – including image of a two-year-old

UNITED KINGDOM
Nottingham Post

The vicar of a Sneinton church has been spared custody after he admitted possessing child porn of children as young as two.

Rev Andrew Waude had been working at St Cyprian’s Church, in Lancaster Road as part of the Diocese of Southwell and Nottingham, when he was caught with 476 images and videos.

After pleading guilty at Nottingham Crown Court at an earlier hearing, he was sentenced to a three-year community order and supervision from probation and 250 hours of unpaid work on Wednesday.

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Ballarat abuse horror doesn’t go away

AUSTRALIA
Daily Mail

AAP

It’s the rollcall of names that decades on still haunts former St Alipius students: Ridsdale, Best, Dowlan, Fitzgerald, Farrell.

The school chaplain, principal and the entire teaching staff.

Five confirmed pedophiles, all at the Christian Brothers junior school in Ballarat East in the 1970s.

A St Alipius class photo from the time bears testament to the devastating toll their abuse wrought.
“Now a third of those are gone, they’re dead,” Ballarat Centre Against Sexual Assault (CASA) manager Shireen Gunn said.

The unusually high level of suicides and premature deaths is the ongoing legacy of the abuse of children as young as five in the Ballarat diocese.

Peter Blenkiron, who was 11 when he was abused at the Brothers’ other school in Ballarat, St Patrick’s College, estimates there’s been 10 suicides in the regional Victorian city in the past year alone.

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Catholic College Students Say Cardinal Dolan Can’t Be Commencement Speaker Because He’s ‘Homophobic’

UNITED STATES
National Review

by IAN TUTTLE May 13, 2015

This year’s inevitable commencement controversy is at Le Moyne College in Syracuse, N.Y., where students are circulating the following petition, via Change.org:

Le Moyne College has appointed Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan as Commencement Speaker for the graduating class of 2015 and the graduates, along with staff and other students, do not approve of this choice.

Over the years, Cardinal Dolan has been involved with sexual abuse scandals dealing with clergy of the church, homophobic comments and does not represent the ideals we have come to know Le Moyne to represent. With the growing attention toward sexual assault on the Le Moyne campus, students have felt that keeping Cardinal Dolan as commencement speaker completely opposes what we have advocated against.

By signing this petition, you are playing a part in being the voice of Le Moyne. We have walked the halls of Le Moyne for the Black Lives that Matter, we have held vigils for the Muslim students gunned down in Chapel Hill and much more. We have always come together in hard times. Do not stop now. Stand strong, sign and keep it going.

The petition has garnered 662 signees, from a college of about 2,800 undergraduate and 800 graduate students. It seems worth noting, by the by, that Le Moyne is a Jesuit college. It touts its “Jesuit Tradition” on its website homepage. It shows pictures of students chatting with priests.

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May 13, 2015

Suit: Parishioners took more than $100K worth of jewelry from Melrose Park church

ILLINOIS
Chicago Sun-Times

Sam Charles

The Archdiocese of Chicago is suing several members of a west suburban parish who, a new lawsuit alleges, took jewelry and other adornments from the church valued at more than $100,000.

The lawsuit was filed Wednesday in Cook County Circuit Court against three members of the Society of the Shrine of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, based in Melrose Park.

The Archdiocese alleges that some time “prior to and during 2013,” dozens of gold rings, chains, crosses, crowns, broaches and several statue adornments were taken from the church by the three parishioners.

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Briton goes to Italy to accuse priest of abuse

UNITED KIGNDOM
The Times

Alice Hutton
May 14 2015

A father of two travelled to Italy to covertly film his confrontation with a priest whom he claimed had sexually abused him as a teenager at a Roman Catholic seminary in Britain.

Mark Murray went to Italy to track down Father Romano Nardo, after repeated attempts to have him extradited to Britain to face questioning failed.

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Pew survey: Percentage of US Catholics drops…

UNITED STATES
Crux

Pew survey: Percentage of US Catholics drops and Catholicism is losing members faster than any denomination

By Michael O’Loughlin
National reporter May 12, 2015

For years, two truisms dominated coverage of the US Catholic Church: about one quarter of the population is Catholic and each year at Easter, Catholics entering the church offset those leaving it.

But new data suggests a new story.

A report released Tuesday by the Pew Forum finds that the total number of Catholics in the United States dropped by 3 million since 2007, now comprising about 20 percent – or one-fifth – of the total population.

And perhaps more troubling for the church, for every one Catholic convert, more than six Catholics leave the church. Taken a step further, Catholicism loses more members than it gains at a higher rate than any other denomination, with nearly 13 percent of all Americans describing themselves as “former Catholics.”

The report, America’s Changing Religious Landscape, found that in 2014, the overall share of Christians in the United States dropped to an all-time low of just under 71 percent, down about 7 percentage points from 2007.

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IL–Ousted Priest-ducking, dodging, deflecting and distracting

ILLINOIS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, May 13

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

An accused predator priest who has reportedly been permanently ousted from ministry is speaking out for the first time. And he’s ducking, dodging, deflecting and distracting.

[Journal Courier]

Fr. Robert “Bud” DeGrand claims he’s been mistreated by his boss, Bishop Thomas Paprocki, and a panel of Catholics. But, if Paprocki is to be believed, Fr. DeGrand deceived a therapist and refused to take a lie detector test, be evaluated by a psychiatrist, meet again with a church panel, and move to free housing in Springfield.

Fr. DeGrand gripes that his accuser has stepped forward years after the alleged crimes. But DeGrand isn’t stupid. He knows that precious few young boys or girls have the strength, maturity and courage to promptly call 911 right after they’ve been raped or sodomized by a trusted adult. Even fewer can do this when the perpetrator is a revered religious figure who purports to have the power to get a child or his loved ones into heaven by hearing confession.

Fr. DeGrand also knows that, given the church’s long-standing priest shortage, most Catholic officials feel pressured to err on the side of keeping sexually troubled clerics on the job. Often, church officials believe their accused colleagues over their alleged victims. So it’s significant when a bishop and his hand-picked Catholic panel concur that a cleric likely molested a child. We also strongly suspect that church insurers, defense lawyers and public relations experts agree with Paprocki and his panel that Fr. DeGrand is a threat. We also suspect there is other information in Fr. DeGrand’s personnel file about other known, admitted or alleged sexual misdeeds.

We again call on Paprocki to

–stop using parishioner donations to buy a lawyer for Fr. DeGrand
–put notices about Fr. DeGrand and the credible accusations against him on the diocesan website
–do the same with parish bulletins and websites across the diocese
–beg, in each notice, all victims, witnesses and whistleblowers to call police
–visit each church where Fr. DeGrand has worked, making the same plea in person,
–turn over, to law enforcement agencies in every county where he worked, his personnel file, and
–teach his flock how to respond appropriately when abuse reports against clerics surface

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Reform groups’ letter to Francis: Stop combining parishes into megaparishes

IRELAND
National Catholic Reporter

Sarah Mac Donald | May. 13, 2015

DUBLIN The leaders of 24 international reform groups who met in Limerick, Ireland, in April are urging Pope Francis to call for a halt to the church’s policy of clustering parishes into megaparishes as a response to the decline in priest numbers.

In an open letter, the 32 signatories — from groups such as Catholics for Renewal in Australia, A Call to Action in England, and the Society for Open Christianity for the 21st Century in Slovakia — tell Francis that the future of parish life is “massively threatened.”

Bishops seeking to address the priest shortage are “merging active and vibrant parishes into anonymous and unmanageable superstructures,” the letter said.

While merging seems to be “the formula of the hour,” the reform leaders warn that in these new megaparishes, personal contact between people and ministers is being lost as the sacraments are removed ever further from the everyday life of church citizens.

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Solicitor charged with perverting course of justice tries to get case thrown out

NORTHERN IRELAND
Ulster Herald

A SOLICITOR, charged alongside a priest with perverting justice, is to argue to have the case thrown out of court.

Committal proceedings were scheduled to take place at Dungannon Magistrates Court, potentially sending the case against 54-year-old solicitor Patrick Mallon, and Father Joseph John Quinn (48) to the Crown Court for trial but that was adjourned again after Mallon’s solicitor Aidan Quinn revealed he would be launching an abuse of process application.

The PE was initially scheduled at the beginning of March. In court Mr Quinn told District Judge John Meehan the application would be “on two limbs” but did not expand on them, asking instead for two weeks to lodge skeleton arguments.

Dungannon based solicitor Mallon, from Upper Parklands, and Fr Quinn, from Ardmore Park in Coalisland, each face two charges of perverting the course of justice in that they allegedly attempted to pressurise or persuade witnesses to withdraw statements made to police between February 1 and 15

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Dal Galles a Verona: il lungo viaggio dell’ex seminarista abusato in cerca della verità

ITALIA
La Repubblica

Mark Murray ha 59 anni e ha intrapreso un lungo viaggio dal Galles fino a Verona per incontrare padre Romano Nardo, il sacerdote che nel 1970 abusò sessualmente di lui nel seminario di Mirfield, in Inghilterra. Un faccia a faccia avvenuto all’interno della Casa dei padri Comboniani di Verona, dopo 45 anni di attesa senza mai un’ammissione di colpevolezza o delle scuse. “Mi hanno dato dei soldi come compensazione, ma non è una questione di soldi. Quei fatti hanno avuto un grande impatto sulla mia vita, per anni non ho voluto avere figli per paura di essere io stesso un pedofilo”, racconta Murray

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British man confronts Catholic priest he claims abused him as teenager

UNITED KINGDOM/ITALY
Telegraph

By Nick Squires, Rome 13 May 2015

A British father-of-two has confronted an Italian priest who allegedly sexually abused him when he was a teenager.

Mark Murray claims he was systematically abused by Father Romano Nardo at Mirfield, a Catholic seminary school in Yorkshire.

Mr Murray, 59, spent years trying to bring the alleged abuse, which took place in 1970, to the attention of the Vatican authorities.

He finally decided to turn up in person at a religious institution in Verona, northern Italy, where Father Nardo, now 73, lives.

He managed to confront the elderly priest, telling him: “You have had a massive, negative impact on my life and my family and my children. I tried many times to meet with you.”

Mr Murray covertly filmed the encounter with a tiny camera hidden inside a wristwatch, provided to him by La Repubblica, which published the footage online on Wednesday.

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Lawsuit: Pedophile New England priest sent to New Mexico

NEW MEXICO
New Mexican

Posted: Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Russell Contreras
AP Writer

ALBUQUERQUE — A new lawsuit says the Vatican sent a New England priest accused of raping boys and stealing parish money to New Mexico for treatment and that he later abused a boy in that state numerous times.

The lawsuit recently filed in Albuquerque District Court says a religious order in Massachusetts wrote the Vatican seeking to fire Rev. John George Weisenborn. However, the Vatican instructed the diocese to send Weisenborn to New Mexico in 1964 where he was later hired as a full-time priest.

According to the lawsuit, Weisenborn abused as boy more than fifty times as a priest at St. Francis Xavier in Albuquerque beginning in 1968.

Court documents say Weisenborn also was detained three times in Washington D.C. for having sex with boys before coming to New Mexico.

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Ambassador of Peace

CALIFORNIA
The Worthy Adversary

posted by Joelle Casteix on May 13, 2015

Last week, I learned that I have been selected as a 2015 Ambassador of Peace award winner by the Violence Prevention Coalition of Orange County. That’s some pretty cool news!

I was nominated by my cousin and friend Darcy Fehringer-Mask*, who won the award herself in 2008 for her work in diversity and anti-bias education, including bullying awareness and prevention. I was chosen for my work on behalf of victims of child sexual abuse, prevention and awareness education, and my efforts towards changing civil and criminal statutes of limitations for sex crimes against children.

Looking at the other winners, I’m in awesome company and am very humbled by the honor. The ceremony is a June 5 luncheon in Costa Mesa. Let me know if you want to come. I’ll save you a seat!

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.

Rome–3 groups write lay panel re Finn’s upcoming ordinations

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, May 13

For more information: David Clohessy 314 566 9790 ( davidgclohessy@gmail.com ) , Anne Barrett Doyle 781-439-5208 ( barrett.doyle@comcast.net )

Three groups: Finn should not ordain new priests
Bishop was convicted for not reporting child abuse images
Last month, three years late, prelate finally resigned
But Catholic officials are letting him ordain priests & deacons
Organizations say his “continued visibility hurts parishioners and victims”

Three groups concerned about clergy sex crimes and cover ups are urging a Catholic panel to stop a convicted bishop from ordaining priests and deacons in two ceremonies later this month.

Members of BishopAccountability.org, the National Survivor Advocacy Coalition (NSAC), and the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) are concerned about Bishop Robert Finn who resigned last month, three years after he was criminally convicted of failing to report suspected child sex crimes by a priest.

The organizations are writing the National Review Board, a group of lay Catholics charged with working with US bishops across on the sexual abuse of minors.

[National Review Board]

A fourth group, the Boston-based Voice of the Faithful, is expected to write the NRB today expressing the same concern. (Contact Donna Doucette, dbdoucette@votf.org )

They are asking that the group demand that the US Conference of Catholic Bishops ban Bishop Finn from presiding over the upcoming May 16 and May 23 ordination of priests and deacons. Finn was allowed to resign last month, after years of outcry from victims and Catholics over his conviction and his handling of the Fr. Shawn Ratigan case.

[New York Times]

“A convicted and disgraced bishop is the last person who should be ordaining a new priest,” the letter said. “What kind of message does it send when a man who could not pass the background check in his own diocese is the one ordaining new priests? Does his crime mean nothing? Do the children Ratigan abused mean nothing?”

The groups fear that if Finn has any public role, victims will be less likely to report abuse and that wrong-doers will feel like they can easily get a “free pass” for covering up abuse. They also worry about the feelings and morale of Kansas City Catholics, many of whom want healing and closure and are dismayed by Finn’s continued visibility in the church.

“There are dozens of less-objectionable bishops who are a short plane ride from Kansas City,” the letter continued. “Why can’t one of them officiate at the ordination? Why celebrate a man who deliberately put children in the path of a predator? Finn is not a leader, and allowing him to remain in a position of power is not healing for anyone.”

The groups also want reassurance that Finn will be assigned a life of “prayer and penance” and will not be allowed any public or powerful roles in the church in Kansas City, the US or the Vatican.

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.

Q&A Manny Waks: Film blows whistle on yeshiva sex abuse

CANADA/AUSTRALIA
Canadian Jewish News

Paul Lungen, Staff Reporter, Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Manny Waks comes from an Australian Chabad family that had to leave Chabad after Waks went public in 2011 with revelations of sexual abuse at Chabad’s Yeshivah College in Melbourne. Waks, who has served as vice-president of the Executive Council of Australian Jewry, also testified at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, which included a close look at Yeshivah College. He was in Toronto last week to present Code of Silence, the film about his ordeal which aired at the Toronto Jewish Film Festival. He spoke to The CJN’s Paul Lungen.

Tell us about Code of Silence.

Code of Silence is an award winning documentary commissioned by the Australian Broadcasting Company and undertaken by Danny Ben-Moshe. It won Australia’s most prestigious award, the Walkley Award, in December last year.

I’m the main subject, as the victim of child sexual abuse in the Jewish community. I’m often described as a whistleblower focused not only the abuse itself and the subsequent cover up, but it also follows the ongoing intimidation that myself and my family experienced, particularly my parents. It follows their story as well, ultimately culminating in them having to leave Australia.

Where are they now?

They’re in Israel. They still spend half the time in Australia. My mom still owns a wig shop, and they still own the house, which is not an easy thing to sell, because it’s right across the road from the Yeshivah centre. It has 13 bedrooms—I’m one of 17 children, that’s why the 13 bedrooms – with six kosher kitchens. They typical clientele for such a house would be from the ultra-Orthodox community, where the relations between them and my parents, at the Yeshivah centre, has been problematic to say the least.

Tell us about the abuse you suffered.

I was 11-years-old. There were two pedophiles in my case. The first is [prominent in the Chabad community]. He abused me for the first time ever on Shavuot night, when it’s customary within the Orthodox community to remain awake all night to study the Torah. He abused me inside the Chabad Yeshivah Centre synagogue. Subsequently he abused me several more times in another synagogue where my family and I used to go every week. That lasted about six months. Subsequently, from the age of around 12 to the age of around 14 and a half, I was sexually abused repeatedly by David Cyprys, who’s currently sitting in jail for the crimes committed against me and many other boys at the Yeshivah Centre.

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.