ABUSE TRACKER

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

November 25, 2015

Vatican thwarts review boards, documents show

UNITED STATES
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on November 25, 2015

Everything the bishops have been led you to believe about the independent power of lay review boards is deliberately misleading.

Citing a sex-offening priest’s “right to privacy,” a newly released Vatican document shows that priests are able to shield potentially damning evidence from review boards who are charged with determining whether abuse allegations against a priest have merit.

The 2006 document, sent from a Vatican office that oversees religious orders, says that canon law states that no priest’s files may be turned over to a third party, including internal and external review boards, without the priest’s permission and signature.

You can read the documents here. Start at page 94 (stamped on the actual page as 00526).

The findings of the Vatican office—saying that McDonald’s privacy was violated and that review boards may not access a personnel file without the priest’s signature is on page 100 (stamped 00532)

The review boards were set up by bishops nationally as a part of sweeping 2002 reforms instituted as a result of the Boston Archdiocese sex abuse scandal. They are a part of the “Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People.”

While religious orders like the Benedictine’s were not a part of the agreement, the Canon Law cited in the Vatican’s response applies to all priests, whether they belong to a diocese or a religious order.

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.

‘Spotlight’s’ the movie sadly has many Dorchester connections

MASSACHUSETTS
Dorchester Reporter

Nov. 24, 2015

By Lew Finfer, Special to the Reporter

The very first scene in “Spotlight,” the new movie detailing how The Boston Globe exposed the pedophile priest scandal, is set at the Area C-11 police station in Dorchester. It’s the mid-1970s. In one room, a priest sits alone; in a second room, another priest assures a woman that the cleric who had just sexually assaulted her children would be reassigned and kept away from other potential victims.

But just the opposite occurred. As the Globe would report in 2002, the Boston Catholic archdiocese took such predator priests and reassigned them to other parishes over and over again, placing more young children in their paths. And Cardinal Law knew this and participated in this cover-up.

There’s also a scene at Boston College High School in Dorchester about a meeting of Globe reporters with officials there about an accused priest who served there.

The Globe has a website listing the 271 accused priests. It also tells what parishes they served in. This sent a shudder through the laity as they realized that so, so many parishes at one time or another had one or more of these priest abusers at their own parish. The list includes the names of 22 priests who served in Dorchester parishes.

I have met four of the priests who turned out to be abusers. I still feel haunted remembering the unkindly piercing eyes of Fr. Paul Mahan whom I worked with at St. Matthew’s Church when they participated in one of our community improvement organizations. I later learned he was one of the abusers. Another abuser, Fr. Paul Shanley, actually had an acclaimed ministry to homeless youth. Clearly, he constantly found hopeless youth whom he could abuse while in that so-called ministry. I will always remember the anguish of one priest who told me that he had to live with knowing he’d referred troubled youth to Fr. Shanley because he was thought to be effective with youth.

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.

Shtumi in the Spotlight: How to Turn an Info-Heavy Story into Riveting Drama

UNITED STATES
Movie Maker

By Josh Singer on November 17, 2015

“That first draft must have been 300 pages.”

If I had a nickel for every time someone’s said this to Spotlight director—and my co-writer—Tom McCarthy or me in the last couple of weeks, I’d have a lot of nickels. We’re constantly asked how we managed to squeeze so much information—about the Boston Globe’s 2001-2002 investigation into sex abuse within the Massachusetts Catholic Church—into two hours on the screen.

Well, for the record, our very first draft was 131 pages. And our final shooting script tallies 132 pages, give or take. How did Tom and I boil down “all that information” into a reasonably sized script?

Condensing true-life stories into screenplays is hard. I’ve spent the past dozen years trying to figure out how to do it and I’ve still got lots to learn. Part of the secret to making talky, information-heavy movies cinematic is making sure the talk you do have is as clear and concise as possible. I’ll get specific on that in a second. First I have to talk about shtumi.

My first writing job was working for John Wells on The West Wing. At the end of the fourth season is an intense cliffhanger in which the Speaker of the House has taken over the presidency. I was fresh out of law school, so Wells asked me to research the 25th amendment, which deals with the line of succession to the presidency.

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.

Pope Francis appoints new Vatican Bank chief

VATICAN CITY
Business Standard

Vatican city, (IANS/AKI) Pope Francis named banker Gian Franco Mammi the new director of the Vatican Bank, which is currently at the centre of a leaks scandal over which five people have gone on trial.

Pope Francis on Tuesday held a 20-minute meeting with Mammi and members of the governing council of the Vatican Bank (IOR), which is trying to clean up its murky image and get onto the international white list against money laundering.

IOR and the Vatican’s financial machinery have come under fresh scrutiny after two ex-members of a commission set up by the Pope in 2013 to study economic and administrative reforms allegedly stole confidential documents and leaked these to two Italian journalists.

The journalists and the two former commission members — a Vatican prelate and a laywoman — as well as the prelate’s aide went on trial on Tuesday over the leaked stolen documents.

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.

Other Pontifical Acts

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 25 November 2015 (VIS) – The Holy Father has:

– accepted the resignation from the pastoral care of the diocese of Nazare, Brazil, presented by Bishop Severino Vatista de Franca, O.F.M. Cap., in accordance with canon 401 para. 2 of the Code of Canon Law.

– accepted the resignation from the pastoral care of the diocese of Campanha, Brazil, presented by Bishop Diamantino Prata de Carvalho, O.F.M., upon reaching the age limit. He is succeeded by Bishop Pedro Cunha Cruz, coadjutor of the same diocese.

– appointed Bishop Edmar Paron, auxiliary of the archdiocese of Sao Paulo, Brazil, as bishop of Paranagua (area 11,537, population 507,000, Catholics 391,000, priests 29, deacons 1, religious 42), Brazil.

– appointed Msgr. Roberto Filippini as bishop of Pescia (area 224, population 121,637, Catholics 112,920, priests 67, deacons 8, religious 80), Italy. The bishop-elect was born in 1948 in Vinci, Italy, and was ordained a priest in 1973. He holds a licentiate in scripture, and has served as parish priest, diocesan vicar, head of the inter-diocesan school of theology in Camaiore, Lucca, and rector of the “Santa Caterina” archiepiscopal seminary in Pisa. He is currently spiritual father of the same “Santa Caterina” seminary and chaplain of the prison of Pisa.

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.

Abusi sessuali : Condannato in primo grado, 5 anni e mesi tre, Incardona Gaetano ex arciprete della Basilica di Augusta.

ITALIA
La Spia Press

di Francesca Lagatta

Per ora gli abitanti di Augusta dovranno arrendersi: Non era vittima ad inventarsi che il prete avesse abusato di lei, era proprio il prete invece che mentiva dichiarando di non averle mai messo un dito addosso. A stabilirlo sono stati i giudici di primo grado del Tribunale di Siracusa, che lo hanno condannato a 5 anni e 3 mesi per abusi sessuali.

I fatti risalgono al 2013, quando Gaetano Incardona era ancora arciprete della basilica cittadina. La vittima, allora 21enne, si era recata in chiesa per una confessione, ma ne uscì in lacrime e con il sudiciume morale e fisico dell’uomo sulla pelle.

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.

EXCUSES VLAAMSE BISSCHOPPEN AAN DE SLACHTOFFERS GEDWONGEN ADOPTIES

BELGIE
KerkNet

[Apologies from the Flemish bishops to victims of forced adoptions.]

BRUSSEL (KerkNet/IPID) – Naar aanleiding van de excuses die het Vlaamse parlement dinsdagmorgen aan de slachtoffers van gedwongen adoptie aanbood, stuurden de Vlaamse bisschoppen volgend persbericht uit. Het persbericht is namens de Vlaamse bisschoppen ondertekend door mgr. Johan Bonny, bisschop van Antwerpen en referent.

“Samen met het Vlaamse Parlement willen ook wij, de Vlaamse bisschoppen, namens de katholieke kerkgemeenschap, onze excuses aanbieden aan de slachtoffers van gedwongen adopties.

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.

Don Francesco Rutigliano, condannato dal Santo Ufizio per abusi su un minore, reintegrato a Civitavecchia

ITALIA
Rete L’Abuso

[Don Francesco Rutigliano, condemned by the Holy Office for abuse of a minor, is reinstated in Civitavecchia.]

Se sei un sacerdote e ami qualcuno, peggio ancora se è del tuo stesso sesso, il Vaticano ti costringe a lasciare ogni incarico. Esattamente quello che è appena successo a monsignor Krzysztof Charamsa, “reo confesso” di amare il proprio compagno. Ma se sei un prete accusato di aver abusato ripetutamente di un minore, tanto da aver scontato 4 anni di sospensione, allora hai diritto a continuare la scalata nel clero, hai diritto a rifarti la verginità della coscienza Questo, invece, è quello che è successo poche settimane addietro a Francesco Rutigliano, dopo aver scontato la sua “pena”.

Ordinato sacerdote a 32 anni, don Francesco, pugliese di nascita, approda nel Reggino come parroco nelle parrocchie di Bivongi e Pazzano, facenti capo alla diocesi Locri-Gerace. E qui, nel 2006, ovvero nel suo primo anno di sacerdozio, risulterebbero già i suoi primi approcci con un adolescente, anche se alcune testimonianze farebbero risalire degli episodi già durante il periodo del cammino spirituale che lo ha portato a diventare un uomo di Dio. Il decreto (DECRETO-su-don-Francesco-Rutigliano) con cui il Santo Uffizio lo si inibisce nella sua funzione ecclesiastica, però, si riferisce unicamente a reati commessi nel periodo fra il 2006 e il 2008 porta la data del 20 giugno 2011.

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

The Pope meets the Board of Directors of the IOR and appoints a new Director

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 24 November 2015 (VIS) – This morning, at around 10.30, the Holy Father visited the premises of the Institute for the Works of Religion (IOR) where he spoke with the Board of Directors for approximately twenty minutes, during which he communicated the appointment of the new Director general, Dr. Gian Franco Mammi, to be assisted by Dr. Giulio Mattietti pending the selection of a new Deputy Director.

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

Catholic church accused of sending pedophile priests – including man with a ‘fetish’ for children going into confession – to a Melbourne parish because it was POOR

AUSTRALIA
Daily Mail

By Australian Associated Press and Nicole Low For Daily Mail Australia

The Catholic Church let a ‘raving lunatic loose’ with no concern for people in a poor Melbourne parish where it sent a string of pedophiles from the 1970s to 1990s, an inquiry has heard.

One pedophile parish priest left Doveton, 34km south of Melbourne, because he was having sex with a number of women, while his ‘bizarre’ successor told a girl he indecently assaulted in confession ‘the Lord forgives you’.

Former Holy Family Primary School principal Graeme Sleeman said church authorities did not care about parishioners in Doveton, a disadvantaged, low socio-economic area.

‘I believed and I am convinced now that the Melbourne archdiocese had no concern for the parishioners of Holy Family School Doveton and what priests they sent to them,’ Mr Sleeman told the child abuse royal commission.

‘The only way something could be drastically changed was for those parishioners to be empowered with the skills and the knowledge of how to change some serious matters that were being inflicted upon them,’ Mr Sleeman said.

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

Child abuse survivors: Holyrood is now complicit in the cover-up

SCOTLAND
The National

NOVEMBER 25TH, 2015 KATHLEEN NUTT

SURVIVORS have accused the Scottish Government of “becoming complicit in the cover-up of abuse” as a row over the remit of the inquiry into the historical child abuse intensifies.

In an angry email to Education Secretary Angela Constance, Alan Draper, parliamentary liaison officer for In Care Abuse Survivors, claimed many institutions would escape public scrutiny if the Government did not include non-residential settings such as church parishes, schools and children’s and youth organisations within the inquiry’s scope.

“When we made our submission to Government we asked that the inquiry should cover all organisations and institutions which had a duty of care for young people. Your Government, however, limited the remit primarily to residential institutions,” he wrote in his email sent on Monday night.

“This decision resulted in many victims, who had suffered grievous abuse, being excluded from the inquiry. We are of the view that this decision has enabled institutions and organisations, who have covered up criminal activity, to escape public scrutiny, and possible prosecution. The failure to extend the remit of the inquiry has effectively resulted in the Government becoming complicit in a cover-up of 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.

Priest who was suspended for getting his cousin pregnant is now in a court battle over a cottage he was given by Princess Diana’s mother

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

He is the shamed priest whose colourful private life propelled him into the public eye.

Now Father Roddy MacNeil has come to prominence once again – thanks to a row over a house gifted to him by Princess Diana’s mother.

Father MacNeil, who was suspended from his parish after getting his cousin pregnant, is battling a £150,000 court action brought by his brother-in-law John Gray over his father’s estate.

Mr Gray told a court that the 55-year-old cleric was given the house by Frances Shand Kydd in 2000.

But the house, then valued at £89,000, was put in his father Donald MacNeil’s name because priests cannot own property, Mr Gray told Lochmaddy Sheriff Court on the Scottish island of North Uist,

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

Vatican’s foolish response to leaks

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Thomas Reese | Nov. 24, 2015

The Vatican appears to be responding from the wrong playbook to the leaking of confidential documents. It is acting like a state rather than a church.

True, Vatican City is a state that can enact and prosecute laws, but it is also the central office of the Catholic church. In this case, it should act like a church not a state.

The Vatican has criminally charged five people — two journalists and three Vatican employees — with “procuring and revealing” confidential information.

The journalists, Emiliano Fittipaldi and Gianluigi Nuzzi, have both published books on questionable Vatican spending and financial practices based on leaked confidential documents.

At the 70-minute initial hearing in a Vatican courtroom, the reporters protested that the trial violates their rights as journalists recognized in Italy, Europe, and by the United Nations.

The International Association of Journalists Accredited at the Vatican issued a statement Tuesday expressing “consternation and worry” that two journalists were being prosecuted for publishing leaked documents when “publishing news is exactly their work.”

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.

Sunday school teacher sent to jail for sex with girl, 13

NEW YORK
Buffalo News

By Melinda Miller | News Staff Reporter
on November 24, 2015

The Sunday school student sexually abused by her teacher – a teacher who also was the son of her minister – was so disturbed by what was happening that she began cutting herself and considering suicide.

The young victim described how Caleb Sexton’s abuse was emotional as well as sexual.

“He never apologized or showed remorse, even when he found out I was hurting myself,” she wrote in her victim’s impact statement in a letter to Erie County Judge Kenneth E. Case. “Caleb was an adult, 13 years older … He misused God and the Bible to try to justify his sexual behavior.”

The girl, who was 13 when the abuse began and is now in high school, said she continues to have flashbacks, trouble eating, and difficulty trusting people and making new friends.

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 Scott City, MO pastor accused of sex crimes

MISSOURI
KFVS

[with video]

Written by Alycia Dobrinick

SCOTT CITY, MO (KFVS) –
A former pastor in Scott City, Missouri faces several felony charges for alleged sex crimes.

According to authorities with the Napoleon, Ohio Municipal Court, Robert Azinger was arrested in Henry County, Ohio on Thursday, Nov. 19 for being a fugitive from justice.

Azinger faces several charges in Scott County including one count of statutory rape in the first degree, four counts of statutory sodomy in the first degree, and five counts of statutory rape in the second degree.

He is reportedly the pastor of St. Peter Lutheran Church in Florida, Ohio.

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.

Pastor of a secretive New York sect where a teen was beaten to death and another seriously injured is among seven church members to be charged with murder

NEW YORK
Daily Mail (UK)

By HANNAH PARRY and LOUISE BOYLE FOR DAILYMAIL.COM

The pastor of a secretive New York ‘cult’ where a young man was beaten to death and his younger brother seriously injured is among seven people now charged with his murder.

Lucas Leonard was murdered by a mob of congregants – which included his own parents and half-sister – during a ‘counseling session’ at the Word of Life Church in New Hartford, New York

The 19-year-old was beaten for 11 hours in the sanctuary on October 11 in an attack allegedly organized by the leader, Pastor Tiffany Irwin, after he said he wanted to leave the church. His younger brother Christopher, 17, was also savagely beaten for hours but survived the assault.

Pastor Tiffanie Irwin and her mother Traci Irwin, who originally were not charged in the incident, now face charges of second-degree murder, kidnapping and gang assault.

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.

Charge: Sartell man abused altar boy

MINNESOTA
St. Cloud Times

Sam Louwagie, slouwagie@stcloudtimes.com November 24, 2015

A Sartell man sexually abused a teenager who was an altar boy at a St. Cloud church, according to criminal charges.

Douglas Gerard Kleinsmith, 54, was charged Nov. 16 with two counts of felony criminal sexual conduct by a person in a position of authority.

A criminal complaint against Kleinsmith said he volunteered to train altar boys at a church, and trained the teenage boy he would abuse. The complaint says the boy met Kleinsmith at church when he was 15 years old, and that year also began working for Kleinsmith outside church hours.

Joe Towalski, spokesman for the Diocese of St. Cloud, said Kleinsmith was part of a Latin Mass group that met at St. John Cantius Church. Towalski said the group rented the church facility, and its activities were not affiliated with the St. John Cantius Parish or the Diocese of St. Cloud. He said Kleinsmith was not a parish volunteer or church employee.

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.

What do Church rules say about ex-Jesuit’s sex abuse case?

PHILIPPINES
Rappler

Paterno Esmaquel II

MANILA, Philippines – After being confronted with a sex abuse complaint, Philippine Jesuits are revisiting the rules of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) and the Holy See to seek guidance in handling the case.

The case involves Lucas (not his real name), who once studied in a school run by the Society of Jesus or the Jesuits, the biggest male religious order in the Catholic Church. (READ: Part 1: Ex-Jesuit accused of sexual abuse)

Lucas said a Jesuit, who eventually left the Society of Jesus, abused him “a few hundred times” from 1984 to 1987, starting when he was 15.

What do the rules of the Catholic Church say about sexual abuse cases like this?

We consulted 3 documents cited by Fr Jose Quilongquilong SJ, the investigator assigned to meet with the persons involved. He sat down for an interview with Rappler on Sunday evening, November 22.

Quilongquilong showed us a landmark document by the CBCP in 2003, and two from the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

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.

Concern at treatment of priests after sex abuse allegations

IRELAND
Irish Times

Eoghan MacConnell

Wed, Nov 25, 2015

Concern at the treatment of priests who find themselves the subject of allegations of sex abuse has been expressed by members of the Association of Catholic Priests

Issues such as presumption of innocence, support for priests facing allegations and the time it takes for allegations to be dealt with were all of concern to the clergy, canon lawyer Helen Costigane who lectures in Heythrop College, London, told the association’s annual conference.

When priests face allegations of sexual abuse they are “put in a limbo situation and the bishops are almost hoping they will move on or die,” one priest said.

Ms Costigane was highly critical of “the idea that priests who are accused are cut adrift and left to fend for themselves”.

She cited cases where priests have had to fund their own legal representation or were forced to rely on the charity of friends.

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.

Blind Wiccan sex offender Robin Fletcher loses bid to ease strict supervision order

AUSTRALIA
The Age

November 25, 2015

Mark Russell
Court Reporter for The Age

Convicted paedophile Robin Fletcher, who has claimed his religion endorses sex between children and adults, has lost his bid to have a strict supervision order relaxed while living in a sex-offender facility.

Supreme Court Justice Phillip Priest ordered the supervision order for Fletcher, 59, who is legally blind, remain unchanged until at least June 2016.

“I am satisfied that [Fletcher] still poses an unacceptable risk of committing a relevant offence if a supervision order is not in effect,” Justice Priest.

Fletcher has been living at Corella Place – which houses offenders who have finished their sentences but are deemed to have an unacceptable risk of reoffending – since his release in 2006 after serving eight years’ jail for raping and prostituting two 15-year-old girls.

He has also refused to participate in sex-offender rehabilitation during his time at Corella Place.
The village-style complex, next to Ararat’s Hopkins Correctional Centre in western Victoria, has no walls surrounding the facility, but residents are monitored with electronic bracelets and cannot leave without permission.

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.

Sex abuse commission: Was there a sign above your head saying ‘come and get me’?

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

November 25, 2015

Beau Donelly

A young girl who was sexually abused by a paedophile priest, after already suffering abuse at the hands of a family member, was later asked by police if she was “wearing a neon sign above your head saying ‘come and get me’,” the royal commission has heard.

Julie Stewart told the child abuse royal commission that she was nine years old when Doveton parish priest Peter Searson forced her to sit on his lap during confession and indecently assaulted her.

“He would say to me: ‘Do you love father?’ And I said ‘yes’. He would ask me to kiss him on the lips. I did,” she told the hearing on Wednesday.

Ms Stewart, now 40, said the abuse continued throughout 1984 and 1985 and that she started wearing tracksuit pants or stockings into the confessional to make it harder for the priest to abuse her.

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.

Detective told child abuse victim she must have been ‘asking for it’, inquiry hears

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Melissa Davey
@MelissaLDavey
Tuesday 24 November 2015

A detective told a teenager who was repeatedly the victim of sexual abuse she must have been wearing a “neon sign” above her head “asking for it”, and that there was not enough evidence to investigate her case.

Julie Stewart, now 40, gave evidence before the royal commission into institutional responses into child sexual abuse on Wednesday that she was sexually abused by a family member between the age of five and eight.

She was then sexually abused by the parish priest at the Holy Family church in Doveton, Victoria, Peter Searson, from when she was in year three, the commission heard.

Stewart told the commission Searson would force her to sit on his lap during confession, rather than on the other side of the confessional barrier, and would ask her to kiss him and tell him that she loved 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.

Settlement sparks release of monk files

MINNESOTA
St. Cloud Times

David Unze, dunze@stcloudtimes.com November 24, 2015

ST. PAUL — The personnel files of five St. John’s Abbey monks were released Tuesday as part of the settlement of a lawsuit against the abbey and one of its monks.

The files show that one monk admitted to each having more than 200 sexual encounters and another credibly accused monk was paid $30,000 to leave the priesthood, according to the files.

Attorney Jeff Anderson held a press conference to announce the release of the files on the Rev. Finian McDonald, the Rev. Bruce Wollmering, Francis Hoefgen, the Rev. Thomas Gillespie and the Rev. Richard Eckroth.

Hoefgen was arrested in Stearns County in 1984 in connection with a report of sexual abuse against a 17-year-old boy who had been living with Hoefgen temporarily. Hoefgen was a priest at St. Boniface parish in Cold Spring at the time. He wasn’t charged in the case. Hoefgen left the priesthood in 2011 and got a $30,000 check from the abbey.

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.

Part 1: Ex-Jesuit accused of sexual abuse

PHILIPPINES
Rappler

[EXCLUSIVE] This marks the first time that a formal complaint about sexual abuse has been put on record with the Society of Jesus’ Philippine Province

Chay F. Hofileña

MANILA, Philippines – The Society of Jesus in the Philippines is facing its first sexual abuse scandal after a former student in one of the Jesuit high schools recently surfaced and alleged he had been sexually abused by a Jesuit 30 years ago.

Now 46 years old, the alleged victim who was born and raised in Zamboanga City said he converted from Islam to Roman Catholicism upon the invitation of a Jesuit seminarian then teaching at the Ateneo de Zamboanga. A 15-year-old boy at the time, Lucas (not his real name) said he was sexually abused “a few hundred times” from 1984 to 1987.

His complaint, which reached the Office of the Provincial of the Philippine Province of the Society of Jesus on October 15, is now the subject of a “preliminary investigation” that seeks to verify the allegations.

This marks the first time that a formal complaint about sexual abuse has been put on record with the Society of Jesus’ Philippine Province.

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.

Child sex abuse inquiry: Police asked repeat abuse victim if she was wearing ‘neon sign’, royal commission hears

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Pat Stavropoulos and Samantha Donovan

A survivor of child sex abuse at the hands of a Catholic priest and a family member was asked by police if she was wearing a neon sign saying “come and get me” above her head when she was a teenager, an inquiry has heard.

Witness Julie Stewart broke down as she told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse that she was repeatedly abused by Father Searson at Doveton, from when she was in grade three.

The inquiry heard that when she was 15, she was approached by police about allegations against Father Searson after they received reports she was a possible victim.

She said because she had also been sexually abused by a relative from the ages of five to eight, she found it hard to tell anyone she had also been abused by Father Searson.

She said her admission that she had been abused by two men prompted the police officer to remark “oh my God, what, were you wearing a neon sign above your head, ‘come and get me?'”.

The police took no further action.

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

Royal Commission: vandals lash Catholic Church in graffiti messages

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

November 24, 2015

Shannon Deery
Herald Sun

VANDALS have lashed out at court and church buildings across the city over the Catholic Church’s handling of sex abuse cases.

Just a day after the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse continued its probe of the Melbourne Archdiocese vandals attacked the church’s Melbourne headquarters.

Graffiti was sprayed across the Catholic Archdiocese offices in East Melbourne, while at the County Court, where the commission is sitting, vandals also sprayed sledges aimed at key church figures.

The graffiti was covered and painted over earlier today.

Cardinal George Pell will return to Melbourne next month to answer allegations he covered up abuse cases, ignored complaints of assaults and tried to bribe a victim of stay silent about being molested. He has consistently denied the allegations.

The Royal Commission is examining the Church’s handling of abuse cases between until 1996, when Cardinal Pell took over as Melbourne Archbishop.

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.

Sex abuse royal commission: Angry victim reveals details of Pell letter apologising for suffering at hands of ‘creepy’ paedophile priest

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Louise Milligan and Andy Burns

A victim of notorious paedophile priest Peter Searson has revealed the contents of a letter of apology to her from former archbishop George Pell about her abuse.

The letter paints a different picture to the evidence given by Cardinal Pell to a Victorian inquiry in 2013.

Julie Stewart (nee Prien) gave evidence this morning to the royal commission into child sex abuse about her treatment at the hands of Father Peter Searson at the Doveton Holy Family Parish in outer Melbourne in the 1980s.

The letter, signed by the then-archbishop Pell and written in 1998, accepts that Ms Prien was abused and says: “On behalf of the Catholic Church and personally, I apologise to you and to those around you for the wrongs and hurt you have suffered at the hands of Father Searson.”

But, while being questioned in 2013 by Victorian MP Frank McGuire, Cardinal Pell defended his actions in relation to Searson.

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George Pell asked for payments for paedophile priest, commission heard

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

November 25, 2015

Beau Donelly

Cardinal George Pell lobbied for payments to be made to a paedophile priest days before he was charged with sex offences, documents tendered to the child abuse royal commission show.

In May 1998, the Catholic Church’s independent commissioner Peter O’Callaghan, QC, informed then Bishop Denis Hart that Gladston Park priest Wilfred “Billy” Baker was likely to be charged.

Then archbishop George Pell had already put Baker on administrative leave while police investigated allegations of child abuse against him.

In a July 1998 letter the Priests Retirement Foundation told Baker that Pell had asked that he be provided for as if he were a “Pastor Emeritus”. The letter confirmed payments to Baker of up to $12,000 a year had been approved for board and lodging.

Six days later Baker was charged with child sex abuse offences. He was jailed the following year for abusing eight young boys over two decades. He died in 2014 while facing new charges against him.

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Attorney releases St. John’s Abbey priests’ files

MINNESOTA
KARE

[with video]

John Croman, KARE November 25, 2015

ST. PAUL, MINN. — Attorney Jeff Anderson Tuesday released the personnel files of five monks and priests who were part of St. John’s Abbey in Collegeville.

The five, including two who are now deceased, were previously listed by St. John’s Abbey as credibly accused of child sexual abuse. Anderson said the redacted version of the documents posted on his website, show that priests who admitted battles with sexual urges still had access to potential victims.

“What the files show us is a culture of permissive access by known offenders,” said Anderson, who for decades has represented child sex abuse victims in lawsuits against the Catholic Church and other institutions.

Among the documents was a 1992 psychological evaluation of Father Finian McDonald, who for years worked as a counselor at St. John’s University.

According to the psychologist who authored the report, McDonald breaking his oath of celibacy with at least 200 sexual partners including as many as 15 college students.

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Graffiti targets Pell amid abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
NT News

BY MEGAN NEIL AND CHRISTOPHER TALBOT AAP NOVEMBER 25, 2015

GEORGE Pell hung up the phone when a former Catholic school principal asked him to publicly back the man’s attempts to deal with a bizarre pedophile priest, an inquiry has heard.

GRAEME Sleeman says he wrote to Cardinal Pell, then the Melbourne archbishop, about a decade after he resigned as principal of Doveton’s Holy Family Primary School in 1986 in frustration that nothing was done about parish priest Peter Searson.

Mr Sleeman was unable to get another job as principal of a Catholic school and said he wanted the Melbourne archdiocese to provide some support for his loyalty.

“I put my career on the line. I’d lost superannuation. I believed that I was a good educationalist and I was being deprived of carrying out my trade,” Mr Sleeman told the child abuse royal commission on Wednesday.

He said Cardinal Pell rang him to ask what he wanted.

Mr Sleeman told him: “I want you to go on national TV and the national press and state that the stance I took in Doveton was morally correct and the only one I could take.”

Then the archbishop ended the call.

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Lawyer John Stobierski has unique perspective on child sexual abuse by Catholic priests portrayed in ‘Spotlight’

MASSACHUSETTS
Daily Hampshire Gazette

By DIANE BRONCACCIO
For the Gazette
Wednesday, November 25, 2015

GREENFIELD — If anyone has no need to see “Spotlight” — a movie about the Boston Globe’s 2002 investigation of child sexual abuse by Catholic priests — it’s probably John Stobierski, a Greenfield-based lawyer who has more or less lived the story.

Over the past 23 years, Stobierski has met with hundreds of families who told him disturbing stories of misplaced trust in and betrayal by clergymen. He has successfully litigated at least 80 cases, resulting in settlements of at least $10 million.

He was invited to the star-studded Boston premiere of “Spotlight” at the end of October. “I didn’t need to go that far to see a movie,” he remarked in his corner office at Stobierski & Connor law firm in Greenfield.

But last weekend, Stobierski did see the movie at Cinemark in Hadley.

“I think it’s a wonderful movie that everyone should see,” said Stobierski. “My involvement in this whole thing starts at the end of that movie — which was when that first piece (on clergy abuse) was published. But it only captures one chapter of an incredibly long story.” …

He had only been practicing law in Greenfield for a few years when the Rev. Richard R. Lavigne of Shelburne Falls was first arrested in October 1991 on charges of molesting three boys in St. Joseph’s parish. Lavigne eventually pleaded guilty and was placed on probation for 10 years and ordered to spend six months in a treatment program for sex abusers at a Maryland hospital.

Stobierski recalled that Superior Court Judge Guy Volterra, who gave Lavigne such a light sentence, was quoted in one news story as saying, “This story doesn’t belong anywhere but on the back page of any newspaper.”

The Recorder reported June 25, 1992, that “The judge, in sentencing, lambasted media for blowing the case out of proportion. Volterra said Lavigne’s outstanding ministry to the people has been destroyed by his behavior toward the young who were entrusted to his care.”

Volterra went on to say that the media had made the trial a “cause celebre” that did not merit such widespread attention.

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‘No one listened’ to hundreds of complaints about priest, says principal

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Melissa Davey
Wednesday 25 November 2015

A former principal of a school in Victoria has said he received and passed on “hundreds” of complaints from parents and staff about the inappropriate behaviour towards children of a parish priest, Peter Searson.

But Graeme Sleeman, then the head of the Holy Family Parish school in Doveton, told the royal commission into institutional responses into child sexual abuse on Wednesday that none of those complaints, made across two and a half years between 1984 and 1986, had been acted upon by senior parish staff, including the then archbishop Frank Little.

Complaints came in from parents daily, Sleeman told the commission in Melbourne. They ranged from concerns about Searson sexually abusing children to his bizarre way of running confession by having children sit on his lap. He passed all of them on to an educational consultant at the Catholic Education Office, Allan Dooley.

“I just couldn’t believe I could make so many complaints and see nothing happen, and be told on the other hand … I was running great programs at the school,” Sleeman told the commission.

“As soon as it came to issues with the parish priest, any credibility I seemed to have went out the window. No one wanted to listen to me. No one wanted to take any notice.”

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Sex abuse survivors to be cross examined during Australian Commission inquiry

AUSTRALIA
The Tablet (UK)

25 November 2015 by Mark Brolly

Australia’s national inquiry into child sexual abuse has begun a scheduled four weeks of public hearings into the Archdiocese of Melbourne and its neighbouring Victorian Diocese of Ballarat in which Cardinal George Pell is to give evidence for the third time.

Cardinal Pell, a former Archbishop of Melbourne and later of Sydney, has indicated that his counsel will cross-examine abuse survivors – a departure from the practice adopted by Australia’s bishops and religious orders with the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

The cardinal, now Prefect of the Vatican’s Secretariat for the Economy, has drawn criticism from survivors and their supporters for his decision but some of his critics within the Church have defended his right to defend himself over claims made against him at previous hearings.

Ballarat-born Cardinal Pell is expected to give evidence in both case studies, relating to his time as a priest in his home diocese and later as Auxiliary Bishop to Archbishop Sir Frank Little in Melbourne from 1987 until he succeeded Archbishop Little, who died in 2008, nine years later.

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Letter reveals apology for ‘creepy’ paedophile priest

UNITED STATES
The New Daily

Nov 25, 2015

LOUISE MILLIGAN

A letter of apology from Cardinal George Pell appears to contrast evidence given at a 2013 inquiry.

A victim of notorious paedophile priest Peter Searson has revealed the contents of a letter of apology to her from former archbishop George Pell about her abuse.

The letter paints a different picture to the evidence given by Cardinal Pell to a Victorian inquiry in 2013.

Julie Prien (nee Stewart) gave evidence on Wednesday morning to the royal commission into child sex abuse about her treatment at the hands of Father Peter Searson at the Doveton Holy Family Parish in outer Melbourne in the 1980s.

The letter, signed by the then-archbishop Pell and written in 1998, accepts that Ms Prien was abused and says: “On behalf of the Catholic Church and personally, I apologise to you and to those around you for the wrongs and hurt you have suffered at the hands of Father Searson.”

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November 24, 2015

Legionaries’ Paradise, Part 2: The Pedophiles

CANCúN (MEXICO)
ReGain [Arlington VA]

November 24, 2015

By Da Man from Cabra West

Read original article

The Pedophiles

Four minor seminarians, 11-14 years old, reach out to Fr. Juan José Vaca, who has just come to the seminary in Ontaneda, Cantabria, Spain, as their new spiritual director. They reveal to him that Fr. Jesús Martínez-Penilla, the rector, had taken them to bed to masturbate them. Their stories implied that the abuses had been going on for two or three months.

As a good Legionary, Fr. Vaca called Fr. Maciel immediately. “Don’t worry, Juan José. Talk with those junior seminarians and calm them down. Tell them not to tell their parents.”

Within three hours Martínez-Penilla was on the train to Madrid. From there he flew to Mexico City and immediately headed for Chetumal where Monsignor Jorge Bernal, the Legionary of Christ apostolic delegate of the prelature, appointed by Marcial Maciel, was waiting to give him his next appointment, the Parish of Isla Mujeres.

Thousands of miles away from his victims, Martínez-Penilla was front line in all the most important religious celebrations of the Prelature. On March 19th, 1974 he accompanied Bishop Bernal through the streets of Chetumal as Bernal was consecrated bishop head of the Chetumal Prelature. Four other bishops follow in procession behind the newly consecrated bishop.

Martínez-Penilla continued his ecclesiastical career in the prelature as a pastor. The church directory of 1991 has him as pastor of the St Joachim Parish, Bacalar, Quintana Roo.  In 2007 he is pastor of Our Lady of Perpetual Help, in José María Morelos township.

In the Anniversary brochure published by the prelature in 2010, “Fr. Penilla” appears surrounded by the parish leadership group at Immaculate Conception parish in Isla Mujeres, Quintana Roo, Mexico.

In his deposition as part of initial investigation into sexual abuse of children at the Legion’s Instituto Cumbres, Mr. Villafuerte accuses Legionary of Christ, Eduardo Lucatero Alvarez of “having known the facts and having limited himself to terminating a predatory gym instructor at the Instituto Cumbres in Mexico City”. Lucatero was accused of advising the abuser’s family to leave the country because he was going to have problems. According to Villafuerte, the gym instructor was not the only abuser in the school; he names Guillermo Romo, Francisco Rivas and Alfonso NJ, other Cumbres employees of ‘touching children.”

“He also knows and saw that sometimes the assistant principal, called Eduardo Lucatero, LC, was hearing the boys’ confessions; that said person also took the little girls, the boys’ sisters, and caressed their intimate parts obscenely.” But when the case came to court Fr. Lucatero was only sentenced for covering up the abuse.

Before going to legal authorities, one of the victim’s mother approached the Instituto Cumbres administration directly. It was a huge mistake. “My life turned upside down. I lost my work because of them. I lost my lifelong friends. I lost my condominium, and overnight I was swallowed up by a huge hole in the ground. They are very powerful people. They threatened me. They tried to ride me off the beltway (periférico) more than once with a Mustang to frighten me out of going to court.”

Lucatero-Álvarez also ended up in the Chetumal (now Cancun-Chetumal) Prelature where his presence was never hidden. On the inside back page overlap of A Missionary Church he can be seen in the second row of active clergy, vested in priestly robes and in a prayerful posture. The group is headed by the present bishop of the Prelature, Monsignor Pedro Pablo Elizondo, another Maciel appointee.

The brochure describes Lucatero-Álvarez as belonging to Holy Trinity Parish in Cancun. On page 85 he appears in a group of twenty posing in front of the Cancun cathedral church. He is tall, with glasses, wearing a white guayabera and a cross on his chest, smiling.

The Prelature’s 2014 church directory describes him as a religious (LC) priest, head of the Doctrine of the Faith in the office for Prophetic Pastoral Ministry. In other words, he is in charge of protecting the discipline and dogmas of the Catolic Church in Quintana Roo state, Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico.

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MN Abbey: Prep School/University campus has housed abusers for decades

MINNESOTA
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on November 24, 2015

Earlier today, attorneys for sex abuse victims by priests and monks at a prestigious Benedictine high school, university, and abbey released hundreds of pages of documents that show a decades-long cover-up of the sexual abuse of children and university students.

It’s important to note that many of the credibly accused priests still live on the St. John’s Abbey campus, where the college and boarding schools are (including a priest who admitted to having abusing more than 200 sexual partners).

The boarding school enrolls children as young as the sixth grade. The Benedictine Order, who owns the campus, claims that the men are under strict safety plans and have no contact with students. I say that’s bunk. Check out the interactive map.

These men are adults and are not handcuffed to their chairs. They have had “safety plans” in the past that were totally ineffective. These predators can go where they want, when they want … even into the 9th grade dorm.

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Catholic building defaced in Melbourne

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

AAP

A Melbourne building has been spray painted with graffiti calling for Cardinal George Pell to be jailed over allegations he covered up cases of child abuse by priests.

The graffiti was found on the building in East Melbourne on Wednesday morning and police say they have not yet been contacted about it.

The graffiti appeared a day after the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse heard testimony that priests laughed at victims and told them they would go to hell.

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Cardinal George Pell accused of sex assault cover-up in graffiti attacks on Melbourne buildings

AUSTRALIA
The Age

November 25, 2015

Christopher Talbot

A Melbourne court and a Catholic Archdiocese building have been defaced with graffiti accusing Cardinal George Pell of covering up child sexual abuse by priests.

Graffiti scrawled in black paint across the windows and pillars of the Catholic Archdiocese building in East Melbourne said: “child molester Pell” and “put Pell in jail for cover up”.

“Put Pell in jail” has also been sprayed on the Victorian County Court in Melbourne’s CBD.

The graffiti spotted on Wednesday morning on the East Melbourne building was quickly painted over and covered with black plastic.

The words on the court were covered but are still visible from inside.

Cardinal Pell has not been accused of sexual abuse and has denied allegations he ignored complaints or covered them up.

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Pell fixed retirement pay for priest

AUSTRALIA
9 News

AAP

Cardinal George Pell arranged for a pedophile priest to be paid from a retirement fund just days before he was charged, documents show.

The then Melbourne archbishop had placed Father Wilfred Baker on administrative leave once advised of the child abuse allegations by the Melbourne Response independent commissioner Peter O’Callaghan in May 1997.

Mr O’Callaghan told then bishop Denis Hart, who later replaced Cardinal Pell as Melbourne archbishop, in May 1998 that Baker was likely to be charged with child sex offences, documents tendered to the child abuse royal commission show.

Priests Retirement Foundation secretary Rev Gerard Beasley told Baker that then archbishop Pell had asked the foundation to provide for the priest “as if you were a Pastor Emeritus”.

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George Pell named in anti-Catholic graffiti on church and royal commission building

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

Anti-Catholic graffiti relating to the church’s handling of child sex abuse cases has been scrawled across a church building and a court in Melbourne.

Police said one of the abusive messages named the former Archbishop of Melbourne, Cardinal George Pell.

They were written on the Victorian County Court and a building belonging to the Melbourne Archdiocese.

Court workers tried to scrub off the graffiti this morning and have erected black plastic to cover what remains.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is using the County Court building to hold hearings into the way the Melbourne Archdiocese responded to child sexual abuse complaints.

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Case Study 35, November 2015, Melbourne – Live hearing

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

[live stream]

The Royal Commission will hold a public hearing in Melbourne from Tuesday 24 November 2015 commencing at 10:00am AEDT.

The public hearing will inquire into the response of the Catholic Archdiocese of Melbourne to allegations of child sexual abuse.

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Files of 5 Central Minn. Priests Accused of Sexual Abuse Released

MINNESOTA
KSTP

Rebecca Omastiak

The files of five priests accused of sexually abusing children were released Tuesday.

The priests — Richard Eckroth, Thomas Gillespie, Francis Hoefgen, Finian McDonald and Bruce Wollmering — are associated with Saint John’s Abbey in Collegeville.

The files allege the priests used their positions to exploit Saint John’s University students and children in nearby areas.

The law office Jeff Anderson & Associates held a news conference in St. Paul Tuesday regarding the release of the files.

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St. John’s Abbey monk accused of abuse reports 200 sexual encounters

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

By Jean Hopfensperger Star Tribune NOVEMBER 24, 2015

The first batch of personnel files on monks accused of sex abuse at St. John’s Abbey in Collegeville were released Tuesday, in which a former counselor and dormitory prefect at St. John’s University reported having 200 sexual encounters — some with St. John students.

The Rev. Finian McDonald told a psychologist that his youngest victims were 13 or 14 year old prostitutes in Thailand, that he had 18 victims while serving as a prefect at St. John’s dormitories, and that he had acted out sexually and abused alcohol during most of his 29 years as a dormitory prefect.

That information, from a 2012 psychological assessment, is contained in abbey personnel files on McDonald and four other monks credibly accused of child sex abuse that were released in response to an abuse victim’s legal settlement earlier this year.

The abbey has identified 19 such monks to date, and their personnel files have been turned over to attorney Jeff Anderson.

“This reflects to us … that there are dozens and hundreds of survivors that are yet to be known and yet to have a voice,” said Anderson at a news conference.

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Secret files on St. John’s Abbey monks show hundreds of possible victims

MINNESOTA
KMSP

ST. PAUL, Minn. (KMSP) – Brand new, once-secret files on 19 monks from St. John’s Abbey show they may have abused hundreds of children. Attorney Jeff Anderson released the files of 5 of those monks Tuesday, saying time is running out for victims to step forward.

St. John’s Abbey agreed to release these files as part of a court settlement with a victim who was known as John Doe No. 2. That victim’s real name is Troy Bramlage, and he stepped forward to encourage other victims to do the same.

“We still need to get our voices out to people who have not come forward,” Bramlage said.

Anderson released the files of 5 previously accused monks, but the documents on one of them — Father Finian McDonald — shows a man with a troubled past.

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Priest cost Catholic Church $3m in claims

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

NOVEMBER 25, 2015

Tessa Akerman
Reporter
Melbourne

Former Archbishop of Melbourne George Pell arranged for a pedophile priest to be provided for by the Priests Retirement Foundation when it was known that the priest was likely to be charged.

Documents tendered to the child sex abuse royal commission show that in May 1998 Peter O’Callaghan QC informed then Bishop Denis Hart that Wilfred Baker was likely to be charged with sex offences.

Mr O’Callaghan had informed now Cardinal Pell of allegations regarding Baker in May 1997 and recommended he be placed on administrative leave, which Cardinal Pell did.

Secretary of the Priests Retirement Foundation, Reverend Gerard Beasley, wrote to Baker in July 1998 and said the then Archbishop had asked the Foundation to provide for him “as if you were a Pastor Emeritus”.

Rev Beasley advised Baker that the Foundation would provide for his “board and lodging” costs up to a total of $3000 per quarter and hospital insurance and ambulance subscription would be maintained on his behalf.

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The Pedophiles

MéRIDA (MEXICO)
ReGain [Arlington VA]

November 24, 2015

By Da Man from Cabra West

Read original article

Four minor seminarians, 11-14 years old, reach out to Fr. Juan José Vaca, who has just come to the seminary in Ontaneda, Cantabria, Spain, as their new spiritual director. They reveal to him that Fr. Jesús Martínez-Penilla, the rector, had taken them to bed to masturbate them. Their stories implied that the abuses had been going on for two or three months.

As a good Legionary, Fr. Vaca called Fr. Maciel immediately. “Don’t worry, Juan José. Talk with those junior seminarians and calm them down. Tell them not to tell their parents.”

Within three hours Martínez-Penilla was on the train to Madrid. From there he flew to Mexico City and immediately headed for Chetumal where Monsignor Jorge Bernal, the Legionary of Christ apostolic delegate of the prelature, appointed by Marcial Maciel, was waiting to give him his next appointment, the Parish of Isla Mujeres.

Thousands of miles away from his victims, Martínez-Penilla was front line in all the most important religious celebrations of the Prelature. On March 19th, 1974 he accompanied Bishop Bernal through the streets of Chetumal as Bernal was consecrated bishop head of the Chetumal Prelature. Four other bishops follow in procession behind the newly consecrated bishop.

Martínez-Penilla continued his ecclesiastical career in the prelature as a pastor. The church directory of 1991 has him as pastor of the St Joachim Parish, Bacalar, Quintana Roo.  In 2007 he is pastor of Our Lady of Perpetual Help, in José María Morelos township.

In the Anniversary brochure published by the prelature in 2010, “Fr. Penilla” appears surrounded by the parish leadership group at Immaculate Conception parish in Isla Mujeres, Quintana Roo, Mexico.

In his deposition as part of initial investigation into sexual abuse of children at the Legion’s Instituto Cumbres, Mr. Villafuerte accuses Legionary of Christ, Eduardo Lucatero Alvarez of “having known the facts and having limited himself to terminating a predatory gym instructor at the Instituto Cumbres in Mexico City”. Lucatero was accused of advising the abuser’s family to leave the country because he was going to have problems. According to Villafuerte, the gym instructor was not the only abuser in the school; he names Guillermo Romo, Francisco Rivas and Alfonso NJ, other Cumbres employees of ‘touching children.”

“He also knows and saw that sometimes the assistant principal, called Eduardo Lucatero, LC, was hearing the boys’ confessions; that said person also took the little girls, the boys’ sisters, and caressed their intimate parts obscenely.” But when the case came to court Fr. Lucatero was only sentenced for covering up the abuse.

Before going to legal authorities, one of the victim’s mother approached the Instituto Cumbres administration directly. It was a huge mistake. “My life turned upside down. I lost my work because of them. I lost my lifelong friends. I lost my condominium, and overnight I was swallowed up by a huge hole in the ground. They are very powerful people. They threatened me. They tried to ride me off the beltway (periférico) more than once with a Mustang to frighten me out of going to court.”

Lucatero-Álvarez also ended up in the Chetumal (now Cancun-Chetumal) Prelature where his presence was never hidden. On the inside back page overlap of A Missionary Church he can be seen in the second row of active clergy, vested in priestly robes and in a prayerful posture. The group is headed by the present bishop of the Prelature, Monsignor Pedro Pablo Elizondo, another Maciel appointee.

The brochure describes Lucatero-Álvarez as belonging to Holy Trinity Parish in Cancun. On page 85 he appears in a group of twenty posing in front of the Cancun cathedral church. He is tall, with glasses, wearing a white guayabera and a cross on his chest, smiling.

The Prelature’s 2014 church directory describes him as a religious (LC) priest, head of the Doctrine of the Faith in the office for Prophetic Pastoral Ministry. In other words, he is in charge of protecting the discipline and dogmas of the Catolic Church in Quintana Roo state, Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico.

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Vatican Trial Begins Over Leaked Documents

VATICAN CITY
The New York Times

By ELISABETTA POVOLEDO
NOV. 24, 2015

VATICAN CITY — Five people, including two Italian journalists, went on trial in a Vatican courtroom on Tuesday on charges of illegally procuring and circulating confidential documents that were used to write two tell-all books detailing suspected mismanagement and corruption at the Vatican.

The Vatican claims that by taking the documents, the defendants violated the “fundamental interests of the Holy See and the State,” language it used in a formal indictment issued on Saturday. The two journalists counter that the Vatican is violating their right to freedom of the press.

“We are not martyrs, we are investigative journalists and some principles must be defended,” one of the defendants, Gianluigi Nuzzi, the author of “Merchants in the Temple,” told the small pool of reporters allowed into the Vatican courtroom on Tuesday. “We just did our job.”

Media watchdog groups and organizations have rallied behind Mr. Nuzzi and his co-defendant, Emiliano Fittipaldi, the author of “Avarice,” calling on the Vatican to drop all charges against them.

The defendants face up to eight years in prison.

“Journalists should be allowed to carry out their role as watchdog and investigate alleged wrongdoing without fear of repercussions,” Nina Ognianova, Europe and Central Asia Coordinator for the Committee to Protect Journalists, said in a statement on Monday.

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Other Pontifical Acts

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 23 November 2015 (VIS) – The Holy Father has appointed:

– Msgr. Tadeusz Litynski as bishop of Zielona Gora – Gorzow (area 14,814, population 1,160,000, Catholics 989,000, priests 641, religious 283), Poland. Msgr. Litynski is currently auxiliary of the same diocese. He succeeds Bishop Stefan Regmunt, whose resignation upon reaching the age limit was accepted by the Holy Father.

– Bishop Rafael Sandoval Sandoval, M.N.M., of Tarahumana, Mexico, as bishop of Autlan (area 14,744, population 357,000, Catholics 341,000, priests 120, religious 192), Mexico.

On Saturday 21 November, the Holy Father appointed:

– Msgr. Nuno Manuel dos Santos Almeida as auxiliary of the archdiocese of Braga (area 2,857, population 964,800, Catholics 886,700, priests 465, permanent deacons 12, religious 676), Portugal. The bishop-elect was born in Viseu, Portugal in 1962 and was ordained a priest in 1986. He holds a licentiate in theology from the Catholic University of Porto, and has served as parish priest in various parishes in the diocese of Viseu, president of the Priestly Fraternity of Viseu, and member of the college of consultors and the presbyteral council.

– Bishop Francisco Mendoza De Leon as coadjutor of the diocese of Antipolo (area 1,828, population 3,958,820, Catholics 3,153,824, priests 178, religious 811), Philippines. Bishop De Leon is currently auxiliary of the same diocese.

– Bishop David William V. Antonio, auxiliary of the archdiocese of Nueva Segovia, Philippines, as apostolic administrator “sede plena” of the apostolic vicariate of San Jose in Mindoro, Philippines.

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Communique from the Holy See Press Office

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 21 November 2015 (VIS) – The Vatican City State Tribunal has notified the defendants and their lawyers of the request for indictment by the Office of the Promotor of Justice, after the completion of the preliminary phase of the current proceedings for the wrongful disclosure of reserved information and documents, and of the consequent Decree of Indictment issued by the president of the Tribunal on 20 November.

The following is an extract of the Decree, which was signed by the Promotor of Justice Gian Pietro Milano, and the adjunct Promotor of Justice Roberto Zannotti.

The Promotor of Justice, with regard to articles 353, 355 and 359 of the Code of Penal Procedure, requests His Excellence the President of the Tribunal to issue, against the persons indicated as follows: Lucio Angel Vallejo, born in Villamediana de Iregua, Spain on 12 June 1961; Francesca Immacolata Chaouqui, born in Cosenza, Italy on 18 December 1981; Nicola Maio, born in Benevento on 2 March 1978; Emiliano Fittipaldi, born in Naples on 13 November 1974 and Gianluigi Nuzzi, born in Milan on 3 June 1969, a decree of summons to trial.

Angel Lucio Vallejo Balda, Francesca Immacolata Chaouqui and Nicola Maio for the offence defined in art. 248 CPP (this latter as substituted by art. 25 of Law IX of 11 July 2013), “because within the Prefecture for Economic Affairs and COSEA they associated in order to form a criminal organisation, with own autonomous composition and structure, organised by Lucio Angel Vallejo Balda and Francesca Immacolata Chaouqui, with the objective of committing further crimes of disclosure of information and documents concerning the fundamental interests of the Holy See and the State”.

All the aforementioned, accused of the crime set forth in articles 63 and 116 bis of the CPP (this latter introduce by Law IX of July 2013), “as, in collaboration with each other, Vallejo Balda in his role as Secretary General of the Prefecture for Economic Affairs, Chaouqui as member of COSEA, Maio as collaborator with Vallejo Balda for issues relating to COSEA, Fittipaldi and Nuzzi as journalists, illegally procured and subsequently disclosed information and documents concerning the fundamental interests of the Holy See and the State; in particular, Vallejo Balda, Chaouqui and Maio obtained such information through their respective roles in the Prefecture for Economic Affairs and in the COSEA; whereas Fittipaldi and Nuzzi solicited and applied pressure, especially to Vallejo Balda, to obtain reserved documents and information, which they used in part to prepare two books published in Italy in November 2015”.

The crimes were committed in Vatican City between March 2013 and November 2015.

Decree of trial

Following the request for trial presented by the Promotor of Justice, the president of Vatican City State Tribunal, Giuseppe Dalla Torre, issued the decree establishing for 24 November 2015, at 10.30, the first hearing in the trial against the defendants Angel Lucio Vallejo Balda, Francesca Immacolata Chaouqui, Nicola Maio, Emiliano Fittipaldi and Gianluigi Nuzzi, specifying that if they do not appear they will be judged in absentia.

At the same time the panel of judges will be composed as follows: Professor Giuseppe Dalla Torre, president; Professor Piero Antonio Bonnet, judge; Professor Paolo Pappanti-Pelletier, judge; Professor Venerando Marano, substitute judge.

The decree establishes that the evidence for the defence must be submitted by 12.30 on 28 November 2015, while the citaiton of texts will be reserved to subsequent provisions.

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Other Pontifical Acts

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 24 November 2015 (VIS) – The Holy Father has appointed:

– Fr. Steven Joseph Lopes as ordinary bishop of the Personal Ordinariate of “The Chair of St. Peter”, United States of America. The bishop-elect was born in Fremont, United States of America on 22 April, and was ordained a priest in 2001. He holds a doctorate in theology from the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome, and is currently an official of the secretariat of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. He succeeds Bishop Jeffrey N. Steenson, whose resignation from the pastoral ministry of the same Personal Ordinariate in accordance with canon 401 para. 2 of the Code of Canon Law.

– Fr. Paul McAleenan and Msgr. John Wilson as auxiliaries of the archdiocese of Westminster (area 3,634, population 4,831,000, Catholics 485,300, priests 600, permanent deacons 18, religious 1,289), England.

Bishop-elect McAleenan was born in Belfast, Northern Ireland in 1951 and was ordained a priest in 1985. He has served in a number of pastoral roles in the archdiocese of Westminster, including parish vicar and parish priest. He is currently canon of Westminster Cathedral.

Bishop-elect Wilson was born in Sheffield, England in 1968, was baptised in the Anglican Communion and received in the Catholic Church in 1985. He was ordained a priest in 1995. He holds a bachelor’s degree in theology and religious studies from the University of Leeds, England, a bachelor’s degree in theology from the Pontifical Gregorian University, Rome, a licentiate in moral theology from the Alphonsianum of Rome and a doctorate in ethics from the University of Durham, England. He has served in a number of pastoral and academic roles in the diocese of Leeds, including parish vicar, professor of moral theology, episcopal vicar for evangelisation, and apostolic administrator. He is currently parish priest in Wakefield, Yorkshire. In 2011 he was named Chaplain of His Holiness.

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First hearing in trial for the disclosure of confidential information

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 24 November 2015 (VIS) – This morning, at 10.30 a.m. at the Vatican City State Tribunal, the first hearing in the criminal trial of Msgr. Angel Lucio Vallejo Balda, Francesca Immacolata Chaouqui, Nicola Maio, Emiliano Fittipaldi and Gianluigi Nuzzi, accused of offences connected to the disclosure of reserved information and documents.

The defendants were all present, accompanied by their respective lawyers: Emanuela Bellardini for Msgr. Vallejo Balda, ex officio; Agnese Camilli for Francesca Chaouqui, ex officio; Rita Claudia Baffioni for Nicola Maio, ex officio; Lucia Musso for Emiliano Fittipaldi, private; and Roberto Palombi for Gianluigi Nuzzi, private.

The representative for the injured party, i.e. the Holy See, was not present.

The panel of judges was composed of Professor Giuseppe Della Torre, president; Professor Piero Antonio Bonnet, judge; Professor Paolo Papanti-Pelletier, judge; and Professor Venerando Marano, substitute judge.

The Office of the promotor of justice (the prosecutor’s office) was represented by the promotor, Professor Gian Piero Milano, and the adjunct promotor, Professor Roberto Zannotti.

After the reading of the criminal charges by the chancellor, the president communicated that he had forwarded to the Court of Appeal the request for the appointment of two further private lawyers by Nuzzi and Msgr. Vallejo Balda, for eventual authorisation.

Two preliminary objections were heard, by Bellardini regarding the time limits for evidence for the defence, and – following a declaration by Fittipaldi – from Musso on the nullity of the writ served on Fittipaldi due to a lack of precision regarding the alleged offences.

The promotor of justice, in the person of Professor Zannotti, responded to the second objection, arguing that the intention was not to violate the freedom of the press, but that the defendant was required to respond regarding the activities conducted to obtain the published information and documents, and that this had been specified in the writ.

The panel of judges, after a meeting in the chamber lasting three quarters of an hour, rejected the two objections present and established the date of the next hearing, to be held on Monday 30 November at 9.30 a.m., during which the questioning of defendants will commence, starting with Msgr. Vallejo Balda, followed by Francesca Chaouqui, and then the other defendants. Various hearings are expected to be held during that week.

The hearing was closed before midday.

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Vatican puts journalists on trial despite criticism from rights groups

VATICAN CITY
Telegraph (UK)

By Nick Squires, Vatican City State 24 Nov 2015

Two journalists who went on trial in the Vatican on Tuesday on charges of publishing leaked Holy See documents denounced their trial as “absurd” and “Kafkaesque”.

Emiliano Fittipaldi and Gianluigi Nuzzi are among five people on trial, accused of leaking and publishing documents that revealed widespread waste and financial mismanagement within the Vatican. They could all face up to eight years in jail.

At the first hearing, which lasted barely more than an hour, Mr Fittipaldi read out a statement to the court.

“I am incredulous in finding myself here as a defendant in a country that is not mine,” he said.

He said the trial contravened press freedoms that were enshrined in the Italian constitution, the European Convention on Human Rights and the Universal Declaration on Human Rights.

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Judges deny human rights plea at Vatican leaks trial

VATICAN CITY
The Times (UK)

Tom Kington Vatican City

Five people went on trial at the Vatican yesterday over the leaking of secrets after judges rejected a request from one of them to drop the case saying that it violated human rights.

Emiliano Fittipaldi, one of two authors who published books detailing greed and corruption at the Vatican, told the court that he was “incredulous” to find himself on trial for “simply having published news”.

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Rev. Robert Couture’s trips to Europe, Disney funded by stolen cash, court told

CANADA
CBC News

A southern Ontario Catholic priest embezzled more than $150,000 and used it to fund a lavish lifestyle that included trips to Europe, New York, Disney theme parks and fine dining, the Crown said to open the trial of Robert Couture.

Robert Couture was Ste. Anne Parish’s priest in Tecumseh, just east of Windsor, when he was charged with one count of theft over $5,000 nearly two years ago.

Provincial police claim an audit of the parish’s accounts revealed at least $169,000 in irregularities.

His three-week trial began in a Superior Court of Justice courtroom in Windsor on Tuesday.

Couture is alleged to have stolen money in a number of ways.

The Crown claims he stole from collection plates and told funeral homes they had to pay $260 for “prayer teams” to come to funerals. It’s alleged Couture would then give the church cheques for only $125 to $140, and pocket the rest.

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Cardinal George Pell’s plush safety net retirement plan for disgraced paedophile priest Wilfred Baker

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

CARDINAL George Pell signed off on a lavish retirement fund for one of the state’s most notorious paedophile priests while he was still the subject of a police investigation.

Just a week after Pell ordered the plush retirement fund, disgraced priest Wilfred Baker was charged with more than a dozen vile sex acts and was subsequently jailed.

Documents tendered to the child abuse Royal Commission yesterday reveal Baker had been the subject of a police investigation for more than a year at the time Pell arranged his retirement fund.

And his widespread offending had been widely known by church authorities for two decades.

The stunning revelations are expected to increase the pressure on Pell, Australia’s highest-ranked Catholic, when he returns to Melbourne next month to give evidence at commission.

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‘Outward be fair, however foul within’

UNITED STATES
Anglican Journal

By John Arkelian on November, 24 2015

Spotlight
Directed by Thomas McCarthy
Released November 6, 2015
128 minutes
Rated 14A

In 1761, the poet Charles Churchill penned these words: “Keep up appearances; there lies the test; / The world will give thee credit for the rest. / Outward be fair, however foul within; / Sin if thou wilt, but then in secret sin.”

The present day has no shortage of such “secret sin”—and among the worst is the shocking betrayal of trust (and criminality) that sees ministers of God prey upon innocent children. Based on a true story, Spotlight takes its name from an investigative journalism unit within The Boston Globe newspaper, which, in early 2002, revealed pervasive sexual abuse of children by Catholic priests in the archdiocese of Boston. The investigative reporters who start looking into allegations of such abuse can scarcely believe their ears: the truth is too appalling to credit, until it becomes impossible to dismiss. It’s bad enough that any priest sexually abused any child, but the predators who have done so have done so repeatedly—these are serial sexual predators. And there are many of them. An estimate given in the film that six per cent of Catholic priests have “acted out sexually against children” proves to be dead-on: the journalists uncover 87 predatory priests in Boston alone. And that predation consists of the sexual molestation and rape of children—the most vulnerable (and trusting) among us.

Can things get any worse? Alas, yes they can: senior church officials (up to and including the archdiocese’s cardinal, the film suggests) were actively involved in covering up the heinous crimes committed against their flock of believers. Pedophile priests are simply shifted from one parish to another, and while they’re waiting for their new parish they’re designated as being on “sick leave” or “unassigned”—code words used to disguise their status as criminally deviant offenders. But admission of wrongdoing, let alone criminal prosecution, is conspicuous by its absence. Instead, the church successfully silences complainants, quietly settling their claims for a pittance or simply discrediting them (victims often came from poor or broken families, precisely because it was easier to impugn the credibility of such victims). Other elements of society, among them some lawyers and police officers, also play a part in this systemic corruption and cover-up—usually in the cause of protecting ‘the good name’ of the church. Secret sins indeed! Misguided loyalty to an institution, self-interest and simple complacency all play their role in perpetuating an appalling, longstanding and covert epidemic of child abuse by persons in positions of trust.

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Pope Francis hauls 2 journalists into court amid protest

UNITED STATES
Poynter

by James Warren
Published Nov. 24, 2015

Two journalists went on trial at the Vatican today in an unusual proceeding in which they’re accused of illegally publishing claims of Vatican mismanagement based on confidential documents.

Reporters Gianluigi Nuzzi and Emiliano Fittipaldi both showed up before the Vatican court and, in theory, could face up to eight years in prison. The Vatican operates a different legal system than Italy and, though there is an extradition agreement between the two entities, it’s unclear if the two journalists could actually wind up in prison if convicted.

The early stages Tuesday included the judge spurning Fittipaldi’s request to dismiss the charges. The journalists’ fellow defendants are three individuals accused of leaking them the documents for use in two separate books.

“I am not afraid, I am calm,” Nuzzi wrote on Facebook, minutes before the first hearing.

“I have no intention to repent. It’s those who squandered money of the poor and weak, those who enjoy themselves in super attics at worshippers’ expenses that will have to repent,” he added in reference to revelations contained in Fittipaldi’s “Avarice” and his own “Merchants in the Temple.” “I will be in court at the Vatican to denounce a system of censorship that bans freedom of thought and information.”

Fittipaldi contended the the trial is an attack on press freedom. “In no other part of the world, at least in the part of the world that considers itself democratic, is there a crime of a scoop, a crime of publishing news,” he told AP.

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Vatican trial opens for 2 journalists, three others accused of leaking documents

VATICAN CITY
Los Angeles Times

Tom Kington

At the first hearing in a controversial Vatican trial of five people accused of leaking Holy See documents, judges have thrown out a request by one of the defendants to drop the case because it violates human rights.

Emiliano Fittipaldi, one of two authors on trial who published confidential reports of greed and corruption at the Vatican, told the court he was incredulous to find himself on trial for “simply having published news.”

Fittipaldi faces up to eight years in jail, alongside fellow Italian author Gianluigi Nuzzi, for publishing findings from a Vatican committee set up by Pope Francis in 2013 to weed out waste and wrongdoing at the Vatican.

Also facing trial for violating Vatican laws against leaks are three members of the committee accused of releasing the information: Spanish priest Angel Lucio Vallejo Balda, who is currently locked up in a Vatican cell, his assistant Nicola Maio and Italian public-relations expert Francesca Chaouqui. All five were present in the courtroom Tuesday.

After asking to address the court, Fittipaldi said: “I feel I must express above all my incredulousness at finding myself a defendant before a court which is not that of my country, even though I wrote and published in Italy the book for which I have been incriminated.” …

Speaking during a break in the trial, Nuzzi called the trial “Kafkaesque.”

“We are not martyrs, just journalists,” he said. “But there are principles that must be defended.”

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Father Pohl pleads not guilty in court

KENTUCKY
WHAS

Bethanni Williams November 24, 2015

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WHAS11) — A priest appeared in court on charges for accessing child porn.

Pohl’s mother, brother, brother-in-law, came to support him during his arraignment all filling the rows inside the federal courthouse as the former pastor pleaded not-guilty.

The investigation started after parents of a child at St Margaret Mary raised questions about a pictures the child said Pohl took in August 2015. That’s when nearly 200 other photos of St. Margaret mary school students were found on his computer and taken on parish grounds.

He is not charged in connection to any of those pictures but other images investigators say they found pictures he isn’t accused of taking but accessed on the internet.

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Trial starts for former Tecumseh priest charged with theft

CANADA
CTV

The trial started Tuesday morning for a former Tecumseh priest charged with theft.

Robert Couture, a former priest for Ste. Anne Roman Catholic Church, is charged with one count of theft over $5,000.

Essex County OPP completed a lengthy investigation dating back to 2002. Police say a financial audit of the parishes’ accounts yielded about $180,000 in irregularities.

Officials from Ste. Anne Parish in Tecumseh notified the OPP in August of 2011, regarding an internal theft that occurred between 2002 and 2010.

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Vic priest abused girl during confession

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

A Melbourne priest made a 10-year-old girl sit on his knee and asked her if she loved him while indecently assaulting her during confession, a royal commission will hear.

Father Peter Searson pulled the girl on to his lap and she could feel his erection, counsel assisting the child abuse royal commission Gail Furness SC said.

The girl made a statement to police in 1990 about the 1985 incident at the Holy Family Primary School in Doveton, saying she tried to sit on the very end of Searson’s knee but he pulled her closer to him.

‘All of this time he kept saying to me ‘do you love me’ and ‘tell me you love me’ as well as asking me to give him a kiss on the cheek,’ the girl said in the police statement, tendered to the royal commission.

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Trial date set for priest accused of child exploitation

KENTUCKY
WLKY

LOUISVILLE, Ky. —A trial date was set Tuesday for a former Louisville pastor facing federal child exploitation charges.

Stephen Pohl went before a federal judge Tuesday morning and entered a not guilty plea in the case.

According to the indictment, he accessed and viewed images of child pornography online between January and August of this year.

He resigned as pastor at Saint Margaret Mary after his arrest in August.

He is now out of jail.

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The Vatican is on trial

MALTA
Times of Malta

Tuesday, November 24, 2015 by Fr Joe Borg

Today a trial opened in the Vatican on the latest leaks scandal. Those officially on trial are journalists Emiliano Fittipaldi and Gianluigi Nuzzi, Mgr. Angelo Lucio Vallejo Balda who was the number two of the Commission whose minutes and other documents were published, Francesca Chaouqui a member and a public relations expert, and Balda’s assistant Nicola Maio.

Earlier this month saw the publication of Fittipaldi’s book Avarice, and Nuzzi’s book Merchants in the Temple. The books allege greed, waste, corruption and mismanagement in the way things are done in the Vatican. Several high powered prelates were mentioned while information was given about the opposition Pope Francis was encountering in his attempts to clean things up.

At the beginning of the trial Fittipaldi, who like Nuzzi is an Italian and could have decided not to show up, read out a statement saying that he is not accused of publishing anything false or defamatory, merely news – “an activity that is protected and guaranteed by the Italian constitution, by the European Convention on Human Rights and by the Universal Declaration on Human Rights.”

The Court refused Fittipardi’s plea.

As was to be expected the decision of the Vatican brought with it a general condemnation from the journalistic world.

The Committee to Protect Journalists, Reporters Without Borders and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, among others, have asked the Vatican to drop the charges against the investigative journalists. These organisations rightly assert that freedom of the press, which is a fundamental right, is on trial at the Vatican.

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Italy: Journalists Put On Trial Over Vatican Leaks

VATICAN CITY
Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP)

Italian journalists Emiliano Fittipaldi and Gianluigi Nuzzi, along with three former Vatican officials, have gone on trial charged with criminal misappropriation, among other offenses, in the wake of a Vatican leaks scandal.

A first hearing against the five defendants, who are charged with unauthorized disclosure of secret financial information, took place at the Court of the State of Vatican City on Tuesday morning.
Fittipaldi and Nuzzi are accused of making public confidential documents exposing alleged financial mismanagement in the Holy See in their recent books Merchants in the Temple and Avarice.

Vatican authorities had arrested Spanish priest Monsignor Angelo Lucio Vallejo Balda, his secretary Nicola Maio, and PR expert Francesca Immacolata Chaouqui on Nov. 2 on suspicion of leaking the confidential information, including letters and wiretapped conversations, to journalists Fittipaldi and Nuzzi. …

Media commentators have commented that the charges made the Vatican look vengeful and draw even more attention to the observations and allegations in Nuzzi’s and Fittipaldi’s books.

Nina Ognianova, who is the Europe and Central Asia coordinator of the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), said: “Journalists should be allowed to carry out their role as watchdog and investigate alleged wrongdoing without fear of repercussions.”

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Freedom of press on trial in Vatican court

VATICAN CITY
The Catholic Register

BY JUNNO AROCHO ESTEVES, CATHOLIC NEWS SERVICE
November 24, 2015

VATICAN CITY – Two Italian journalists standing trial in a Vatican court defended their right to freedom of the press, while the Vatican prosecution said the way they acquired confidential information was illegal.

All five people accused of involvement in leaking and publishing confidential documents about Vatican finances were present at the opening of the criminal trial in a Vatican courtroom Nov. 24.

The accused are: Spanish Msgr. Lucio Angel Vallejo Balda, secretary of the Prefecture for the Economic Affairs of the Holy See; Francesca Chaouqui, a member of the former Pontifical Commission for Reference on the Organization of the Economic-Administrative Structure of the Holy See; Nicola Maio, personal assistant to Vallejo Balda on the commission; and the journalists, Gianluigi Nuzzi, author of Merchants in the Temple, and Emiliano Fittipaldi, author of Avarice.

Vallejo Balda, Chaouqui and Maio were accused of “committing several illegal acts of divulging news and documents concerning fundamental interests of the Holy See and (Vatican City) State.” Nuzzi and Fittipaldi were accused of “soliciting and exercising pressure, especially on Vallejo Balda, in order to obtain confidential documents and news.”

The Vatican court granted Fittipaldi’s request to address the courtroom at the trial’s opening session. He expressed his “disbelief” at finding himself being tried by a non-Italian court system when he wrote and published a book in Italy. He said the charges against him were not “for publishing false or defamatory news, but simply for publishing news, an act protected by the Italian Constitution,” as well as European and universal human rights conventions.

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Media Advisory: Five St. John’s Priest Files to be Publicly Released Tomorrow [Tuesday]

MINNESOTA
Jeff Anderson & Associates

Five St. John’s Abbey Priest Files to be Released Tuesday

Files include: Richard Eckroth, Thomas Gillespie, Francis Hoefgen, Finian McDonald and Bruce Wollmering

Bruce Wollmering Key Documents
Bruce Wollmering File, part 1
Bruce Wollmering File, part 2
Bruce Wollmering Timeline

Finian McDonald Key Documents
Finian McDonald File, part 1
Finian McDonald File, part 2
Finian McDonald Timeline

Francis Hoefgen Key Documents
Francis Hoefgen File
Francis Hoefgen Timeline

Richard Eckroth Key Documents
Richard Eckroth File, part 1
Richard Eckroth File, part 2
Richard Eckroth File, part 3
Richard Eckroth Timeline

Thomas Gillespie Key Documents
Thomas Gillespie File
Thomas Gillespie Timeline

What: At a news conference on Tuesday in St. Paul attorney Jeff Anderson will:

• Release the files of five St. John’s monks accused of sexually abusing children. Files to be released include Richard Eckroth, Thomas Gillespie, Francis Hoefgen, Finian McDonald and Bruce Wollmering. The files were obtained as part of the Troy Bramlage (Doe 2) settlement earlier this year.

• Discuss the contents of the five priest files. Finian McDonald spent more than 20 years as a counselor at St. John’s where he used his position to prey on and sexually exploit vulnerable students. Bruce Wollmering was part of the counseling staff along with McDonald who also preyed on vulnerable students who sought help. Francis Hoefgen was arrested for sexually assaulting a 17-year-old vulnerable boy in Cold Spring, MN in 1984. In 1996 St. John’s learned of Thomas Gillespie’s sexual abuse of a boy at St. Mary’s in Stillwater, MN approximately 20 years earlier and Richard Eckroth, a serial sexual psychopath abused dozens of St. Johns students, if not more, over his 60+ year career.

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Editorial: Taking the low road in diocese bankruptcy

NEW MEXICO
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, NM, Nov. 23, 2015

Do not exploit the poor because they are poor and do not crush the needy in court. — Proverbs 22:22

The Diocese of Gallup’s Chapter 11 case recently reached some dismal milestones. The case began its third year in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in November. Recent quarterly billing statements show the Gallup Diocese has racked up more than $3.2 million in bankruptcy costs. Now, attorneys in the case are headed back for their third mediation session after two failed earlier attempts.

For anyone who naively believes this bankruptcy case might actually deliver some justice for the clergy sex abuse claimants, they should read the 12-page statement filed in court recently by attorney Edward A. Mazel. His statement is a sobering reminder that the protection of money — not the promotion of justice — is at the heart of this case.

Mazel represents the New Mexico Property and Casualty Insurance Guaranty Association, an entity created by state law that oversees the coverage of claims by insolvent insurers. In the Diocese of Gallup case, it involves liability insurance policies the diocese bought from the now-defunct Home Insurance Company.

Mazel’s statement on behalf of his insurance client is a classic example of why the public frequently views both lawyers and insurance companies with similar distaste. Mazel doesn’t even bother to pay superficial lip service to the victims in this case, the clergy sex abuse claimants. Rather, his primary interest appears to be protecting his client from having to pay out much money on the diocese’s insurance policies.

Using his convoluted interpretation of insurance terminology and the law, Mazel lays out a series of possible legal defenses his client might assert against the insurance claims. His most specious defense is based on the Home Insurance Company’s policy that “specifically excludes coverage for bodily injury that is either expected or intended by the insured.” Citing the example of the Rev. Clement Hageman, a credibly accused perpetrator, Mazel claims, “NMPCIGA believes these assertions, along with factual evidence, trigger the ‘expected or intended’ injury exclusion since there would be no coverage for Hageman’s alleged misconduct, and no coverage to the Debtor because the injury would be expected or intended as a result of his alleged misconduct.”

Regardless of what some diocesan officials knew about sexual abuse in the Gallup Diocese, no one could argue that the sexual abuse of children was intended. The clergy abuse claimants were sexually molested when they were minor children with no legal say about what schools or churches they would attend. Neither they nor their parents could have possibly expected or intended sexual molestation as a result of attendance at a Catholic school or parish. Mazel’s suggested legal defense is offensive.

And what was the purpose of Mazel’s statement to U.S. Bankruptcy Judge David T. Thuma? Mazel, who states he practiced bankruptcy law “under the mentorship” of Thuma on his law firm’s website, states the purpose is to “simply outline and summarize the complexity of the issues” for his former mentor and “simply to aid the Court in reaching a determination on how to manage this case.” Leave it to a lawyer to come up with such a disingenuous piece of malarkey.

No, the real reason was to deliver a message to the sex abuse claimants. As all the parties are heading back to the mediation table for the third time Dec. 3-4, the New Mexico Property and Casualty Insurance Guaranty Association is taking the low road by trying to intimidate abuse claimants with the wearying prospect of ongoing litigation over insurance coverage.

On the other hand, the Diocese of Gallup’s other insurer, Catholic Mutual, has the opportunity to take the high road. A group of Catholic bishops founded and currently direct Catholic Mutual. And it was Catholic bishops who had the authority to change the outcome of the sex abuse crisis if they had chosen to protect innocent children rather than protect the church’s reputation and criminal clerics. The Catholic bishops who run Catholic Mutual have a similar moral choice now.

Catholic Mutual can take the high road. Its attorneys can work with the mediator and attorneys for abuse survivors and the Gallup Diocese to come up with a settlement that is truly just for the abuse claimants. Catholic Mutual can put pressure on the New Mexico Property and Casualty Insurance Guaranty Association to get off the low road it is traveling and come to the mediation table with a decent and fair settlement offer.

Both insurance organizations have the power to bring the Diocese of Gallup’s bankruptcy case to a close with a good resolution. But they both need to demonstrate that the promotion of justice — not the protection of insurance money — is at the heart of their motivation.

In this space only does the opinion of the Gallup Independent Editorial Board appear.

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When the truth ends up on an editing room floor

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Globe

By Kevin Cullen GLOBE COLUMNIST NOVEMBER 22, 2015

“Spotlight,” the movie about The Boston Globe’s Pulitzer Prize-winning investigation of the coverup of sexual abuse by Roman Catholic priests, had its general release on Friday and film critics agree: “Spotlight” is one of the best movies of the year.

Jack Dunn had a different reaction. After seeing the film at the Loews theater across from Boston Common, he stepped onto the sidewalk and threw up.

The movie sickened him because he is portrayed as someone who minimized the suffering of those who were sexually abused, as someone who tried to steer Globe reporters away from the story, as someone invested in the coverup.

“The things they have me saying in the movie, I never said,” Dunn said. “But worse is the way they have me saying those things, like I didn’t care about the victims, that I tried to make the story go away. The dialogue assigned to me is completely fabricated and represents the opposite of who I am and what I did on behalf of victims. It makes me look callous and indifferent.”

Dunn is the longtime spokesman for Boston College, his alma mater. He is also on the board of trustees at Boston College High School, from which he graduated in 1979. In 2002, Walter Robinson, then editor of the Globe’s Spotlight Team, called Dunn to set up a meeting with BC High president Bill Kemeza about allegations against priests who had taught at BC High.

That real-life meeting became a dramatic scene in the movie, in which Robinson, played by Michael Keaton, and Globe reporter Sacha Pfeiffer, played by Rachel McAdams, press Kemeza, Dunn, and a fictional character called Pete Conley about what BC High knew and when they knew it.

Robinson graduated from BC High, and his character expresses incredulity that previous BC High administrators didn’t know about the serial abuse by one Rev. James Talbot.

‘The dialogue assigned to me is completely fabricated and represents the opposite of who I am and what I did on behalf of victims.’

“It’s a big school, Robbie, you know that,” the Jack Dunn character says. “And we’re talking about seven alleged victims over, what, eight years?”

In real life, Jack Dunn says, not only did he not say this but that after Robinson told him what the Globe had learned about the abuse by priests at BC High, he drew up for the school’s board of trustees a four-point plan to address the allegations with transparency and compassion.

“I proposed to the board that we create a hotline so alums can call in and report anything they know; hire an independent child advocate to review each case; report any criminality to the police; and provide counseling and compensation for the victims. There was input from others, but that essentially became the plan,” Dunn said.

The real-life meeting with Globe reporters, Dunn said, was cordial, not confrontational.

“We said we didn’t know anything, that there were no files,” Dunn said. “But we weren’t denying or minimizing anything.”

There were stories in the Globe at the time chronicling what Kemeza and Dunn said and did in response to the Globe inquiries, and a column praised BC High’s response compared to the foot-dragging and obstruction of the Archdiocese.

But real life usually isn’t dramatic enough for the silver screen. Artistic license means screenwriters and filmmakers can take a scene from real life and make it a composite that serves what they consider a larger truth. In other words, they make stuff up.

The irony, of course, is that “Spotlight” has been widely and rightly praised for the way it captures the minutiae of what newspaper reporters do in pursuit of hard-to-get stories like the clergy abuse scandal. It gets the journalism right. But in doing so, “Spotlight,” like other films that take on real-life stories, engages in something that is anathema to journalism — making up characters and dialogue.

The caveat employed by filmmakers is that most elastic of phrases, “based on a true story.” But in the interest of transparency, that sort of disclaimer should be augmented with the words “but we reserve the right to make stuff up.”

The real problem highlighted in Jack Dunn’s case is that fictional dialogue meant to highlight the obstruction thrown up by Catholic powerbrokers was put into the mouth of a real person, creating real-life consequences.

When I talked to him last week at his office in Chestnut Hill, it was obvious that Dunn was emotionally and physically wrecked by the way he’s portrayed in the film. At one point, he cried, describing how his son, a senior at BC High, felt compelled to stand up and defend him in front of his classmates before they went, as a class, to see the film.

“Part of me didn’t want to say anything about this, because I don’t want to take anything away from the victims,” he said. “The Globe reporters did a great job, and my beef is not with them. But the real heroes in this are the victims, and I know some of them and I care about them. But I can’t just stand by and have my reputation ruined.”

What perplexes Dunn, and me, too, is why the fabricated lines are credited to a real person when there is a fabricated character called Pete Conley in the scene. As a character, Conley is an influential business guy who acts as a fixer for the Archdiocese of Boston.

I asked Tom McCarthy, who directed the film and co-wrote the screenplay with Josh Singer, what he thought of Dunn’s complaint.

“We spent enormous time researching in depth what happened in Boston — interviewing individuals, reviewing e-mails, poring over court documents. The movie is based on real events and uses, by necessity, scenes and dialogue to introduce characters, provide context, and articulate broad themes. That is true of every movie ever made about historical events,” McCarthy wrote in an e-mail.

“We understand that not everyone will embrace the way they are portrayed in the film, but we feel confident, based on our extensive research, that the movie captures with a high degree of authenticity the nature of events, personalities, and pressures of the time.”

I asked McCarthy for an interview, and to answer this question specifically: Why make a real person look bad with words he didn’t say, when you could just as easily assign those words to a fictitious person you put in the scene? But his spokeswoman said they would limit their response to the e-mail.

Dunn isn’t the only real person portrayed in the film who has a beef with McCarthy. Steve Kurkjian, a legendary Globe reporter, is portrayed as a curmudgeon who was dismissive of the importance of the story. That couldn’t be further from the truth, and Kurkjian did some of the most important reporting as part of the team that won the 2003 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service for exposing the coverup.

Kurkjian, a journalistic icon, is owed an apology, at least. So is Dunn, but he’s looking for more. A lot more. His lawyer sent a letter to the filmmakers, demanding that the offending scene be deleted from the movie, just as the movie hit hundreds of screens coast to coast.

But, with lawyers now involved, getting people to do the right thing is going to be that much harder.

Sort of like when all those lawyers were telling Cardinal Law to batten down the hatches and ignore the rabble that wanted answers.

How’d that work out for the cardinal?

Kevin Cullen is a Globe columnist. He can be reached at cullen@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter@GlobeCullen.

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‘Not martyrs just reporters’ says Nuzzi

VATICAN CITY
ANSA

(ANSA) – Vatican City, November 24 – Freedom of information and of the press must be defended, journalist Gianluigi Nuzzi told reporters Tuesday as the so-called Vatileaks 2 trial kicked off.

“We are not martyrs, we are just reporters but some principles must be defended,” said Nuzzi, one of five defendants in the document-leaking case.

“You can criticize, appreciate, or blame but there is another level, which is safeguarding freedom of information”.

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Vatican puts journalists on trial amid human rights furor

VATICAN CITY
Today

VATICAN CITY – Five people, including two Italian reporters, went on trial in the Vatican on Tuesday, to outrage from rights groups, on charges arising from publication of books in which the Holy See was portrayed as mired in mismanagement and corruption.

At the first session, dominated by procedural issues and dubbed “Kafkaesque” by one of the defendants, journalists Gianluigi Nuzzi and Emiliano Fittipaldi said they had done nothing wrong and had simply fulfilled their professional duty.

“I am incredulous in finding myself here as a defendant in a country that is not mine,” Fittipaldi told the court, adding that publishing news was protected by the Italian constitution as well as European conventions and universal declarations on human rights.

The trial, being heard by three non-clerical judges in the sovereign city-state, stems from publication of two books which depict a Vatican plagued by mismanagement, greed and corruption and where Pope Francis faces stiff resistance from the old guard to his reform agenda.

While the Vatican follows a 19th-century Italian criminal code that is no longer used in Italy, the fundamental approach to criminal trials is similar to the Italian legal system of magistrates and prosecutors. Unlike Italy, the Vatican does not have jury trials.

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Pope Francis visits the Vatican Bank, appoints new Director General

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Radio

(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis on Tuesday visited the Institute for the Works of Religion (IOR), commonly known as the Vatican Bank.

During his visit, he met with the Board of Superintendence for about 20 minutes, where he announced the appointment of a new Director General of the Institution, Dr. Gian Franco Mammi, who has been serving as Vice-Director.

He will be assisted for the time being by Dr. Giulio Mattietti , until a new Vice-Director is appointed.

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Journalists in Vatican trial protest rights’ violations in first hearing

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Nov. 24, 2015

VATICAN CITY
The controversial and extraordinary Vatican trial of three employees and two Italian journalists over publication of leaked documents got underway Tuesday with strong protestations from the journalists that the trial violates their rights as recognized in Italy, Europe, and by the United Nations.

The organization that represents every journalist accredited at the Vatican also issued a rare public statement on the trial Tuesday morning, expressing “consternation and worry” that the two colleagues are facing prosecution for doing “exactly their work.”

The trial, which opened in the morning with a 70-minute initial hearing in a Vatican courtroom, relates to books recently released by Emiliano Fittipaldi and Gianluigi Nuzzi, titled Avarizia (“Greed”) and Merchants in the Temple, respectively.

Both books outline instances of questionable Vatican spending and financial practices, citing leaked documents.

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Trinity Grammar School in Kew reveals sex charge against former teacher

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

November 24, 2015

Lucie Morris-Marr and Cassie ZervosHerald Sun

AN elite Melbourne private boys boarding school has been rocked by a sex abuse scandal.

Trinity Grammar School, Kew, has announced police have charged a former teacher regarding an alleged sexual offence against a former pupil.

In a letter to parents headmaster Dr Michael Davies said the Anglican school were fully supporting police in their investigations against the former staff member.

“The allegation has been brought by an Old Boy of Trinity who attended the school in the late 1960s,” he wrote.

“He was made an offer of counselling and ongoing support and was referred to the police.”

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It Takes a Village to Abuse a Child: Further Thoughts on Spotlight

UNITED STATES
Extra Ecclesiam Est Libertas

NOVEMBER 22, 2015 ~ LMICKENS

I saw the movie “Spotlight” this morning, and it exceeded my expectations in every way. It’s definitely an Oscar contender, and I think it’s a film everyone should see. Not only does “Spotlight” do a great job of dramatizing the Boston Globe’s investigation into the abuse scandal, but it also shows the extent to which Boston was controlled not just by the Catholic church but by what one could call “the old Irish boy’s club” that demanded silence from priests, police, survivors, their families, and entire communities. Indeed, it seems like many Bostonians had direct knowledge of abusive priests, but assumed that it was just that one guy and the church knew how to handle things. The willingness for communities to turn a blind eye to abusive priests leads a lawyer working for abuse victims to proclaim (and here I’m paraphrasing), “It takes a village to raise a child, and a village to abuse one.”

Some people might take offense to such a statement, but it’s really true. How many times have you heard a local news story about an abused and/or murdered child, where teachers, neighbors, and other relatives knew something was wrong, but didn’t intervene? Agencies like CPS get a lot of flak, most of it justified, for letting children fall through the cracks, but in many cases, blame can be extended to individuals and institutions closer to the children in question. The more notorious priests like John Geoghan, Paul Shanley, and Joseph Birmingham explicitly targeted kids from impoverished, broken homes, knowing not only that such children would be the least likely to complain about excessive attention from a father figure, but they would also be the least likely to tell and the easiest to discredit. In many cases, other people — nuns, priests assigned to the same parish, janitors, lay administrators — knew or suspected something was wrong, but didn’t say anything because of a fear of “scandalizing the faithful” or because they had been threatened into silence.

It’s interesting that child molestation is generally seen as the worst thing imaginable, but in far too many cases, the public will blame the victim. In this case from Missouri, a junior deacon at a Protestant church (not sure of the denomination) admitted to and was convicted of abusing a young girl for ten years, starting when she was five years old, yet the community called the victim a “liar” and rallied around the abuser:

“There are certainly a few good people in this community who have offered support to this young victim,” said Platte County Prosecuting Attorney Eric Zahnd. “It is shocking, however, that many continue to support a defendant whose guilt was never in doubt. If it takes a village to raise a child, what is a child to do when the village turns its back and supports a confessed child molester?”

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Former Jehovah’s Witness says church’s policies don’t help abuse victims

UNITED KINGDOM
Hartlepool Mail

Mark Payne
mark.payne@jpress.co.uk
Tuesday 24 November 2015

A former Jehovah’s Witness is calling for a change to practices within the church which he says do not help sex abuse victims.

Steve Rose, 51, from Hartlepool, believes policies of the church, based on what the Bible says, make it difficult for allegations of child and other sex abuse to be uncovered or acted upon.

He wants to see the end to a “two-witness rule” which says church elders are not allowed to take action against allegations of wrongdoing unless it has been witnessed by at least two people.

The church say its rules do not prevent allegations being taken seriously or issues being reported to police.

Mr Rose, who used to be a member of Hartlepool’s Kingdom Hall, in Ashgrove Avenue, is also concerned that convicted sex offenders – like Richard Ogilvie, who was recently sentenced for grooming a girl – are allowed to remain part of the church.

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BC’s Jack Dunn Says His Portrayal In Spotlight The Movie Was Untrue

MASSACHUSETTS
WGBH

[with video]

The movie Spotlight has brought in nearly six-million dollars over the past two and-a-half weeks, pretty impressive, given fewer than 600 theaters are showing it.

As you probably know, the movie tells the story of The Boston Globe’s uncovering of clergy sex abuse in the Catholic Church.

Boston College Spokesman Jack Dunn says fictitious portrayal in the movie is far from the truth.

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No real legal recourse over ‘Spotlight’ beef

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Herald

Bob McGovern Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Jack Dunn tells me he’s been defamed in the “Spotlight” movie, but there don’t seem to be any Hollywood endings in character assassination lawsuits.

The longtime Boston College spokesman has already lawyered up and asked the movie’s distributors to remove a scene that paints him in an unflattering light. He says his role in the Boston clergy sex-abuse scandal was grossly misstated.

However, he stopped short of saying he would sue Open Road Films, the producer of “Spotlight.” Maybe that’s because it’s too soon to start thinking litigation. Or perhaps it’s because he knows how hard it is to win a defamation case against Hollywood.

“Usually, people in these cases don’t have a good understanding of the First Amendment, and they typically fail,” said Mark Litwak, a famous California entertainment attorney who has experience with silver screen suits. “It’s tougher, too, when they say it’s based on a true story. They’re basically telling the audience they’ve taken some creative liberties.”

Harvey A. Silverglate, a local civil rights attorney, seconded that motion.

“Unless it’s found that the filmmakers had notice early that what they said was false, and then they recklessly disregarded it and didn’t clarify it, I think a filmmaker has an advantage,” Silverglate said. “There’s a sliding scale here, and filmmakers have more leeway than a newspaper or even a documentary.”

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Vatican court rejects journalist’s bid to drop leaks charges

VATICAN CITY
Daily Mail (UK)

By ASSOCIATED PRESS

VATICAN CITY (AP) — A Vatican tribunal on Tuesday rejected a journalist’s request to have charges against him of publishing confidential documents dropped as a trial opened in the Holy See’s latest leaks scandal.

Journalists Emiliano Fittipaldi and Gianluigi Nuzzi are accused of having published books about Vatican waste, greed and mismanagement that were based in part on confidential Holy See documents. Alongside them in the courtroom Tuesday were three people, including a high-ranking Vatican monsignor, accused of leaking them the information.

The trial opened amid appeals by media watchdog groups, including the Committee to Protect Journalists, Reporters Without Borders and the OSCE, for the Vatican to drop the charges against the reporters, on the grounds that a free press is a fundamental human right.

The hearing was held in the intimate courtroom of the Vatican’s criminal tribunal, decorated with a photo of Pope Francis facing the defendants and a crucifix behind the bench. A small group of journalists was admitted inside as “pool” reporters.

After the charges were read out, Fittipaldi asked to approach the bench and read out a statement to the four judges, saying he decided to show up out of respect for the court even though in Italy he would never have been accused of the charges he faces, much less put on trial.

He noted that he’s not accused of publishing anything false or defamatory, merely news — “an activity that is protected and guaranteed by the Italian constitution, by the European Convention on Human Rights and by the Universal Declaration on Human Rights.”

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Why a criminal trial for leaks could boomerang on the Vatican

VATICAN CITY
Crux

By John L. Allen Jr.
Associate editor November 24, 2015

Although it may be overshadowed both by Pope Francis’ trip to Africa this week and, in the United States, the Thanksgiving holiday, a Vatican trial that got started on Tuesday runs the risk of boomeranging in its effort to claim the moral high ground amid a recent cycle of embarrassing leaks.

In brief, five people are facing a three-judge Vatican court on allegations of publishing secret internal documents pertaining to finances. Three were part of a papal study commission created in 2013 to lay the groundwork for a financial reform: Spanish Monsignor Lucio Vallejo Balda, his aide Nicola Maio, and Italian laywoman Francesca Chaouqui.

The other two defendants are journalists who published new books based on the leaked documents: Gianluigi Nuzzi, author of Via Crucis (released in English as “Merchants in the Temple”) and Emiliano Fittipaldi, author of Avarizia (“Avarice.”)

The journalists are being tried for allegedly using illicit means to obtain secret documents. The three former Vatican insiders are charged with having formed an “organized criminal association” for purposes of violating confidentiality.

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Vatican trying reporters, press freedom

ROME
ANSA

(ANSA) – Rome, November 23 – The trial of journalists Emiliano Fittipaldi and Gianluigi Nuzzi Tuesday in the Vatican for their books about the Holy See, “Avarice” and “The Way of the Cross,” is a trial against freedom of the press as well as the two reporters, the pair have said.

Together with the two accused of divulging Holy See confidential documents also being tried are alleged whistleblowers, Monsignor Lucio Angel Vallejo Balda and Francesca Immacolata Chaouqui, as well as Vallejo’s former assistant Nicola Maio, all of them also accused of criminal association for having taken documents from the Vatican’s financial affairs committee and passing them to the two reporters.

Nuzzi and Fittipaldi, who under Vatican law face potential sentences of four to eight years in prison if found guilty, indicated they would be present in court but both strongly protest the trial of journalists merely for doing their job and threatening thereby the freedom of information.

“What is opening is not a trial against me but a trial against freedom of the press,” Fittipaldi wrote in a letter to la Repubblica.

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Belfast priest who got parishioner pregnant lines up return

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

By Ciaran Barnes Chief Reporter
PUBLISHED
24/11/2015

A Northern Ireland priest who was put on gardening leave by the Catholic Church after getting a parishioner pregnant has made a return to public life.

Fr Ciaran Dallat quit his post at St Peter’s Cathedral in west Belfast in March after the woman who later miscarried his baby revealed her story to Sunday Life.

The 52-year-old cleric announced he was undertaking “spiritual guidance” to “repair the damage and hurt” he had caused.

But after eight months out of the spotlight the priest has started stepping out in public again.

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Male witch child abuser loses court bid over supervision order

AUSTRALIA
news.com.au

AAP

A MALE witch who hypnotised two 15-year-old girls and then prostituted and abused them has lost his bid to vary his supervision order.

Robin Angus Fletcher, 58, wanted to be allowed to complete a rehabilitation-related workbook with verbal answers only and a recording of his answers also sent to his lawyer because he is vision impaired.

His lawyer Alan Marshall told Victoria’s Court of Appeal Fletcher was prone to giving long answers, and he feared a transcriber would not summarise these correctly.

“It is his concern that if someone fills in the booklet but doesn’t regard the full context he may be disadvantaged at a later stage,” Mr Marshall told the court.

David Grace QC, for Corrections Victoria, said there were concerns with how these audio recordings could be distributed or used.

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“Spotlight”: My Five-Point Commentary

UNITED STATES
Bilgrimage

William D. Lindsey

Steve and I went yesterday to see “Spotlight.” Most of you will already know quite a bit about this film, but in case anyone reading this blog doesn’t have information about it, it’s a depiction of the dramatic story of the gradual awakening of the Boston Globe’s investigative “Spotlight” team to the massive ramifications of the abuse story in the Catholic church. It’s the story of how, after having been alerted to this by abuse survivors like Phil Saviano of SNAP, the Globe ignored the situation until reports about a single monstrously abusive priest in the Boston archdiocese, John Geoghan, alerted Globe journalists to the fact that there were more abusive priests in the diocese — as many as 90 — hiding in plain sight, whose histories of abuse were known to all kinds of powerful people but above all to the diocese’s chief shepherd Cardinal Law, but about whom no one with power to combat the abuse had done anything at all.

These revelations led to the Globe’s historic exposé report in 2002 that ultimately toppled Cardinal Law, who was then “punished” by the Vatican by being whisked away to Rome where he was given a cushy and powerful job within the Vatican. If you want to know more about “Spotlight,” here’s the Facebook page for the movie. And here’s its Twitter site.

Our reaction: we drove away from the theater talking about how the U.S. Catholic bishops just met to ratchet up their attacks on same-sex marriage as an “intrinsic evil,” a position they plan to place before Catholic voters in the U.S. in a voting guide designed to herd voters into the GOP voting column. Steve and I and couples like us, same-sex couples who choose to commit our lives to each other in public, loving marital relationships, are evil. Not what the bishops have done: that is not evil.

As I told Steve as we talked about this, and have told friends on Facebook, it’s astonishing to me that, just as a movie appears in theaters everyhere shining a spotlight on the direct involvement of a majority of Catholic bishops in covering for priests sexually molesting minors, the bishops have chosen to shine their own spotlight on my life and Steve’s life as evil lives. Talk about moral obtuseness of the most intractable form imaginable. Talk about a total lack of self-knowledge or insight into one’s own life and behavior undercutting claims to pastoral responsibility in the grossest way possible.

Talk about not seeing what is right in front of one’s nose as one chooses to focus, instead, on imaginary (and politically useful) bugbears everywhere around oneself.

Here’s what else struck me as I watched:

1. I find it amazing — marvelous, really — that a marginal, embattled organization of abuse survivors and advocates for survivors, the heroic folks who formed SNAP, has gone in two decades from being marginal and embattled to being celebrated in a major movie playing in theaters all over the place this (American) holiday season. This movie is in key respects a paean to SNAP leaders including Phil Saviano and Richard Sipe, a richly deserved paean to them for their willingness to keep on keeping on when no one, including the Globe itself, would pay any attention to them when they first came forth with their explosive reports about the ramification of the abuse situation in the Catholic church.

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Two journalists go on trial over Vatican leaks

VATICAN CITY
Deutsche Welle

The trial of several Italian journalists and Vatican officials has begun despite criticism from media rights groups. The five are on trial as part of the “Vatileaks 2” scandal revealing waste within the Holy See.

The five appeared before the court on Tuesday for obtaining and publishing secret documents showing widespread financial waste and fraud within the Vatican bureaucracy.

The journalists, Gianluigi Nuzzi and Emiliano Fittipaldi, face up to eight years in prison for publishing two books earlier this month based on confidential Vatican documents from a special reform commission established by Pope Francis to clean up waste in the Church.

While walking into the Vatican, the two reporters denied any wrongdoing, saying they had just done their duty as professionals.

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Vatican trial of five over leaks gets under way

VATICAN CITY
Irish Times

Paddy Agnew in Rome

Tue, Nov 24, 2015

For the second time in three years, the Holy See this morning sees the opening of a Vatican City trial investigating the internal theft of confidential documents. The so-called Vatileaks 2 trial sees five people indicted – Spanish monsignor Lucio Angel Vallegjo Balda, his Italian lay assistant Nicola Maio, lay consultant Francesca Chaouqui and writers Gianluigi Nuzzi and Emiliano Fittipaldi.

The pair both published books this month – Merchants in the Temple by Nuzzi and Greed by Fittipaldi – which outlined not only the mismanagement of the Holy See’s finances but also the resistance of elements in the Roman Curia (and elsewhere) to the reform process instigated by Pope Francis.

Summer investigation

The investigation into these thefts began this summer, while Msgr Balda and Ms Chaoqui were both first arrested and questioned on November 2nd. Msgr Balda, an official at the Vatican’s prefecture for economic affairs, has been held in the Vatican since then while Ms Chaoqui was released after questioning.

Many commentators believe the haste with which this trial is being conducted is because Pope Francis wants the affair resolved as soon as possible so it will not drag on into celebrations for the Holy Year of Mercy. Some observers argue the trial may be over before the Holy Year starts on December 8th, Feast of the Immaculate Conception.

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Vatican puts journalists, employees on trial as media cries foul

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

By Philip Pullella

VATICAN CITY , Nov 24 Five people, including two Italian reporters, went on trial in the Vatican on Tuesday, to outrage from rights’ groups, on charges arising from publication of books in which the Holy See was portrayed as mired in mismanagement and corruption.

As they walked into the Vatican, the two reporters, Gianluigi Nuzzi and Emiliano Fittipaldi, said they had done nothing wrong and were merely doing their professional duty.

The trial, being heard by three judges, stems from publication of two books which depict a Vatican plagued by mismanagement, greed and corruption and where Pope Francis faces stiff resistance from the old guard to his reform agenda.

Two of the officials indicted, Spanish Monsignor Angel Lucio Vallejo Balda, who was number two at the Vatican’s Prefecture for Economic Affairs, and Italian laywoman Francesca Chaouqui, a public relations expert, were arrested earlier this month.

Balda and Chaouqui were both members of a non-defunct commission Francis set up in 2013 to study economic and administrative reforms. Vatican employee Nicola Maio, Balda’s assistant, also went on trial.

The Holy See was embarrassed and angered by the books, which it said used information that should never have been allowed to leave the walls of the city state.

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Jack Dunn Says He Was Unfairly Portrayed As Villain In ‘Spotlight’

BOSTON (MA)
CBS Boston

[with video]

November 23, 2015 By Paula Ebben

BOSTON (CBS) – The new film “Spotlight” opened Friday to strong reviews around the country but one Boston man says his reputation has been ruined by the way he was portrayed.

Jack Dunn, the spokesman for Boston College, wants the public to know this story about uncovering the truth, contains a scene that is a complete lie.

“Hollywood needed a villain, and in this particular scene they assigned that to me,” Dunn said in an interview with WBZ-TV’s Paula Ebben.

Spotlight chronicles the work of dogged Boston Globe reporters who uncovered the secrecy in the archdiocese of Boston that allowed the clergy sex abuse crisis to go unreported for decades.

But one scene at BC High shows Jack Dunn, an alumnus of the school, reacting to news of an abusive priest there as if he was complicit in the cover-up. …

A spokeswoman for Open Road Films, the distributor of Spotlight, released the following statement:

“We believe the complaint against Spotlight is without merit. The filmmakers meticulously researched what happened in Boston. The movie is based on real events and was made with the cooperation and help of the people who lived them. The movie uses – as is the case for all movies ever made about historical events – scenes and dialogue to introduce characters, provide context, and articulate broad themes. We feel confident, based on the extensive research conducted, that the movie authentically captures the nature of events, issues, and pressures of the time. While the film could not possibly portray all of the good deeds done by some to help victims and expose the truth – many of which occurred after the events dramatized in the film – we hope that the movie helps bring all of their efforts to light.”

Statement from BC High in Letter to Alumni:

“In order to present this complex and sorrowful history, Spotlight compresses details and portrays characters to focus on the vitally important overarching story. Specifically, the film dramatizes a meeting at BC High by condensing several dimensions of the larger diocesan investigation into a single scene. For example, in the film, an official Archdiocesan representative is depicted as present and influential in the meeting. In reality, no one from the Archdiocese was ever present at any of our meetings or involved in our responses to the victims.

In that same scene, there is a fictionalized portrayal of another one of our alumni, Jack Dunn ’79, a Trustee of the school. The lines assigned to Jack were manufactured by the filmmaker for dramatic effect and represent an inaccurate portrayal of what he did and said. From the start, Jack was an outspoken advocate for transparency in our communication. He was one of the key members of the school leadership that established a plan to respond to the victims. That plan included communication to all alumni informing them of a hotline that would allow them to report any abuse, hiring an independent advocate who set up free counseling for victims, and reporting to law enforcement any criminal conduct that was disclosed.

This response, although it could not undo the history of harm, was viewed by many victims and their advocates as a model that would later be adopted by other faith-based institutions.”

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SPOTLIGHT IS AN AIRTIGHT JOURNALISTIC PROCEDURAL

UNITED STATES
Audiences Everywhere

POSTED BY JOSH ROSENFIELD ON NOV 23, 2015

Overview: Four Boston Globe reporters track down proof that the Catholic Church protected priests who sexually abused children. Open Road Films; 2015; Rated R; 128 Minutes.

All The Pope’s Men: I’ve always had a soft spot for movies about journalism. There’s something innately compelling about good-hearted, determined people on the hunt for truth and justice. If Spotlight brings anything new to this sub-genre, it’s a dogged insistence on denying the first part of the equation. The members of the titular investigative group at the Boston Globe aren’t callous or even apathetic, but the film never forgets that their work is, well, exactly that. Work. It’s their job. Spotlight does its best not to project personal motivations for covering the story onto these characters. They don’t choose to chase this story down because they have a stake in it, they’re told to do so by their boss. Any personal connections they have to it arise naturally as a result of covering it. Spotlight has been compared to Zodiac for its depiction of the journalistic process, but Zodiac used journalism as a conduit to explore the external pressures being exacted on its characters. Spotlight is more concerned with the the way the process itself affects its characters.

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Journalists face Vatican for ‘crime of the scoop’

VATICAN CITY
Portland Press Herald

BY NICOLE WINFIELD
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

VATICAN CITY — Two Italian journalists who wrote books detailing Vatican mismanagement go on trial Tuesday in a Vatican courtroom along with three people accused of leaking them the information in a case that has drawn scorn from media watchdogs around the world.

The Committee to Protect Journalists, Reporters Without Borders and the OSCE, among others, have all called on the Vatican to drop the charges against Gianluigi Nuzzi and Emiliano Fittipaldi. The two reporters face up to eight years in prison if convicted of charges they violated Vatican law by publishing news based on confidential Holy See documents.

In interviews Monday, Nuzzi and Fittipaldi both called the process “Kafka-esque.” With hours to go before the start of trial, neither they nor their lawyers had seen the court file detailing the accusations against them. Nuzzi only spoke for the first time with his Vatican court-appointed lawyer Monday morning. They were indicted Friday.

Even though they technically risk arrest by stepping on Vatican soil Tuesday, both said they planned to attend the trial – if only to report to the world what transpires. The Vatican is a sovereign state, and by entering Vatican territory, Nuzzi and Fittipaldi could well be detained by Vatican gendarmes given the grave accusations against them. But neither expected the Vatican would take that route, given the diplomatic incident it would set off with Italy.

“This is a trial against freedom of the press,” Fittipaldi said in an interview at his offices in the headquarters of Rome’s La Repubblica newspaper. “In no other part of the world, at least in the part of the world that considers itself democratic, is there a crime of a scoop, a crime of publishing news.”

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Press freedom groups condemn prosecution of reporters in Vatican leaks case

VATICAN CITY
Washington Post

By Rosie Scammell | Religion News Service November 23

VATICAN CITY — A trial due to open at the Vatican this week is drawing widespread condemnation as an attack on press freedom, as two journalists risk lengthy jail sentences for publishing leaked documents.

“It is one thing for the Vatican to try to protect itself from this scandal. But penalizing its exposure by journalists whose only sin was to do some investigative reporting cannot be tolerated,” said Alexandra Geneste, head of Reporters Without Borders’ EU-Balkans office, in a statement.

The doors of the Vatican’s criminal court will open on Tuesday (Nov. 24) for the start of an unprecedented trial that will be a significant test for the Holy See’s justice system. The case centers on documents allegedly stolen from the Vatican, in addition to other information that was illicitly shared with outsiders.

The Holy See secrets were laid bare in two books released earlier this month: “Merchants in the Temple” by Gianluigi Nuzzi and “Avarice” by Emiliano Fittipaldi. They explore Pope Francis’ struggle to reform the murky Vatican finances. They depict a Vatican plagued by mismanagement, greed and corruption, where Pope Francis faces stiff resistance to his reform agenda.

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Sex abuse commission: Catholic Church has paid out more than $16.8 million to child victims

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

November 24, 2015

Beau Donelly
Reporter

A paedophile priest recorded “hot” confessions with children, showed students a dead body and carried a gun at school, the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sex Abuse has heard.

The royal commission has resumed in Melbourne and has turned its focus to historic child sex offences committed by clergy from the mid 1980s to 1996.

The hearing was told on Tuesday that the Catholic Church paid out more than $16.8 million in compensation to child abuse victims in Melbourne between January 1980 and February 2015.

In her opening address, counsel assisting the commission, Gail Furness, SC, said new data showed 454 people made a claim or substantiated complaint about child sex against priests, religious employees and volunteers during this period.

There were 316 claims that resulted in compensation – an average of $52,000 each. Most of the claims (335) were against priests, with most alleged abuse taking place at local parishes and schools.

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Abuser priest laughed after confessing

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

AAP

A Melbourne pedophile priest used confession to get absolution for his crimes. Then he laughed.

The priest found out his victim had told Father Philip O’Donnell about the abuse.

He turned up at 8am the next day, sat down and then dropped on his knees and went into confessional mode, Mr O’Donnell said.

“I gave absolution, and as he walked out the door he laughed at me. In other words, he had made sure that I couldn’t speak to anyone,” the former priest told the child abuse royal commission on Tuesday.

“I felt totally entrapped by that situation; that he had found out that I’d been told, he came to me, put himself in a confessional situation that therefore took me out.

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Rome ‘pulled strings’ on complaints

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

The Catholic Church in Rome pulled the strings and told Australian parishes how to handle child sex abuse complaints, a former priest says.

Frank Little, who was archbishop of Melbourne from 1974 and 1996, would try everything to avoid scandal and was particularly loyal to Rome, former priest Philip O’Donnell has told the child abuse royal commission.

‘I personally think he had a misplaced loyalty to Rome when faced with the dilemma of how to handle this particular problem, and he made the wrong decision,’ Mr O’Donnell told the inquiry on Tuesday.

‘I don’t think there’s much doubt that Rome pulled the strings and instructed various parishes around Australia, around the world, how to handle the matter,’ Mr O’Donnell said.

He said the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith made it clear it was their responsibility to handle abuse complaints, not the local bishop’s.

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The litany of child abuse by Catholic priests that no longer shocks the world

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

David Marr
Tuesday 24 November 2015

Not long ago, Tuesday morning’s revelations at the royal commission into institutional responses to child abuse would have made headlines round the world. Priest after priest in the Melbourne archdiocese of the Catholic church was caught abusing children. And for decades bishop after bishop ignored these crimes.

The priests were caught abusing as soon as they left the seminary. They kept abusing despite “treatment” and despite being shifted from parish to parish. The church knew what was going on and for a very long time no one called the police.

But Melbourne fits the now familiar pattern of the Catholic world. Gail Furness SC, piling up the numbers in her dry opening address to the 35th case study of the royal commission, might have been talking of Chicago, Brussels or Caracas.

In Melbourne, eight notorious priests have since the 1950s provoked multiple claims by 454 victims. What sets the city apart from cities in Europe and America is how little the church has had to pay. Furness puts the bill for damages plus legal and medical costs at not quite $18m.

But claims are still coming.

Before the day began, the atmosphere in the foyer of the Melbourne county court was strangely cheerful. So much pain and so many years have brought victims to this place, but they meet on these occasions as old friends.

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Inquiry told many priests dysfunctional

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Many priests are dysfunctional and sexually immature, a former priest says in trying to explain why so many clergy are pedophiles.

Many priests struggle with celibacy, said Philip O’Donnell, a Melbourne priest from 1975 to 1999 who noted that over a period of three decades the 26 in his seminary year had whittled down to two priests.

“I personally believe mandatory celibacy isn’t a gift. It’s an imposition,” he told the child abuse royal commission on Tuesday.

“Although it’s accepted by priests as a condition of ministry, I think there’s a significant number of priests who don’t embrace it and find the celibate life particularly difficult.

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Priest’s victim told he’d go to hell

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

The sexual abuse was the devil’s way of punishing the boy for his sins, pedophile priest Peter Searson told his victim.

Searson abused the altar boy for six months from 1978, on Saturday mornings when the nine-year-old washed the Melbourne priest’s car for 50 cents and mowed the lawn.

BVD was already scared of Searson, who even a fellow priest described as a bizarre human being, but his devout Catholic mum told him to do the job.

He couldn’t tell anyone.

‘Searson threatened me, saying I would go to hell if I told anyone, that the devil was punishing me for my sins and this is how he was doing it, that if I told anyone, I’d be taken away from my family and sent to a child’s camp,’ BVD told the child abuse royal commission.

‘I was terrified.’

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Sex abuse commission: Rome ‘pulled strings’ on sex abuse cases, claims former priest

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

November 24, 2015

Beau Donelly

Top church officials in Rome called the shots on how to deal with child sex abuse cases involving Catholic clergy in Melbourne, the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sex Abuse has heard.

Former Melbourne priest Philip O’Donnell testified on Tuesday that he believed Australian archbishops were under strict instructions about how to handle child abuse allegations.

“I don’t think there’s much doubt that Rome pulled the strings and instructed various bishops around Australia and around the world how to handle the matter,” he said.

“The consistency of the response from diocese to diocese … I just heard bishop after bishop say the same phrases and it just – you just started to see there was a common script, in my opinion, on how the matter was being dealt with.”

Mr O’Donnell said the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith made it clear it was their responsibility to handle abuse complaints and that former Archbishop Frank Little had “misplaced loyalty” to Rome when faced with how to deal with the sex abuse scandal.

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Cries of ‘inquisition’ as Vatican puts journalists in dock over leaks

VATICAN CITY
Yahoo! News

Vatican City (AFP) – Two journalists and three Vatican officials go on trial Tuesday over the publication of classified documents in a case critics have attacked as having a whiff of the inquisition.

All five accused face potential jail time of up to eight years for obtaining and disclosing confidential papers “concerning the fundamental interests of the Vatican State”.

The unprecedented prosecution of journalists — who say they were only doing their job — is being pursued under punitive legislation introduced in 2013.

The law was rushed through a year after Pope Benedict XVI’s butler leaked damaging information about Vatican in-fighting which plunged the Holy See into crisis and, it is widely believed, contributed to the pontiff’s decision to retire.

Spanish priest Lucio Angel Vallejo Balda, Italian PR expert Francesca Chaouqui and a third Vatican official, Nicola Maio, are charged with criminal association in order to obtain the documents and then divulging them to the press.

Journalists Gianluigi Nuzzi and Emiliano Fittipaldi are accused of illegal disclosure and putting pressure on the Vatican officials, particularly Vallejo Balda, to obtain documents which they used as material for books depicting financial irregularities and uncontrolled spending in the Holy See.

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Watchdog urges Vatican to drop journalists’ trial over leaks scandal

VIENNA
Business Standard

Vienna, Nov 24 (IANS/AKI) The Vatican should drop an imminent trial of two Italian journalists who published stolen confidential documents in new exposes of graft and financial mismanagement at the Holy See, a Vienna-based watchdog has said.

“Journalists must be free to report on public interests and to protect their confidential sources,” the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE)’s media freedom envoy Dunja Mijatovic said on Monday.

“I call on the authorities not to proceed with the charges and protect journalists’ rights in accordance with OSCE commitments,” Mijatovic added.

The Holy See is one of the 57 members of OSCE, a Vienna-based European security and democracy watchdog.

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Journalists in Court for Leaked Vatican Documents

VATICAN CITY
EMTV

Two journalists, Emiliano Fittipaldi and Gianluigi Nuzzi are facing charges over books both published based on leaked confidential documents exposing alleged corruption and mismanagement of tens of millions of Euros belonging to Vatican funds.

Over the weekend, the Vatican announced that it was moving ahead with charges against the two journalists and former insiders – Monsignor Lucio Angel Vallejo Balda, Francesca Chaouqui, an Italian PR executive and laywoman, and Nicola Maio, another Vatican employee.

Following the passing of law by Pope Francis in 2013 that makes stealing of confidential documents a criminal offence, the two journalists could face up to eight years imprisonment if found guilty.

This decision by the Vatican is being seen as having a detrimental effect on journalists and may create tensions between Italy and the Vatican.

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