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.

January 15, 2016

Decoding what it means to say the Vatican has a ‘gay lobby’

VATICAN CITY
Crux

By John L. Allen Jr.
Associate editor January 15, 2016

Since the Vatican is a global institution, understanding it often requires at least a passing familiarity with a few foreign languages. Italian is a no-brainer, Latin still helps, and in the Pope Francis era, Spanish gives you a leg up, too — especially Porteño, the brand of Spanish spoken in Francis’ native Buenos Aires.

Perhaps the most challenging language, however, is what one might call “Vaticanese,” referring to a frequently bewildering cluster of terms and phrases that have taken shape in and around the place, and often mean something only to insiders.

One recent entry in that lexicon is “gay lobby,” which emerged during the first Vatican leaks scandal under Pope Benedict XVI in 2012 and still pops up in Italian tabloid headlines and water-cooler chatter.

Shortly after his election, Francis reportedly said he had to “see what we can do” about this “gay lobby” in an informal session with leaders of men’s religious orders. More recently, Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez Maradiaga, coordinator of the pope’s council of cardinal advisors, told a newspaper that there is, indeed, such a “gay lobby,” and that Francis is trying to chip away at it.

Here’s the confusing thing: When Italians say “gay lobby,” they don’t mean “lobby” in the conventional political sense, and they often don’t really mean “gay” in the sense that sex has much to do with it.

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 altar boy says priest molested him in confessional

NEW JERSEY
NJ.com

By Mark Mueller | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com
on January 15, 2016

An assistant pastor at a South Orange church has been removed from ministry amid allegations he sexually assaulted two minors in the early 1980s, a spokesman for the Archdiocese of Newark confirmed.

The Rev. Michael “Mitch” Walters, parochial vicar at Our Lady of Sorrows Church, also has given up two archdiocese-wide positions.

Walters served as director of the Center for Ministerial Development, overseeing educational and spiritual enrichment programs for parishioners, and director of the Pontifical Mission Societies, which raises money for missionary and evangelical work.

The accused priest denies the allegations, said the spokesman, Jim Goodness.

“He said nothing had happened, that he did not do this,” Goodness said.

Walters, 60, left ministry by mutual agreement with the archdiocese in October. NJ Advance Media learned of his removal recently. The allegations date to Walters’ tenure at St. Cassian Church in Montclair.

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.

Two bishops: The Vatican isn’t a ‘den of thieves,’ but has a ‘gay lobby’

VATICAN CITY
Crux

By Inés San Martín
Vatican correspondent January 14, 2016

ROME — As Pope Francis continues his efforts to clean up the Vatican, two of his closest advisers this week struck slightly different notes about where things stand, with one insisting the Vatican is not a “den of thieves,” but the other claiming it contains a “gay lobby” the pope is trying to dismantle.

The comments came from Italian Archbishop Angelo Becciu, the Substitute for General Affairs, effectively the No. 2 official in the Vatican Secretariat of State, and Honduran Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez Maradiaga, coordinator of the pope’s all-important council of nine cardinal advisors.

Becciu was addressing the scandal that broke out in November, when two Italian journalists published books based on leaked documents revealing various forms of financial corruption, mismanagement, and waste.

In comments to an Italian news magazine, Becciu insisted that the depiction by some of the Vatican as a den of thieves is an “absolute falsehood.”

It’s unfair that Vatican employees, who are “proud of serving the pope and the Church,” Becciu said, “some time ago arrived at the point at which they’re embarrassed to say that they work here.”

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.

Editorial: Diocese owes abuse victims truth, along with money

NEW MEXICO
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, N.M., January 14, 2016

Attorneys in the Diocese of Gallup’s bankruptcy case are currently working out the details of the diocese’s settlement agreement with clergy sex abuse claimants. Part of that agreement will involve providing the claimants a monetary settlement for the physical, mental, emotional and spiritual injuries they suffered after being sexually abused as children. Another part of the agreement will involve non-monetary terms for the diocese to begin implementing.

In many ways, if the non-monetary terms of the settlement are grounded in the principles of truth and transparency, they are potentially more important than the monetary terms. Whether abuse claimants are awarded small or large monetary settlements, the money will eventually be spent. The truth, however, will last forever. Therefore, we hope the attorneys representing the clergy abuse claimants will advocate for all abuse victims and survivors by insisting on the following non-monetary terms.

Updated list of credibly accused abusers: When Bishop James S. Wall released his list of credibly accused abusers in December 2014, the list was not accurate or complete. The list did not include four former Gallup priests who have been identified as abusers by other Catholic dioceses and religious orders, and it did not include individuals who have been named in U.S. Bankruptcy Court claims. This updated list should be posted prominently on the diocesan website and published several times in all parish bulletins — including parishes in the Diocese of Phoenix that were once part of the Gallup Diocese. The Franciscan provinces that have sent clergy to the Diocese of Gallup should also be required to post such lists on their websites.

Publicly release personnel files: The personnel files of all credibly accused abusers who worked or volunteered in the Gallup Diocese should be publicly released and posted on the Internet. Redactions to protect the identity of abuse victims should be the only redactions allowed. The file of former Gallup priest James M. Burns, which was publicly released by the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, needs to be re-released because church officials were allowed to redact an unreasonable amount of information — more than one-third of the file. Again, the Franciscans and other religious orders should be required to also comply.

Terminate all confidentiality agreements: The Diocese of Gallup has signed countless confidentiality agreements with victims of clergy sex abuse, forcing those survivors to remain silent about their abuse. Those past confidentiality settlement terms must be terminated so all abuse survivors can be free to speak out if they choose.

Support victims of abuse: The diocese needs to establish an adequate fund to support the counseling needs of abuse survivors and their immediate family members. In addition, the name and contact information of the victims assistance coordinator should be published prominently on the diocesan website and in every church bulletin.

Notify law enforcement: There are currently 11 accused abusers from the diocese who are reportedly still alive. Only Brett Candelaria, a former lay religion education teacher, is in prison. Where is John Boland, who was allowed by Bishop Wall to leave the country? Where is Raul Sanchez, who was allowed to become an Air Force chaplain to escape allegations here? Where is Charles Cichanowicz, who abused boys on the Navajo Nation? Where are the rest of the abusers? Diocesan officials should encourage abuse victims to file police reports in the counties where the abuse occurred, and church officials should notify law enforcement officials of known incidents of abuse. Law enforcement officials can properly determine statute of limitation issues. Diocesan officials should also be required to notify law enforcement officials where credibly accused abusers are currently residing.

Revise and enforce diocesan policies: The Gallup Diocese needs a revised diocesan policy concerning sexual assault, misconduct, harassment and the use of pornography, and that policy needs to be posted on the diocesan website. Violations of that policy need to be enforced and truthfully reported to the public. The days of telling parishioners that a priest has stepped down for “health reasons” should be over.

Publicly announce allegations: The Diocese of Gallup has a long history of quietly shuffling abusers — to new parishes, treatment centers or into retirement — when allegations surface. Being in bankruptcy court apparently hasn’t changed this. According to court documents, a new abuse allegation was made in July 2014. Who is the accused abuser? Was the allegation credible? Is the accused abuser still in ministry? Or has he been sent to another parish, put in a treatment center or pushed into retirement? Bishop Wall owes local Catholics and the public the truth about this and all allegations.

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

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 school parents want convicted priest’s photos released

KENTUCKY
WDRB

By David Scott

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WDRB) — In August, Louisville priest Stephen Pohl was arrested and charged with accessing child pornography on a computer belonging to the Archdiocese of Louisville.

But detectives say they found more than 150 other pictures, taken by Pohl, of students at St. Margaret Mary School — where he served as pastor. Court records said the kids were clothed, though in some, their underwear was visible.

Investigators said in court they don’t consider those photos child porn, but do say children were in “sexually arousing positions.”

Since then, parents at the school have started a petition with more than 100 signatures demanding St. Ma

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.

Authorities investigate youth minister’s alleged sexual abuse

WEST VIRGINIA
Bluefield Daily Telegraph

Posted: Friday, January 15, 2016

By GREG JORDAN Bluefield Daily Telegraph

BLUEFIELD — An investigation into the alleged activities of a Bluefield man charged with multiple counts of sexual abuse continued Thursday as one church issued a statement saying it was cooperating with police.

James Lilly, 24, was arrested Tuesday. He faces one charge of incest, one charge of second-degree sexual assault and 31 charges of first-degree sexual abuse, Detective K.L. Adams of the Bluefield Police Department said.

Adams stated after Lilly’s arrest that the victim was a juvenile female. He said the abuse began in 2009 when the victim was 9 to 10 years old, and continued until she was 16. The alleged abuse occurred in a home, and not at a church.

Lilly described himself as transgender, and said he is in the process of becoming a woman, according to Adams. Lilly has a degree in religion from a Virginia college and has worked at numerous churches including Episcopal churches in Bluefield and Bluefield, Va.

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.

Court Documents Reveal New Details on Church Beatings

NEW YORK
TWC News

By Cara Thomas
Updated Thursday, January 14, 2016

New details surrounding the Word of Life Church beatings have come to light through newly obtained court documents from the Oneida County District Attorney’s office.

In total, nine church members are said to have been involved in a horrific beating during one of the church’s counseling sessions. Seven of those people have been charged with depraved indifference murder. Prosecutors say the defendants repeatedly whipped, punched and kicked 19-year-old Lucas Leonard and his younger brother Christopher. They were held against their will for more than 12 hours. Lucas died from his injuries.

Prosecutors believe the counseling session was held because Lucas had expressed interest in leaving the church. In the court documents, District Attorney Scott McNamara says the church pastor, Tiffanie Irwin, then initiated a counseling session, where she accused Lucas and Christopher of several other things with the intent to infuriate the boys’ parents and half sister.

When the victims’ mother, Deborah Leonard, pleaded guilty last month, she shared with the court that the church believed Tiffanie Irwin was a prophet and could hear directly from God.

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.

Disgraced K.C. bishop starts anew in Lincoln convent

NEBRASKA
Lincoln Journal Star

By ERIN ANDERSEN | LINCOLN JOURNAL STAR

A Catholic bishop who was the first American priest convicted of not notifying police of suspected child abuse in a timely manner is now the chaplain at a Lincoln convent.

But Lincoln’s bishop said Robert Finn paid for his mistake by completing two years of probation and deserves mercy.

Finn became chaplain of Lincoln’s School Sisters of Christ the King convent in December after serving as bishop of the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph for 10 years.

He cited personal reasons when he resigned as a bishop in April in the aftermath of a child pornography scandal involving one of his priests, Father Shawn Ratigan, and a subsequent Vatican investigation into Finn’s effectiveness as a leader.

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

Cardinal O’Malley says ‘Spotlight’ is an ‘important film’

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Globe

By Martin Finucane GLOBE STAFF JANUARY 14, 2016

Boston Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley has seen “Spotlight,” the movie about the Boston Globe’s investigation into clergy sex abuse that has been nominated for six Academy Awards, and considers it an important movie, a spokesman said.

“The Cardinal found it a very powerful and important film,” archdiocese spokesman Terry Donilon said. He said the cardinal saw the film before Christmas.

The Oscar nominations were announced Thursday morning. “Spotlight” was nominated for best picture, director (Tom McCarthy), original screenplay, editing, and supporting performances by Mark Ruffalo and Rachel McAdams.

In October, when the film was first released, O’Malley issued a statement saying that the film “depicts a very painful time in the history of the Catholic Church in the United States and particularly here in the Archdiocese of Boston.”

“We have asked for and continue to ask for forgiveness from all those harmed by the crimes of the abuse of minors. … The Archdiocese of Boston is fully and completely committed to zero tolerance concerning the abuse of minors,” he said.

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

Marc Gafni Scraps Appearance at New Age Retreat Amid Outcry

CALIFORNIA
Forward

Josh Nathan-Kazis
January 14, 2016

Marc Gafni, the onetime Jewish spiritual leader against whom allegations of sexual improprieties have resurfaced in recent weeks, has pulled out of teaching a long-planned workshop in February at Esalen Institute, the influential New Age retreat center in California.

“The teachers have chosen to withdraw,” said Gordon Wheeler, Esalen’s president, of the February 5 workshop on “Evolutionary Relationships.”

Gafni was scheduled to co-teach the workshop with Sally Kempton, a spiritual teacher with whom he has collaborated on other projects. Wheeler said that Gafni and Kempton had not been asked by Esalen to cancel the workshop.

On January 12, the Forward published an essay by a woman, Sara Kabakov, who alleged that Gafni molested her repeatedly, beginning when she was 13.

While allegations against Gafni have been the subject of multiple press reports since 2004, new attention was brought to the claims in a December New York Times column. The New York Jewish Week reported on January 5 that Esalen was considering cancelling Gafni’s February workshop.

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.

Source: Chesco pastor accused of rape will return to U.S. from Ecuador

PENNSYLVANIA
PhillyVoice

BY MICHAEL TANENBAUM
PhillyVoice Staff

A Chester County pastor accused of raping and impregnating a teenage girl will return to the United States from Ecuador to face pending charges, according to a Pennsylvania detective who confirmed contact with the suspect’s lawyer.

West Whiteland, Pa. Detective Scott Pezick told People Thursday afternoon that 33-year-old Jacob Malone, of Exton, has been in Ecuador for approximately two weeks and will be brought into custody upon his entry into the United States. He is expected to face charges of rape, institutional sexual assault, endangering the welfare of a child, corruption of minor, and furnishing liquor to a child, according to the detective.

The allegations against Malone evolved over a period of several years. He reportedly met the victim when she was 12 years old while pastoring at a church she attended in Mesa, Arizona. In 2014, he reached out to the then-17-year-old girl and invited her to stay with him and his family at his new home in Minnesota, where he allegedly attempted to have inappropriate contact with her.

When Malone moved to Chester County in July 2014, police say he again extended an invitation to the victim to stay with him, registering her at a local high school. That fall, according to police, the victim said Malone began sexually assaulting her at his home on the unit block of Atherton Drive in Exton.

When she turned 18, the victim told police Malone allegedly served her alcohol on several occasions, molesting her on one occasion when she became “highly intoxicated.”

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.

HEAD OF POPE’S GANG OF NINE: GAY LOBBY IS REAL

ROME
Church Militant

by Christine Niles • ChurchMilitant.com • January 14, 2016

“The Holy Father is gradually trying to purify it”

ROME (ChurchMilitant.com) – Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez Maradiaga, nicknamed the “Vice-Pope” for his position of influence with the Holy Father, is acknowledging the existence of a “gay lobby” in the Vatican — a group Pope Francis is aware of and is trying to eliminate.

The head of the Pope’s Gang of Nine, Maradiaga admitted to the existence of the homosexual cabal in a January 12 interview with the Heraldo de Honduras paper. Asked whether there had ever been “an infiltration of the gay community” at the Vatican, he replied, “Not only that, but the Holy Father has said there is a ‘lobby’ in this sense. The Holy Father is gradually trying to purify it.”

Although their situation must be addressed pastorally, he explained, “what is wrong cannot be true,” and Church teaching cannot be revised to accept same-sex “marriage.”

No, we must understand that there are things that can be changed and others not. Natural law cannot be changed. We see how God has designed the human body, the body of the man and the woman’s body to complement each other and transmit life. The opposite is not the plan of creation; there are things that cannot be changed.

He spent the rest of the interview discussing the Vatican Bank, curial reforms and various projects he’s working on in his archdiocese.

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January 14, 2016

Oscars 2016: Academy puts Tom McCarthy and Josh Singer back in the Spotlight

UNITED STATES
Entertainment Weekly

[with video]

BY DEVAN COGGAN • @DEVANCOGGAN

Way back in September, the biggest headlines out of the Toronto International Film Festival were devoted to one movie: Spotlight. Tom McCarthy’s drama, which chronicles the Boston Globe’s investigation into sex abuse allegations in the Catholic Church, was labeled awards season gold — and it was even hailed as a worthy successor to All The President’s Men.

But that was September, and since then, the film’s Oscar chances, which had once felt like a lock, suddenly seemed… iffy. The film’s talented ensemble — Michael Keaton, Mark Ruffalo, Rachel McAdams, Liev Schreiber, John Slattery, Brian d’Arcy Jones, Stanley Tucci — meant that there was no one star to build on Oscar campaign around, and as stories of Leonardo DiCaprio eating bison liver began to dominate the year-end pre-nomination buzz, some were wondering whether Spotlight peaked too early. Such fears seemed legitimate when Spotlight got shut out of the Golden Globes last weekend, raising the question of whether the subtle but powerful journalism drama still had a prime seat at the Oscar table.

Turns out that the filmmakers needn’t have worried: Spotlight raked in six Oscar nominations, including ones for Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Original Screenplay.

“Literally, before I went to bed last night, I looked at the bloggers and I was like, ‘Okay, if we have a great morning, we’ll get five,’” co-writer Josh Singer says. “And then when we got six, it was just super thrilling.”

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Rachel McAdams slept through Oscar nominations

UNITED STATES
Boston Globe

By Meredith Goldstein GLOBE STAFF JANUARY 14, 2016

Actress Rachel McAdams wasn’t up for Thursday morning’s announcement of this year’s Oscar nominations — not because she’s too cool to care, but because she thought they were being announced on Friday.

“I had the day wrong. I was in a deep, deep sleep,” she told us. “I was half-asleep wondering why my publicist was calling me at 5:45. Then I saw every person who I had ever loved or knew had texted me. I thought there had been some catastrophic event in the world.”

McAdams is among the nominees for best supporting actress for the Boston film “Spotlight,” which follows The Boston Globe’s Spotlight team investigation of the Catholic Church abuse scandal. In the film she plays reporter Sacha Pfeiffer, who was a frequent visitor to the set. McAdams’s nomination is one of six for “Spotlight”; the drama, directed by Tom McCarthy, also picked up nominations for best picture, best director, best screenplay, best editing, and best supporting actor for Mark Ruffalo, who plays Spotlight reporter Mike Rezendes.

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’ producer ecstatic over Oscar noms

UNITED STATES
Boston Globe

By Meredith Goldstein GLOBE STAFF JANUARY 14, 2016

Waking up was easy for Nicole Rocklin, one of the producers behind “Spotlight,” the film that follows The Boston Globe’s investigation of the Catholic Church sex abuse scandal. “It’s a fantastic morning,” she said, shortly after hearing that film had picked up six Oscar nominations.

“Spotlight” has been a best picture front-runner since it opened to rave reviews at the Venice and Toronto film festivals last fall, but Rocklin told us by phone that you can never count on Oscar attention. “There’s no expectation. There have been so many surprises along that way that you can’t expect anything.”

Rocklin said that when she heard that Mark Ruffalo had been nominated for best supporting actor for portraying Boston Globe Spotlight reporter Mike Rezendes, “I was screaming. Then Rachel’s,” she added, of Rachel McAdams, who picked up a nomination for best supporting actress for portraying the Globe’s Sacha Pfeiffer.

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Mitchell Garabedian hails Oscar nods for ‘Spotlight’

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Globe

By Mark Shanahan GLOBE STAFF JANUARY 14, 2016

Mitchell Garabedian can be irascible, at least he’s portrayed that way in “Spotlight.” But the Boston attorney who represented many of the victims in the priest sex abuse scandal was downright overjoyed Thursday that director Tom McCarthy’s movie snagged six Oscar nominations.

“It’s a reflection of the hard work, grit, and determination that the writers, director, and actors put into making ‘Spotlight,’” said Garabedian, who’s played with a degree of prickliness by Stanley Tucci. “The movie sends a very powerful and clear message about pedophilia within the Catholic Church and the coverup. And it’s empowered victims and made the world a safer place.”

Garabedian admits he was initially skeptical when he heard Hollywood was making a movie about The Boston Globe’s Pulitzer Prize-winning series about priest sex abuse within the Boston archdiocese. “If the movie sent an inaccurate message, it could have caused a lot of harm to victims and reinforced the church’s position,” he said. “But I spoke to the writers and a number of the actors and I was struck by how deeply they were concerned that the movie and the performances be worthy of the subject.”

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Judge rules ‘discovery’ material in priest sexual abuse suit be made public before trial

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philly.com

JANUARY 14, 2016

by Joseph A. Slobodzian, STAFF WRITER.

A Philadelphia judge has ruled that documents and other evidence from pretrial proceedings in a lawsuit involving sexual abuse of minors by a Catholic priest remain public before trial.

The two-paragraph ruling by Common Pleas Court Judge Mark I. Bernstein was a legal setback for the Archdiocese, which had asked for an order barring public disclosure of the materials. The church has insisted on confidentiality as a condition for engaging in pretrial “discovery” with lawyers in suits seeking damages for being sexually molested by priests.

The ruling, filed Tuesday, was in a wrongful-death lawsuit filed against the church in November 2013 by Deborah McIlmail, whose son Sean, 26, died of an accidental drug overdose.

Marci A. Hamilton, who filed the McIlmail suit, said she believes this is the first time the archdiocese has been denied confidentiality in a priest sex abuse case.

Hamilton said she thinks one reason is that in filing suit McIlmail and her husband never sought anonymity for their son or themselves.

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There is a gay lobby in Vatican

VATICAN CITY
ANSA

(ANSA) – Vatican City, January 14 – There is a gay lobby in the Vatican, just as Pope Francis has said, one of his closest aides in Curia reform said Thursday.

“Yes, a gay lobby exists,” Honduran Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez Maradiaga told Honduran daily El Heraldo.

Maradiaga, who coordinates the so-called C9 group of cardinals on helping Francis reform the Curia, was asked if there had been successful attempts by a gay lobby to infiltrate the Vatican.

“Not only that,” he replied. “Even the pope said it, there is an actual lobby.” According to Maradiaga, “the pope is gradually trying to purify this”.

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Vatican: Italian journalists face eight years in prison

ROME
Index on Censorship

Mapping Media Freedom correspondent Rossella Ricchiuti explores the Vatican’s case against two journalists standing trial for publishing leaked financial documents

By Rossella Ricchiuti / 14 January 2016

Two Italian journalists are being prosecuted by The Vatican for revealing confidential information and could face up to eight years in prison.

Emiliano Fittipaldi and Gianluigi Nuzzi are being tried in the so-called “Vatileaks II” case for publishing leaked documents in their books detailing financial misdeeds involving The Holy See. Fittipaldi is the author of Avarice and Nuzzi’s is entitled Merchants in the Temple.

The criminal trial by the Vatican justice against the reporters is a serious one. The journalists are accused of violating “Crimes against the Fatherland” in the Vatican penal code, specifically a 2013 amendment that added section 116, which says “whoever procures illegally or reveals information or documents whose disclosure is forbidden, shall be punished with imprisonment from six months to two years or with a fine from thousand to five thousand euro”. But “if the conduct has related to information or documents concerning the fundamental interests or diplomatic relations of the Holy See and the State, punishment of imprisonment is implemented from four to eight years”.

Fittipaldi and Nuzzi are not the only people standing trial in the case. The alleged sources of the internal Vatican documents — Lucio Vallejo Balda, secretary of Cosea, the commission that conducted the survey on the finances of the Vatican, and Francesca Immacolata Chaouqui, a member the commission — are also in the dock. A fifth person, Nicola Maio, a former contributor to Cosea, is also being prosecuted. Balda, Chaouqui and Maio are also accused of criminal association.

So far, there have been three hearings as part of the trial. The first on 24 November ended with a decision by the court to reject requests for deferral submitted by the defendants, who said they didn’t have enough times to organise their defence, having received court documents only the day before. The second hearing on 30 November lasted only 13 minutes, during which the court deferred the trial until 7 December. On that day, the court admitted all the witnesses requested by the defence.

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‘Spotlight’ Nominated For 6 Academy Awards; Matt Damon Gets Best Actor Nomination

BOSTON (MA)
CBS Boston

[with video]

BOSTON (CBS) – “Spotlight,” the movie about the Boston Globe’s investigative team uncovering the Boston Archdiocese’s priest sex abuse scandal, was nominated for six Academy Awards Thursday.

In addition to being named a finalist for Best Picture, Best Original Screenplay and Film Editing, Tom McCarthy was nominated for Best Director, Mark Ruffalo was nominated for Best Supporting Actor and Rachel McAdams was nominated for Best Supporting Actress.

“I can’t imagine any actor doing a better job than Mark Ruffalo did,” Michael Rezendes, the reporter played by Ruffalo in the movie, told WBZ NewsRadio 1030’s Carl Stevens. “I think he was sensational. He worked very hard at it. He spent a lot of time with me, he visited my home, he shadowed me at the Globe. Mark Ruffalo put his entire heart and soul into this project and it really paid off.”

“I’m really happy for all the victims and survivors of clergy sex abuse, because these nominations will keep their story in the forefront of public attention, which is where I think it needs to be,” he added.

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Settlements reached in O’Connell abuse-lawsuits

UNITED STATES
The University News

Posted by Tim Wilhelm / News Editor

Jesuits attribute resolutions, over 20 years in the making, to ‘mediation’

The new year heralded the settlement of two cases against former SLU president Daniel C. O’Connell, S.J., involving alleged sexual abuse against two women. The Missouri Jesuit Province and the University paid $200,000 to a plaintiff known as Jane Doe 929, and the Province paid $81,000 to a plaintiff known as Jane Doe MB.

Filed in 2010, the latter lawsuit carried a breach of contract charge. The Missouri Province (now titled “Southern and Central”) had paid a settlement of $181,000 to the same plaintiff in 2003 in response to allegations that O’Connell sexually assaulted her while she was studying abroad in Rome during the spring and summer of 1983. O’Connell was then a chaplain at Loyola University in Chicago, where Jane Doe MB was a student.

The settlement’s other terms entailed O’Connell’s restriction from “non-public ministerial contact with women” and “public priestly ministry,” as well as from teaching, campus ministry, counseling and retreats, according to St. Louis Circuit Court documents. In June 2003, Frank Reale, S.J., the Jesuit Provincial at the time, wrote a letter to Jane Doe MB stating that he had requested O’Connell’s resignation from Loyola and his transfer back to the Missouri Province.

An attached Settlement and Release Agreement from the Jesuits of the Missouri Province clarifies: “This agreement shall not be construed as an admission of liability or wrongdoing on the part of any party.” However, Reale wrote in his letter that, “Although I find it impossible to determine with certainty the precise details and the exact extent of the abuse, nonetheless I do find credible your allegation of abusive behavior on the part of Fr. O’Connell.”

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Scandal-plagued archbishop at St. Philip

MICHIGAN
Battle Creek Enquirer

Safiya Merchant, Battle Creek Enquirer January 14, 2016

An archbishop emeritus who left the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis amid reports that its leaders failed to adequately deal with priests accused of sexual misconduct is now temporarily helping out at St. Philip Catholic Church in Battle Creek.

Nienstedt served as the archbishop of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis from 2008 to 2015.

A Minnesota Public Radio investigation alleged leaders of that archdiocese have been “reassigning, excusing and overlooking sexually abusive priests among their ranks” for decades.

During Nienstedt’s tenure at the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, he had “authorized secret payments to priests who had sexually abused children, did not report alleged sex crimes to police and failed to warn parishioners” about the “sexual misconduct” of former St. Paul priest Curtis Wehmeyer, who was sentenced to prison for sexually abusing two boys and possessing child pornography, the Minnesota Public Radio investigation found.

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 Pope Benedict Knew About Abuse in the Catholic Church

UNITED STATES
The New Yorker

BY JOHN CASSIDY

The election of Pope Francis, in 2013, had the effect, among other things, of displacing the painful story of priestly sexual abuse that had dominated public awareness of the Church during much of the eight-year papacy of his predecessor. The sense that the Church, both during the last years of Benedict and under Francis, had begun to deal more forcefully with the issue created a desire in many, inside and outside the Church, to move on. But recent events suggest that we take another careful look at this chapter of Church history before turning the page.

During the past week, a German lawyer charged with investigating the abuse of minors in a famous Catholic boys’ choir in Bavaria revealed that two hundred and thirty-one children had been victimized over a period of decades. The attorney, Ulrich Weber, who was commissioned by the Diocese of Regensburg to conduct the inquiry, said that there were fifty credible cases of sexual abuse, along with a larger number of cases of other forms of physical abuse, from beatings to food deprivation.

The news received widespread attention not only because of its disturbing content but because the director of the Regensburg boys’ choir from 1964 to 1994 was Georg Ratzinger, the older brother of Joseph Ratzinger, who became Benedict XVI. Joseph Ratzinger was the Archbishop of Munich from 1977 until 1981, when he went to head up the powerful Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, which establishes theological orthodoxy and was also one of the branches of the Church that dealt with priestly sexual abuse.

The developments in Germany raised the question of what the two Ratzinger brothers knew about the abuse in the Regensburg choir. Most of the sexual abuse took place, apparently, at a boarding school for elementary-grade students connected to the choir. The chief culprit, according to Weber, was Johann Meier, the boarding school’s director from 1953 until 1992. The composer Franz Wittenbrink, a graduate of the school, told Der Spiegel magazine, in 2010, when the abuse scandal became public, that there was “a system of sadistic punishments connected to sexual pleasure.”

At that time, Georg Ratzinger, who was on the three-person supervisory board of the elementary school, acknowledged that some choirboys had complained about the punishments they received at the school. “But I did not have the feeling at the time that I should do something about it,” he told the Passauer Neue Presse, in 2010. “Had I known with what exaggerated fierceness he was acting, I would have said something.”

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Child abuse survivor Gina Swannell wins compensation after speaking out against Catholic Church

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By the National Reporting Team’s Lorna Knowles
Posted January 15, 2016

A woman who was suing the Catholic Church over sexual abuse she suffered as a young child has been awarded an out-of-court settlement.

Gina Swannell was seeking damages in the NSW Supreme Court for sexual abuse she suffered when she was six years old at the hands the late Father Charles Holdsworth when she was a boarder at the St Francis Xavier school in Urana.

Last August, Ms Swannell spoke out publicly against the Church, telling the ABC the Church was failing to honour its pledge to treat sexual abuse victims with more compassion.

She now says she is happy with the settlement, but believes it would not have happened if she had not gone public.

“The apology is accepted but trust is denied,” Ms Swannell 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.

Archbishop John Nienstedt, Bishop Robert Finn have new homes outside former dioceses

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Brian Roewe | Jan. 14, 2016

Two U.S. bishops who prematurely resigned their posts amid clergy sexual abuse scandals each have found new landing spots outside their previous dioceses.

A southern Michigan parish announced over the weekend that Archbishop John Nienstedt, formerly head of the St. Paul-Minneapolis archdiocese, will help out temporarily in the coming months, while Bishop Robert Finn, former head of the Kansas City-St. Joseph, Mo. diocese, began last month as chaplain for a Nebraska community of women religious.

Within the span of two months last spring, Finn, 62, and Nienstedt, 68, stepped down as shepherds of their respective dioceses, both of which teemed with anger and anguish for their church’s handling of child sexual abuse allegations. In the case of Finn, it was a 2012 misdemeanor conviction for failing to report suspected child abuse that drew a probationary sentence in civil court but no recourse from the church. For Nienstedt, his abdication, along with Auxiliary Bishop Lee Piché, came just 10 days after the Ramsey County prosecutor brought criminal charges against the archdiocese for its handling of abuse allegations.

Both Finn and Nienstedt now have new homes.

Nienstedt has agreed to assist in pastoral ministries at St. Philip Roman Catholic Church in Battle Creek, Mich., in the Kalamazoo diocese, or about two hours west of his hometown Detroit diocese. He took up residence in Battle Creek on Jan. 6.

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Questioning a Legacy

ALASKA
Anchorage Press

It’s easy and tempting to say nice things about someone after he or she passes away. In the case of just-deceased Alaska Catholic Archbishop Francis Hurley, however, we hope Catholic officials are careful about overdoing it. Praising him, we in the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) fear, rubs even more salt into the already-deep and often still-fresh wounds of hundreds of Alaskans who were sexually abused by priests during Hurley’s tenure, and thousands of parishioners who were betrayed by decisions Hurley made.

While Hurley surely accomplished much good during his career, frankly, his track record on protecting kids from predators was very poor. Evidence clearly shows that he repeatedly put children in harm’s way. In 2002, when US bishops—under extreme public pressure—finally adopted a nationwide abuse policy, Hurley argued against it. And just five years ago, he advocated returning some child-molesting clerics to ministry and relaxing the church’s already poorly-enforced “zero tolerance” policy.

Consider Fr. Timothy Crowley. He’s a priest who was removed from his Michigan parish when his church supervisors deemed him “credibly accused” of molesting a boy for eight years in the 1980s. (The Lansing diocese paid the victim $200,000.) But two years later, with little or no warning to parents, parishioners or the public, Hurley welcomed him to Alaska, housed him at Our Lady of Guadalupe church in Turnagain, and gave him a job as a spokesperson for the Archdiocese.

Or consider Archbishop Robert Sanchez. He’s the former Archbishop of Santa Fe who was accused of having sexual intercourse with at least 11 women, some of them teenagers. According to BishopAccountability.org, an independent archive of the church’s abuse crisis, Sanchez “also had extensive knowledge of the sexual abuse by priests and rarely did anything to punish or remove them.”

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.

Marc Gafni – Beneath and Behind the Denials

UNITED STATES
Integral Options Cafe

[NOTE: I have been actively involved in the newest Marc Gafni situation for the last two weeks, posting a lot of material on Twitter and Facebook. This post has been in process since Christmas day. I had originally written 34 pages of text, outlining each and every manipulation, episode of lying, and sexual abuse allegation. That is too much. This is likely only part one of several articles in the coming weeks.]

On December 25, 2015, The New York Times posted an article (in print, Dec. 26) called A Spiritual Leader Gains Stature, Trailed by a Troubled Past, by Mark Oppenheimer (with additional reporting from Jerusalem by Irit Pasner Garshowitz).

One of the many things missing in the NYT article, and most of the ones that have followed, is a recognition that Gafni’s pathology is not only emotional and sexual manipulation and other forms of abuse, it is also a sociopathic personality that almost hides the malignant narcissist within.

The NYT article exposed some of the controversies surrounding Gafni (which has led to the current outrage in the Jewish community and in the integral community, but in each instance allowed him to refute the allegations with no further exploration of the facts or statements by the victims. What could have been an important document revealing Gafni’s 35-year pattern of abuses–interpersonal, sexual, and control–became little more than a PR piece for him and his “think tank.”

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

Why we must start regulating religious schools

UNITED STATES
Left Foot Forward

Jonathan Russell

As the captain of a cricket club, I occasionally pick young people to play in my team. Rightly, I had to be checked by the Disclosure and Barring Service to do this, and my fellow team-mates who coach our juniors have to complete additional safeguarding training. It seems fair enough to me – if parents are signing over their children to my supervision, they want to know I am accountable.

I was shocked to learn that parents who send their children to madrassahs or yeshivas are not afforded such courtesies, despite the fact that children are often under the duty of care of these institutions for more than six hours each week. Schools, or anyone who works with children for over 18 hours each week, are regulated, but these out-of-school settings are not.

The Department for Education has just closed the consultation period for new proposals to register, inspect, and, if necessary, sanction these institutions. The proposals want to protect young people from inadequate premises, unsuitable staff, poor management, corporal punishment, and the promotion of ideas that undermine British values or promote extremism. All of this is absolutely necessary in my book.

When Quilliam goes in to schools, we try to promote a ‘primary prevention’ approach. That is, not making an assessment of a child’s vulnerability or referring people to the Channel programme, but instead promoting things like human rights and critical thinking that can help everyone. However, there is little point in promoting such positive measures, unless we can guarantee a minimum standard for all young people that ensures they are safe when being educated. I am adamant that this must go for out-of-school settings as much as schools and colleges.

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Spotlight, The Martian both got a whole lot of Oscar nominations

UNITED STATES
Boston.com

By Bryanna Cappadona @brycappa
Boston.com Staff | 01.14.16

Oscar nominations came in Thursday morning in Beverly Hills, announced by Newton-bred actor John Krasinski, Academy President Cheryl Boone Isaacs, and filmmakers Guillermo del Toro and Ang Lee.

As for main takeaways: Spotlight received six nominations, including Best Picture, Best Supporting Actress for Rachel McAdams, Best Supporting Actor for Mark Ruffalo, Best Director for Tom McCarthy, Best Original Screenplay, and Best Film Editing.

The Martian received seven nominations, including Best Picture, Best Actor for Matt Damon, and Best Adapted Screenplay.

The Revenant led with the most nominations, 12, and Max Max: Fury Road got 10.

The 88th Academy Awards air February 28 at 8:30 p.m. on ABC. Below, see the full list of nominees:

Best Picture
The Big Short
Bridge of Spies
Brooklyn
Mad Max: Fury Road
The Martian
The Revenant
Room
Spotlight

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Other Pontifical Acts

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 14 January 2016 (VIS) – The Holy Father has appointed:

– accepted the resignation from the pastoral care of the diocese of Mannar, Sri Lanka presented by Bishop Rayappu Joseph upon reaching the age limit. He appointed Bishop Joseph Kingsley Swampillai, emeritus of Trincomalee, Sri Lanka, as apostolic administrator of the same diocese.

– given his assent to the canonical election by the Synod of Bishops of the Greek-Catholic Ukrainian Church of Fr. Volodymyr Hrutsa, C.Ss.R., as auxiliary bishop of Lviv (area 3,767, population 1,067,200, Catholics 730,525, priests 468, permanent deacons 4, religious 513), Ukraine. The bishop-elect was born in Dobromyl, Ukraine in 1976, gave his religious vows in 2000 and was ordained a priest in 2001. He holds a doctorate in dogmatic theology from the University of Innsbruck, Austria and has served in a number of roles within his congregation, including director of studies of the Province of Lviv and master of novices of the same province, and lecturer of dogmatic theology at the Catholic University of Ukraine, the major seminary of Lviv and the seminary of Basilian fathers in Bryukhovychi.

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‘The Revenant’ leads Oscar nominations with 12 bids

UNITED STATES
Boston Globe

By Ty Burr GLOBE STAFF JANUARY 14, 2016

The nominations for the 88th annual Academy Awards are in, and Oscar is smiling upon Leonardo DiCaprio and “The Revenant.” The grueling historical epic was nominated for 12 Academy Awards, including best picture, actor, and director (Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu). “Spotlight,” the acclaimed drama about the Boston Globe’s reporting of the Catholic Church clergy abuse scandal, was nominated for best picture, director (Tom McCarthy), original screenplay, editing, and for the supporting performances by Mark Ruffalo and Rachel McAdams.

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Catholic archbishop in Minnesota abuse scandal comes to Michigan parish

MICHIGAN
MLive

By Rosemary Parker | rparker3@mlive.com
on January 14, 2016

KALAMAZOO, MI — A Roman Catholic archbishop who was accused of failing to protect children from sexual abuse and resigned in the wake of the civil and criminal charges against his archdiocese of Minneapolis has taken on new work, assisting at St. Philip parish in Battle Creek.

A spokesperson for the Diocese of Kalamazoo confirmed Wednesday that Archbishop Emeritus John C. Nienstedt arrived at the Battle Creek parish Jan.6.

Just a few weeks earlier, the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis signed a 28-page settlement agreement that ended a civil lawsuit brought against the Roman Catholic archdiocese by three victims of sexual abuse by a priest. The lawsuit, and related criminal charges, were the first in the country ever launched against an archdiocese for complicity in sex abuse cases.

Criminal charges accusing the archdiocese of repeatedly ignoring complaints of priestly misconduct are still pending. The priest convicted in 2013 of molesting boys is now in prison.

Nienstedt, the imprisoned priest’s former boss, “has volunteered to assist temporarily the pastor of St. Philip Parish in Battle Creek in light of the pastor’s ongoing serious health challenges,” the statement from the Kalamazoo Diocese said.

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German church probers receive more claims of sex abuse of boys at school run by Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI’s brother

GERMANY
Christian Today

Shianee Mamanglu-Regala 14 January 2016

More than 200 children at a famous choir school in Germany run by the brother of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI fell victim to physical and sexual abuse, an ongoing investigation into the decades-long Catholic Church scandal revealed.

The investigation is centred on the Domspatzen, the official choir at the Regensburg Central dedicated to St. Peter in Bavaria state, and two feeder schools between 1953 and 1992.

Investigators received additional allegations of sexual and physical assault by priests on the members of the boys choir, according to Ulrich Weber, a lawyer hired by the church to look into the scandal.

Weber told a news conference in Berlin last week that at least 50 of the 231 alleged victims made “plausible” claims of sexual abuse.

The alleged sexual abuse encompassed offences such as fondling and rape, while the reported physical abuse included beatings and the withholding of food. He said the victims named 10 perpetrators, Agence France-Presse reported.

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Church ‘shocked’ by arrest of pervert who gave Bible lessons

OKLAHOMA
The Free Thinker

An Oklahoma Bible study leader charged with dozens of sex crimes against a 14-year- old girl had form as a sex offender before joining the Calvary Christian Church in Del City, Oklahoma.

According to this report, Donnie Ray Schultz, 45, above, faces more than 50 charges for rape and “forcible oral sodomy”, along with counts of making and possessing child pornography.

Calvary spokesman Jason Sharp, a spokesman for the church, said the allegations came as:

A complete shock. While (Schultz) led a small group Bible study on church doctrine, he was one of seven members who took turns teaching the class. The class was for adults only, but apparently some participated in the class before they were eighteen.

He added that Schultz was never in any paid, employee relationship with the church. He led the discipleship class as a volunteer.

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Retired Sherborne priest Roy Catchpole cleared of sex assault charges

UNITED KINGDOM
Western Daily Press

A clergyman who was recently acquitted of four counts of sexual assault has thanked the community for their “incredible” support during the past 18 months.

At a hearing on Wednesday, January 6, at Bournemouth Crown Court, Judge Roberts ordered that a not guilty verdict should be entered after the prosecution offered no evidence in the case of Roy Catchpole, 69, of Milborne Port.

A spokeswoman for the Crown Prosecution Service said: “We had to offer no evidence as we were not going to pursue with a prosecution and in order to end the proceedings.”

Following the not guilty order, Mr Catchpole expressed his relief that the ordeal of the past 18 months was now over.

He said: “Throughout the process I have been aware that the wider public in Sherborne and surrounding area have been incredibly supportive. I have been nobly served by barristers whose energies have been directed to getting at the truth and delivering justice.

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Only on 10: St. George’s victims continue to call for headmaster’s resignation

RHODE ISLAND
NBC 10

BY ADAM BAGNI, NBC 10 NEWS WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 13TH 2016

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — Alleged victims are continuing to call for the resignation of the headmaster at St. George’s School, even as the school announced a new independent investigator earlier this week.

The elite Middletown prep school is currently engulfed in a major sex abuse scandal.

Attorneys for the alleged victims say more than 40 people have told them they were sexually assaulted at St. George’s.

Of the three that have spoken publicly, all of them want the resignation of headmaster Eric Peterson.

“Eric Peterson has been covering this up since 2004 – my issue, as well as others,” said alleged victim Harry Groome.

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Church wants full investigation into claims a member sexually assaulted children decades ago

FLORIDA
Action News Jax

[with video]

By Samantha Manning

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Evangel Temple said it wants a full police investigation into claims a church member sexually assaulted children decades ago in St. Louis.

Roy Bay, 56, made the claims publicly Tuesday during a Jacksonville City Council meeting on the human rights ordinance, which he was speaking out against.

The expansion of the HRO would offer protections for the LGBT community in housing, employment and public accommodations.

“At the age of 10 to 12 years old, I was in restrooms, businesses, and I was sexually assaulted by the homosexual community,” Bay said to City Council.

Bay then spoke exclusively with Action News Jax about his claims. – See more at:

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West Texas megachurch sued for $50M; volunteer pastor accused of sex assault

TEXAS
Fox 28

[with statement from Trinity Fellowship Church]

BY BROOKE SELF WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 13TH 2016

AMARILLO, Texas (KVII) — A lawsuit is being filed against Trinity Fellowship Church in Amarillo — one of the largest churches in West Texas — over accusations that one of the volunteer pastors molested a girl.

The lawsuit is being filed by the law firm of Glasheen, Valles & Inderman, LLP on behalf of the child. The suit alleges the girl was subjected to sexual abuse by a volunteer youth group leader at the church.

In a statement provided by Trinity Fellowship Church the church stated that Randy Castillo served as an occasional volunteer in the Children’s Ministry from October 2012 to July 2014. They said Castillo was not, at any time, employed by the church, given the title of Pastor, or even referred to as such.

TFC said Castillo occasionally served on the volunteer team, where he worked with 4-year-olds in the early childhood ministry. He also served at the summer camp for 1st through 4th graders in 2014.

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Child abuse advocate Kathy Kezelman calls on government to adopt recommendation for a national scheme

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By JOANNE MCCARTHY
Jan. 14, 2016

THE Federal Government will announce whether it supports a national compensation and support scheme for survivors of historic child sexual abuse before the end of January.

Social Services Minister Christian Porter’s office has confirmed the government’s response to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse recommendation for a national redress scheme is due in two weeks.

The commission proposed a $4.3 billion national scheme funded by institutions, including churches, responsible for the sexual abuse of children, and state and federal governments, with the scheme administered and underwritten by the federal government.

The scheme would treat all survivors equally, with compensation between $10,000 and $200,000, along with long term counselling and psychological care.

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Abuse allegations in Newfoundland casting a cloud over Jehovah’s Witnesses

CANADA
CBC News

By Terry Roberts, CBC News Posted: Jan 14, 2016

Allegations of abuse involving two members of the Jehovah’s Witness religious movement in Newfoundland have emerged, though details of the charges are protected by a court-ordered publication ban.

CBC News has learned that two men, including a former volunteer church elder and his son, are facing charges.

The former elder is charged with sexual assault and sexual exploitation relating to allegations dating from 2009 to 2012 in central Newfoundland.

According to court documents, a second man is charged with sexual assault, with the information referencing a period between May 2011 and December 2013 in a community on the Avalon Peninsula.

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$50 million lawsuit claims Amarillo church failed to report sexual assault

TEXAS
NewsWest9

[with video]

By Julia Deng

WINKLER COUNTY, TX (KWES) –
A lawsuit seeking $50 million in damages for “severe psychological pain and mental anguish” was filed Wednesday in Winkler County against an Amarillo church, claiming members kept quiet about molestation involving a former volunteer pastor.

Kermit resident Randy Steven Castillo, 28, was arrested in January 2015, Amarillo Police said, after an adult discovered inappropriate text messages he sent to a minor.

He reportedly met the unidentified girl while volunteering at Trinity Fellowship Church on Hollywood Road in Amarillo, authorities said.

“We sued Trinity Church because we have learned the church had information about ‘Pastor Randy’ asking junior high-aged girls for nude pictures,” said Kevin Glasheen, the anonymous plaintiff’s Lubbock-based attorney. “You could see that in their internal emails.”

Church members who were made aware of the inappropriate correspondence never alerted law enforcement or parents of the children, according to the lawsuit.

Failing to report child abuse is a crime in Texas. However, Castillo’s colleagues and supervisors at Trinity Fellowship Church were not arrested or charged.

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Self-proclaimed Westside child molester attends church guarded by security

FLORIDA
Action News Jax

[with video]

By Jenna Bourne

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — A Westside pastor faced his congregation for the first time since a member and former employee of his church made a disturbing confession at a Jacksonville City Council meeting Tuesday night.

Roy Bay said he molested boys for years in St. Louis public bathrooms as he was speaking out against an expansion of Jacksonville’s human rights ordinance to include the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community.

More than 200 churchgoers streamed through Evangel Temple’s doors Wednesday night.
Bay was one of them.

Action News Jax’s cameras were not allowed inside the church, although the church leadership welcomed our crew to attend the service and observe.

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Documents: Pastor accused teens of sex abuse, witchcraft

NEW YORK
Utica Observer-Dispatch

By Micaela Parker

Under the gaze of church members, Lucas Leonard and Christopher Leonard were told to repent for their sins.

The teens stood in the small sanctuary of Word of Life Christian Church on the evening of Oct. 11.

Lucas, 19, already had been confronted during a service that day about his desire to leave the Chadwicks church, new court documents allege, but questioning took a different tone during the beatings that ultimately would result in the death of Lucas and severe injury to his 17-year-old brother Christopher.

Nine people are accused of varying degrees of involvement in the 14-hour counseling session that spanned the evening of Oct. 11 into the morning of Oct. 12. Of those nine defendants, one has accepted a plea offer from the Oneida County District Attorney’s Office while five, as of Wednesday, have rejected their offers.

The session, led by Pastor Tiffanie Irwin, focused on a number of allegations she made into the teens’ conduct, according to court documents obtained from the county District Attorney’s Office by the Observer-Dispatch via a Freedom of Information Act request.

Utilizing her authority within the church, something that includes congregants’ belief that she was a prophet, the documents allege that she accused the teens, who were barred from leaving of having sexually abused numerous minors, several of whom have family ties to the teens; having fantasized about engaging in sexual relations with the pastor; having practiced witchcraft; and having planned and/or taken initial steps to kill their parents.

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Archbishop accused of sexual misconduct to work in Battle Creek parish

MINNESOTA
Fox 17

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP/WXMI) — The former archbishop of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis has a new post, in Michigan.

Former Archbishop John Nienstedt will help a pastor in Battle Creek, Michigan, as the pastor undergoes treatment for epilepsy.

The Star Tribune reports Nienstedt’s arrival was announced in the Sunday bulletin at St. Philip Roman Catholic Church.

The Rev. John Fleckenstein wrote that Nienstedt will help him and other priests until the summer. Fleckenstein says Nienstedt has not been formally assigned to the parish.

Nienstedt resigned from the Twin Cities archdiocese in June after the Ramsey County Attorney’s offices filed civil and criminal charges claiming that the church had failed to protect children from clergy sex abuse.

The Diocese of Kalamazoo wrote in a statement: “The Diocese of Kalamazoo is committed to providing safe environments for all people. As is the case for any priest or bishop ministering in the Diocese, Archbishop Emeritus Nienstedt begins his temporary ministry at St. Philip Parish as a priest in good standing, having met the Church’s stringent standards required to attain that status. As such he is welcome in the Diocese of Kalamazoo for the several months that he will be available to offer supplemental sacramental ministry to the people of St. Philip Parish.”

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Let’s Reform Sex Abuse Laws To Offer Justice — Not Protect Predators

UNITED STATES
Forward

No matter what happens at the Oscars, the very best film of 2015 was “Spotlight,” the improbable drama of how a team of newspaper reporters painstakingly revealed an institutional cover-up of child sexual abuse in the Catholic Church. The film’s excellence lay not only in its superb acting and storytelling, but in the way it humanized without sensationalizing the lasting pain of child abuse.

Who can forget the scene of a tough Bostonian recounting how a priest molested him when he was a vulnerable youngster? His confusion, embarrassment and shame were laid bare on the screen before us, allowing us to viscerally understand how it can take years for a young victim to comprehend what happened and to muster the courage to challenge a figure of religious authority.

That image needs to remain in our sights, alongside the images of the young men the Forward wrote about in 2012 and 2013 who bravely stepped up to reveal the abuse they suffered at the hands of esteemed rabbis at Yeshiva University High School for Boys.

And it should remain alongside the stunning essay by Sara Kabakov published in this week’s Forward, where she for the first time detailed how she was repeatedly molested in her home by the former rabbi and spiritual guru Marc Gafni when she was only a teenager and he was a rabbinical student.

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January 13, 2016

Former Archbishop involved in church sex scandal takes temporary post in Battle Creek

MICHIGAN
WIN

Wednesday, January 13, 2016 by John McNeill

KALAMAZOO/BATTLE CREEK (WKZO) — A controversial former Archbishop who resigned from his position in St. Paul-Minneapolis after allegations involving sexual abuse by priests has been reassigned to work with the pastor of St. Phillip Roman Catholic Church in Battle Creek.

Archbishop John Nienstedt resigned last June after the local prosecutors filed criminal and civil charges that the church had failed to protect children from clergy sex abuse.

The national director of SNAP, Survivors Network of those abused by Priests, David Clohessy tells WKZO news that there are allegations that Nienstadt himself has sexually exploited seminarians. He was cleared of allegations of abusing a young boy, but his diocese was charged with hiding a predator priest.

Clohessy asks if any other employer would retain an employee with such a work history, and reassign him to a post where he is sure to come into contact with children? He calls it an outrage.

Clohessy says it’s part of a pattern, alleging the church still rigorously protects anyone who wears a collar despite promises of reform.

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Kalamazoo diocese hires former Archbishop of Minneapolis, to objection of activist group

MICHIGAN
WWMT

KALAMAZOO, Mich. (NEWSCHANNEL 3) – A Catholic official accused of sexual misconduct and covering child sex crimes has been hired by the Kalamazoo diocese.

Newschannel 3 spoke to a group raising awareness on Wednesday, and got reaction from the Catholic Diocese of Kalamazoo.

There are no formal charges against a new assistant priest in the Battle Creek area, but there was an investigation into cover-up and alleged sexual abuse during his last leadership role.

Some say it’s important for the community in West Michigan to know.

It was Sunday’s newsletter at St. Philip Roman Catholic Church in Battle Creek, that welcomed new assistant priest John Nienstedt.

“Shouldn’t your community have been made aware of his past? Of his history?” asked Barbara Dorris, from the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests.

Nienstedt retired from his last role as Archbishop in Minneapolis, but SNAP, an awareness group, says he was forced out in the wake of a criminal investigation.

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Child abuse compensation decision due end of January

AUSTRALIA
Gold Coast Bulletin

[with video]

AUSTRALIA will know in two weeks whether it will have a national compensation scheme for survivors of shocking abuse in orphanages, children’s homes and other institutions.

A spokesman for Social Services Minister Christian Porter has confirmed to AAP that an announcement – the federal response to a royal commission recommendation for a national redress scheme – will be made by the end of January.

He declined to comment on whether the Turnbull government would back the $4.3 billion proposal, rejected as too complex and expensive when Tony Abbott was in power, but expectations are high the go-ahead for a single national scheme will be given.

Since the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse made final redress recommendations six months ago, tens of thousands of abuse survivors – as well as state and faith-based institutions who could have to collectively contribute billions of dollars – are anxiously awaiting federal direction.

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Catholic church in Minnesota hires priest linked to sex abuse

MINNESOTA
Press TV (Iran)

A high ranking catholic priest in the US state of Minnesota, who was forced to resign after clergy in his church were charged with sexual abuse, has been appointed assistant priest at a church in Michigan state.

Saint Philip Roman Catholic church in Kalamazoo announced this week that it had appointed John Nienstedt, the former archbishop of St Paul and Minneapolis, to assist the parish while its head pastor dealt with medical issues.

Nienstedt resigned in June 2015, days after Ramsey County attorney John Choi filed criminal and civil charges against the archdiocese.

Choi had alleged that the archdiocese “time and time again turned a blind eye” to sex abuse by the clergy. It was the first time a US archdiocese had faced sex abuse charges in the past ten years.

The criminal charges are pending at the Ramsey County civil court.

The Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests (Snap) called on Pope Francis to reverse the decision and asked Michigan bishops to denounce Nienstedt’s appointment.

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Cardinal Rodriguez: Homosexual Lobby Exists in the Vatican

ROME
National Catholic Register

by Edward Pentin 01/13/2016

Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez Maradiaga has confirmed the presence of a homosexual “lobby” in the Vatican and revealed that Pope Francis is trying “little by little to purify it.”

The Honduran Archbishop of Tegucigalpa, who coordinates the Council of Nine cardinals advising the Pope on reform of the Roman Curia and Church governance, was responding to a question from a Honduran newspaper reporter who asked him whether there had been “an attempt to infiltrate the gay community in the Vatican, or a moment when that had actually happened?”

Cardinal Rodriguez replied: “Not only that, also the Pope has said there is even a ‘lobby’ in this sense. Little by little the Pope is trying to purify it.” He added: “One can understand them [members of the lobby] and there is pastoral legislation to attend to them, but what is wrong cannot be truth.”

The Pope acknowledged the presence of a homosexual network of priests at the Vatican during a private conversation with leaders of a Latin American confederation of religious in June 2013. In the context of saying he found reform of the Roman Curia difficult, the Pope said: “The ‘gay lobby’ is mentioned, and it is true, it is there … We need to see what we can do.”

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Priest accused of misconduct working in Battle Creek

MICHIGAN
WOOD

[with video]

BATTLE CREEK, Mich. (WOOD) — A Catholic official accused of covering up sexual misconduct will start working at St. Philip Parish in Battle Creek.

According to the Diocese of Kalamazoo, Archbishop Emeritus John Nienstedt volunteered to help Father John, who has ‘ongoing serious health challenges.’ The Diocese of Kalamazoo said Nienstedt moved to Battle Creek on Jan. 6. He’s expected to stay in Battle Creek for approximately six months.

Nienstedt resigned from the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis last year after several accusations and charges of covering up sexual misconduct surfaced. The Minneapolis Star Tribune reported Nienstedt’s archdiocese became first in the nation to be charged with failure to “protect children.”

“One of the priests in his archdiocese in Minneapolis is in prison now for molesting kids in that diocese and he concealed that. This is the first archdiocese to have criminal charges against them for concealing child sex abuse. As a result of that, he resigned from that archdiocese,” said Bill McAlary, a Michigan leader of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests.

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Michigan church hires Minnesota archbishop linked to clergy sex abuse

MINNESOTA/MICHIGAN
The Guardian (UK)

Amanda Holpuch in New York
@holpuch
Wednesday 13 January 2016

A Minnesota archbishop who was forced to resign when his diocese faced criminal and civil charges related to sexual abuse by clergy has been appointed assistant priest at a church in Michigan.

Saint Philip Roman Catholic church in Kalamazoo announced this week that it had appointed former St Paul and Minneapolis archbishop John Nienstedt to assist the parish while its head pastor dealt with medical issues.

Nienstedt resigned in June 2015, days after Ramsey County attorney John Choi filed criminal and civil charges against the archdiocese. Choi alleged at the time that the archdiocese “time and time again turned a blind eye” to clerical sex abuse. It was the first time a US archdiocese had faced such charges in a decade.

The civil suit was settled in December, but the criminal charges are pending in county court.

Pastor John Fleckenstein of Saint Philip Roman Catholic church in Battle Creek, Michigan, announced that Nienstedt would be assisting him in a church bulletin on 10 January.

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Duggar mentor sorry for ‘sinful’ touching of women’s feet — but not for sex abuse

UNITED STATES
The Raw Story

DAVID EDWARDS
13 JAN 2016

A longtime evangelical mentor of the Duggar family responded to ten women who have accused him of sexual abuse by admitting that he had taken “ungodly and sinful” actions, but denied that he had committed any sexual crimes.

Earlier this month, a lawsuit filed by ten women accused Bill Gothard, founder of Institute in Basic Life Principles (IBLP), of rape, sexual abuse and harassment.

“Oh no. Never never. Oh! That’s horrible,” Gothard told The Washington Post at the time. “Never in my life have I touched a girl sexually. I’m shocked to even hear that.”

In a document titled “A Further Confession And Request,” which was obtained published by Radar Online this week, Gothard said that God had recently “revealed” to him “the gravity of my words and actions.”

The faith leader observed that he had wrongly selected “certain types of young people, especially young women, to serve at Headquarters, often as my personal assistants.”

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Lawsuit Claims Sexual Abuse by Minnesota Priest

MINNESOTA
KSTP

Jennie Lissarrague
Updated: 01/13/2016

A lawsuit was filed Wednesday on behalf of a woman who said she was sexually abused by a Minnesota priest.

The law firm Attorney Jeff Anderson and Associates says Father Othmar Hohmann worked in several Minnesota dioceses, including the Diocese of St. Cloud, the Diocese of Duluth and the Diocese of Crookston in addition to churches in other states.

The lawsuit, which was filed in Stearns County, claims Hohmann repeatedly abused a young girl from 1961-1966. The young girl is now an adult.

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‘Drie jaar geëist tegen dominee om ontucht’

NEDERLAND
NRC

[A pastor was sentenced to three years in jail for sexually abusing a 15-year-old girl.]

Sjoerd Klumpenaar 13 januari 2016

Tegen een dominee die werkte in het Zuid-Hollandse Oud-Beijerland is woensdag drie jaar cel geëist, waarvan een half jaar voorwaardelijk. Dat meldt RTV Rijnmond. De 46-jarige man uit Streefkerk zou tussen 2009 en 2012 een meisje misbruikt hebben, terwijl hij werkte als haar vertrouwenspersoon.

Naast de celstraf wordt de verdachte onder toezicht gesteld van de reclassering en er zou tevens een schadevergoeding zijn geëist.

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Más de 200 niños sufrieron abusos en el coro dirigido por el hermano del papa Benedicto XVI

ALEMANIA
RT

Un abogado de la Iglesia sostiene que el número de niños víctimas de abusos en el coro dirigido por el hermano del Papa emérito Benedicto en Ratisbona asciende a 231.

Ulrich Weber, un abogado contratado por la Iglesia católica, ha revelado nuevos casos de abusos de menores en el coro dirigido durante 30 años por el hermano mayor del Papa Benedicto XVI. La revelación se produce en el marco de su investigación sobre el escándalo en torno a Domspatzen, el coro oficial de la Catedral de Pedro en Baviera, Alemania.

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Re.: Request that the Congregation for Bishops investigate the behavior the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops …

UNITED STATES
Catholic Whistleblowers

January 4, 2016
Cardinal Marc Ouellet, P.S.S.
Prefect, Congregation for Bishops
00120 Vatican City State
Europe

Re.: Request that the Congregation for Bishops investigate the behavior the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) for possible violations of canons 1389 and 1399 of the Code of Canon Law within the context of clergy sexual abuse of minors and vulnerable adults.

Dear Cardinal Ouellet,

We, members of the Catholic Whistleblowers Steering Committee, recognize our duty and our right to bring to your attention the request presented above because it involves the good of the Catholic Church and the good of the society at-large.

Summary of our concern

Why would the USCCB establish a commitment to Zero Tolerance and then work against its own commitment? What motivates such behavior?

The USCCB is to advance efforts that further the protection of minors and vulnerable adults from sexual abuse within the Church. The bishops commit to this as it applies to priests and deacons by saying: “Diocesan / eparchial policy is to provide that for even a single act of sexual abuse of a minor – whenever it occurred – which is admitted or established after an appropriate process in accord with canon law, the offending priest or deacon is to be permanently removed from ministry and, if warranted, dismissed from the clerical state.”1 This establishes Zero Tolerance as a USCCB policy.

1 See Article 5 of the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People. Also see Norm #8 of the related Essential Norms.

However, in a deliberate and ongoing way, the USCCB reneges on its commitment. The Conference does not exercise the leadership necessary to assure that known sexually abusive priests and deacons are removed from the community and that the community is warned about the sexually abusive priests and deacons.

Three stunning realities focus our concern and explain the need for an investigation by the Congregation for Bishops into the behavior of the USCCB.

First, Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI changed the statute of limitations (prescription, as it is called in the Code of Canon Law) in the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) so that in effect cases of sexual abuse of a minor or of a vulnerable adult by a priest or a deacon cannot be barred from a Church court because of a failure to report the abuse within a prescribed time frame. Moreover, canon law provides that such cases can address both the crime of sexual abuse of a minor or of a vulnerable adult as well as the reparation for damages that result from the crime.

Furthermore, at various times state legislators have attempted to bring about changes to their state’s statute of limitations for criminal and civil actions in cases of child sexual abuse. The USCCB and its member bishops should follow the example of Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI by working to change the states’ statutes of limitations. It’s about protecting minors and vulnerable adults from sexual abuse, and about protecting their moral right to reparation. More details on this point are presented later in this letter.

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“Wegsehen und Weghören”

DEUTSCHLAND
Domradio

Erklärung des Aloisiuskollegs

[Aloisiuskolleg, a Jesuit school in Bonn, along with a victims group on Wednesday published a declaration that admitts sexual assault by Jesuits and other staff going back to the 1950s and also spoke of failure of the institution for looking away and not listening.]

Sechs Jahre nach Bekanntwerden der Missbrauchsfälle hat das Bonner Jesuiten-Gymnasium Aloisiuskolleg (AKO) eine Erklärung erarbeitet – gemeinsam mit der Opfergruppe “Eckiger Tisch Bonn” und der Bonner Beratungsstelle für sexualisierte Gewalt.

Das am Mittwoch veröffentlichte Dokument benennt nicht nur die Übergriffe durch Jesuitenpatres und andere Kollegsmitarbeiter seit den 1950er Jahren, sondern spricht auch vom “Versagen der Institution” durch “Wegsehen und Weghören”. Der “Eckige Tisch Bonn” begrüßte die Erklärung “als absolutes Novum im Umgang mit sexuellem Missbrauch an katholischen Einrichtungen in Deutschland”. Das Kolleg habe erkannt, dass die katholische Kirche, ihre Orden und Schulen nicht einseitig festlegen könnten, was wirkliche Aufarbeitung bedeute.

Zu jedem Zeitpunkt habe es in Schule, Internat und mit dem AKO verbundenen Institutionen Verantwortliche gegeben, die Vorwürfen nicht nachgegangen seien, so das Papier. “Wir haben von den Betroffenen gelernt, dass für sie das Versagen der Institution ein entscheidender Teil des Missbrauchs war und ist.”

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Ex-Twin Cities archbishop Nienstedt takes Michigan church post

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

Peter Cox Jan 13, 2016

Archbishop John Nienstedt, who stepped down in June as head of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, has taken on a temporary pastoral role at a church in Battle Creek, Mich.

Nienstedt resigned the Twin Cities post after Ramsey County prosecutors charged the

The charge followed two years of revelations about the failure of the archdiocese to protect children from sexual abuse at the hands of clergy. Nienstedt, who served eight years as Twin Cities archbishop, admitted no mistakes in his resignation letter.

David Clohessy, director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, said Nienstedt should’ve been defrocked, not reassigned.

“This move sends precisely the wrong message to Catholic employees,” he said. “The message it sends is, no matter how severe your wrongdoing is, you’ll always have a job in the Catholic Church.”

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Former St. Joseph Priest Accused of Sex Abuse in New Lawsuit

MINNESOTA
WJON

By Lee Voss January 13, 2016

ST. CLOUD — A woman alleging she was abused by a Catholic priest at the Church of St. Joseph in the early 1960’s has filed a lawsuit. Jane Doe 115 has filed suit against the St. Cloud Diocese, Order of St. Benedict and Church of St. Joseph.

The woman is claiming multiple incidents of abuse at the hands of the late Father Othmar Hohmann between 1961-1966 when she was 11-16 years-old.

Attorney Mike Bryant says the lawsuit is to provide financial relief to the victim, get all of the files on accused priests released and to encourage other victims to come forward.

Father Hohmann worked at churches in Stearns County, Crookston and Duluth. He died in 1980.

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Archbishop Nienstedt Leaving Minnesota For A Michigan Diocese

MINNESOTA/MICHIGAN
CBS Minnesota

MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) — Archbishop John Nienstedt, who resigned from the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis after it was charged with failing to protect children from a priest convicted of child sex abuse, is moving out of Minnesota.

In a bulletin posted by the St. Philip Roman Catholic Church in Battle Creek, Michigan on Jan. 10, church officials say Nienstedt will be serving as an assistant priest at the parish – located in the Diocese of Kalamazoo.

The church says Nienstedt volunteered to temporarily assist the pastor of the parish in light of the pastor’s serious health challenges. Nienstedt took up a temporary residence in Battle Creek on Jan. 6, 2016.

“The Diocese of Kalamazoo is committed to providing safe environments for all people,” the church said. “As is the case for any priest or bishop ministering in the Diocese, Archbishop Emeritus Nienstedt begins his temporary ministry at St. Philip Parish as a priest in good standing, having met the Church’s stringent standards required to attain that status. As such he is welcome in the Diocese of Kalamazoo for the several months that he will be available to offer supplemental sacramental ministry to the people of St. Philip Parish.”

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This is what John Nienstedt is up to after his resignation as archbishop

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

Elizabeth Mohr
emohr@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 01/13/2016

Seven months after embattled Archbishop John Nienstedt announced his resignation from the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, a church in Michigan has announced he will be joining them as an assistant pastor on a temporary basis.

The announcement came Sunday, on Page 2 of the weekly bulletin for St. Philip Roman Catholic Church in Battle Creek, Mich.

The church’s pastor, Fr. John Fleckenstein, noted Nienstedt’s move midway through a memo written for parishioners, saying he’s known Nienstedt for about 20 years and that Nienstedt “will be joining us to assist in various pastoral ministries during this time.”

Fleckenstein said Nienstedt will remain in the St. Philip parish for about six months because the pastor needs help while he navigates health issues and while he takes time to “complete a couple of major projects for the Diocese in my role as Episcopal Vicar for Education.”

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Former St. Joseph priest accused of 1960s abuse

MINNESOTA
St. Cloud Times

Sam Louwagie, slouwagie@stcloudtimes.com
January 13, 2016

WAITE PARK — A deceased priest with the Diocese of St. Cloud has been accused of sexually abusing a teenage girl more than 50 years ago.

Othmar Hohmann was a monk of St. John’s Abbey, and served as a pastor at St. Boniface Church in Cold Spring, Immaculate Conception Church in New Munich, and the Church of St. Joseph in St. Joseph. He retired to St. John’s Abbey in 1975, and died in 1980.

According to a lawsuit filed Wednesday in Stearns County, Hohmann had “unpermitted sexual contact” with a girl on multiple occasions between 1961 and 1966, while he was a pastor at the Church of St. Joseph. The girl was approximately 11-16 years old during that time. The Diocese of St. Cloud, St. John’s Abbey and St. Joseph Parish are named as defendants in the suit.

Hohmann moved between parishes 12 times before that time, serving in the Bahamas, North Dakota, Utah and Colorado in addition to Minnesota. Mike Bryant, attorney at Bradshaw & Bryant, said clergy moving around that often has historically indicated patterns of abuse.

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Ex-Archbishop John Nienstedt goes to Michigan parish

MINNESOTA/MICHIGAN
Star Tribune

By Jean Hopfensperger Star Tribune JANUARY 13, 2016

Former Archbishop John Nienstedt’s next post is in Battle Creek, Mich., where he will help the pastor of St. Philip Roman Catholic Church.

St. Philip’s pastor announced Neinstedt’s arrival in the Sunday bulletin. Nienstedt resigned from the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis in June after the Ramsey County attorney’s offices filed civil and criminal charges claiming that the church had failed to protect children from clergy sex abuse.

The Rev. John Fleckenstein wrote that Nienstedt will help him and other priests in the parish with various duties until the summer. He has not been formally assigned to the parish, he said.

“He will celebrate some of the weekend and weekday Masses, visit the sick in the hospital, visit the sick and homebound, and celebrate Mass for the nursing home and assisted living facilities. He will also celebrate some Masses on Sundays around the Diocese when there is a priest who needs to be away,” Fleckenstein wrote.

Fleckenstein said he is undergoing treatment for epilepsy at the Mayo Clinic and expected to be hospitalized in the Epilepsy Monitoring Unit.

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How do you solve a problem like Nienstedt?

MINNESOTA/MICHIGAN
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on January 13, 2016

What do you do with a disgraced bishop, whose involvement in the cover-up of child sexual abuse led to his being forced out (as well as a bankruptcy for his Archdiocese and criminal charges against the organization)? Put him in a parish, apparently.

Yesterday, former St. Paul and Minneapolis Chancellor (and whistleblower) Jennifer Haselberger published the parish bulletin from St. Philip Catholic Church in Battle Creek, Michigan.

John Nienstedt is going to be their new fill-in parish priest. What does this say to the faithful at that parish? We hope you don’t notice, but we are passing our trash to you. We know you go to church for spiritual growth and healing, but we hope you can just “forgive” the fact that we stuck you with a guy who covered-up sex abuse, has been accused himself, and who led his archdiocese down a criminal path of disaster.

In fact, I bet that Kalamazoo Bishop Paul Bradley and Twin Cities Archbishop Bernard Hebda are going to use the rhetorical device of “forgiveness” to shame Battle Creek Catholics into accepting Nienstedt.

Nienstedt shouldn’t be a priest anymore. He blew it. If Archbishop Hebda wants to throw Nienstedt a bone and let him keep the collar (and the pension), Nienstedt should live a life of quiet prayer and penance.

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Domspatzen: Kriminologe lobt Aufklärung

DEUTSCHLAND
Mittelbayerische

[Professor Chrsitian Pfeiffer, a criminologist, has praised the investigation into abuse at the Regenburg cathedral choir.]

REGENSBURG.Der Kriminologe Professor Christian Pfeiffer wollte den sexuellen Missbrauch in der katholischen Kirche schon vor Jahren aufklären. Doch die Studie des Kriminologischen Forschungsinstituts Niedersachsen scheiterte Anfang 2013. Widerstand habe er damals insbesondere aus dem Bistum Regensburg gespürt, wie Pfeiffer am Mittwoch sagt. „Eine tragende Rolle bei dem Scheitern hatte der damalige Bischof Gerhard Ludwig Müller.“ Dass nun aber ausgerechnet dieses Bistum den Mut gefunden habe, einen unabhängigen Rechtsanwalt zu beauftragen, nötige ihm Respekt ab. Der Wandel sei sicher auf den neuen Bischof Rudolf Voderholzer zurückzuführen.

München und Regensburg stellten sich quer

Der vom Bistum und den Regensburger Domspatzen eingesetzte Aufklärer Ulrich Weber leiste vorbildliche Arbeit, lobt Pfeiffer. Das hätte man aber schon früher haben können. „Wir hätten die Akten genauso gründlich untersucht“, unterstreicht Pfeiffer. In der Startphase seiner Arbeit sei er auch auf Repräsentanten der Kirche getroffen, die mit ihm einen ausgewogenen Vertrag aushandelten, der die Auswertung kircheninterner Akten seit 1945 sowie eine umfassende Befragung noch lebender Opfer ermöglichen sollte. Dann wandelte sich jedoch die Stimmung im Forschungsbeirat. Der zuständige Münchner Generalvikar Peter Beer und der Regensburger Generalvikar Michael Fuchs forderten, wie Pfeiffer ausführt, dass der Beirat nicht nur eine beratende Funktion, sondern eine entscheidende Funktion bekommt. Sie pochten auf ein Recht der Kirche, Texte zu kontrollieren, Änderungen zu machen und über eine Veröffentlichung zu entscheiden. Aus wissenschaftlicher Sicht war das für Pfeiffer unzumutbar. Er lehnte diese Zensur durch die Kirche ab.

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Media Advisory: Priest File of Fr. Othmar Hohmann to be Released Publicly Today at 11 a.m. CDT

MINNESOTA
Jeff Anderson and Associates

Lawsuit filed on behalf of sexual abuse survivor Doe 115

Filed Complaint
Othmar Hohmann Assignment History
Othmar Hohmann Docs
Othmar Hohmann Timeline
Othmmar Hohmann Photo

What: At a news conference today in St. Cloud, attorney Mike Bryant of Bradshaw & Bryant, co-counsel with Jeff Anderson & Associates, will:

• Release the priest file of Father Othmar Hohmann, OSB, who worked in several Minnesota dioceses including the Diocese of St. Cloud, Diocese of Duluth and Diocese of Crookston. Additionally, Hohmann worked in North Dakota, Utah, Wisconsin and the Bahamas and has been accused of abusing several children.

• Announce the filing of a sexual abuse lawsuit filed in Stearns County on behalf of sexual abuse survivor Doe 115 naming the Diocese of St. Cloud, St. John’s Abbey and St. Joseph Parish in St. Joseph, MN as defendants. The young girl, now an adult, was sexually abused by Hohmann for several years.

• Request that all dioceses in Minnesota release the files of credibly accused clergy like St. John’s Abbey has done. St. John’s released the files of several credibly accused clergy as part of a settlement in the Doe 2 case in 2015.

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People like Francis, but maybe not the Church

ROME
Crux

By John L. Allen Jr.
Associate editor January 13, 2016

ROME — Two bits of data emerged recently which, taken together, confirm a disquieting reality for Pope Francis: His personal popularity doesn’t appear to be translating into notably greater enthusiasm for the Church he leads.

Last week, news agencies reported that the pontiff’s nine Twitter accounts had reached a worldwide total of 26 million followers, representing impressive growth indeed for papal accounts that have been around only since February 2012. (That’s when accounts in English, Italian, and French were started for Pope Benedict XVI; other languages were added soon after.)

That 26 million, by the way, includes a robust 411,000 people who follow the pope in Latin, suggesting that rumors of the death of the Church’s traditional tongue have been exaggerated.

TechnoAndroid, an Italian site that follows digital trends, also reported that in 2015, one of the most-used Twitter hashtags in Italy, for the entire year, was #PapaFrancesco.

All of which indicates the pontiff’s star power is undiminished.

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Children remain victims, and the powerful protect each other

RHODE ISLAND
Crux

By Margery Eagan
On Spirituality columnist January 13, 2016

If you’re not from New England, you may have missed news of a devastating sexual abuse scandal engulfing St. George’s School, a prestigious Rhode Island prep school that educated President George H.W. Bush and other children of America’s aristocracy.

Two of the lawyers representing an ever-growing number of accusers there — Eric MacLeish and Carmen Durso — represented dozens of victims in the Catholic Church abuse scandal as well. And the patterns between the two cases are stunning.

Decades of abuse unreported to law enforcement. Institutional secrecy, cover-up, and denial. Perpetrators relocated, but not punished. Victims intimidated and harassed. And when the story made news, as in the Church case, emboldened accusers went public. The number of accusations skyrocketed.

The cover-up of abuse in the Church, which daily preaches morality, is a reason many Catholics cite today for leaving it. And surely there is no good news in the growing number of abuse stories being reported now in private and public schools. Durso has called educational abuse “the clergy abuse crisis of this century.”

Still, as defenders of the Church have long argued, the Church’s horrible performance is hardly unique. Teachers, too — trusted by parents and children alike — not only abuse, but are protected by other teachers and school bureaucrats in the same way Church leaders protected deviant priests.

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Spotlight: the reporters who uncovered the Catholic child abuse scandal in Boston

UNITED STATES
The Guardian (UK)

Henry Barnes
@HenryHBarnes
Wednesday 13 January 2016

On the homepage of the Boston Roman Catholic archdiocese website, next to information on preparing for marriage, is a box labelled “Support, Protection and Prevention”. You have to scroll to see the first reference to children and click a link to find any mention of abuse.

In 2002, the Boston Globe’s Spotlight team, a group of five investigative journalists, uncovered the widespread sexual abuse of children by scores of the district’s clergy. They also revealed a cover-up: that priests accused of misconduct were being systematically removed and allowed to work in other parishes.

The team’s investigation brought the issue to national prominence in the US, winning them the Pulitzer prize for public service. The journalists’ story, and those who suffered at the hands of the clergy, are the subject of Spotlight, a Hollywood movie starring Michael Keaton, Mark Ruffalo and Rachel McAdams. It is a love letter to investigative journalism and a reminder that, 13 years and some $3bn in settlement payments later, survivors in Boston and beyond are still waiting for satisfactory long-term action from the Vatican.

“The Catholic church often talks about this as pain that’s in the past,” says Spotlight’s co-screenwriter, Josh Singer. “I think the survivors would tell you they’re less interested in the church trying to make amends and more interested in the church protecting children in the future.”

Singer, who was a writer and editor on The West Wing, calls the Spotlight journalists of 2002 a “championship team”. Their player-manager was Boston native Walter “Robby” Robinson. His high school, which was across the road from the Boston Globe’s offices, employed three priests who were later suspended for misconduct. In the film, Robinson, played by Michael Keaton, represents the Globe’s old guard. He’s navigating a community that’s very Catholic and very close-knit, working on a contentious story for a paper that he says at the time was “too deferential to the church”.

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Winners: Arts & Faith Ecumenical Jury Awards for 2015, Part 2

UNITED STATES
Good Letters

By Kenneth R. Morefield.

Continued from yesterday. Read Part 1 here.

Coninuing yesterday’s list of films, here are five other films (ranked) the 2015 Arts & Faith Ecumenical Jury recommended for Christian audiences, plus a list of honorable mentions (unranked): …

4) Spotlight—Tom McCarthy
spotlight-movie-posterSpotlight is pervaded by incredulity, pain, and anger, laced with sadness and guilt. Working with a script co-written by Josh Singer, director Tom McCarthy brings precision and persuasive detail to a portrait of a specific time, place, and perspective: Boston, seen through the eyes of The Globe‘s Spotlight Team around the turn of the millennium, at a time when reporters and editors were long familiar with cases of “pedophile priests,” but couldn’t yet imagine the extent of the cover-up culture in the Catholic Church.

The film’s polemic is not entirely directed at the Church; lawyers, law enforcement, and, notably, the press itself, and specifically The Globe, are all implicated. Still, it is the Church’s betrayal, a betrayal of a sacred trust and a form of spiritual abuse, that is the most deeply felt.

Spotlight makes painful viewing, but Christians tempted to circle the wagons and nit-pick the film to oblivion—a possible tactic with any two-hour dramatization of such a story—should resist the temptation: This defensive response is precisely what made the scandal possible in the first place. The Church is called to be the light of the world. We must not fear to turn a spotlight on ourselves.—Steven D. Greydanus

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Vatican not ‘den of thieves’ says Becciu

VATICAN CITY
ANSA

(ANSA) – Rome, January 13 – Monsignor Angelo Becciu, substitute for general affairs at the Vatican, said that portraying the Holy See Vatican as a “den of theives” in the wake of the Vatileaks 2 scandal is “an absolute falsehood”.

“I find it supremely unjust that our employees, proud of working in service to the pope and for the church, for a while now have come to the point of feeling ashamed to tell people they work here,” Becciu said in a excerpts released Wednesday of an interview in weekly newsmagazine Panorama set to hit newsstands Thursday.

Two recently-published books written by investigative journalists documenting alleged Vatican waste and mismanagement and lavish spending by clergymen are at the heart of the document-leaking scandal and current trial, and the authors are two of five defendants.

The other three defendants – Monsignor Lucio Vallejo Balda, who is currently in a Vatican jail; PR expert Francesca Chaouqui, and Balda’s former assistant Nicola Maio – are charged with allegedly passing confidential Vatican financial documents to the journalists.

“The right of journalists to publish news in their possession is not under discussion,” Becciu said.

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THE SEX SCANDAL FOLLOWING WHOLE FOODS’ GURU

UNITED STATES
Religion Dispatches

BY MICHAEL SCHULSON JANUARY 5, 2016

Over the holidays, the New York Times ran a punishing profile of Marc Gafni, an ex-rabbi who reinvented himself as a New Age spiritual leader.

A founder of the Center for Integral Wisdom and organizer of the Success 3.0 Summit, Gafni has built a New Age brand around two trademark concepts—Unique Self and Outrageous Love—which, like much of “Integral Theory,” seems to draw from psychotherapy, Eastern and Western religious traditions, and philosophy. Or as his website’s biography puts it, “[Gafni] teaches on the cutting edge of philosophy in the West, helping to evolve a new ‘dharma,’ or meta-theory of Integral meaning that is helping to re-shape key pivoting points in consciousness and culture.”

There’s also reason to believe that Gafni is a sexual predator. At the Times, religion journalist Mark Oppenheimer (a friend and mentor of mine) lays out the allegations in detail, which include assault, statutory rape, emotional abuse, and exploitation of the counselor-student power dynamic. “My personal opinion is that Marc Gafni has a pathology,” Rabbi David Ingber, a former associate of Gafni’s, told me.

Because Gafni writes books about crying and makes statements about “love intelligence and love beauty,” it’s easy to read his story as a straightforward tale of hypocrisy: a spiritual leader pledges universal love, even as he assaults girls and manipulates his followers. Cue the disgust.

That’s not an inaccurate read, but what’s so striking here is that none of the allegations are new. Scandal has followed Gafni for years. The most serious allegation—repeated, nonconsensual sexual contact with a middle school-aged girl, when Gafni was 19 and 20—happened years before he became a New Age leader. (Gafni has said that the encounters were consensual, and that the girl was “14 going on 35”).

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Seeing ‘Crisis’ In Jewish Ethics, Group Urges Reform

UNITED STATES
The Jewish Week

Wed, 01/13/2016
Gary Rosenblatt
Editor And Publisher

Fed up with ethical lapses among Jewish leaders that have “reached crisis levels,” more than 350 scholars, authors, rabbis, cantors and Jewish community activists have signed onto a “declaration” that is challenging individuals and organizations to act with more transparency and accountability, and in accord with Jewish values.

In the past several years, the New York Jewish community endured the embarrassment of prominent rabbis accused of sexual abuse; a leading Jewish communal official going to prison for accepting millions of dollars in a kickback scheme; and the financial collapse of FEGS, the mammoth social service agency that seemed to suddenly lose $20 million while no one was looking.

“Disturbing developments” like these, the strongly worded declaration states, “make a mockery of Jewish values, shatter the trust that we have placed in our community’s leaders, and alienate young people from Judaism.” News of the declaration is being reported here for the first time.

Rafael Medoff, a Holocaust historian and author in Washington, D.C., said he reached a tipping point a few months ago and felt he had to do something to “at least start a conversation in the Jewish community about ethical issues that will affect the future quality of American Jewry.”

He and several other academics have just launched a website (jewishleadershipethics.org) and a “Declaration on Ethics in Jewish Leadership,” a bold 10-point statement urging that “whistleblowers should be encouraged,” “excusing offenders’ conduct or blaming the victims for coming forward is intolerable,” and that “Jewish organizations should adopt term limits, to combat the phenomenon of entrenched and self-perpetuating leaders.”

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Children Lured Into Pornography Ring Via Webcams, Youtube

AUSTRALIA
Australia Network

Federal authorities have just convicted eight American men in connection with an international child pornography ring that had been operating secretly online.

“1,600 children have been drawn to at least two pedophile’s websites, one in the U.S. and the other in South Africa,” reported Fox News Insider from Johannesburg.

“The ring drew in children and pedophiles from the U.S., Canada, Sweden, Australia, Holland and South Africa.”

A bigger chunk of the children lured to these pornography websites were between the ages of 8 and 13. Sources say that pedophiles lured the kids into their crime ring first by befriending them on popular websites like YouTube and Facebook.

“There, the men played specially recorded videos of kids, as if they were live chats”.

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Tracey Spicer: My school days at a Catholic college were anything but rosy.

AUSTRALIA
Mamma Mia

Remember the days of the old school yard?
We used to laugh a lot. Oh, don’t you
Remember the days of the old school yard?

Ah, it’s lovely to reminisce.

We had simplicity and warm toast for tea, to quote Cat Stevens.

Why, we’d play in the street until dark! Kids weren’t molly-coddled like they are these days! All of that rough-and-tumble was character building!

Girls were girls and boys were boys; mum ran the home while dad was at work.

Life was easier in those days, wasn’t it…?

Well, the answer is “no”.

This week, writing my memoir, I revisited the ghosts of schools past.

My senior years, at Frawley College on the outskirts of Brisbane, held a rosy hue: the passion of the teachers; the camaraderie of schoolmates; the myth of “the best time of our lives”.

Anything that didn’t fit the Disney version of events was obviously an aberration.

That sick feeling in the stomach when a gang of boys yelled, “Show us your tits!” was just “boys being boys”.

The shiver up the spine when one of the Brothers grabbed a student’s arse was clearly an over-reaction.

And girls being told to ignore maths because they’d find a nice man to look after them seemed a logical conclusion.

Looking back, it was clear: misogyny, child abuse and bullying were on the curriculum.

A fish rots from its head: the corruption went all the way to the top.

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The church’s strategy of cover-up: A classic example

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher (article posted 10 January 2016)

Broken Rites research has discovered how an Australian Catholic leader (Bishop William Brennan) covered up allegations of clergy sex-abuse in his diocese. Police charged one of Brennan’s priests (Father Bernard Connell) with allegedly abusing two boys in different parishes but Bishop Brennan hired an expert legal team to defeat the charges. One of these victims then asked Bishop Brennan for help but the bishop shunned him. The bishop’s main aim was protecting the church’s holy image, instead of protecting children.

The accused priest, Father Bernard M. Connell, belonged to the Wagga Wagga diocese in southern New South Wales. This diocese extends southward to Albury on the Victorian border. This is one of the eleven dioceses into which the state of New South Wales is divided. Bishop Brennan was in charge of the Wagga Wagga diocese from 1983 to 2002.

Bernie Connell, born in 1938, came from a large family in Cootamundra, southern NSW. He attended school at De La Salle Brothers in Cootamundra until 1951 and then completed his schooling at St Patrick’s College in Goulburn. He began training for the priesthood in 1957. He was ordained as a priest in 1983.

Bishop Brennan, too, was born in 1938. He started studying for the priesthood in Sydney but did some of his studies in Rome. Father Connell always belonged to the Wagga Wagga diocese, whereas Brennan started in another diocese and moved to Wagga Wagga to become its bishop.

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Authorities ignored boarding school staff reports of sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

JANUARY 14, 2016

Dan Box
Crime reporter
Sydney

Former staff from a remote Catholic boarding school in far north Queensland say they reported ­alleged child abuse by a teacher to local education authorities years before he was charged by police, but were told that no action would be taken.

The Australian has previously revealed the dormitory master was one of three former employees of St Teresa’s Catholic College in Abergowrie, including two principals, currently facing child-sex charges in different states.

Several former employees of the school, many of whose pupils come from indigenous families across northern Australia, say they verbally reported their concerns about the man to senior execu­tives at the Townsville Catholic Education Office between 1991 and 1993.

These included allegations that he attempted to sexually assault a child. One former staff member said he was later told the alle­g­ations had been investigated and no further action would be taken; another said he was threatened with legal action as a result.

In October 1993, the teacher resigned “due to personal and family reasons”, according to a school newsletter from the time.

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Rome–Victims urge Pope to block move of accused MN archbishop

ROME
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, Jan. 13

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

An archbishop accused of committing sexual misconduct and concealing child sex crimes will start working in a Michigan parish. We call on Pope Francis to reverse this stunningly reckless and callous move. And we call on all of Michigan’s bishops to denounce it.

Last year, Archbishop John Nienstedt resigned his post as head of the Twin Cities archdiocese after his archdiocese became “the nation’s first (to be) charged with failure to protect children,” according to the Minneapolis Star Tribune. Nienstedt also allegedly sexually abused several seminarians.

[BishopAccountability.org]

And he’s accused of interfering with a church investigation into clergy sexual misconduct.

[BishopAccountability.org]

But now, church officials say Nienstedt will soon work at St. Philip Roman Catholic Church in Battle Creek and live at the nearly Church of Saint Joseph.

[Canonical Consultation]

[Star Tribune]

This is an outrage. Kalamazoo church officials are putting young people in harm’s way. It’s just that simple.

Shame on Kalamazoo Bishop Paul Bradley, Twin Cities Archbishop Bernard Hebda and on every single Catholic priest, employee and parishioner who silently approves or accepts this dangerous decision without protest.

This is a key reason clergy sex crimes, misdeeds and cover ups continue in the church: because those who commit these heinous acts are still usually protected – and sometimes promoted – regardless of how much harm they cause.

We urge Kalamazoo Catholics and citizens to learn about Nienstedt’s deceitful handling of the abuse and cover up crisis, especially the case of Fr. Curtis Wehmeyer, at BishopAccountability.org

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01 Misshandlung im Vorschulinternat

DEUTSCHLAND
inter-at.de

The following report was written by a former cathedral choir student. He wrote an eight-page letter to former Director of Music Georg Ratzinger. He has never received any reply. Of particular note is a description of punitive action in the presence of Ratzinger.]

Der folgende Bericht wurde von einem ehemaligen Domspatzenschüler bereits 2010 verfasst. Er hat sich damals in einem achtseitigen Brief an den ehemaligen Domkapellmeister Georg Ratzinger gewandt. Eine Antwort hat er nie erhalten. Erst im März 2015 erhielt er als einzige Reaktion den Serienbrief von Generalvikar Fuchs in dem ihm 2.500,- € „in Anerkennung des erlittenen Leids“ angeboten wurden. Besonders beachtenswert ist die Schilderung der „Strafaktion“ im Beisein von Georg Ratzinger.

Misshandlung im Vorschulinternat der Regensburger Domspatzen in Etterzhausen

Aufgewachsen in Riedenburg, im beschaulichen, aber etwas abgelegenen Altmühltal, war ich als 11-jähriger Junge ein ziemlich kleines, schmächtiges Kind – ein „Grischperl“ wie man in Niederbayern damals zu sagen pflegte. Gegen Ende der dritten Klasse machten sich meine Eltern wohl Gedanken über den weiteren schulischen Werdegang ihres Sohnes. Mein Vater leitete die örtliche AOK. Ich war kein schlechter Schüler und der Aufbruchsstimmung der frühen 60-er Jahre entsprechend, sollte es eine weiterführende Schule sein. Die nächstgelegenen Gymnasien, in Ingolstadt und Regensburg, waren beide etwas über 35 Kilometer entfernt. Für einen kleinen Fahrschüler schien dieser Schulweg zu weit. Deshalb empfahl der Klassenlehrer ein Internat. Das Internat der Domspatzen war billig und die kirchliche Trägerschaft entsprach dem Weltbild meiner Eltern, vor allem dem meiner Mutter. Folglich präsentierten mich meine Eltern in der Vorschule der Regensburger Domspatzen in Etterzhausen. Nach dem Vorsingen von „Großer Gott wir loben Dich“ war die Entscheidung gefallen. Ich sollte dort die vierte Volksschulklasse besuchen um anschließend auf das Gymnasium zu wechseln.

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Ein letztes Halali? (12.01.2016)

DEUTSCHLAND
intern-at.de

Es ist mittlerweile zur Realsatire geworden: Das ungleiche Duo Georg Ratzinger und sein Haus- und Hofschreiber Karl Birkenseer (seines Zeichens „Journalist“ bei der Passauer Neuen Presse), aber offensichtlich Zwillinge im Geiste. Die Zeitung hatte bereits am Sonntag nach der ersten Pressekonferenz von Rechtsanwalt Weber, bei der erhebliche Vorwürfe gegen Ratzinger thematisiert wurden, das Interview für den nächsten Tag angekündigt. Seit gestern steht fest: dazugelernt haben beide nicht.

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Domspatzen: „Der Rest einer jahrzehntealten Vertuschungskultur“

DEUTSCHLAND
Regensburg Digital

Georg Ratzinger will weder etwas von der exzessiven Gewalt noch von Missbrauch bei den Domspatzen gewusst haben. Das behauptet der frühere Domkapellmeister in einem Interview mit PNP-Redakteur Karl Birkenseer – einem Mann, der seine schwindelerregenden Bezüge zu den Domspatzen nicht offenlegt und seine Position als Journalist dazu nutzt, um nur ja nichts auf die Domspatzen-Familie kommen zu lassen. Betroffene sind empört. Sie bezeichnen Birkenseer als Ratzingers „Haus- und Hofschreiber“ und „Rest einer jahrzehntealten Vertuschungskultur“.

Von Robert Werner und Stefan Aigner

„Dann schleifte er (Johann Meier, Anm. d. Red.) mich an den Haaren zu seinem Esstisch zurück und hob mich an den Haaren hoch, dass ich über dem Boden schwebte. Anschließend schlug er mich wie besessen, wo immer er mich treffen konnte, bis er nach wohl einem Dutzend Schlägen erschöpft aufhörte. Im großen Speisesaal war es totenstill. Ratzinger saß daneben und das Bild hat sich in mein Gehirn eingegraben wie schlecht verheilte Narben in einem jugendlichen Körper. Er lachte. Er hätte die Autorität gehabt, seinem Kollegen Einhalt zu gebieten. Es war mindestens Feigheit, wohl eher bewusstes kumpelhaftes Einvernehmen. Jetzt zu behaupten in der einzigen Filiale der Domspatzen seinen über zwei, drei Jahrzehnte Dinge geschehen, die ihm „nicht bekannt“ waren ist eine Verhöhnung der damaligen Schüler und Opfer. Da wird die Bitte um Verzeihung zur berechnenden Phrase.“

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Archbishop Nienstedt has a new job (sort of)

MINNESOTA/MICHIGAN
Canonical Consultation

01/12/2016

Jennifer Haselberger

According to the January 10, 2016 bulletin of Saint Philip Roman Catholic Church in Battle Creek, Michigan, Archbishop Nienstedt has found a job serving as an assistant priest at the parish, which is located in the Diocese of Kalamazoo.

Per the Pastor’s Column (see below, page two), Nienstedt will have an office at the parish center, but will be living at the neighboring Church of Saint Joseph. His duties will include covering masses in the absence of the pastor, visiting the sick and homebound, and assisting with ‘various pastoral ministries’. TH

Apropos of my previous column suggesting some reasons for releasing the Greene Espel report, the article notes that Archbishop Nienstedt’s connection with the pastor dates back to when he (Nienstedt) was assigned to the Shrine of the Little Flower. This time period was of particular interest to the G&E investigators, as at least one of the complaints uncovered dated to this period.

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“Zero tolerance” – Vatican requested to investigate failures in US

UNITED STATES
Catholica (Australia)

Yesterday the message below and the two attachments were sent to approximately 700 news media personnel throughout the US 50 states.

(Thanks to Fr Jim Connell for sharing this information).

All of this information is in the public forum so feel free to pass on the info to others, if you wish.

The Catholic bishops in the United States claim a Zero Tolerance policy regarding priests and deacons who have sexually abused a minor or a vulnerable adult. Yet, Church documents show otherwise and potential victims could be at risk now.

This misrepresentation by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) is deliberate and systemic in nature, and sexually abusive clergy still could be in ministry.

Thus, the Catholic Whistleblowers Steering Committee (http://www.catholicwhistleblowers.com/) has requested the Vatican to investigate the bishops’ handling of clergy sexual abuse in the United States.

A copy of this request is attached to this email. Please read our letter to the Vatican and then discuss the issues we raise with the Catholic bishop(s) in your area.

Also attached to this email is a document that contains copies of related correspondence in recent years with USCCB leadership members: Cardinal Francis George, Cardinal Timothy Dolan, Bishop R. Daniel Conlon, and Francesco Cesareo, Ph.D.

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Paul Kendrick, who accused Haitian orphanage founder, appeals defamation verdict

MAINE
Portland Press Herald

Associated Press

A Freeport man who accused a Haiti orphanage founder of molesting boys is appealing a defamation verdict.

Paul Kendrick has accused Michael Geilenfeld, founder of St. Joseph Home for Boys, of being a serial pedophile. Geilenfeld denied the allegations and sued Kendrick for defamation.

In July, a federal jury awarded $7 million to Geilenfeld and $7.5 million to a North Carolina-based charity, Hearts of Haiti.

Kendrick’s attorneys contend Geilenfeld didn’t have jurisdiction to sue in federal court because he was living outside the U.S. when he filed his complaint. The appeal also contends his testimony was key to damages awarded North Carolina-based charity, Hearts with Haiti.

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What do Georg Ratzinger in Bavaria, Cardinal Bernard Law in ‘Spotlight’, John Paul II in the Vatican, have in common? They “Hear no evil. See no evil. Speak no evil”!

UNITED STATES
PopeCrimes& Vatican Evils.

Paris Arrow

It’s a secular lawyer’s word versus a Catholic pedophile priest’s word. Again, and again.

It’s a secular lawyer’s word as he represents many sex abuse victims versus a Catholic hierarchy head’s word who covered-up many pedophile priests. Again, and again.

It’s the Vatican Machiavellian John Paul II strategy of “Deny and deny until you die”. Again, and again.

It’s the Vatican Devil-in-Angel’s-clothing strategy, “See No Evil. Hear No Evil. Speak No Evil”. Again, and again.

Georg Ratzinger ruled the Domspatzen boys’ choir for 30 years where almost a third of the boys were sexually and physically abused. Cardinal Bernard Law ruled as archbishop in Boston for 18 years where he aided and abetted more than 70 pedophile priests mentioned in movie Spotlight. John Paul II ruled as pope for 27 years and he never fired any his JP2 Army – John Paul II Pedophile Priests Army worldwide and he promoted Cardinal Law to Rome.

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Hartlepool man’s award for exposing Jehovah’s sex abuse rules

UNITED KINGDOM
Hartlepool Mail

A former Jehovah’s Witness has won an international award for highlighting potential sex abuse risks within the church.

Steve Rose, from Rift House, Hartlepool, has received a Courage Award from the organisation Silent Lambs for campaigning against practices that he says make it difficult for allegations of child and other sex abuse to be uncovered or acted upon.

Mr Rose, 51, spoke out in an article in the Mail in November about a “two-witness rule”, which says Jehovah’s Witness church elders are not allowed to take action against allegations of wrongdoing unless it has been witnessed by at least two people.

Mr Rose, who used to be a member of Hartlepool’s Kingdom Hall, in Ashgrove Avenue, also raised concerns that convicted sex offenders are allowed to remain part of the church.

He was also interviewed by a national newspaper and featured in an article on an American website about allegations of cover-ups within the church.

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‘PAEDOPHILE PRIEST’ RECEIVED £100,000 FROM CATHOLIC CHURCH IN AUSTRALIA WHILE ON RUN

AUSTRALIA
The Tablet (UK)

13 January 2016 | by Mark Brolly

British priest received pension while avoiding authorities for alleged sexual abuse of 16 children

A suspected paedophile priest, British-born Ronald Pickering, reportedly received almost AU$200,000 (£97,000) from the Archdiocese of Melbourne for almost a decade after he evaded Australian authorities in 1993 and fled to his homeland, where he died in 2009.

The Sunday Age newspaper in Melbourne reported on 10 January that Pickering, who is believed to have abused at least 16 children but never faced justice, was one of a number of abusive priests who received pension, housing and private medical insurance benefits while victims received one-off payments of $31,000 to $37,000 under the church’s Melbourne Response redress scheme.

The paper said parishioners had unwittingly been partly funding the assistance through their donations into church collection plates, which they believed went towards the local church or fundraising for retired priests.

It said Archbishop Sir Frank Little, who led the Church in Melbourne from 1974-96, appointed Pickering “Pastor Emeritus” in 1993, entitling him to additional payments, even though he had been aware of complaints against Pickering as early as 1986. The current Archbishop, Denis Hart, stopped the payments in 2002.

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Maine clergy abuse accuser appeals $14.5 million defamation ruling

MAINE
Bangor Daily News

By Darren Fishell, BDN Staff
Posted Jan. 12, 2016
.
PORTLAND, Maine — A Freeport man ordered by a jury to pay $14.5 million for defaming a Catholic brother and a nonprofit based in Haiti is appealing his case to the U.S. First Circuit Court.

The attorney for Paul Kendrick, an advocate for children sexually abused by clergy, on Tuesday filed an argument with the court seeking to dismiss the case.

Catholic brother Michael Geilenfeld and the nonprofit Hearts with Haiti sued Kendrick for a campaign he launched against Geilenfeld and the North Carolina-based nonprofit for which he worked in 2011, alleging that Geilenfeld sexually abused children he had taken in at an orphanage in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, and that the nonprofit had turned a blind eye.

After hearing testimony, including from seven men who alleged that they were sexually abused by Geilenfeld in the 1990s, a jury in Portland awarded damages of $7.5 million to Hearts with Haiti and $7 million to Geilenfeld.

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Campaigner calls for Orthodox rabbinate to apologise for ‘past failures’ in dealing with child sex abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
The JC

By Rosa Doherty, January 13, 2016

A leading campaigner against child sex abuse in the Orthodox community has called on Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis to issue an apology “on behalf of the rabbinate” over historical abuse cases.

Manny Waks made the suggestion at a meeting with Rabbi Mirvis, to discuss his own global initiative to tackle the problem.

Mr Waks, who himself was abused while studying at a yeshivah in Melbourne, Australia, said: “One thing I suggested was he issue a public apology on behalf of the rabbinate. I’m not saying he should take responsibility personally but to acknowledge and accept there have been serious failures over the years.

“I think it would send a powerful message to victims.”

The campaigner says that in the past, there has been a culture of intimidation of victims and a lack of support for them to come forward to report abuse.

Mr Waks also asked Rabbi Mirvis to take on a formal role in his campaign.

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Chesco church: We’re ‘devastated’ by rape accusations against former pastor

PENNSYLVANIA
PhillyVoice

BY DANIEL CRAIG
PhillyVoice Staff

Police in Chester County say a pastor raped and impregnated a teenage girl, an accusation that has left the community at his former church “devastated.”

According to authorities, Jacob “Jake” Malone, 33, sexually assaulted the victim while she lived at his home in Exton.

Police had previously believed that Malone was eluding arrest and possibly left the country. But an attorney claiming to represent Malone, a resident of the 300 block of South Whitford Road in Exton, called detectives Tuesday saying his client was out of the country but was flying back in the wake of the allegations, authorities said.

Police are working with the attorney to determine where and when Malone will be returning, authorities added.

Malone reportedly met the victim when she was 12 while pastoring at a church she attended in Mesa, Arizona. In 2014, he reached out to the then-17-year-old girl and invited her to stay with him and his family at his new home in Minnesota, allegedly trying to have inappropriate contact with her.

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Ex-pastor, coach who filmed himself molesting boy deserves long prison term, court rules

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

By Matt Miller | mmiller@pennlive.com
on January 12, 2016

A former Lancaster County youth pastor and junior high school basketball coach who filmed himself performing sex acts on a 13-year-old boy lost a bid Tuesday to void his 25 1/2- to 80-year state prison sentence.

A state Superior Court panel rejected Jonathan D. Masteller’s claims that his punishment was excessive.

Masteller, formerly the head junior high boy’s basketball coach for Pequea Valley School District was sentenced by a county judge in November 2014 after pleading guilty to 12 sex crimes involving abuse of the boy.

He had been the victim’s basketball coach and youth pastor, Senior Judge William H. Platt wrote in the state court opinion. The abuse was discovered in November 2013 when a pastor at the Family Center in Gap found photos of Masteller molesting the boy on Masteller’s work computer.

The boy later told police about the abuse, and Masteller admitted committing the crimes and using the camera in his cell phone to record the incidents. Masteller pleaded guilty to charges including involuntary deviate sexual intercourse, indecent assault. possession of child pornography, aggravated indecent assault and corruption of minors without having a sentencing deal with prosecutors.

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Catholic Church Admits Prov. School Aide Arrested for Sexual Assault Worked at Cathedral

RHODE ISLAND
GoLocalProv

A teacher’s aide at a Providence Middle School who was arrested for sexually assaulting a minor had been working part time at the Cathedral of SS Peter and Paul in Providence, GoLocal has learned.

Anthony Tedeschi, who was arrested on January 8 by the Providence Police and Rhode Island State Police Violent Fugitive Task Force, had been under investigation for an incident that occurred at Esek Hopkins Middle School on October 23 where another aide observed Tedeschi “inappropriately touching” a 13 year old male student with autism.

Diocese Releases Info After GoLocal Inquiry

The Diocese would not give dates as to Tedeschi’s service or position, but only provided the following statement from Msgr. Anthony Mancini, Rector of the Cathedral of SS Peter and Paul, when GoLocal inquired on Monday.

“Anthony Tedeschi has not been an employee of the Cathedral of SS Peter and Paul in Providence for some time. He left his part time position of his own accord several months ago as a result of staffing changes at the Cathedral,” said Mananci.

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Local youth minister charged with sexual abuse of a juvenile

WEST VIRGINIA
Bluefield Daily Telegraph

Posted: Wednesday, January 13, 2016

By SAMANTHA PERRY Bluefield Daily Telegraph

BLUEFIELD — A transgender Bluefield man involved in youth ministry at local Episcopal churches was arrested Tuesday and charged with multiple counts of sexual abuse of a juvenile.

James “Jimmy” Lilly, 24, was charged with one count of incest, one count of second-degree sexual assault and 31 counts of first-degree sexual abuse, Detective K.L. Adams, with the Bluefield Police Department, said.

Adams said the victim in the case is a juvenile female. He said the abuse began in 2009 when the victim was 9 to 10 years old, and continued until she was 16.

The alleged abuse in the case took place at a home, and not a church, Adams said.

“Mr. Lilly, by his own admission, is transgender,” Adams said. “He is in the process of becoming a woman.”

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‘Singing Priest’ sentenced

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Declan Brennan
PUBLISHED
13/01/2016

Former priest and serial abuser Tony Walsh has been sentenced to one year imprisonment for the sexual assault of a child in the early 1970s.

Walsh was a seminarian at the time of the offence, which is the earliest recorded case of child abuse by him. He went on to become known as the ‘Singing Priest’ for his role in a travelling all-priest group before he was defrocked after his abuse of young boys began to emerge.

Walsh (61), formerly of North Circular Road, Dublin, was convicted last December after a trial at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court of the indecent assault of a girl at St Luke’s, Kilbarron Park, Kilmore, Dublin, on a unknown date between April 17, 1973, and September 9, 1976.

He had pleaded not guilty. The victim was aged between seven and 10 at the time when Walsh locked her into a room and sexually assaulted her.

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PM fails to censure Glenn Bedingfield’s abuse dig at the Archbishop

MALTA
Times of Malta

Wednesday, January 13, 2016 by Ivan Martin

Prime Minister Joseph Muscat failed to condemn an aide yesterday who had made a public ‘priest child abuse’ dig at Archbishop Charles Scicluna.

Glenn Bedingfield, employed at the Office of the Prime Minister on a position of trust basis, shared a video clip Tuesday of Mgr Scicluna accompanied by the caption: “At least the Prime Minister didn’t go into any children’s bedrooms.”

In the clip, Mgr Scicluna is seen criticising Joseph Muscat’s controversial new year’s message during a television interview aired on Monday night. Mgr Scicluna told the interviewer he trusted that “the next time Dr Muscat visits a kitchen, it will be real”, a reference to the Prime Minister’s staged tete-a-tete with a young couple inside their designer kitchen.

Mr Bedingfield’s comment was a reference to sexual abuse by priests. Mgr Scicluna was the chief Church prosecutor in such cases when he served at the Vatican.

A spokesman for Dr Muscat said: “Mr Bedingfield’s comment should be taken as having been made in his personal capacity and as a commentator who presents a
satirical show on One radio.”

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January 12, 2016

Media Advisory: Priest File of Fr. Othmar Hohmann to be Released Publicly Tomorrow

MINNESOTA
Jeff Anderson and Associates

St. Cloud News Conference Wednesday

Priest File of Fr. Othmar Hohmann, OSB to be
Publicly Released Tomorrow

Lawsuit filed on behalf of
sexual abuse survivor Doe 115

What: At a news conference on Wednesday in St. Cloud, attorney Mike Bryant of Bradshaw & Bryant, co-counsel with Jeff Anderson & Associates, will:

• Release the priest file of Father Othmar Hohmann, OSB, who worked in several Minnesota dioceses including the Diocese of St. Cloud, Diocese of Duluth and Diocese of Crookston. Additionally, Hohmann worked in North Dakota, Utah, Wisconsin and the Bahamas and has been accused of abusing several children.
• Announce the filing of a sexual abuse lawsuit filed in Stearns County on behalf of sexual abuse survivor Doe 115 naming the Diocese of St. Cloud, St. John’s Abbey and St. Joseph Parish in St. Joseph, MN as defendants. The young girl, now an adult, was sexually abused by Hohmann for several years.
• Request that all dioceses in Minnesota release the files of credibly accused clergy like St. John’s Abbey has done. St. John’s released the files of several credibly accused clergy as part of a settlement in the Doe 2 case in 2015.

WHEN: Wednesday, January 13, 2016 at 11:00AM CDT

WHERE: Bradshaw & Bryant, PLLC
1505 Division Street
Waite Park, MN 56387

Notes:
• Documents from Hohmann’s file and the complaint will be available at the press conference and on our website tomorrow at www.andersonadvocates.com.

Contact Mike Bryant: Office: 320.259.5414 Cell: 800.359.0061
Contact Jeff Anderson: Office: 651.964.3473 Cell: 612.817.8665

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Trial date set for Minnesota priest accused of abusing girls

MINNESOTA
Inforum

HIBBING, Minn. — A June trial date has been scheduled for a Hibbing priest accused of sexually abusing four girls.

A five-day trial for Brian Michael Lederer, 30, is set to begin June 13 in State District Court in Hibbing, according to court records.

Sixth Judicial District Judge David Ackerson previously denied a motion to dismiss the charges, and not guilty pleas were entered on Lederer’s behalf on Nov. 30.

Authorities said four girls, ranging in age from 10 to 14, came forward to report incidents of inappropriate touching by Lederer, who worked at Blessed Sacrament Parish and the Assumption Catholic School.

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‘I Was 13 When Marc Gafni’s Abuse Began’

UNITED STATES
Forward

Sara Kabakov
January 12, 2016

With all the accounts that have come out about Marc Gafni, the former rabbi and spiritual guru, you may wonder what more I have to offer. But this story is not over, even if Gafni never teaches or abuses again.

Right now there are children in the Jewish world, and in other communities, who are being abused and forced into silence. Their parents and teachers don’t know what is happening.

I know, because it happened to me. I am the woman Gafni molested when she was 13 years old. This is the first time I am telling my story in my own name.

If these children are lucky, someone will notice there is something wrong. But too often, the police are not involved, and these children are unlikely to be protected.

I wasn’t.

These children will grow up, and it may take years before they figure out how to speak the unspeakable, until they have the strength and courage to overcome the pressure to be silent.

And by then, their ability to seek legal recourse may have expired.

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At least 231 children were abused during Former Pope Benedict XVI’s brother’s watch

GERMANY
Daily Kos

By Walter Einenkel

Tuesday Jan 12, 2016

When Pope Benedict left the leadership position of the Catholic Church, after a rather short term, many speculated the Catholic Church realized that having a man who looks sort of scary—with a German accent, who may or may not have Nazi ties, and a lot of child sexual abuse skeletons in his closet, wasn’t the best idea. But maybe he was just a little too old for the torrid schedule of a Pope? Maybe it’s a family issue.

At least 231 children who sang in a boys’ choir led for 30 years by the brother of former Pope Benedict XVI were abused over a period of almost four decades, a lawyer investigating reports of wrongdoing said Friday.

The lawyer, Ulrich Weber, who was commissioned by the choir to look into accusations of beatings, torture or sexual abuse, said he thought that the actual abuse was even more widespread.

This breaks out to about a third of the children under Rev. Georg Ratzinger (Benedict’s brother).

Asked whether Benedict’s brother, the Rev. Georg Ratzinger, who conducted the Regensburg choir from 1964 to 1994, had known of the abuse, Mr. Weber said, “After my research, I must assume so.”

Most of the abuses are alleged to have been perpetrated by Johann Meier, a director of a school connected with the choir between the years 1953 until 1992. Meier has since died.

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