ABUSE TRACKER

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

March 9, 2016

Local priest accused of stealing $1.5 million from Huber Heights church

OHIO
ABC 22

BY CHRISTINA SCHAEFER WEDNESDAY, MARCH 9TH 2016

MONTGOMERY COUNTY – A longtime local priest faces charges that he stole $1,500,000 from a catholic church in Huber Heights. Montgomery County Prosecutors said today, that Rev. Earl F. Simone stole the money from Saint Peter Catholic Church between January 2008 and March 31, 2008.

According to the church, Simone had been a priest at Saint Peter from 1992 until 2015. We first reported what Huber Heights police called “financial irregularities” in March of 2015. The Cincinnati Archdiocese gave the tip to police about the irregularities after there was an ethics complaint at Saint Peter Catholic Church.

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

Former Catholic bishop of Jackson William Houck dies at 89

MISSISSIPPI
Washington Times

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) – A retired Roman Catholic bishop in Jackson has died.

Current Bishop Joseph Kopacz says Bishop William Houck died early Wednesday at St. Dominic’s Hospital of complications following heart surgery.

Houck, 89, led the diocese covering 65 counties in central and northern Mississippi from 1984 to 2003. …

His tenure was marred by lawsuits against the diocese over sexual abuse by priests.

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.

Interview mit Kardinal Müller Was ist im Islam anders als im Christentum?

DEUTSCHLAND
KSTA

[Cardinal Müller “We should restrain ourselves with self-righteous teachings”.]

Von Joachim Frank
28.02.16

Herr Kardinal, Sie haben in Köln unter dem Titel referiert, „Die Wahrheit wird euch frei machen“. In vielen Ländern sitzen Regimegegner in Haft, weil sie die Wahrheit gesagt haben, viele Journalisten, auch ein Whistleblower wie Edward Snowden. Wem gilt eigentlich Ihre Botschaft?

Es geht in diesem Bibelwort aus dem Johannes-Evangelium um die existenzielle Freiheit des Menschen, die aus dem Glauben an Gott kommt: die Freiheit von der Angst um sich selbst, Freiheit von Sünde und der Verfallenheit an das Nichts. In diesem Sinn kann ein ungerecht Gefangener innerlich freier sein als seine Peiniger. Männer wie Pater Maximilian Kolbe oder Dietrich Bonhoeffer bezeugen uns das. Oder heute auch die Christen, die vom IS enthauptet worden sind, weil sie ihrem Glauben treu bleiben wollten.

Wie wollen Sie vermeiden, dass aus dieser Sicht – die Opfer sind freier als die Täter – ein Freifahrtschein für Diktatoren und Terroristen wird?

Ich versuche, es konkret zu machen: Dietrich Bonhoeffer hat sich dem Unrechtsregime der Nationalsozialisten aktiv entgegengestellt. Der Kampf gegen Ungerechtigkeit ist notwendig. Aber es kann die Stunde der Ohnmacht kommen. Dann gilt es, sich nicht vom Bösen überwältigen zu lassen, sondern die innere Freiheit zu bewahren; wie Jesus sagt, sich nicht vor denen zu fürchten, die zwar den Leib, aber nicht die Seele töten können (Matthäus 10,28). Beides kommt im Titel von Bonhoeffers wichtigstem Werk zum Ausdruck: „Widerstand und Ergebung“.

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.

Lawmakers to call for tougher child sex abuse investigations

PENNSYLVANIA
ABC 27

By Janel Knight
Published: March 9, 2016

HARRISBURG, Pa. (WHTM) – A group of state lawmakers will call on district attorneys across the state to lead tougher child sexual abuse investigations.

State Reps. Mark Rozzi (D-Berks), Tom Murt (R-Montgomery/Philadelphia) and Frank Burns (D-Cambria) will make the call at a news conference Wednesday afternoon at the Capitol.

They want prosecutors to follow every lead possible that may may lead to evidence in child sex abuse cases. This includes conducting grand jury investigations whenever there are multiple allegations.

This is in response to a grand jury report on child sexual abuse in the Catholic diocese of Altoona-Johnstown. Investigators said 50 priests abused hundreds of children for at least 40 years. Two bishops are accused of covering up their behavior.

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.

Crookston Diocese seeking dismissal of sexual abuse suit

MINNESOTA
Crookston Times

By Times Report

Posted Mar. 9, 2016

Crookston, Minn.

The Diocese of Crookston will ask the Court during Thursday’s scheduled hearing at the Polk County Justice Center to dismiss a lawsuit filed on behalf of a sexual abuse survivor, Doe 19, who was sexually abused as a young boy by Father J. Vincent Fitzgerald. Fitzgerald worked as a priest at St. Anne’s in Naytahwaush, MN, where he allegedly abused Doe 19.

Prior to working at St. Anne’s in the Diocese of Crookston, Fitzgerald also worked at St. Catherine’s parish in Squaw Lake, MN, in the Diocese of Duluth, where he sexually abused another young boy, Bill Weis. In November 2015, a Ramsey County jury reached a verdict in favor of Weis, concluding the Diocese of Duluth was negligent in failing to supervise Fitzgerald.
Doe 19’s trial is set for July 2016.

Doe 19’s lawsuit was filed in November 2013 under the Minnesota Child Victims Act which allows survivors of sexual abuse to sue their offenders and the institutions who protected the offenders. The deadline for sexual abuse survivors to file a lawsuit is May 25, 2016.

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.

WA–Yakima predator priests may be listed this month

WASHINGTON
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release – Monday, March 7, 2016

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 566 9790, 314 645 5915 home, davidgclohessy@gmail.com)

A few weeks ago, Yakima Catholic officials said they MIGHT post names of predator priests on a church website this month. (Last week, a Pennsylvania bishop pledged to do this too.)

This move is long overdue. It’s the quickest, easiest way to warn parents, police, prosecutors, parishioners and the public about predator priests. It’s the very least bishops should do, since they recruited, educated, ordained, hired, trained, transferred and shielded these predators for years, often helping them evade prosecution by keeping their crimes secret until the statute of limitations expired.

Over the past dozen years or so, more than 30 US bishops have released such lists. http://www.bishop-accountability.org/AtAGlance/lists.htm

In January, the Seattle Catholic archdiocese released a list of 77 child molesting clerics who worked there.

That same month, the Yakima Republic reported that Yakima church officials may do the same thing in March.

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.

Dos sacerdotes de Oaxaca son suspendidos por denunciar a un pederasta

OAXACA (MEXICO)
El País [Madrid, Spain]

March 9, 2016

By CLAUDIA ALTAMIRANO

Read original article

Nueve párrocos de ese Estado del sur de México acusaron a otro cura de abusar de casi 100 niños, por lo cual dos fueron suspendidos y el resto ha recibido amenazas

Nueve sacerdotes católicos de Oaxaca acusan haber sido amenazados de muerte y al menos dos de ellos han sido suspendidos del sacerdocio por pedir a su obispo y al Vaticano su intervención en el caso de un párroco que ha abusado de unos 100 niños indígenas en Oaxaca, sureste de México. El pederasta incluso ya está preso pero la Iglesia se niega a castigarlo o siquiera reconocerlo como abusador….

El párroco Gerardo Silvestre Hernández está acusado de abusar sexualmente de un centenar de niños. Cuatro de las víctimas se lo contaron a otro cura en confesión y él decidió poner al tanto al arzobispo José Luis Chávez, quien solucionó el problema cambiando al pederasta de parroquia y callando la voz acusadora. Pero los abusos continuaron en la siguiente iglesia y en otras cinco. El acusador, Apolonio Merino, mantuvo el apoyo a los menores y sus familias, hasta que fue suspendido junto con otro sacerdote que se unió a esa causa. El Vaticano absolvió al abusador mientras los sacerdotes suspendidos temen por su integridad y la de sus familias.

“La mayoría de los sacerdotes que hemos impulsado esta causa en Oaxaca estamos siendo objeto de amenazas, persecución y hostigamiento de parte del arzobispo y de su equipo. Ratifico lo que me dijeron en confesión pero no lo voy a ventilar por ética profesional, lo que sí puedo decir es que hubo abusos muy graves en esa parroquia. Eran adolescentes de entre 13 y 14 años, sólo de Santiago Camotlán son 45 menores y en las otras calculamos otros 45, alrededor de 100 en total”, dijo Apolonio Merino a El País.

El otro sacerdote suspendido es Ángel Noriega, quien fuera responsable de la parroquia de Santiago Camotlán, de donde fue desalojado en julio de 2015 sin una orden ni aviso previo de la arquidiócesis. Merino afirma que recibe llamadas anónimas en las que le dicen que se cuide, que “se lo va a cargar la chingada, que le van a dar donde más le duele”, es decir, su familia. Ambos firmaron, junto con otros siete curas, una carta dirigida a la Santa Sede en la que le informan de los abusos contra los niños y de la omisión del arzobispo Chávez Botello, pero su acción sólo derivó en suspensiones y amenazas.

Esta es la carta de respuesta que envió el Vaticano.
Esta es la carta de respuesta que envió el Vaticano.FONI OAXACA

“Sobre el reverendo Silvestre no pesa denuncia verosímil que justifique la intervención de este Dicasterio en su ámbito de competencia, por lo que la causa queda desestimada en su mérito. A su vez, se invita al diálogo sereno que redunde en un mayor bien de cohesión y unidad pastoral”, fue la respuesta enviada por el Vaticano a Oaxaca en 2011.

Otra de las personas que acusó a Silvestre es Narcisa Mendoza, madre de una de las víctimas. La señora presentó una denuncia penal contra el párroco y escribió una carta al Papa Francisco en noviembre de 2015 para pedirle su intervención en el caso, sin respuesta hasta ahora.Únete a EL PAÍS para seguir toda la actualidad y leer sin límites.

“Cuando me entero que el cura los llamaba al cuarto y los emborrachaba y así abusaba de ellos, entonces fui a quejarme ante las autoridades”, relató Mendoza en su carta, escrita de puño y letra y difundida por la red defensora de la infancia oaxaqueña ‘Foni’. “Yo sí le pido justicia por los niños zapotecas y que no se vuelva a repetir porque es un sufrimiento muy grande, muy terrible que a nadie se le desea”.

Esta es la carta que Narcisa Mendoza escribió al papa Francisco.
Esta es la carta que Narcisa Mendoza escribió al papa Francisco.FONI OAXACA

Mendoza acudió con la autoridad local para denunciar a Silvestre, pero la respuesta que obtuvo fue que “ya habían notificado al arzobispo y éste no les había hecho caso”, así que interpuso su denuncia a nivel estatal. Gracias a su denuncia y la de otra decena de madres y padres, Silvestre Hernández fue detenido en 2013 y está en espera de una sentencia por abuso sexual contra menores de edad.

Por su parte, el arzobispo de Antequera, José Luis Chávez Botello, está en espera también de la decisión del pontífice sobre su permanencia en la arquidiócesis, pero no por su presunta complicidad en los abusos contra los niños, sino porque recién cumplió 75 años y el Derecho Canónico obliga a los obispos a renunciar a esa edad, dejando su cargo a consideración del Papa.

En México no existe una cifra exacta de niños abusados por sacerdotes porque todavía es una mayoría la que no denuncia, según el activista contra la pederastia Alberto Athié. El caso más notorio es el del fundador de la Legión de Cristo, Marcial Maciel, acusado no sólo de pederastia sino de tener hijos con varias mujeres e imponer un voto de silencio extraordinario a sus congregados para evitar que lo denunciaran. Maciel murió en 2008 a los 87 años de edad, sin haber enfrentado ningún proceso penal o canónico.

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.

Jerome Christenson: In diocese abuse cases, we owe it to the children

MINNESOTA
Winona Daily News

Jerome Christenson Daily News Mar 2, 2016

Sometimes you don’t have to see the movie. Sometimes it’s not a movie at all.

A letter arrived at my house last week that, right away, caught my attention. Now I don’t know about you, but there’s something about an attorney’s return address on an envelope addressed to me that makes finding out what’s inside a lot more important than the latest missive from Publisher’s Clearinghouse. So I stood there, barely in the door, coat still on and read, “We are sending this letter to anyone who may have attended a parish or school in the Diocese of Winona …”

The letter was from Jeff Anderson & Associates, a reminder that “anyone who was sexually abused by a priest, deacon teacher, or anyone else associated with the Diocese of Winona … must bring a claim by the May 25, 2016 deadline.”

I put the letter down and took off my coat. I hadn’t been abused.

But I could have been. When I was a boy the Bishop of Winona moved Thomas Adamson, one of the accused priests, into the rectory three blocks from my house.

I was fortunate. My friend and classmate was not so lucky.

He wasn’t the first. The bishop knew that when he sent Adamson to our town.

He knew.

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.

Altoona-Johnstown Diocese Protest

PENNSYLVANIA
ABC 23

Just a week after a Grand Jury report detailing decades of sexual abuse and cover-up within the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese a group rallies to support victims. A small group held a rally Tuesday outside the Diocese in Hollidaysburg and clutching photos of innocent children asking the Diocese for change. This biggest issue is the cover up and that needs to get stopped in order for kids to get help. These young faces are important, they are the faces of survivors at the age they were abused. Those in the photos allow snap, the Survivors Network of those abused by Priests show their faces to tell their story about sexual abuse at the hands of church leaders. And for Pam Erdely this mission is personal. I was sexual abused by a nun in my high school in 1972. Erdely made the two hour drive from Pittsburgh to stand on this lawn to stand up for what she believes in. Abuse is like a knife in your heart and a bullet in your brain. It is very dark and depressing. My main message today is, I just want to tell victims there is a light at the end of the tunnel.

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.

Victims ask damages in priest trial

ITALY
ANSA

(ANSA) – Cremona, March 9 – Two of five alleged child sexual abuse victims on Wednesday requested damages in a trial against 66-year-old Father Mauro Inzoli, who stands accused of several counts of sexual assault on minors.

Inzoli headed up the Cremona chapter of conservative lay Catholic movement Communion and Liberation (CL) for 30 years. He founded the Food Bank charity and is also known as Father Mercedes thanks to a passion for luxury cars.

The prelate is accused of abusing his authority to sexually assault underage boys, both in his office where he led spiritual exercises and in hotels in summer resorts during CL-organized youth holidays.

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.

Leslie Hittner: The kind of church abuse in Boston, Winona is still happening—all over the world

MINNESOTA
Winona Daily News

Leslie Hittner Community columnist

Jerome Christenson wrote an excellent column about the sexual abuse cover up in the Roman Catholic Church (Daily News, March 2). While that column may have been motivated viewing the recent award-winning movie, “Spotlight,” it was much more personal and real. In that column, Jerome says, “We owe it to the children never to forget.”

He is so right.

My wife and I attended the movie “Spotlight” about two weeks ago. We came out of the theater in silence. Everyone who was there was silent. I’ve never left a theater where it felt like everyone was dumbstruck by the events of the movie.

As many of you may know, I have been vocal in a very public way about the Catholic Church’s response to the sexual abuse crisis. I wrote my first public letter in the Daily News on the subject in May 2007, but I was still unaware of the absolute corruption that was the coverup in Boston…until seeing this movie.

Today — 15 years after the Boston story hit the papers, 30, 40, 50, 60 years after the “modern” sexual abuse coverup scandal began — the Roman Catholic hierarchy still does not get it.

Even as I write this, Cardinal George Pell (formerly of Australia) and retired Bishop Joseph Adamec (Pennsylvania) are defending their illegal behaviors. Cardinal Law remains safely in the Vatican and has not been called to account for his illegal activities.

Perhaps even more incredulous is that newer bishops not involved in the previous coverup activities in their dioceses are actively defending the behaviors of their predecessors, in many instances driving their dioceses into bankruptcy in order to do so. Apologies are shallow or two-faced. For instance: Archbishop Jerome Listecki (Milwaukee) appears to have “reached out” to sexual abuse survivors simply as a tactic to ensure that his bankrupt archdiocese would not be obligated in any way to those who came forward.

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.

Lord Janner faced allegations of abuse against 30 victims, hearing told

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Rajeev Syal
Wednesday 9 March 2016

Lord Janner faced allegations that he had abused 30 victims from the mid-1950s until the late 1980s, the first preliminary hearing of a public inquiry into child abuse has heard.

The inquiry, overseen by Justice Lowell Goddard, began by looking at abuse claims against the former Labour MP, including claims he took alleged victims to the houses of parliament.

Wednesday’s hearing was the first of Goddard’s public investigations in her independent inquiry into institutional failures to protect children from abuse over many decades in England and Wales.

Janner, a former Leicester MP, was charged with 22 sexual offences dating back to the 1960s, but died in December at the age of 87 before a trial of the facts could take place in a criminal courtroom.

In her inquiry, Goddard will be asked to decide whether or not the allegations are well founded, to discover any institutional failings, and to look at why so many children who complained of abuse were left within his reach for so long.

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.

This child sex abuse inquiry is a chance for survivors to finally be heard

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Sandra Laville

In a courtroom that has hosted some of the most significant and dramatic public inquiries of the last 20 years, a New Zealand judge will take her seat to begin a journey into one of the darkest corners of British life.

What emerges over the coming months and years in Court 73 of the Royal Courts of Justice, will be difficult to face, not only for social workers, local government officials, teachers, religious leaders, senior politicians and the police, but for society as a whole.

The first of Justice Lowell Goddard’s 25 public investigations, in her independent inquiry into institutional failures to protect children over many decades in England and Wales, will focus on the late Greville Janner. The former Labour MP was charged with 22 sexual offences dating back to the 1960s, but died before a trial of the facts could take place in a criminal courtroom. It will be her job to decide, having considered the allegations, whether or not they are well founded, and to probe why so many children who have complained of abuse were left within his reach for so long.

For the few hours that she sits in court on Wednesday, Goddard will hear from lawyers, as most victims plan to stay away from what is a preliminary hearing. But for these survivors – vulnerable children in the care of Leicestershire county council, now grown into middle-aged men – and many others, it will be a hugely symbolic moment.

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

Pope’s Abuse Accountability Tribunal Going Nowhere Fast

VATICAN CITY
ABC News

By NICOLE WINFIELD, ASSOCIATED PRESS

VATICAN CITY — Mar 9, 2016

Pope Francis’ proposed Vatican tribunal to judge bishops who covered up for pedophile priests is going nowhere fast.

Despite fresh focus from the Oscar-winning film “Spotlight” on how Catholic bishops protected priests who raped children, Francis’ most significant sex abuse-related initiative to date has stalled. It’s a victim of a premature roll-out, unresolved legal and administrative questions and resistance both inside and outside of the Holy See, church officials and canon lawyers say.

The surprise proposal made headlines when it was announced on June 10 as the first major initiative of Francis’ sex abuse advisory commission. A Vatican communique said Francis and his nine cardinal advisers had unanimously agreed to create a new judicial section within the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith to handle “abuse of office” cases against bishops accused of failing to protect their flocks from pedophiles.

But the proposal immediately raised red flags to canon lawyers and Vatican officials alike.

For starters, the congregation, which since 2001 has been the clearing house for all church abuse cases around the world, wasn’t consulted or even informed. As is, the congregation is understaffed and overwhelmed processing hundreds of backlogged cases of priests who molested children, advising dioceses on how to proceed.

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.

PEDOPHILE PRIEST SCANDAL: CARDINAL BARBARIN “THINKS VICTIMS EVERY DAY”

FRANCE
Siver Times (Canada)

THE FACT OF THE DAY. We met Tuesday Archbishop Philippe Barbarin. The Archbishop of Lyons, accused of having protected a pedophile priest responds to victims who file complaints against him. “The resignation, for me, is not relevant. If I am guilty, then we’ll see, “he says.

In front of the Basilica of Notre-Dame de Fourvière Tuesday afternoon on the heights of Lyon, a few dozen meters from his archbishop, Cardinal Philippe Barbarin argues, relaxed, with an old parishioner. True to himself, he collects big hand gestures as if he had Italian blood.

Since it is specifically referred to two complaints from victims of pedophile priest Bernard Preynat for not denouncing these acts, he did not personally expressed. The day before, his entourage has informed us that he could not respond positively to our request for interview. But when we decide to question him directly on the square, the Primate of the Gauls, currently in turmoil, finally agrees to deliver. And to face the accusations of the alleged victims of Father Preynat who reproach him for not having alerted justice since 2007 when it experienced the past pedophile of scouts priest. What do you say to the victims of the father Preynat? M GR BARBARIN . In 2007, these are rumors and these are very old facts. I have not seen anyone at that time. When, in 1991, the priest was moved to another parish, Archbishop I’m not, I’m not responsibilities. And then, there are twenty-five years, we must not forget that we are also in a different mentality compared to pedophilia. Have you thought in 2007 to prevent the judiciary? I do not even think. Again, I hear things about the past of the priest but that’s it. How to improve the warning system? Maybe Consider later we have external advisors in this type business.

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.

Time limits cut for NSW abuse victims

AUSTRALIA
9 News

AAP

Victims of child sexual and physical abuse will no longer face restrictive limitation periods when seeking compensation in NSW.

State parliament on Wednesday voted to remove the limitation periods that have previously blocked claims made more than three years after abuse occurred.

About 22,000 people are expected to benefit from the change, which was one of 99 recommendations made by the abuse royal commission last year.

Greens MLC David Shoebridge said the bill delivered a measure of real justice for victims of historic abuse.

“We know that it can take decades for survivors to be able to talk about their experiences, let alone find the courage to bring a claim for damages, and this reform reflects that reality,” 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.

New bishop to be installed in Metuchen Diocese in May

NEW JERSEY
NJ.com

By Sue Epstein | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com

METUCHEN — A new bishop will be installed in the Diocese of Metuchen in May, replacing Paul Bootkoski who has served as bishop there for 14 years.

The Rev. Monsignor James Checchio, 49, was introduced Tuesday morning at a press conference in the auditorium of the St. John Neumann Pastoral Center in Piscataway, which was filled with priests, and other members of the diocese he will soon lead.

“I’m looking forward to making this my home for a very long time,” Checchio said.

Bootkoski will remain in charge of the diocese until Checchio’s installation, according to a diocese statement.

Checchio spent the last 12 years as the rector for the Pontifical North American College in Rome, but he is originally from Collingswood in Camden County.

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Other Pontifical Acts, 08.03.2016

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 8 March 2016 – The Holy Father has appointed Msgr. James F. Checchio as bishop of Metuchen (area 3,688, population 1,383,217, Catholics 636,217, priests 204, permanent deacons 154, religious 304), United States of America. The bishop-elect was born in 1966 in Camden, United States of America and was ordained a priest in 1992. He holds a doctorate in canon law from the Pontifical University of St. Thomas in Rome, and has served in a number of pastoral roles, including parish vicar, defender of the bond in the tribunal of Camden, director of the diocesan Public Relations and Communications Office, parish administrator and moderator of the Curia. He is currently rector of the Pontifical North American College in Rome. He succeeds Bishop Paul G. Bootkoski, whose resignation from the pastoral care of the same diocese upon reaching the age limit was accepted by the Holy Father.

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.

Edmonton Anglican priest faces more sexual assault charges

CANADA
CBC News

An Anglican priest charged last month with sexually assaulting five youths in Edmonton during the 1980s is facing more charges after police say more victims came forward.

In February, Edmonton police charged Gordon William Dominey, 63, with five counts of sexual assault and five counts of gross indecency in connection with incidents that allegedly occurred at the Edmonton Youth Development Centre from 1985 to 1989.

He now faces 18 sexual assault charges and nine gross indecency charges in relation to the alleged assaults, which are reported to have happened at the incarceration facility.

Dominey was employed at the centre at the time.

The new charges come after four more men came forward in the last month to report allegations of sexual assault at the facility during the same time period, Edmonton police say.

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 Edmonton Anglican priest facing addition sexual assault charges

CANADA
Edmonton Sun

BY OTIENA ELLWAND
FIRST POSTED: TUESDAY, MARCH 08, 2016

An Anglican priest accused of sexually assaulting teenage boys at an Edmonton youth jail in the 1980s faces 17 additional charges after four more complainants came forward to police in the past month.

Edmonton police announced Tuesday that Gordon William Dominey, 63, is now facing a total of 18 sexual assault charges and nine gross indecency charges in relation to incidents that allegedly occurred while he was employed as a priest at the Edmonton Youth Development Centre.

Dominey was initially charged with five counts each of sexual assault and gross indecency in February after two complainants came forward to police in September and then three other alleged victims were identified later.

Those complainants were allegedly abused at the youth centre between 1985 and 1989, when they were between the ages 14 to 17.

Dominey was arrested Feb. 4 in Coquitlam, B.C., and is believed to have lived in British Columbia since 1990. While living there, Dominey was employed as a parish priest.

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.

IN DONNYBROOK, FUTURE OF CRUMBLING MAGDALENE LAUNDRY IS UNCERTAIN

IRELAND
Dublin Inquirer

LOUISA MCGRATH
MARCH 9, 2016

When she arrived at the Donnybrook laundry, Sara was given a number and told to remember it. The number 100. This was her new identity.

In her survivor testimony for Justice for Magdalenes’ (JFM’s) submission to the Inter-Departmental Committee set up to investigate state involvement in the Magdalene laundries, Sara W described the conditions in the Donnybrook laundry between 1954 and 1956, before she was moved to another Magdalene laundry, in Cork.

“At nine o’clock every night you were locked into that cell,” she says. “The windows used to be up very high, like a small little window . . . and I used to climb up the top of the bed to look out.”

“I never seen daylight for two years,” she continues. “The only bit of freedom — we were allowed to walk up and down a place called ‘the bleach’, where they put out the sheets in the summertime, clothes lines and all that. You’d walk up and down there. That was your freedom.”

Sara’s crime? She didn’t commit one.

At 15, she was working at a bed and breakfast. As she recalls it, members of the Legion of Mary promised her a better job and brought her to the Donnybrook Laundry. There, they told her they were putting her in the institution for her own safety.

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Lawsuit: Religious Brother abused boy at Tampa school

FLORIDA
Fox 13

[with video]

By: Evan Lamber, FOX 13 News

TAMPA (FOX 13) – For 40 years, a man named in a new lawsuit as John Doe has been hiding allegations that he was sexually abused as a child at Tampa Catholic school Mary Help of Christians.

The school is now defunct, but the religious order that ran it, the Salesians of Don Bosco, does operate a church on the school’s old property in East Tampa.

The lawsuit filed Tuesday in Hillsborough County names Brother John Casula as the abuser.

Casula was an auto shop teacher and religious leader at the school. He died in 1994.

Casula’s accuser says the abuse began in 1976 when he was 12 and continued for two years. During that time, the accuser says Casula touched and fondled him on nearly 20 separate occasions in a secluded auto shop at the school. The lawsuit alleges the school knew about other abuse allegations against Casula and other brothers or priests, but did not report the abuse and protected the abusers.

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Church defends stance in historic sex abuse inquiry

UNITED KINGDOM
The Argus

Rachel Millard, Reporter

THE Church of England is standing firm over its handling of the George Bell case despite fierce criticism from its former head.

On Monday The Argus reported how the former Archbishop of Canterbury Lord Carey had lambasted the church after it publicly settled a claim of historic sex abuse against Bell and apologised to the victim of the former head of the church in Sussex.

In a letter to Bell’s niece, Lord George Carey said he felt the revered wartime bishop had been denied the right to a fair trial and he was looking for “ways of reopening” the matter.

His intervention was met with resolve from the Church of England on Monday, reiterating its reasons for the way it handled the case.

The spokesman told The Argus: “Where allegations are made against a deceased person, as is the case with Bishop Bell, they are treated seriously and dealt with accordingly, however uncomfortable this may prove, or however high profile the individual may be.

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Catholic Brother raped student at Edmund Rice College in late 1980s: court

AUSTRALIA
Illawarra Mercury

By SHANNON TONKIN
March 9, 2016

A former Catholic Brother has fronted Wollongong court accused of sexually abusing a young male student at Edmund Rice College in the late 1980s.

John Vincent Roberts was a teacher at the prestigious single-sex school when he allegedly repeatedly molested and raped the 12-year-old boy while on school grounds.

Police charge sheets presented in court claim Roberts’ carried out several acts of indecency upon the child, including fondling his penis and anus, and masturbating him.

Roberts is also accused of rubbing his own erect penis over the boy’s body at least twice in an 18 month period.

Police allege Roberts’ sexual attention towards the boy escalated into rape on several occasions.

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Agressions sexuelles sur des scouts: la démission “pas d’actualité” (cardinal Barbarin)

FRANCE
Le Parisien

[Cardinal Phillipe Barbarin, who is being investigated by the court for failing to report a suspect abusive priest, said his resignation is not being considered.]

L’archevêque de Lyon Philippe Barbarin, mis en cause par une association de victimes d’un prêtre pédophile, a indiqué que sa démission n’était “pas une question d’actualité” sans toutefois l’écarter s’il était “fautif” aux yeux de la Justice, dans une interview au Parisien.
“La démission, pour moi, n’est pas une question d’actualité.

Si je suis fautif, si je suis +occasion à scandales+, alors là on verra. La justice va faire son travail”, déclare le cardinal.

“Je porte les souffrances terribles provoquées par ce prêtre”, ajoute le Primat des Gaules, assurant penser “aux victimes tous les jours”.

Le parquet de Lyon a ordonné une enquête préliminaire pour des faits de non-dénonciation et de mise en péril de la vie d’autrui au sujet d’agressions sexuelles commises par le père Bernard Preynat, sur de jeunes scouts lyonnais entre 1986 et 1991 pour lesquelles le religieux a été mis en examen.

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Scandale de pédophilie : le cardinal Barbarin exclut “pour le moment” de démissionner

FRANCE
Metro

[Facing reporters, Cardinal Barbarin defended his not having informed the authorities when he was made aware of the actions of the priest Preynat who is accused to abusing scouts but he said he thinks every day of the victims.]

Dans la tourmente, le cardinal Philippe Barbarin, qui fait face à deux plaintes pour “non-dénonciation” d’un prêtre pédophile, a répondu aux questions du Parisien qui l’a rencontré sur le parvis de la basilique Notre-Dame de Fourvière, à Lyon.

Face aux journalistes, Mgr Barbarin défend le fait de ne pas avoir prévenu les autorités au moment où il a été mis au courant des agissements du père Preynat, le curé des scouts, tout en affirmant penser “tous les jours” aux victimes.

“Si je suis fautif, on verra”

“En 2007, ce sont des bruits qui courent et ce sont des faits très anciens (entre 1986 et 1991, ndlr). Je n’ai vu personne à ce moment-là”, explique l’archevêque de Lyon. “Encore une fois, j’entends dire des choses sur le passé du prêtre, mais c’est tout. ”

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Ballarat Grammar School as ‘proactive as possible’ in handling historical sexual abuse allegations, headmaster says

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Charlotte King

Ballarat Grammar says it has assisted a number of former students to report allegations of historical sex abuse at the school to the police and the child abuse royal commission.

The Anglican school’s headmaster Adam Heath said the school wrote to former students late last year asking them to come forward if they had experienced abuse in the past.

“The school decided to be as proactive as possible,” he said.

“That was really a measure by the school to do everything possible to offer support to any former students who had been subjected to abuse.”

Mr Heath said a number of students had since approached the school, to report instances of abuse relating to the 1970s and early 80s.

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Film Short Cuts: ‘Australia’s Spotlight’ takes on landmark sexual abuse case

AUSTRALIA
WA Today

March 9 2016

Garry Maddox

A film about a landmark sexual abuse case for damages against an Anglican school is shooting in Queensland with an impressive cast headed by Rachel Griffiths, Jack Thompson, Aden Young and Jacqueline McKenzie.

Director Tori Garrett calls Don’t Tell a “riveting” courtroom drama that tells an important story that triggered new regulations and contributed towards the creation of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

“The material is so strong,” Garrett says. “The stuff that we’re talking about in the courtroom is straight from the court transcripts, so it’s all word for word true.”

Don’t Tell is based on a book by lawyer Stephen Roach (Young), who represented a 22-year-old woman known only as Lyndal (Sara West) when she took action against Toowoomba Preparatory School in 2001.

The school had denied she was sexually abused by a boarding house master, played by Gyton Grantley, a decade earlier. As a result of the case the Anglican Archdiocese of Brisbane paid her compensation of more than $800,000.

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Campaigns from the heart

AUSTRALIA
The Age

March 9, 2016

John Warhurst

Personalising political campaigns may not guarantee success but usually enhances the case being made.

Personalised advocacy can be extremely effective in politics. Cardinal George Pell was at the centre of the recent hearing conducted in Rome by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, but it was the Ballarat survivors of church abuse whose personal presence and shocking stories have created added momentum and political pressure for apologies and redress. The survivors were living testimony of the damage inflicted by the abuse. Pell, on the other hand, failed the test of personal empathy.

In other commission hearings into institutional child sex abuse where the passing of time means that there are no surviving personal stories, or where privacy demands that the identity of the victims is hidden from view, the issues can appear much more abstract and so lack the same political impact.

The general point is that personalised advocacy is one of the main characteristics of many of the major social campaigns now crowding the political agenda. Making the political personal may not guarantee success but it usually enhances the political arguments that are being made. Such personalised arguments can put the other side very much on the back foot.

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NY Jewish Scene Abuzz Amid Resignation of Bronx “Sauna” Rabbi

NEW YORK
The Jewish Voice

ANTHONY MARANDETTO

Jonathan Rosenblatt, the modern Orthodox rabbi who found himself at the center of a controversial firestorm at the Riverdale synagogue that he has led for decades, has now announced that he will be stepping down from his post as spiritual leader.

The prominent rabbi of the Riverdale Jewish Center drew harsh rebuke from congregants for taking boys as young as 12 years of age along with young men to join him in naked sauna visits. Reports indicate that during the 1980s and 90s, Rosenblatt, now 59, would engage his young charges in deep discussions about their lives and faith in G-d. The sauna sessions would generally take place after playing squash in the synagogue gym. Rosenblatt would shower with the boys and then enter the sauna or hot tub. While nothing sexually untoward occurred, a 2015 article in the New York Times renewed an ongoing debate as to whether his conduct was appropriate as several of the boys in question, who are now in their 40s had said that Rosenblatt made them feel uncomfortable by looking at their naked bodies and commenting on them.

In 2011, Rosenblatt reached an agreement with the Rabbinical Council of America, which oversees American Orthodox rabbis, to stop taking congregants to the sauna altogether.

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MEDIA RELEASE – SEX ABUSE AND SAFEGUARDING IN THE CATHOLIC ARCHDIOCESE OF CANBERRA AND GOULBURN

AUSTRALIA
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Canberra and Goulburn

[with release download]

Catholic Archbishop of Canberra and Goulburn, Christopher Prowse announces the new Institute for Professional Standards and Safeguarding in the Catholic Archdiocese of Canberra and Goulburn.

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Catholic Church establishes new body to handle abuse complaints in Canberra, Goulburn

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

The Catholic Church has established a new body to handle sexual abuse complaints in the ACT region.

Archbishop Christopher Prowse from the Canberra and Goulburn Archdiocese has launched the Institute for Professional Standards and Safeguarding.

Archbishop Prowse said the move was in response to the recent focus on the church’s responses to child sexual abuse through the royal commission.

“Too many [survivors], regrettably, have spoken of being confronted by a brutal and defensive church governance structure that refused to take responsibility,” Archbishop Prowse said.

“The aim is to support survivors with the reassurance that all our communities are safe, our children and vulnerable people are truly cared for, and the spiritual dimension of all we do is not compromised by unethical and criminal behaviour.”

Archbishop Prowse said the institute would be headed by a lawyer and former senior police officer.

“The manager [Jane Cronan] is a wonderful woman with a legal background, particularly in this area,” he said.

“The director [Matt Casey] is a former senior detective.”

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SNAP says victims ‘suffering in silence’

PENNSYLVANIA
Altoona Mirror

March 9, 2016

By Phil Ray (pray@altoonamirror.com) , The Altoona Mirror

Four representatives of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, known as SNAP, on Tuesday called for an end to the statute of limitations for child sexual abuse offenses and asked the bishops of the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown and other Pennsylvania dioceses to publish the names and photographs of clergy and other employees who have been identified as child predators.

Judy Jones, the assistant director of SNAP’s midwestern office in St. Louis, said, “There are many victims out there suffering in silence.”

SNAP invited area victims to attend a confidential meeting at the Bellwood-Antis Public Library on Tuesday evening. The SNAP representative said the meeting was held to allow victims to discuss the abuse they suffered while being consoled by other victims.

Pam Erdely, who said she was sexually abused at age 17 by a nun at Canevin High School in Pittsburgh, said she joined SNAP because she wanted to “stand in solidarity” with other victims and help them heal as a group.

At first she didn’t realize the magnitude of what had happened to her. She said it took time for her to realize that a crime had been commited and “that it wasn’t my fault.”

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Seattle Archdiocese must release ‘secret’ files on misconduct

WASHINGTON
Seattle Times

By Michael T. Pfau
Special to The Times

THE Catholic Church across America has been mired in scandal for nearly 20 years — since reports of widespread abuse of children by its priests first surfaced. The Seattle Archdiocese is no different.

As an attorney, I have represented hundreds of Catholics who were abused by priests, brothers and lay employees in Seattle and across Washington. My clients have been men and women, young and old, rich and poor, from both stable and troubled families. These survivors of abuse have a unique and important perspective on the actions of the Seattle Archdiocese with regard to how it handles complaints of abuse, and its claims of apology and accountability.

On Jan. 15, the Archdiocese released the names of 77 individuals who it deemed had been credibly accused of sexually abusing children. Almost immediately, survivors of abuse and their advocates began to call on the Seattle Archdiocese to release all of its files pertaining to the 77 abusive priests, nuns and clerics it identified.

The Archdiocese of Seattle maintains files and a “secret archive” regarding abusive priests in its ranks, including many of the 77 individuals it recently identified. Under canon law, which governs the Catholic Church, every bishop and archbishop is required to keep “secret files” that contain information regarding misconduct by his priests. The secret files include information regarding priests who are accused of sexually abusing children, including internal correspondence that often sheds light on how the church allowed the abuse to happen.

Each bishop and archbishop has the authority to make his secret files public. A number have exercised that authority and released the files regarding priests credibly accused of sexually abusing children, including the archbishop of Chicago, who oversees the third largest archdiocese in the United States.

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State grand jury investigation of Altoona-Johnstown Catholic Diocese priests blocked in 2013

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Review

BY BRAD BUMSTED | Tuesday, March 8, 2016

HARRISBURG — A deputy attorney general requested a grand jury investigation of child sexual abuse allegations against Altoona-Johnstown area Catholic priests in January 2013, but superiors turned him down, the Attorney General’s Office said Tuesday.

It was rejected about a year before a grand jury investigation was initiated based on a stronger case referred by Cambria County District Attorney Kelly Callihan, said Chuck Ardo, spokesman for Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane.

Ardo confirmed that Deputy Attorney General Daniel Dye requested a grand jury investigation the month Kane was sworn into office based on a referral late the previous year from Callihan on a case involving child abuse allegations against the Rev. George Koharchik.

He was later called a “child predator” in a grand jury report released last week that found hundreds of victims had been abused by as many as 50 priests over 40 years in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown. No one was charged as a result of expired statutes of limitations, deaths and reluctant witnesses. The grand jury investigation began in April 2014.

“There’s no question” the Attorney General’s Office could have used the 2013 referral from Callihan to launch a grand jury investigation, said Marci Hamilton, a professor at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law in New York City. Why it did not do so remains unclear, she said.

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State lawmakers can afford some justice to sex abuse victims

PENNSYLVANIA
The Intelligencer

Wednesday, March 9, 2016

By State Rep. Thomas P. Murt

First, it was Penn State. Then it was the Archdiocese of Philadelphia. Now, just when you thought that scandals involving the sexual abuse of children couldn’t get any worse, we learn about yet another one.

After a prolonged and extensive investigation, law enforcement professionals have uncovered literally mounds of evidence detailing countless cases of child sexual abuse and a multiyear cover-up by Roman Catholic Church officials in the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown.

The diocese was found to have willingly protected priests who were known child molesters. Through church connections and pathetic public officials, the diocese protected the child-molesting priests from law enforcement and prosecution.

Perhaps the worst crime they committed was never taking subsequent action to protect children from these child-molesting priests. In the diocese, when a priest was found to have sexually abused a child, the normal protocol was to simply move the priest to another parish, offer a cash payment to the family and/or send the offending priest on retreat, only to have him returned to ministry in the future.

The grand jury report reads even more graphic, sickening and disgusting than the grand jury report that concerned the Archdiocese of Philadelphia. If you have the stomach for it, you can find it on the Internet. The link will caution you about the graphic nature of what you are about to read.

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Youngstown Diocese responds to allegations made by Road to Recovery

OHIO
Vindicator

By LINDA M. LINONIS
linonis@vindy.com

YOUNGSTOWN

Monsignor John A. Zuraw, chancellor of the Diocese of Youngstown, responded Tuesday to issues raised by Road to Recovery, a New Jersey-based support group for victims of sexual abuse by priests and other clergy.

Robert Hoatson, support-group president, led a news conference Sunday near diocesan offices that included Barbara Aponte, mother of Luke Bradesky, a student from 1990-94 at John F. Kennedy High School in Warren and a victim of the late Stephen Baker, who abused a group of JFK students.

The Sunday news event was prompted by the release of findings by Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane. That investigation of Altoona-Johnstown Diocese revealed former bishops covered up or didn’t respond to allegations of abuse by more than 50 priests from 1966 to 2011. Baker was implicated in some cases.

Baker was in the religious order of the Third Order Regular Franciscans, the monsignor explained. “Baker was not a diocesan priest under the bishop. He was a religious brother under a local religious superior,” he said. When the religious order’s ranks dwindled, members were reassigned.

“The diocese had no knowledge of Baker’s misbehavior until it learned of the alleged abuse,” Monsignor Zuraw said. In January 2013, letters from the bishop were sent to all students who attended JFK when Baker was a teacher, coach and trainer there seeking information on abuse. And in November 2013, questionnaires went to JFK teachers and staff asking questions on Baker’s behavior and how it might have put youth in danger. The response was that nothing was observed.

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Advocates for sexual-abuse victims want diocese to fire nun

PENNSYLVANIA
Daily Item

By Randy Griffith CNHI News Service

HOLLIDAYSBURG — Supporters of those who were abused by priests kept pressure on Roman Catholic church leadership Tuesday, calling for swift action against those identified in an investigation.

Protestors from the Survivors Network of those Abused By Priests, or SNAP, stood at the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese administration complex to push for changes following last week’s release of a scathing grand jury report by state Attorney General Kathleen Kane.

“We are here because we want Bishop (Mark) Bartchak to fire a nun who was in the grand jury report for being a victims’ advocate,” said Judy Jones, SNAP’s midwest associate director. “It turns out she was more of an advocate for the defense attorneys for the diocese.”

Jones also called for the removal of all members of the diocese Allegations Review Board and for the bishop to work with the attorney general’s office to select replacements on the board.

Jones singled out the Rev. Joseph Byrnes, a board member who refused to answer the grand jury’s questions.

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10 years later: Davenport diocese recovering decade after bankruptcy

IOWA
Quad-City Times

Deirdre Cox Baker dbaker@qctimes.com

When Martin Amos was announced as the eighth bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Davenport, it was two days after the diocese became the fourth in the United States to declare bankruptcy because of clergy abuse lawsuits.

Amos moved to Davenport from Cleveland, Ohio, city of his birth and his home for six decades. Weeks before he moved, he sat with a reporter from the Quad-City Times and promised he would work to promote healing among abuse victims and also to restore financial health to the diocese.

Ten years later, the diocese still is recovering from the bankruptcy, trying to meet the spiritual needs of nearly 100,000 Catholics in the 78-parish diocese that covers 22 counties in the southeast part of Iowa.

Amos knew of the bankruptcy decision before he left Ohio. He accepted the decision “with humility and concern for the survivors of abuse and for the diocese,” according to spokesman, Deacon David Montgomery.

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March 8, 2016

Cardinal Pell and the culture of silence

AUSTRALIA
Eureka Street

Neil Ormerod | 09 March 2016

There was an obvious irony in the timing of Cardinal Pell’s evidence to the royal commission last week, coinciding as it did with the awarding of the Oscar for best film to Spotlight, the searing expose of the Boston Church’s failure in relation to its own sexual abuse crisis.

The Commission put the spotlight on the Cardinal in relation to what he knew and did not know about the multiple cases of sexual abuse in the Ballarat diocese while he was a young priest working there.

This was not the Cardinal’s first evidence to the commission. He has been under considerable scrutiny over the John Ellis case and the Melbourne Response, his own attempt to deal with sexual abuse within the Melbourne Diocese.

The Ellis case in particular was very damaging, with contradictory evidence given by the Cardinal and key figures in his offices about who knew what and when. We are yet to see the findings of the commissioner, Peter McClellan, in relation to that conundrum.

The latest interrogation had a focus on the case of the out-of-control pedophile Gerald Ridsdale. Evidence has been received of person after person who seems to have had some knowledge of Ridsdale’s offending: bishops, priests (one of whom went on to become a bishop), religious and laity.

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New call for NZ church abuse inquiry

NEW ZEALAND
Newshub

[with video]

Survivors and supporters of church sex abuse victims are renewing calls for a Royal Commission into sex abuse throughout New Zealand.

They say Australia is facing up to its past by having an inquiry, and New Zealand should too.

John* still has the scars on his hands where he was hit with a cane by Catholic school teachers.

Now in his early fifties, he also suffers from PTSD and anxiety as he was the victim of sex abuse for six years at Christchurch’s Maryland’s school from the age of six.

John, other survivors and their supporters, are now calling for a Royal Commission into New Zealand’s Catholic Church sex abuse.

Ken Clearwater, from Male Survivors of Sexual Abuse, says he’s been fighting for an independent inquiry since the Boston Globe uncovered huge abuse within the Catholic Church around the world, as seen in Oscar award-winning film Spotlight.

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‘Priest Abused Minor Girl for Several Months’

INDIA
New Indian Express

KOCHI: The Christian priest accused in the Puthenvelikkara rape case exploited his position and sexually abused the minor girl for several months.

The chargesheet in the case, filed before the Special Court for cases related to atrocities and sexual violence against women and children, states that Fr Edwin Figarez, who was priest of the Puthenvelikkara Lourde Matha Church, sexually abused the 14-year-old victim for one-and-half year.

Meanwhile, Ajitha, the government doctor who has been named the fourth accused in the case, was booked under the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act (POCSO Act), in a first of its kind arrest in the State. According to the chargesheet, Ajitha failed to inform the matter to the police after learning about the sexual abuse of the minor girl. The doctor came to know about the crime when the victim along with her mother approached her for treatment, while the former was working at the Puthenvelikkara Community Health Centre.

In addition to Fr Figarez and Dr Ajitha, four others brothers and cousins of the priest have been included as accused on charges of harbouring the offender. Thrissur-native Fr Figarez, 41, had served in the church for about three years. Silvestar Figarez, 58, brother of Fr Figarez, is the second accused, while 54-year-old Stanli Figarez, another brother of the priest, is the third accused. His cousin Bencharin Figarez, 22, is the fifth accused, while relative Clarenz De Coutha, 62, is the sixth accused.

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Clergy abuse report prompts a resignation, banner removal

PENNSYLVANIA
KSL

ALTOONA, Pa. (AP) — A grand jury report that found two former bishops helped cover up the sexual abuse of hundreds of children by more than 50 priests in a Pennsylvania diocese has prompted a sitting judge to resign from a Catholic school board and the current bishop to remove cathedral banners that celebrate former bishops.

Bishops James Hogan and Joseph Adamec, who headed the diocese from 1966 until 2011, were criticized by the report. Hogan died in 2005 and Adamec’s attorney has denied he did anything wrong.

Diocesan spokesman Tony DeGol said Bishop Mark Bartchak ordered the banners removed from the Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament because he “feels this is a time of humility for the diocese and the focus should be on the victims of abuse.”

Meanwhile, Cambria County Judge Patrick Kiniry has resigned from the board of a Catholic high school. The grand jury report said Kiniry, a former prosecutor, helped Hogan transfer an alleged molester rather than pursue criminal charges in 1985. That priest, Francis McCaa, was described as a “monster” who fondled altar boys who were told to go without pants under their cassocks, according to the grand jury.

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Party Hopping With Daisy Ridley and Bryan Cranston

CALIFORNIA
New York Times

The Carpetbagger
By CARA BUCKLEY FEB. 29, 2016

Everyone loves an underdog story, especially a surprise one, and ripples of delight over “Spotlight’s” win for best picture spread out from the Dolby Theater on Sunday night into the after-party beyond.

At the Governors Ball, the first stop for many on the post-Oscars party circuit, there was a discernible hop in many people’s steps — even in the ones who had not won. A relaxed, beaming Bryan Cranston (“Trumbo”) lolled outside the party’s entrance, chatting with Louis C.K., looking wholly unperturbed about losing the best actor Oscar to Leonardo DiCaprio for “The Revenant.” (Mr. Cranston had long acknowledged he wasn’t the favorite to win.) …

Next it was off to the Palihouse in West Hollywood, where the party for “Spotlight” was hitting a delighted fever pitch, so thrilled was everyone there for the film’s victory. The cast was not in attendance, but the writer and director Tom McCarthy was, and he was absolutely over the moon.

Laura Kim, of Participant Media, which produced the film, had just taken Phil Saviano, a survivor of clergy abuse whose story is depicted in “Spotlight,” to the emergency room. Before the Oscars, Mr. Saviano had suffered a blood clot that required he be hospitalized, but, against medical advice, had checked himself out to attend the ceremony, and afterward checked himself back in (reportedly he was faring well).

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Advocacy group hosts protest outside Altoona-Johnstown Diocese

PENNSYLVANIA
WJAC

HOLLIDAYSBURG, Pa.– Exactly one week after a gut-wrenching grand jury report that detailed decades of sexual abuse and a cover-up within the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese, a group rallies to support victims.

Clutching photos of innocent children, a small group rallied outside the diocese in Hollidaysburg asking for change.

“This biggest issue is the cover up and that needs to get stopped in order for kids to get help,” Judy Jones, SNAP’s Midwest associate director said.

The young faces are on photos are important. They are the faces of survivors at the age they were abused. Those in the photos allow SNAP, the Survivor’s Network of those Abused by Priests, show their faces and to tell their story about sexual abuse at the hands of church leaders. For protester Pam Erdely this mission is personal.

“I was sexual abused by a nun in my high school in 1972,” Erdely said.

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Another victim of sexual abuse suing former Tampa Catholic school

FLORIDA
Tampa Tribune

By Keith Morelli | Tribune Staff

PINELLAS PARK — For almost 40 years, a former student at the Mary Help of Christians School in Tampa kept his secret. To tell would have meant a life of shame and an afterlife in hell.

The man, whose name was not released because of the nature of the incidents that happened to him four decades ago, filed a lawsuit as John Doe on Tuesday against the Salesian Society, a Catholic order that operated the boarding school in the East Lake area of Tampa.

He spent his life wondering why he was singled out by Brother John Casula, who died in 1994. All those years the man believed he was the only one who suffered sexual abuse by the ordained brother.

He was only 12 years old at the time and the abuse continued until he was 14.

“This is something that has stayed with me for many years,” he said in the conference room of his attorney Tuesday afternoon.

– See more at: http://www.tbo.com/news/breaking-news/another-victim-of-sexual-abuse-suing-former-tampa-catholic-school-20160308/#sthash.kIi6IvoO.dpuf

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Where Boston’s TV stations Were During the Church Sex Abuse Scandal

MASSACHUSETTS
Huffington Post

Joe Bergantino
Co-founder and executive director of the New England Center for Investigative Reporting

Terry Knopf makes an important point in her article in the Columbia Journalism Review about Boston news coverage of the Catholic Church: for years, many reporters — in print and broadcast media — did not cover the Catholic archdiocese in the same way they covered government or other big institutions. Their reverence and respect for the Catholic religion — in many cases, the religion of their childhood — blinded them to possible wrongdoing inside the institution itself.

But that changed on the first Thursday in May in 1992, 10 years before the Globe’s reporting depicted in the movie Spotlight.

The lead story on WBZ-TV’s six o’clock newscast that night was the I-Team’s investigative report on former priest James Porter. The story revealed that Porter, while a priest in southeastern Massachusetts in the 1960s, had molested large numbers of children, that the Catholic Church moved him from parish to parish knowing that he was a serial pedophile, that the Cardinal at the time was made aware of Porter’s crimes and did little or nothing to stop him, and that even law enforcement had turned a blind eye to Porter’s rampage.

In that story, viewers heard Porter’s voice for the first time. In a recorded phone interview, I asked him how many children he had molested. His answer, without a trace of remorse or emotion: “50 or 60, I guess.” Porter didn’t know that the statute of limitations was frozen the moment he left Massachusetts more than 20 years earlier. In 1993, Porter pleaded guilty to molesting 28 children and spent the rest of his life behind bars.

The I-Team’s May 1992 story unleashed a torrent of local and national coverage focused on Porter and other pedophile priests in Boston. Within days, I, along with investigative producer Paul Toomey, began getting phone calls about other priests including John Geoghan, the priest who was the focus of the Spotlight coverage 10 years later.

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Rev. Sweeney, former St. John’s priest, dies at 88

MASSACHUSETTS
Eagle Tribune

HAVERHILL — The Rev. Frederick Sweeney, the beloved priest who blew the whistle on a fellow clergyman at St. John the Baptist Parish during the Catholic priest sex abuse scandal, has died.

Sweeney died peacefully Sunday, March 6, at Sancta Maria Nursing Facility in Cambridge, according to an obituary posted online by Boyle Brothers Funeral Home in Framingham.

A Worcester native, he was 88.

Sweeney was hailed by many as the priest who, along with the Rev. Dennis Nason of All Saints Parish, forced out former St. John’s Rev. Ronald H. Paquin amid allegations of child sexual abuse.

Nason, the founding pastor of All Saints Parish of Haverhill, died Oct. 4, 2010 at Merrimack Valley Hospice House in Haverhill after a battle with cancer. He was 71.

After pleading guilty in 2002 to raping and molesting an altar boy in Haverhill as many as 50 times from 1989 to 1992, Paquin was sentenced to 12 to 15 years at the Massachusetts Correctional Institution at Cedar Junction in Walpole. He was released last October.

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Ex-Priest Gave Ammunition, Explosive Powder to 17-Year-Old: Prosecutors

CONNECTICUT
NBC Connecticut

By Gabriella Iannetta

A former Connecticut priest plead guilty to providing a teenager with ammunition and explosives powder in 2012, the U.S. attorney’s office said.

Paul Gotta, 58, who was charged with seven counts of sexual assault two years ago, faces up to ten years in prison after pleading guilty to one count of willfully distributing an explosive material to an individual under the age of 21 years old, according to prosecutors.

In 2012, Gotta aided a 17-year-old with purchases thousands of rounds of ammunition and on two occasions purchased two pounds of explosives powder in East Windsor for the same teenager, according to court documents.

Gotta served as administrator of St. Philip Church in East Windsor and St. Catherine Church in Broadbrook until he left in 2012 after being accused of sexual abuse.

Gotta was indicted on six charges including aiding and abetting the unlawful transport of a firearm in interstate commerce, aiding and abetting the possession of a handgun by a juvenile, aiding and abetting the possession of ammunition by a juvenile, distribution of explosive material to an individual under the age of 21, aiding and abetting the attempted manufacture of a pipe bomb, and obstruction of justice but only plead guilty to one charge, prosecutors said.

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Cambria County judge among senior officials who ignored reports of sex abuse in Altoona diocese

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

[with copy of the letter]

By Ivey DeJesus | idejesus@pennlive.com

The letter is dated Sept. 25, 2002.

It was written by an attorney whose clients, all of them victims of sexual molestation and rape at the hands of priests from the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese, were seeking some form of redress – either criminal charges or at the very least an investigation into their allegations.

The letter was addressed to three law enforcement officials: Cambria County District Attorney David Tulowitzki, who today is a county judge; Karen Arnold, then-assistant district attorney in Centre County; and Catherine Miller, then-assistant district attorney in Blair County.

The four-page letter detailed accounts from young men who said they had been molested or abused by six parish priests in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese — some over the span of years. One young man was nine years old and serving as an altar boy at Holy Name Church in Ebensburg when Monsignor Francis McCaa began to molest him. The abuse lasted four years.

Richard Serbin, the attorney who wrote the letter to those three officials, never heard back from them.

Now, 14 years later, a grand jury investigation has found that the preponderance of law enforcement authorities to pass on allegations of clergy sex abuse further enabled more than 50 priests to molest hundreds of children over four decades across the diocese of Altoona-Johnstown.

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PA–Cambria County senior officials ignored reports of clergy sex crimes

PENNSYLVANIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, March 8

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 566 9790, 314 645 5915 home, davidgclohessy@gmail.com)

Cambria County senior officials ignored reports of clergy sex crimes for over a dozen years allowing children to be needlessly placed at risk and we fear dozens upon dozens to be sexually assaulted. Attorney Richard Serbin first wrote county officials in 2002 about young men in six parishes who had been molested.

[PennLive]

Law enforcement could have and should have acted sooner. Call on prosecutors and police to come clean about their complicity in clergy sex crimes and cover-ups and to work harder than ever now to expose wrong doers in every way possible. They should also use their “bully pulpit” to prod more victims, witness and whistleblowers to come forward and try again to report these horrific crimes.

They should join growing chorus of voices pushing for a civil window in Harrisburg allowing cases to move forward on their merits rather than automatically being time barred.

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Lawsuit filed in Tampa documents child sex abuse case at defunct Catholic school

FLORIDA
Tampa Bay Times

Laura C. Morel, Times Staff Writer

TAMPA — A lawsuit claiming that a former student of the now-defunct Mary Help of Christians School was sexually abused by a teacher in the 1970s was filed in Hillsborough Circuit Court on Tuesday.

The case is the latest in a string of several lawsuits filed in the last decade alleging sexual abuse against Mary Help students. The lawsuit names the Salesians of Don Bosco, a religious order of brothers that dedicate their lives to helping children, which ran the boarding school until it closed in 2006.

According to the 26-page complaint, the victim, identified only as John Doe, started attending the boarding school at age 12 in 1976 when he met brother John Casula, the auto shop instructor.

“He was from a single parent family that lived in a very rough neighborhood in Tampa,” the complaint says. “His mother worked long hours and boarded him at the school for his safety, education, and religious training.”

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Scottsdale ex-priest to be extradited to Texas for 1960 death of beauty queen

TEXAS/ARIZONA
Arizona Republic

AP

EDINBURG, Texas – Authorities say an 83-year-old Arizona man accused of killing a Texas teacher and ex-beauty queen when he was a young priest in 1960 is set to be extradited to Texas.

McAllen Police say its officers as well as members of the Texas Department of Public Safety Ranger Service expect to take John Feit into custody on Wednesday in Phoenix and fly him to South Texas. He will be booked into the Hidalgo County Jail in Edinburg.

A news conference is scheduled for 3 p.m. Wednesday in Edinburg after Feit’s return.

Feit was arrested in Scottsdale on Feb. 9 after he was indicted in Hidalgo County for the killing of Irene Garza, a 25-year-old school teacher.

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TX–Ted Cruz gives role to “victim hater” – Victims respond

TEXAS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, March 8, 2016

Ted Cruz gives role to “victim hater”
He appointed clergyman to advisory board
That minister called a support group “evil-doers”
“They’re just as reprehensible as sex criminals,” TX preacher said
He heads Ft. Worth seminary and has been a national Baptist official

A presidential hopeful has named a prominent Baptist minister to an advisory board even though the clergyman once called a support group for clergy sex abuse victims “evil-doers.”

[Baptist News]

Texas Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) has tapped Paige Patterson, president of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Ft. Worth, to the candidate’s Religious Liberty Advisory Council, despite Patterson’s calling the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) “just as reprehensible as sex criminals.”

The appointment came in the same week that “Spotlight” won two Oscars, including “Best Picture.” The film shows how SNAP played a helpful role in exposing more than 250 child molesting Boston area clerics.

“Patterson made a hurtful, mean-spirited and Trump-like effort to bully suffering victims into staying silent,” said SNAP director David Clohessy. “To equate child molesters to child sex abuse victims may be most vicious comparison possible.”

“In our 27 years, we’ve been insulted often, but virtually never with such vitriol from such a prominent and purportedly ‘Godly’ man like Patterson,” Clohessy said.

[Stop Baptist Predators]

At the time of Patterson’s remarks, SNAP had raised questions about his actions in the child sex abuse case of Darrell Gilyard, “a pastor whom Patterson had mentored,” according to Christa Brown of StopBaptistPredators.org. “By the time Gilyard was convicted on child sex charges in Florida, over forty young women and underage teens had made allegations against him. According to the Dallas Morning News, many of those claims had been reported directly to Patterson, but to no avail,” Brown wrote.

Cruz should reverse himself and oust Patterson from his panel, SNAP maintains.

Clohessy also urged victims of Baptist child molesters to ignore Patterson’s “self-serving sentiments” and speak up so that “kids will be safer and cover ups will be prevented.”

“We urge every single person who saw, suspected or suffered child sex crimes and cover ups in Baptist churches or institutions – especially at Patterson’s Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary – to protect kids by calling police, get help by calling therapists, expose wrongdoers by calling journalists, get justice by calling attorneys, and get comfort by calling support groups like ours. This is how kids will be safer, adults will recover, criminals will be prosecuted and cover ups will be deterred and the truth will surface.

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Bishop reminds Pennsylvania Catholics that God’s mercy trumps sin

PENNSYLVANIA
Catholic Philly

BY CATHOLIC NEWS SERVICE

HOLLIDAYSBURG, Pa. (CNS) — Reminding people that God’s everlasting mercy “will always be greater than any sin,” Bishop Mark L. Bartchak of Altoona-Johnstown called upon parishioners to find peace in God as the diocese deals with the fallout of a grand jury report detailing hundreds of incidents of clergy sexual abuse.

“God has not abandoned us, nor will God forget any of us at this time or at any time,” he said in a letter to the diocese that was read at Masses the weekend of March 5-6.

The letter recalled the story of the prodigal son, the Gospel reading for weekend, in urging parishioners to remain faithful and not to abandon the church.

“No matter how much God experiences the heartache of a father, God our heavenly father keeps watching out for his children, even those who are separated from him and his church,” the letter said.

Bishop Bartchak said he had heard from people who felt betrayed and were considering leaving the Catholic Church in the days after the grand jury report was released March 1 by Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen G. Kane. He stressed, however, that embracing mercy is the call of God as Pope Francis teaches.

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Oklahoma Missionary Accused of Raping Children at African Orphanage Sentenced to 40 Years in Prison

OKLAHOMA
KTLA

An Oklahoma missionary who volunteered at a children’s home in Kenya was sentenced to 40 years in prison Monday for sexually assaulting three girls and a boy while working at the facility, according to court documents.

Matthew Lane Durham, 21, was sentenced to four decades in prison by Judge David L. Russell on four counts of “engaging in illicit sexual conduct in foreign places,” according to court documents.

“In a span of just 33 days,” prosecutors wrote to the court, Durham “raped three girls — ages 5, 9 and 15 — at least eight times. During that same time period, he sexually molested a 12-year-old boy twice.”

The prosecutors said that Durham “not only forcefully sexually abused these children,” but “he psychologically damaged them by taking advantage of their trust he received from the children.”

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Predator missionaries: Matthew Durham and Jordan Root

OKLAHOMA
Watch Keep

Oklahoma missionary Matthew Durham sentenced to 40 years in prison for raping children at African orphanage

Matthew Lane Durham, 21, was sentenced to four decades in prison by Judge David L. Russell on four counts of “engaging in illicit sexual conduct in foreign places,” according to court documents.
“In a span of just 33 days,” prosecutors wrote to the court, Durham “raped three girls — ages 5, 9 and 15 — at least eight times. During that same time period, he sexually molested a 12-year-old boy twice.”

The region of the eastern African nation that Durham volunteered in has also been shaken, prosecutors say.

In a sentencing memorandum to the court in February, they wrote that Durham’s actions “have had a chilling effect on the lives of dozens of foreign volunteers in Kenya and elsewhere who must now live under the cloud of suspicion … there is a real perception among Upendo’s local Kenyan community that more pedophiles lurk among the volunteers, especially the male volunteers.”

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NJ–New bishop should put cleric in treatment center

NEW JERSEY
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, March 8, 2016

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 566 9790, 314 645 5915 home, davidgclohessy@gmail.com

A new bishop has been picked to head the Metuchen diocese (where there are at least 13 publicly accused predator priests). We are not optimistic about his handling of child sex abuse and cover up cases.

http://www.bishop-accountability.org/AtAGlance/lists.htm

Msgr. James Checchio has been in Rome for at least a decade. Sadly, the mindset of most Catholic officials in Rome, when it comes to the safety of children, is distressing.

We have seen no evidence that Checchio has done or said anything noteworthy to protect kids and deter cover ups by exposing those who commit or conceal heinous crimes against children.

The last two heads of the seminary which Checchio, now-Cardinals Edwin O’Brien and Timothy Dolan, have been anything but open and compassionate about this continuing crisis.

So we are disappointed in Checchio’s promotion.

Roughly 30 US bishops have posted predator priests’ names on their websites. Sadly, Metuchen is not one of them. We hope this will be Checchio’s first move in Metuchen.

His second move, we hope, will be to put a New Jersey Catholic cleric who was just charged with having and watching child porn into a treatment center.

Br. John B. Spalding is accused of endangering the welfare of a child and possession and viewing of pornographic material, primarily child pornography. He’ll soon return to Rhode Island, where he’s from. That’s wrong. His Catholic supervisors should insist he live far away in a professionally run facility so kids will be safer. Why let him live among unsuspecting families and vulnerable children?

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MO–Victims back filibuster of “religious freedom” law

MISSOURI
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, March 8, 2016

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

The dispute over these so-called “religious objection” laws – here and elsewhere – involves more than adults with differing beliefs. It also involves innocent young kids and wounded adult victims who suffer when claims of “religious freedom” are used to protect clerics who commit and conceal heinous child sex crimes.

[New York Times]

Time and time again, in civil courts across the US, unscrupulous church officials cite Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) laws to block child sex abuse lawsuits and prevent records about child molesting clerics from being disclosed. These self-serving church officials – fixated on protecting their careers, comfort and reputations – exploit these laws to make sure their reckless and callous decisions to hire, promote, transfer and protect child predators are not exposed or scrutinized.

We urge every lawmaker to resist pressure to vote for these bills. We applaud the legislators who are filibustering now in Missouri. And we urge judges to help make sure that these laws don’t help corrupt church officials keep hiding their complicity in child sex crimes.

Remember: In the US, we adults are free to believe whatever we want. But we’re not free to do whatever we want, especially when the safety of precious children and vulnerable adults is at stake.

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Suspect in 1960 Murder Expected to Arrive in RGV Tomorrow

TEXAS
KRGV

MCALLEN – McAllen police and DPS troopers are expected to travel to Arizona to take custody of a suspect in a 1960 murder case as early as tomorrow.

John Feit is accused of killing Irene Garza. She was last seen on April 16, 1960 at Sacred Heart Church in McAllen. Her body was found five days later. Feit was a priest at the time.

A grand jury indicted him in the murder last month. (Related Link: Ex-Priest Arrested for 1960 Murder)

Feit currently lives in Arizona. He waived his right to an extradition hearing.

Once Feit arrives in Hidalgo County, he’ll be booked into the Hidalgo County jail, pending his arraignment. Hidalgo County officials are planning a press conference for tomorrow at 3 p.m.

For now, Feit is being held at the Lower Buckeye Jail in Arizona.

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Former priest scheduled for extradition in Irene Garza murder case

TEXAS
Valley Central

Former Priest John Feit — the man long suspected of killing McAllen beauty queen Irene Garza — may return to McAllen on Wednesday to face the murder charge against him.

Investigators plan to take custody of Feit on Wednesday, according to news releases from the McAllen Police Department and Hidalgo County District Attorney’s Office.

District Attorney Ricardo Rodriguez, Sheriff Eddie Guerra and McAllen police Chief Victor Rodriguez plan to hold a news conference 3 p.m. Wednesday at the Hidalgo County Courthouse.

Irene Garza vanished on April 16, 1960, after driving to Sacred Heart Catholic Church in McAllen for confession. Days later, volunteers pulled her body from an irrigation canal.

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150 calls made to Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown hotline established by Attorney General’s office

PENNSYLVANIA
Attorney General Kathleen G. Kane

3/8/2016

HARRISBURG — Attorney General Kathleen G. Kane today announced approximately 150 calls have been made in the last week to a hotline established for people to provide information relating to the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown.

The hotline — 888-538-8541 — is being manned by investigators who worked directly on the Office of Attorney General’s two-year investigation of the Diocese.

That investigation included the use of a statewide investigating grand jury. After reviewing evidence and testimony, the grand jury issued a 147-page report that detailed the sexual abuse hundreds of children endured over a period of at least 40 years. Dozens of religious leaders and priests assigned to the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown were responsible for the abuse and some were instrumental in covering it up, the grand jury found.

“The victims need to be heard,” Attorney General Kane said. “In many cases, they have waited years to speak about the abuse they suffered. We want to assure them that they will be taken seriously.”

The hotline went live last week on the same day that Attorney General Kane released the grand jury’s report. The hotline is being manned from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.

Many calls have been placed by victims, including numerous senior citizens, who had yet to speak with investigators. Many stated they were abused by religious leaders associated with the Diocese. Their calls have further confirmed the findings in the grand jury’s report.

Investigators answering the calls also are working to connect victims with counseling and therapy assistance. Investigators have encouraged victims to contact the Pennsylvania Coalition Against Rape, which works to put victims in touch with counseling and therapy services.

PCAR maintains a statewide listing of service providers for victims of sexual abuse and domestic violence. Victims also are encouraged to call 888-772-7227 to find a local rape crisis center.

None of the criminal conduct outlined in the grand jury’s report can be prosecuted at this time. That is because of the statute of limitations being expired, abusers being deceased or because traumatized victims are unable to testify in a court of law.

Nonetheless, Attorney General Kane stressed the investigation of this matter is ongoing. The Attorney General’s investigators will pursue new investigative leads as they become available.

One call could change everything,” Attorney General Kane said. “The right information could create a new lead for our investigators. That is why it is so important for those with information to reach out to us.”

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Hotline for Altoona-Johnstown diocese abuse gets 150 calls in first week

PENNSYLVANIA
ABC 27

By Myles Snyder
Published: March 8, 2016

HARRISBURG, Pa. (WHTM) – The state attorney general’s office says it has received about 150 calls since the release of a grand jury report that found widespread child sexual abuse in the Altoona-Johnstown diocese.

Attorney General Kathleen Kane’s office said many of the calls to a hotline established last week were from victims, including numerous senior citizens previously unknown to investigators.

Kane’s office said many callers reported they were abused by religious leaders associated with the diocese.

The grand jury’s 147-page report alleges hundreds of children were abused by priests and other religious leaders assigned to the diocese for at least 40 years, and that two former bishops worked to cover up the crimes.

Kane said last week that none of the crimes in the grand jury’s report can be prosecuted, partly because of the state law that sets a time limit on filing most criminal charges.

However, she said the investigation is ongoing and prosecutors will pursue new leads as they become available.

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150 hotline calls after Altoona priest abuse report

PENNSYLVANIA
York Daily Record

Brandie Kessler, bkessler@ydr.com March 8, 2016

In the week since a grand jury report detailed decades of sexual abuse in the Altoona-Johnstown diocese, about 150 calls from victims and others have been made to a hotline, according to Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane’s office.

“We’re getting calls from all over the country,” said Chuck Ardo, spokesman for the office. People from as far as California have called. He noted that the calls have mostly come from victims of sexual abuse who have a connection to the Altoona-Johnstown diocese and who have moved out of the area.

He said none of those calls that he knew of came from people saying they were abused within the Harrisburg diocese, which includes, York, Adams, Franklin and Lebanon counties, among others.

Many of the people are elderly, Ardo said, so the statute of limitations for them has expired. Still, their calls are important. It broadens the office’s investigation, which is ongoing, he said.

And, victims who call are put in touch with services.

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150 calls made to Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown hotline established by AG’S Office

PENNSYLVANIA
PA Homepage

By Eyewitness News | enews@pahomepage.com, Jayne Ann Bugda | jbugda@pahomepage.com

Published 03/08 2016

HARRISBURG, DAUPHIN COUNTY (WBRE/WYOU) A special hotline received more than 150 calls since last week’s report of alleged sexual abuse by priests in a Central Pennsylvania Diocese.

According to a grand jury report, many of those calls are from victims themselves.

Attorney General Kathleen Kane announced on Tuesday the fallout continues after the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown was cited in a grand jury repor

The investigation detailed hundreds of cases of abuse over the past four decades.

Members of the “Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests” (SNAP) are also lending their support to victims today.

They plan to rally this afternoon outside the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese headquarters.

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Child sex abuse: do Pa. laws thwart prosecution?

PENNSYLVANIA
WITF

Written by Brandie Kessler, York Daily Record | Mar 8, 2016

(Undated) — When a grand jury last week issued a report alleging child sexual abuse over four decades by more than 50 priests in the Altoona-Johnstown diocese, the grand jury said Pennsylvania’s statutes of limitations for child sex crimes needs to change.

Although the abuse alleged in the grand jury report included rape of a child and other alleged acts by priests, a news release from the attorney general’s office said none of the criminal acts can be prosecuted, in part because the statute of limitations has passed.

In Pennsylvania, the statute of limitations for criminal and civil charges vary. For criminal charges, a victim of child sexual abuse who turned 18 years old after Aug. 27, 2002, has until their 50th birthday to report the abuse. The statute of limitations for anyone who had their 18th birthday on or before Aug. 27, 2002, has already expired, since the law allows them to report only until their 30th birthday.

For civil charges, child victims have only until their 30th birthday to file, regardless of when the abuse occurred.

Advocates say that’s a problem for a number of reasons.

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Catholic Church ‘faces governance change’

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

MARCH 8, 2016

Tessa Akerman
Reporter
Melbourne

The child sex abuse royal commission is likely to recommend changes to Catholic Church governance and canon law to target vulnerabilities exposed by the hearings in the Ballarat diocese, an academic says.

La Trobe University lecturer Timothy Jones said there could be room for further changes ­regarding mandatory reporting and oversight of bishops. “There was no simple recourse when a bishop wasn’t willing to act,” he said. “I think one of the biggest problems that emerged was the lack of review of bishops’ decisions, but also a sort of secrecy with which matters of that kind are supposed to be held which is at the heart of protecting abusers.

“(It’s) enshrined in canon law; until there’s strong evidence of an offence, a priest’s reputation is privileged.”

The inquiry heard evidence in Ballarat that then bishop Ronald Mulkearns knew of offending priests and moved them between parishes without calling police.

Mr Jones said there had been a greater centralisation in the church in recent decades and an increase in Vatican authority.

Serious crimes are now referred to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, which instructs bishops on how to act.

Western Sydney priest John Doherty said canon law had been updated in 2001, so that an ­accusation against a cleric must be referred to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith after a preliminary investigation by the bishop’s appointee.

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Opinion: End statute of limitations on child sex abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
Philly.com

MARCH 8, 2016

by Helen W. Mallon

Just days after the Oscar for Best Picture went to Spotlight, the movie detailing how the Boston Globe pursued the child sexual-abuse scandal and cover-up by the local archdiocese, a similar story was reported out of Western Pennsylvania. A grand jury investigation into the Archdiocese of Altoona-Johnstown revealed that hundreds of children were sexually abused by priests over a span of 40 years. And, once again, church officials were accused of participating in a massive cover-up.

It’s mind-numbing. But this problem isn’t limited to the institutionally sanctioned abuse within the Catholic Church. You may not realize it, but someone you see on a daily basis may have been sexually traumatized as a child. The National Child Traumatic Stress Network reports that “as many as one out of four girls and one out of six boys will experience some form of sexual abuse before the age of 18.” Most of these victims will later lead ordinary, private lives as adults. But others will be known only by their destructive coping mechanisms or psychiatric diagnoses, their histories obscured by outrageous behavior. And still other victims will become lightning rods for speaking out.

Most child sexual abuse is done by someone the victim knows and trusts, someone who is already an integral part of the victim’s family or community. It can be an enormous challenge for parents when someone they hold in high regard — perhaps a beloved family member — is linked to such a heinous crime. Children, especially young ones, don’t make this stuff up, but to collude in silencing a child is a simple matter. Facing the truth and seeking justice can be psychologically devastating and legally complicated, fracturing once-solid relationships.

As Spotlight attests, most perpetrators are not the suspicious, antisocial losers we want them to be. This crime thrives behind a wholesome public persona — witness former Penn State coach Jerry Sandusky.

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Hotline Receives 150 Calls Related to Report of Abuse by Priests

PENNSYLVANIA
StateCollege.com

About 150 calls have been made to a hotline to report information related to abuse by religious leaders in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese, Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane said today.

The phone line, manned by investigators from the attorney general’s office, was established last week when a 147-page grand jury report was released detailing child sexual abuse by dozens of priests over at least 40 years and allegedly concealed by diocese leaders. The report included priests who served at State College and Bellefonte churches.

“The victims need to be heard,” Kane said. “In many cases, they have waited years to speak about the abuse they suffered. We want to assure them that they will be taken seriously.”
Kane said many of the calls have been placed by individuals who had not previously spoken with investigators and said they were abused by religious leaders in the diocese. Numerous calls were from senior citizens.

The hotline — 888-538-8541 — is answered by investigators from 8 a.m.-9 p.m.

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Casos de abuso sexual en escuela católica conmocionan a España

ESPANA
Nacion

[Three professors of the Catholic Congregation of the Marist in Barcelona confessed to sexually abusing his students, one of the biggest scandals of pedophilia in this country which is unaccustomed to such cases.]

Barcelona. AFP. Tres profesores de la Congregación católica de los Maristas en Barcelona confesaron haber abusado sexualmente de sus alumnos, en uno de los mayores escándalos de pederastia en este país, poco acostumbrado a dichos casos.

“No sé por qué razón lo hice (…). Era como un juego de críos”, confesó a una de sus víctimas uno de los docentes, en un video grabado con cámara oculta y difundido este lunes por el diarioEl Periódico de Cataluña.

Según el relato de la víctima, no desmentido por el presunto agresor, esta fue violada en decenas de ocasiones en los años 80, cuando él tenía entre 8 y 14 años. Los hechos ocurrieron en la Escuela Marista Sants-Les Corts, epicentro del escándalo.

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Pedofilia, prete condannato a 7 anni dal tribunale. Ma nel processo canonico la Chiesa vuole chiedere l’assoluzione

ITALIA
Il Fatto Quotidiano

[Father Luciano Massaferro was sentenced to seven years in prison for abusing minors but the Vaticans wants to give him absolution and assign him as chaplain in a convent.]

Il 29 dicembre 2009 don Luciano Massaferro, conosciuto come don “Lu”, parroco della chiesa di San Vincenzo di Alassio, comune in provincia di Savona, fu arrestato con l’accusa di aver compiuto abusi su una minorenne, chierichetta della Chiesa. Dopo essere stato condannato definitivamente a 7 anni e 8 mesi di carcere, il sacerdote avrebbe dovuto lasciare la cella nell’estate del 2017 ma grazie agli sconti per buona condotta è uscito quasi un anno e mezzo prima. In totale ha scontato 3 anni in carcere e 1 anno ai domiciliari dopodiché è stato affidato in prova ai servizi sociali.

I giudici, fino alla Cassazione, lo hanno riconosciuto colpevole, ma per don Lu i processi non sono finiti: manca l’ultima sentenza, quella del processo canonico. In caso di assoluzione il sacerdote potrà tornare a fare il prete, a tutti gli effetti. Secondo quanto riportato dal Secolo XIX, l’ipotesi più accreditata è proprio quest’ultima: monsignor Guglielmo Borghetti, infatti, ai collaboratori avrebbe detto che “si va verso l’assoluzione“. Il vescovo coadiutore di Albenga, scelto a gennaio dello scorso anno da Papa Francesco dopo i gravi e numerosi scandali all’interno della diocesi ligure, secondo il quotidiano genovese, ha promesso a “don Lu” anche un alloggio e un lavoro in caso di assoluzione. Così presto il sacerdote potrà riprendere la sua vita così com’era prima della condanna. L’intenzione della Curia sarebbe quella di farlo diventare cappellano in un convento.

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PEDOFILIA, I FANTASMI DI BERGOGLIO

ITALIA
Rete L’Abuso

[Don Mauro Inzoli, leading member of Communion and Liberation, is accused of abuse of eight children but the Vatican continues to be opaque on the issue.]

Via al processo a don Mauro Inzoli, esponente di spicco di Comunione e liberazione, accusato di violenze su otto bambini. Ma il Vaticano continua a essere poco trasparente

di Federico Tulli

Ricordate don Mauro Inzoli? Sebbene a giugno 2014 fosse stato «invitato» dalla Congregazione per la dottrina della fede «a una vita di preghiera e di umile riservatezza, come segni di conversione e di penitenza» per gli «abusi su minori» affidati alla sua cura, il 17 gennaio 2015 fu immortalato sorridente al convegno organizzato dalla Regione Lombardia per tutelare i valori «della famiglia tradizionale». L’ex parroco di Crema, esponente di spicco di Comunione e liberazione, fondatore del Banco Alimentare e dell’Associazione della fraternità, si godeva lo spettacolo in seconda fila. Davanti a lui sedevano il governatore Roberto Maroni e il predecessore, Roberto Formigoni, di cui, Inzoli, si dice sia stato il confessore. Condannato – si fa per dire – dalla Santa Sede «alla pena medicinale perpetua» per lo Stato italiano era un uomo libero. Il 9 marzo le cose potrebbero cambiare.

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“Don Dino ha avuto rapporti con minori”

ITALIA
Tuscia Web

[“Don Dino has had intercourse with minors”]

Roma – Non solo foto hard, don Dino ha anche avuto rapporti con minori. Il tribunale del Riesame conferma le ipotesi della procura di Roma, secondo quanto riportato dal quotidiano “Il Tempo” di Roma.

L’ex parroco di Montecalvello, al secolo Placido Greco, era stato arrestato lo scorso maggio nell’inchiesta sul giro di baby prostituti della stazione Termini nell’operazione Meeting point (L’arresto di don Dino: video 1 – video 2).

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Aufklärung möglichen Mißbrauchs

DEUTSCHLAND
Kloster St. Benedikt Damme

Presseerklärung der Abtei Münsterschwarzach und des Priorats Damme: Im Jahr 2014 erfuhr die in der Abtei Münsterschwarzach seit 2003 bestehende Arbeitsgruppe zur Aufarbeitung und Prävention sexueller Gewalt von Hinweisen, dass es in den Jahren 1966 bis 1974 im Bereich des Internats Damme zu Fehlverhalten durch einen Pater gekommen sei. Die Rede war von Grenzverletzungen sowie möglichem sexuellen Missbrauch. Da der Pater bereits verstorben war, konnte er selbst nicht mehr dazu befragt werden. Mitbrüder, die damals im Internat Damme tätig waren, konnten die Hinweise nicht bestätigen. Auch der mehrfache Kontakt mit ehemaligen Schülern erbrachte keine verwertbaren Verdachtsmomente.

vergrößern

m Rahmen eines Treffens mit ehemaligen Internatsschülern von Damme im November 2015 konkretisierte sich der Verdacht gegen den Pater. Betroffene oder Zeugen eines massiven Fehlverhaltens oder Missbrauchs durch den Pater haben sich bislang jedoch bei uns nicht gemeldet.

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Missbrauchsverdacht: Orden schreibt Ex-Schüler an

DEUTSCHLAND
NDR

[In order to determine whether pupils of a Catholic boarding school were abused in Damme (Vechta County) in the 60s and 70s, the Benedictine Order has decided on an unusual step. A letter has been sent to all former students of the now closed school regarding abuse from 1966 to 1974 by a certain priest. The alumni are asked to report possible abuse.]

Um zu klären, ob in den 60er- und 70er-Jahren Schüler eines katholischen Internats in Damme (Landkreis Vechta) missbraucht wurden, hat sich der Benediktiner-Orden zu einem ungewöhnlichen Schritt entschlossen. Er ist für die mittlerweile geschlossene Schule zuständig und hat nun allen ehemaligen Schülern einen Brief geschickt, die zwischen 1966 und 1974 von einem bestimmten Pater misshandelt worden sein könnten. Darin werden sie aufgefordert, einen möglichen Missbrauch zu melden.

Möglicher Täter ist verstorben

“Das ist ein ungewöhnlicher Schritt, den wir so das erste Mal tun”, sagte dazu der Missbrauchs-Beauftragte des Ordens im bayerischen Münsterschwarzach, Pater Christoph Gerhard. Anlass für diesen Schritt seien Gerüchte, denen der Orden bereits seit zwei Jahren nachgehe, ohne konkrete Hinweise oder Namen von Betroffenen erhalten zu haben. Man wolle Aufklärung, auch, um mit den Betroffenen über Formen der Hilfe und Unterstützung zu reden, sagte Pater Christoph. Der mögliche Täter, der damals das Internat in Damme aufgebaut hat, kann nicht mehr zur Verantwortung gezogen werden – er ist bereits vor elf Jahren gestorben.

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Clergy abuse report prompts fallout, victims’ protest

PENNSYLVANIA
Washington Times

ALTOONA, Pa. (AP) – A grand jury report saying two former bishops helped cover up the sexual abuse of hundreds of victims by more than 50 priests is continuing to cause fallout in a central Pennsylvania diocese.

Members of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests plan a rally outside diocesan offices on Tuesday afternoon.

Meanwhile, Bishop Mark Bartchak has ordered banners of all former bishops removed from the diocese’s Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament. Bishops James Hogan and Joseph Adamec, who headed the diocese from 1966 until 2011, were criticized by the report. Hogan died in 2005 but Adamec’s attorney has denied he did anything wrong.

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RJC Announces the Sauna Rabbi’s Resignation

NEW YORK
Frum Follies

Last night the Board of the Riverdale Jewish Center met and then sent an email to members announcing the resignation of Rabbi Jonathan Rosenblatt. This follows a week of uncertainty as reported last week by Gary Rosenblatt (no relation) in the New York Jewish Week (‘Sauna’ Rabbi Stepping Down; Or Is He?/ Riverdale leader’s surprise statement unclear about intentions and timing.)

The Rabbi has been a source of controversy for years because he regularly took underage minors to saunas gawking at their naked bodies while talking to them at length. His conduct finally erupted into public view when the New York Times reported on the controversy.

At first the board voted to seek an end to his employment but the executive committee overrode the board. This led to an exodus of many members some of whom formed a new prayer group. Membership is down and the RJC is suffering financially. The impact was felt by the board when the new dues year started on January 1. I suspect the shortfall, rather than moral considerations drove the board to reverse course and seek Rosenblatt’s resignation.

It is not clear if this measure will be enough to placate disaffected members. While Rosenblatt will not have any official role going forward according to the email message (i.e., he is not being made rabbi emeritus) the letter does not censure him in any way and speaks of him still being welcome.

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Support group for victims of alleged Priest abuse set to meet tonight

PENNSYLVANIA
We Are Central PA

Bellwood, Blair County, Pa.

Nearly a week after a devastating Grand Jury report revealed decades of sexual abuse, covered up within the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese, groups are coming together to help victims.

Tonight in Blair County will be a self-help group for victims to attend.

The group organizing the meeting is called SNAP which stands for “Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests”.

Victims, family members, and supporters are welcome to attend from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. in the Antis Public Library in Bellwood.

Based in Chicago, SNAP was founded in 1988 and now has nearly 30,000 members.

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Rabbi Blau on Why the SOL Should Be Extended -From the Archives

NEW YORK
Frum Follies

First posted on 3/8/13

Text of Statement to Hearings of the New York State Assembly, Committee on Sexual Abuse, March 8, 2013 by Rabbi Yosef Blau, mashgiach ruchani (spiritual adviser) at the Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary (RIETS) of Yeshiva University. The Committee hearing were devoted to the Child Sex Abuse Act (CSA) to extend the Statute of Limitations for filing criminal and civil cases beyond the current limit of age 23. The CSA is also know as the Markey Bill after its sponsor, Assemblywoman Margaret Markey.

Thank you for giving me this opportunity to speak on behalf of survivors of abuse who suffer from the present statute of limitation; this statute prevents them from starting criminal and civil proceedings against their abuser and those who covered up and protected him.

My name is Rabbi Yosef Blau. For more than two decades I have been supporting and advocating for survivors of abuse, particularly within the Orthodox Jewish community. During these years my understanding of the trauma and its ongoing consequences has grown from conversations with the survivors and reading the literature. Most of the people who have contacted me are adults who are first confronting abuse that occurred during their childhood.

Twenty three and a half years ago I was part of a rabbinical court that dealt with an accusation of slander. A young man accused a rabbi [Boruch Lanner], who worked as an educator and youth leader, of sexually abusing teenagers; that rabbi sued the young man. Naively we restricted testimony to events that had taken place during the last ten years. Few victims came forward and they found it difficult to testify. Soon after, I received a number of letters from survivors clearly describing acts of abuse done to them by this rabbi fifteen and twenty years earlier. Only as adults, having had extensive therapy and in many cases a supportive spouse, were they able to openly confront their abuser. When they were adolescents he seemed all-powerful.

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Vatican officials face prosecution in France over failure to report sex abuse priest to police

FRANCE
National Secular Society (UK)

08 Mar 2016 13:25

Vatican officials face prosecution in France over failure to report sex abuse priest to police

Senior Vatican officials are facing investigation in France over the “non-reporting of crime” and endangering lives, following allegations that clerical sex abuse was not reported to the police.

Father Bernard Preynat was indicted in January 2016 for the alleged abuse of Scouts between 1986 and 1991 and admitted that he sexually abused young Scouts in 1986-1991 in the group which he had run for twenty years.

Prosecutors have now ordered an investigation into senior figures over their “failure to report a crime” after Preynat’s victims said top officials in the Catholic diocese of Lyon, including its Archbishop Cardinal Philippe Barbarin, had failed to report the priest to the police, as required under French law.

In addition, Preynat’s own lawyer told the judge that “the facts had been known by the church authorities since 1991”.

According to AFP, the Vatican had earlier given Cardinal Barbarin its backing, saying it had confidence he would deal with the matter “with great responsibility”. A source close to the cardinal claimed, “Cardinal Barbarin … quite rightly suspended Father Preynat after meeting a first victim and taking advice from Rome, and this, even before a first official complaint was made”.

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‘He was a monster’: how priest child abuse tore apart Pennsylvania towns

PENNSYLVANIA
The Guardian (UK)

Joanna Walters in Ebensburg, Pennsylvania
@Joannawalters13
Tuesday 8 March 2016

One of Brian Gergely’s fellow altar boys had a code he would use to signal danger in the room where they and the priest prepared for mass.

“He would say ‘red buttons’, and that was the alert that the priest was coming up behind you, and we would try to get away from him, running around the desk in the middle of the room where he kept the chalices, the host and the wine,” said Gergely, 46.

Gergely was 10 at the time.

The priest was Monsignor Francis McCaa, a commanding figure in the small Pennsylvania town of Ebensburg in his black cassock with the red buttons, and one of dozens of Catholic leaders named in a devastating report issued last week by a state grand jury detailing appalling child sex abuse in his diocese and a systematic cover-up by the church.

“I was standing in the sacristy and he pinned me to the desk. I was just a little guy,” Gergely said. McCaa assaulted him there and also while the boy gave confession, at the Holy Name church where his family worshipped.

“My parents were patrons,” Gergely said. “They were going door to door raising money for the church. The community put Monsignor McCaa on a pedestal.”

Other priests named in the report worked in the past at the school, where Gergely recalls being subjected to tough corporal punishment.

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PA–Victims blast Altoona Catholic officials

PENNSYLVANIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Victims blast Altoona Catholic officials
Bishop should fire a nun and his abuse advisors
Grand jury showed “victims advocate” is a sham
SNAP: “Saying ‘sorry’ is wrong without clear changes”
Group wants outreach about “sadistic yet ignored teacher”
And victims say Bartchak’s letter on Sunday was “pure public relations”

WHAT:
Holding signs and childhood photos, clergy sex abuse survivors and their supporters will demand that Altoona’s Catholic bishop

–fire a nun and his abuse panel,
–work with the Attorney General to pick replacements, and
–disclose more about a high school librarian who is named in last week’s grand jury report – but has been ignored by news media even though he downloaded “hundreds of pages of violent child rape stories and chats” and was on the job for eight years.

They will also urge the bishop to

–move quickly in posting predators’ name on his diocesan and church websites,
–include their photos, whereabouts and work histories, and

And the group will urge any who saw, suspected or suffered clergy sex crimes or cover ups in Altoona to come forward now to secular authorities, not church officials.

WHEN:
Tuesday, March 7 at 1:00 p.m.

WHERE:
On the sidewalk outside the Altoona-Johnstown diocese headquarters, 927 S. Logan Blvd. (corner of Hawthorne St.) in Hollidaysburg, PA

WHO:
Two-three members of a support group called SNAP (the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests), including a Pittsburgh woman who is the organization’s local volunteer director

WHY:
1) Last week, Pennsylvania’s Attorney General released a scathing grand jury report that concludes “nothing has changed” in the Altoona-Johnstown diocese regarding child sex crimes and cover ups. The report was particularly critical of how Catholic officials deal now with abuse reports, saying there is “no privacy or confidentiality” for victims and that an abuse “review board” is not “unbiased or neutral” and was, in fact, set up to “convince the public that the days of a mysterious bishop deciding how to handle a scandalous report of child molestation and sodomy were over,” but “in reality, the bishop still makes the decision.”

The jurors also found that the work of a so-called “victims advocate” does not, in fact, “remotely resemble advocacy” but instead is “fact-finding” for church defense lawyers, and that victims’ information “is forwarded to lawyers whose interest is solely in protecting the diocese.”

SNAP wants Bishop Mark Bartchak to fire the nun who is the purported “victims advocate” and every member of the board, especially, Fr. Joseph Byrnes, a board member who “pled the Fifth” and refused to answer questions from the grand jury. (Staff and board members include Sister Donna Marie Leiden, Colleen Krug, D.J. Bragonier, Fr. Joseph W. Fleming, Dr. Russell Miller and Dr. Mary O’Leary Wiley.) http://www.ajdiocese.org/children-and-youth

2) The group wants Bartchak to voluntarily work with Attorney General’s office staff to choose replacements.

3) SNAP also wants Bartchack to reveal more about Mark Powdermaker who, as librarian at Bishop Guilfoyle High School, used school computers to “download graphic stories of rape and torture” of girls and “actively discuss” on “chat logs” his “desire to sexually assault and torture a child with other men on line.” Even though investigators found “hundreds of pages of his violent child rape stories and chats” in diocesan offices and jurors concluded that school and diocesan staff “helped him keep his secret” and Powdermaker “spent eight years (1994-2002) amongst the teenage girls he dreamed of raping.” (pages 140-141)

4) Even though the grand jury noted that Bartchak’s “power is nearly absolute,” it said that the “purge of predators is taking too long.” SNAP feels the same way about Bartchack’s pledge to post predators’ names on church websites. The group wants him to provide details and to make sure the information is posted on parish websites too, not just the diocesan website.

5) SNAP is also very critical of a three-page letter Bartchak had read in Altoona area parishes this weekend that repeatedly stressed “mercy” (ten times), “sin” (nine times) and “reconciliation (three times), but not once mentioned the words “crime” ““abuse,” “molestation” or “cover up.” It also announced not a single reform and contained no plea for victims, witnesses or whistleblowers to come forward.

“The letter repeatedly begged Catholics not to leave the church but said nothing that might make kids safer, expose more predators, unearth more cover ups or deter future recklessness, callousness and deceit,” said SNAP’s Judy Jones.

6) Finally, for all the “tragedy and evil” in the 115,042 pages of church abuse records, the grand jury said Bishop Mark Bartchak and his predecessor Bishop Joseph Adamec had one “brief conversation on the subject (of abuse),” “no detailed briefing,” and Bartchak was “unaware of the number of historical predators in the diocese when he appeared before the grand jury.

SNAP believes this was a deliberately self-serving move by Bartchak and is calling on him to explain why he cared so little to learn about this crucial crisis.

Contact:
Judy Jones 314 974 5003, SNAPjudy@gmail.com, Fran Unglo-Samber 717 514 9660, samber13431@comcast.net, David Clohessy 314 566 9790, davidgclohessy@gamail.com, Barbara Dorris 314 503 0003, bdorris@SNAPnetwork.org

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SNAP: Predator Priests’ Files Should Be Exposed

UNITED STATES
Hamilton and Griffin on Rights

Why is it important that predator priests’ files are exposed?

More than 30 US bishops – out of nearly 200 – have grudgingly posted partial lists of predator priests on their diocesan websites. But virtually none have voluntarily released their voluminous records about child sex crimes and cover ups.

Why should they?

Because, as the Bible tells us, “the truth shall set you free.”

Because, as Alcoholics Anonymous tells us, “we’re only as sick as our secrets.”

Because for decades, bishops have pledged to be “open and transparent” about this crisis.

Because since 2002, US bishops have claimed such “openness” is mandatory, as promised in the church’s first-ever belated, grudging nationwide abuse policy.

But here are the best reasons:

Because disclosing long-secret abuse and cover up records is the quickest, easiest, cheapest and most effective way to protect kids now. It’s a way to be sure that no proven, admitted or credibly accused abusive priest is still on the job today.

Because it’s the best way to deter future cover ups. For thousands of years, adults have known that most child sex crimes will never be exposed. So for thousands of years, many adults have not reported knowledge or suspicions of child sex crimes. Unless adults see that this is changing, and learn that even decades-old abuse cover ups are being exposed, many will continue to conceal child sex crimes.

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Royal Commission releases consultation paper on out-of-home care

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

8 March, 2016

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has released a consultation paper on out-of-home care today.

Royal Commission Chief Executive Officer Philip Reed said the Commission’s terms of reference direct it to examine how to better prevent, report and respond to child sexual abuse in institutional contexts.

“We decided to examine out-of-home care because it was apparent from our private sessions, public hearings and research work that children in out-of-home care are at a heightened risk of sexual abuse,” Mr Reed said.

“To date we have held over 4,700 private sessions, in which out-of-home care was the largest category of institutions identified, constituting over 40 per cent of all reports of child sexual abuse,” he said.

“We have heard numerous accounts of the significant sexual, physical and emotional abuse of children that occurred in these institutions and its detrimental impact on many people’s lives.”

Mr Reed said the Commission had heard concerns that the current out-of-home care system did not adequately protect children from sexual abuse, or consistently respond as well as it should when abuse occurs.

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In Allentown, outcry over removed Syriac Catholic priest

PENNSYLVANIA
The Morning Call

Dan Sheehan
Of The Morning Call

ALLENTOWN — In a little more than 15 years, Our Lady of Mercy Syriac Catholic parish in Allentown has grown from a small mission outpost to a thriving community of 500 families.

Now, the mysterious suspension of the parish’s longtime priest — and the appointment of a priest from a different rite to offer the sacraments — has many of the faithful in the Eastern rite church convinced they are being abandoned by their diocese.

Why?

“That’s the million-dollar question,” said George Makhoul of Neffs, a parishioner at Our Lady of Mercy and one of the leaders of a campaign to restore the suspended priest, the Rev. Bassim Shoni, to ministry. “They’re not giving us answers.”

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Teacher pleads not guilty to molesting students

NEW MEXICO
New Mexican

Aaron Chavez, a Catholic elementary school teacher accused of molesting five students since 2007, entered a not-guilty plea at his arraignment Monday morning in state District Court.

Chavez, 47, an art teacher at Santo Niño Regional Catholic School south of Santa Fe, was arrested in January after a 6-year-old girl told her parents he had insisted on tucking in her shirt during an art class and touched her genital area in the process.

Four other alleged victims — including an 8-year-old and two teenagers who were in Chavez’s class as first graders — have since come forward saying he also inappropriately touched them.

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Monroe native a co-producer of Oscar-winning ‘Spotlight’

WASHINGTON
HeraldNet

Blye Pagon Faust, a 1993 graduate of Monroe High School, was a producer on this year’s Oscar-winning film “Spotlight,” the story of how the Boston Globe uncovered the massive scandal of child molestation and cover-up within the local Catholic Archdiocese. In addition to best picture, “Spotlight” took home the Oscar for best original screenplay. Faust, 40, took time this past week to talk with The Herald about the movie and her life. More about “Spotlight” is at spotlightthefilm.com.

What do you remember about the moment at the Academy Awards when you heard Morgan Freeman read the name of your film as the best picture winner?

To be honest, it’s a bit of a blur, but I do remember just feeling an enormous surge of excitement, not only for our entire team, but for all our journalists and the survivors (of pedophilia), knowing that this would be further validation for all their work and efforts to be heard over the years.

Here’s what you said that night: “We would not be here today without the heroic efforts of our reporters. Not only do they affect global change but they show us the absolute necessity for investigative journalism.” How has this story changed your life?

When we were growing up, my parents subscribed to the Everett Herald, the Monroe Monitor and the Seattle Times, so I had always appreciated newspapers. After we made the movie, we knew absolutely how essential investigative units are, but I also realized just how crippled many newspapers had become. I joined the board of the Center for Investigative Reporting because I really believe in investigative journalism and I know it’s tough out there for newspaper reporters. The work the Boston Globe did had global ramifications. They won a Pulitzer prize. What if those reporters hadn’t had the six months it took to do all that research?

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A LESSON FROM SPOTLIGHT THAT NEWSPAPER FOLK DON’T GET: COMPETITION MAKES THEM BETTER

UNITED STATES
Dallas Observer

BY JIM SCHUTZE
TUESDAY, MARCH 8, 2016

You have to wonder: Are daily newspaper people ever struck by the fact that a movie about what they do is so much more popular than they are?

Spotlight, Tom McCarthy’s movie about The Boston Globe’s 2002 Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative series on child molestation among Catholic clergy, was two things. It was a really great movie, and it was a delicious opportunity for self-back-patting by old ink-stained wretches. Like myself.

I watched. I patted. But since the Oscar ceremony, it has taken me a month or more to figure out why the discussion of the movie within my craft inevitably leaves me so sad and lonely. Oh, now I remember. It’s not the movie. It’s the craft.

For every bathetic reminiscence about the way it was when dailies ruled, about what they did and how great they were, I hear at least three expressions of complete bafflement about why dailies don’t do it anymore.

On the PBS Newshour recently, former New York Times ombudsman Margaret Sullivan said, “But I think that the will to do this kind of work is weakening somewhat, and it has to be beefed up. Spotlight is such an inspiring movie, that I’m hopeful that it will cause owners and editors and publishers to realize just how important this work is and to fund it and to get behind it.”

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Affaire Barbarin: Nouvelle plainte à Lyon contre le cardinal et des membres du diocèse

FRANCE
20 Minutes

[Barbarin Case: New complaint against Lyon Cardinal and members of the diocese.The Archbishop of Lyon is targeted by a new complaint. Following his hearing as part of a preliminary investigation opened by the prosecutor of Lyons ten days ago, a second alleged victim of Father Preynat filed suit Monday against Cardinal Philippe Barbarin and also against several members of the diocese for “failure to report sexual assaults on children under 15 years” and “failure to assist a person in danger,” according to La Parole Liberee.]

L’archevêque de Lyon visé par une nouvelle plainte. A la suite de son audition dans le cadre d’une enquête préliminaire ouverte par le parquet de Lyon il y a dix jours, une seconde victime présumée du Père Preynat a porté plainte, lundi, contre Philippe Barbarin, mais également contre plusieurs membres du diocèse, pour « non-dénonciation d’agressions sexuelles sur mineurs de moins de 15 ans » et « non-assistance à personne en péril », a indiqué ce mardi à 20 Minutes l’association La Parole Libérée.

Le directeur de cabinet de l’archevêque, Pierre Durieux, Régine Maire, membre du Conseil épiscopal du diocèse, et Xavier Grillon, vicaire du diocèse de Roanne, sont également visés par cette plainte.

D’autres plaintes probables

Vendredi, François Devaux, membre fondateur de La Parole Libérée et victime présumée du Père Preynat, avait été entendu plusieurs heures par la justice dans le cadre de l’enquête préliminaire et avait déposé plainte à l’issue de son entretien contre les membres de l’église lyonnaise et deux hauts responsables du Vatican.

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Fallout Continues Over Grand Jury Report

PENNSYLVANIA
ABC 23

Fall-out continues after a Grand Jury report that uncovered widespread sex abuse and its cover-up across the Altoona-Johnstown Catholic Diocese. This as a Cambria County Judge resigns from the Bishop McCort Board of Trustees. Monday the Judge’ legal team released a statement. Missing from Bishop McCort’s Board of Trustees web page Patrick Kiniry. We confirmed the Board of Trustees has accepted a letter of resignation from Judge Kiniry effective immediately. We asked for a copy of the letter and when it was submitted and did not hear back. Kiniry was named in the Grand Jury report in connection with the investigation of the Monsignor Francis MCCAA. MCCAA is now dead but served for more than two decades at Ebensburg’s Holy Name Catholic Church until 1985. The report call MCAA “a monster” because of sexual abuse of as many as Juveniles. The documents say Kiniry who was at that time the Assistant District Attorney, met with Bishop Hogan.

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Not 2001: Expert Explains How Altoona Sex Abuse Story Differs From Boston

UNITED STATES
Aleteia

John Burger
March 8, 2016

The Oscar-winning movie Spotlight ends in January 2002, when the results of a months-long investigation by The Boston Globe ends in the publication of the first of many articles on the archdiocese of Boston’s mishandling of clerical sexual abuse.

In many ways, for the Church in the United States, it was just beginning.

Kathleen McChesney played a major role in that work, serving as the head of an office for child protection established by the U.S. Catholic Bishops’ Conference. A former executive assistant director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, McChesney developed and oversaw a national compliance mechanism to ensure that all dioceses complied with civil laws and internal policies concerning the prevention, reporting and response to the sexual abuse of minors. She also coordinated a major research study into the nature and scope of the problem of sexual abuse in the Church.

Now head of Kinsale Management Consulting and co-editor of Sexual Abuse in the Catholic Church: A Decade of Crisis, she spoke with Aleteia about what has been done since 2002 and where the Church needs to go from here.

What has the Catholic Church in the United States done to address the sex abuse problem since the Boston Globe’s expose? What reforms were put into effect, both for clergy and laity?

The two most important things that the U.S. bishops and religious superiors have done to address this problem in the U.S. were to utilize professional survivor advocates to assist persons who are reporting abuse and to ensure they are provided with pastoral care if they desire; and to implement programs to prevent future abuse, including the removal of offenders from ministry. These programs include abuse-awareness training that has been provided for millions of adults and young people and background checks of clergy, educators and volunteers.

How effective do those reforms seem to be?

The reforms in the United States, and the efforts of many dioceses and religious institutes initiated before 2002, have been effective in significantly reducing the incidence of abuse.

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Democrat pushes to extend statutes for church abuse victims

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Review

BY BRAD BUMSTED | Monday, March 7, 2016

HARRISBURG — When his wife was pregnant in 1996, Mark Rozzi said he “prayed to God we wouldn’t have a boy.”

Rozzi, 44, a Democratic state House member from Reading, had a reason for that prayer. Rozzi says he was raped by his priest at the Holy Guardian Angel Catholic Church when he was 13. The vast majority of sexual abuse by priests is perpetrated against boys, experts and national studies suggest.

Rozzi, elected in 2012, is at the forefront of an effort in the state Legislature to provide greater criminal and civil recourse to child sexual assault victims. One bill would eliminate the statute of limitations for child sexual abuse in criminal and civil cases. Rozzi is sponsoring legislation that would raise the age from 30 to 50 years for an adult victim of child sex abuse to file a civil complaint.

He’s driven to push ahead, not only because of his own reported molestation by the late Rev. Edward Graff, but for his friends who were abused and struggled with alcoholism or drug addiction, and those who committed suicide.

“I have had three childhood friends kill themselves,” he said. All were abused. Last year, before Easter, the third friend killed himself.

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Chargesheet filed against Fr Figarez

INDIA
Times of India

TNN | Mar 7, 2016

Kochi: The Vadakkekara police have filed the chargesheet against Catholic priest Edwin Figarez (41) who was booked for raping a minor girl at Puthenvelikkara last year. The chargesheet was submitted before Ernakulam additional sessions court set up to hear cases related to atrocities and sexual violence against women and children.

The chargesheet said that the priest raped the 14-year-old girl several times between January and March 28 last year. The accused was the parish priest of Lourdes Matha Church, Puthenvelikkara in Ernakulam when he committed the crime. Vadakkekara CI Vishal Johnson said that the chargesheet was submitted at the court before the accused completed 90 days in judicial custody; Figarez is yet to be granted bail in the case. After the girl’s mother filed a complaint, Figarez went into hiding and evaded arrest for nearly eight months.

A lookout notice was issued against the priest. However, Figarez surrendered before the police on December 18, 2015, after the high court rejected his anticipatory bail plea.

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Inquirer Editorial: Time can’t heal sexual abuse by priests

PENNSYLVANIA
Philly.com

MARCH 8, 2016

They knew and they let it happen! To kids!

That’s a quote from the movie Spotlight attributed to real-life reporter Mike Rezendes when he was investigating Boston priests accused of sexually molesting altar boys and other children 15 years ago.

The comment could just as well be applied to Pennsylvania authorities who for decades did precious little to stop similar abuse by priests and cover-ups by religious leaders in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown.

A grand jury report released last week by Attorney General Kathleen Kane said an investigation had revealed evidence of “several instances in which law enforcement officers and prosecutors failed to pursue allegations of child sexual abuse occurring within the Diocese.”

Cambria County Judge Patrick T. Kiniry, a former district attorney, reportedly told state investigators that the close relationship between local authorities and diocesan officials when the alleged abuse cases occurred was a reflection of the Catholic Church’s influence.

Evidence presented to the grand jury included material gathered in a raid of diocesan offices last August by state agents. They found a “secret archive” of documents, including handwritten notes sent to Bishop Joseph Adamec by the late Bishop James Hogan, which detailed alleged abuse cases, including victims’ statements.

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March 7, 2016

Youngstown Diocese responds to request for investigation

OHIO
WKBN

By Molly Reed
Published: March 7, 2016

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (WKBN) – The Youngstown Diocese is responding to a request from a nonprofit advocate for victims of sexual abuse that an investigation be launched into the diocese.

Road to Recovery made the request after a grand jury report on alleged sexual abuse in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese in Pennsylvania was released. That investigation claims that the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese helped cover up the sexual abuse of hundreds of children, including abuse by Brother Stephen Baker, who was on staff at Warren JFK in the late 1980s.

In 2013, the Youngstown Diocese announced abuse settlements with 11 former students of Baker’s. Road to Recovery says 28 more students are still waiting for Bishop George Murry to settle their claims.

Monsignor John Zuraw, chancellor of the Diocese of Youngstown, said the diocese does not have a secret archive, nor does it have secret files. He said the situation is completely different from one that was reported at the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese.

“This is the second wave of individuals who have come forward,” he said.

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Op-ed: Give survivors more time to file child sexual-abuse claims

UNITED STATES
The Salt Lake Tribune

By DeAnn Tilton and Ken Ivory

For every legal action, lawmakers decide how long a victim has to take the offender to court. Historically, the state of Utah has given survivors of childhood sexual abuse just a few years to get to civil court to seek redress for the harm done to them by those who have abused them.

While short time limits, also called statutes of limitation, can be appropriate for some legal actions, such as property disputes, where it’s in both parties’ best interest to get to court quickly and sort out who owns what, decades of research into the experiences of survivors of childhood sexual abuse tell us that traditional statutes of limitation are inappropriate in these cases.

We now understand, better than ever before, that there are many significant barriers survivors face in going public with the abuse inflicted upon them, not the least of which includes disclosing it to their loved ones. Other barriers include intimidation, shame, fear of losing important family relationships and the distortion that child sexual abuse causes to the mental and emotional ability of a survivor to comprehend the nature and damage caused by the exploitation and abuse. Research now shows that survivors are into their 40s, on average, before they are able to publicly disclose the abuse.

Despite these barriers, some survivors eventually heal enough to find the courage to knock on the courthouse doors seeking justice for the harm done to them. Tragically, they have found those doors were locked years ago by unrealistically short statutes of limitation. This injustice not only prevents survivors from seeking civil damages to recover some of the financial costs for the physical and mental harm done, it also prevents them from publicly informing the rest of society about those who are still free to abuse others.

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Training children to obey authority doesn’t keep them safe, it puts them in danger

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Jeff Sparrow

By one of those peculiar historical coincidences, Cardinal Pell appeared before the royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse just as the conservative attack on Safe Schools reached its peak. In doing so, he provided a striking example of why the program matters so much.

Several years ago, when working on my book Money Shot, I asked Save the Children’s Karen Flanagan, one of the country’s most experienced advocates for children’s rights, about the forms that child abuse took in Australia.

“Intra-familial abuse, that’s the most common,” she said. “Most children are abused by someone very closely related to them or very well known to them – in other words, a trusted, respected person. About a third of all sex offending is committed by adolescents, about 6% of reported sex offences are by women and the rest is by men. Probably about 95% would be intra-familial.”

In other words, most abused children know the perpetrator.

“If it’s not within the home,” Flanagan said, “it’s the babysitter, or the school or the sporting club. It’s people who know the child, who have a relationship with him or her, who are trusted.”

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Judge resigns from Bishop McCort Board of Trustees

PENNSYLVANIA
WJAC

BY LAUREN HENSLEY MONDAY, MARCH 7TH 2016

EBENSBURG, Pa.– A Cambria County judge has resigned from the Bishop McCort Board of Trustees.

Judge Patrick Kiniry was named in the state attorney general’s grand jury report that uncovered widespread sexual abuse allegations and a cover-up involving the Altoona-Johnstown Catholic Diocese.

Kiniry was named in particular during the investigation into Monsignor Francis McCaa in 1985.

The chairman of the board of trustees confirmed Kiniry’s resignation with 6News on Monday. 6News asked for a copy of the letter of resignation and date it was submitted but our requests went unanswered Monday.

The grand jury report says Kiniry, who was at the time the assistant district attorney of Cambria County met with Bishop James Hogan. The document says it was agreed to have McCaa pulled from the church and given counseling.

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Bellingham priest who is a known pedophile faces new accusations

WASHINGTON
KGMI

Priests and a psychiatrist warned the Seattle Archbishop about a priest who abused children, but the Archbishop just moved the priest to different parishes.

Three people now say the priest, Michael Cody, abused them as kids when he was the pastor of the Assumption Parish and School in Bellingham from 1972 to 1975.

The Seattle Times reports seven other women accuse Cody of preying on them as children while he served in Skagit County before coming to Bellingham.

Archbishop Thomas Connolly was told Cody was a sick and dangerous pedophile, but Connolly kept putting Cody in situations where he could abuse kids.

The information is from Cody’s “secret file” obtained by the Times.

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The Washington Post editorial condemns Cardinal George Pell

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

March 8, 2016

Josephine Tovey
Reporter

One of the most influential newspapers in the United States, The Washington Post, has devoted an editorial to Australian Cardinal George Pell’s appearance at the royal commission last week, noting his “stumbles” and condemning some of his testimony for seeking to “airbrush the church’s staggering lapses.”

The newspaper’s editorial board told its readers that on the same day the film Spotlight, which depicts an investigation into abusive priests in Boston’s Catholic church, was awarded the Oscar for Best Picture, a “related drama” was taking place in the Vatican, as Australia’s most senior Catholic gave testimony to a commission back in Australia.

The Post stated that while Cardinal George Pell stayed mostly “on message” during his appearances before the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, he “stumbled” at several moments, and in doing so, revealed “the shortcomings in the church’s response to revelations of misconduct.”

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