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 7, 2016

A cardinal grapples with ‘the indefensible’

UNITED STATES
Washington Post

By Editorial Board March 6

ON THE same day Hollywood conferred its most prestigious prize on “Spotlight,” the newsroom drama about the Boston Globe’s reporting on the Catholic Church’s complicity in the sexual abuse of children by priests, a related drama was unfolding near the Vatican itself. For hours, Cardinal George Pell, the Holy See’s treasurer and one of its top-ranking clerics, answered questions posed by an Australian commission that quizzed the cardinal on the extent of his knowledge about pedophile priests he knew decades ago.

Cardinal Pell, the most senior Australian Catholic, stayed mainly on message, the message from the Vatican for years having been one of carefully couched contrition in the face of incontrovertible evidence that the church enabled and covered up for sex abuse by clergy. “I’m not here to defend the indefensible,” said the cardinal.

But under polite and sustained grilling, the 74-year-old cardinal, who testified in Rome by video link to Australia, stumbled on several occasions, revealing the shortcomings in the church’s response to revelations of misconduct.

He referred to having heard rumors, during his years as a young clergyman, of “eccentricities” among priests teaching at Australian Catholic schools, a case of whitewash by euphemism. He pleaded a “senior moment” to explain away his failure to recall various allegations and the church’s response. While discussing a notorious priest who was widely known as a serial abuser by the early 1990s, when Cardinal Pell was a high-ranking church official in Melbourne, he said: “I didn’t know whether it was common knowledge or whether it wasn’t. It’s a sad story and [the extent to which it was known publicly] wasn’t of much interest to me.”

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.

Klitzkie: Church published ‘deceptive’ property document

GUAM
Guam Daily Post

Jasmine Stole | Post News Staff

Former Sen. Bob Klitzkie is calling on the Department of Land Management to look into what he suspects are deliberately doctored government documents that the Archdiocese of Agana printed in the Nov. 29, 2015 issue of the U’Matuna Si Yu’os.

The U’Matuna Si Yu’os printed a copy of a certificate of title on the front page of the paper. In the article, approved by the Monsignor David Quitugua, vicar general, Quitugua said the certificates established that the archdiocese, by Archbishop Anthony Apuron, “maintains legal ownership of the seminary property and it is only the archdiocese through the mechanisms of Canon Law that will determine the transferor conveyance of this property.”

The property in question is that on which sits the Redemptoris Mater Seminary of Guam in Yona. At issue is the legal ownership of the property. Critics, like Klitzkie, refute the archdiocese’s claims that the property is under the control of Apuron and the archdiocese.

The church printed the certificate of title retrieved from DLM records on Oct. 30, 2015, and the accompanying article, under the headline “Ownership of Seminary property confirmed.”

About a month after the article was published, in a December letter to DLM Director Michael Borja, Klitzkie wrote that four certificates of title are “clearly erroneous on their face.”

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.

Innocence Abused: A Lethal Combination Of Church And State Fails Pennsylvania’s Children

PENNSYLVANIA
Americans United for Separation of Church and State

Mar 7, 2016 by Rob Boston

Last week, Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane released a damning grand jury report about the rampant sexual abuse of minors by priests in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese – and the failure of anyone in authority to stop it.

News of the report hit me hard. I was born and raised in Altoona. For 16 years I attended a Catholic church in that diocese. I spent eight years in a Catholic school appended to one of its churches.

The nuns occasionally punished us in ways that were inappropriate, but I never suffered the kind of abuse detailed in the report. Still, I felt like I’d been socked in the gut. As I read the report, I kept coming across the names of familiar towns, churches and people.

The report is not easy reading. It goes into explicit detail about the horrors inflicted on these children. Be aware of that if you decide to take a look.

I was especially disgusted by how the powers that be in both the church and the state failed the victims. If you’ve seen the Academy Award-winning film “Spotlight,” you know how church officials reacted: They created, then hid, secret files on problem priests. They did not report them to authorities. They attacked the victims. They shipped molesters off to other parishes where, inevitably, the priests sought more victims.

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

‘Spotlight’ discovers what an Oscar is worth

UNITED STATES
Boston Globe

By Mark Shanahan GLOBE STAFF MARCH 07, 2016

An Academy Award is good — but not great — for business apparently. “Spotlight” earned $1.8 million at the box office during the first weekend since winning the Oscar for best picture. To date, director Tom McCarthy’s movie about the Globe series exposing the priest abuse scandal in the Catholic church, has grossed $41 million. “Spotlight” was in more than 1,200 theaters this past weekend, which is the most since the movie opened last fall. While it got a bump at the box office because of the Oscar, it wasn’t huge.

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.

Waterville native David Mizner inspired making of ‘Spotlight’

MAINE
CentralMaine.com

BY AMY CALDER STAFF WRITER
acalder@centralmaine.com | @AmyCalder17 | 207-861-9247

The Academy Award-winning movie “Spotlight” might not have been made if not for Waterville native David Mizner.

Mizner, an associate producer of the film, pitched the idea of turning the story about the Boston Globe’s Pulitzer Prize-winning expose of the Catholic Church priest abuse scandal into a movie.

Waterville native David Mizner was the inspiration for bringing the Academy Award-winning film “Spotlight” to the screen. Mizner, an associate producer for the film, is a novelist and contributing writer to The Nation and other publications and wrote the description of a course on the Boston Globe’s investigation of the Catholic Church abuse scandal for Columbia University journalism class.

“I had no real creative role in the film,” said Mizner Monday. Producers, though, cited him Feb. 28 when they accepted the Oscar for Best Picture at the 88th annual Academy Awards ceremony at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood.

A novelist and freelance writer, Mizner several years ago wrote a case study for the Knight Case Studies Initiative at the graduate school of journalism for Columbia University.

In doing so, he contacted producers Nicole Rocklin and Blye Faust, who were interested in creating a film about one of his novels, and told them he had a great idea for a different movie — about the priest abuse coverup.

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.

Francis may need to expand his comfort zone to include sexual abuse survivors

UNITED STATES
Crux

By John L. Allen Jr.
Associate editor March 7, 2016

Recently two different constituencies in the Catholic Church have complained of feeling misunderstood or let down by Pope Francis, and it’s instructive to compare the pontiff’s responses in each case.

One group is made up of Eastern Catholics, especially the 5 million-strong Greek Catholic Church in Ukraine, while the other is composed of survivors of clerical sexual abuse. In a nutshell, the pope’s reaction to the former seems a textbook example of effective outreach, while the latter so far appears largely a tale of missed opportunities.

To begin with Greek Catholics, many felt that Francis’ historic Feb. 12 meeting with Patriarch Kirill of the Russian Orthodox Church in Havana, Cuba, was a propaganda coup for Moscow, and that the joint declaration the two men issued was even worse — mostly a series of Catholic concessions to the Russians, including language that could be read to invalidate criticism of Russia’s invasion of Eastern Ukraine. …

Meanwhile, survivors of sexual abuse, as well as their families and advocates, have had their own reasons of late for feeling ambivalent about Francis.

They’ve complained that he appointed a bishop in Chile known as an apologist for that country’s most notorious abuser priest. They’ve watched as a survivor on the pope’s anti-abuse panel was assigned an involuntary leave of absence by fellow members after voicing criticism over the Chile appointment and other matters, and they also wonder why Francis hasn’t had any reaction to criticism of Cardinal George Pell, his hand-chosen financial reformer, for Pell’s record on abuse cases in Australia.

Survivors also noted that Francis did not meet abuse victims during his trip to Mexico last month, even though that country was hard-hit by a scandal surrounding the Legion of Christ and its late founder, Marcial Maciel Degollado.

So far, Francis has not addressed those concerns in his own voice, apparently content to let others do it for him.

Last week, a group of 15 Australian survivors, along with relatives and supporters, were in Rome to watch Pell testify before a Royal Commission in their country via video link. They told everyone who would listen that they’d like to meet the pope, and at one stage Pell released a statement vowing to try to help make it happen.

It was a bit mystifying, then, to hear a Vatican spokesman assert on Friday that no meeting would take place because there had been no “official request.” Everyone knew the victims wanted it, and Francis rarely has shown himself to be a slave to protocol when he’s determined to do something.

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.

Carey’s support for abuse accused Bishop George Bell ‘distressing’

UNITED KING
BBC News

The alleged abuse victim of a former Sussex bishop has said an open letter from a former Archbishop of Canterbury praising him is deeply distressing.

The Church has settled a civil claim made by the woman, who claims she was abused by Bishop of Chichester George Bell in the late 1940s and early 1950s.

In a letter to the bishop’s niece, Lord Carey said he was “appalled” by the way authorities had treated his memory.

But Rt Rev George Bell’s unnamed victim said: “Great men can do evil things.”

She says he molested her as a child in Chichester Cathedral as she sat on his lap listening to stories.

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.

‘He was only 28’: Alan Jones defends Cardinal George Pell on Q&A

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

March 8, 2016

Kate Aubusson

What is the minimum age of moral culpability?

Somewhere north of 28-years-old, according to Alan Jones.

On Monday night’s Q&A, the radio presenter appeared to absolve all those aged 28-years-and-under of moral and ethical responsibility as he defended Cardinal George Pell’s response to the sexual abuse of children within the Catholic Church.

The shock jock was responding to an audience question which suggested Pell – now one of the highest ranking Vatican officials – should be removed from his post over his lack of action on reports of abuse.

Jones called the discoveries of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse “almost too grotesque to even define” and agreed Pell’s choice of words during his evidence to the Royal Commission were “appalling”.

But he defended Pell’s unresponsiveness to cases of abuse during the cardinal’s early career within the 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.

Q&A: Michaelia Cash condemns Cardinal George Pell’s ‘complete lack of empathy’

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Elle Hunt
@mlle_elle
Monday 7 March 2016

Senior Liberal minister Michaelia Cash has condemned George Pell’s apparent lack of compassion and empathy for victims of abuse in the Catholic Church as being against the teachings of Jesus.

The minister for women was one of five panelists on ABC’s Q&A program on Monday night and was asked whether she thought Pell should be removed from his position in the church.

Pell gave evidence at the royal commission into institutional responses to child abuse in Sydney via video link from Rome over four days last week.

Cash began her answer by acknowledging that she is Catholic.

“What we’ve all seen over the last few weeks – over the last few years – it was that complete lack of empathy.

“Jesus was someone who had compassion and who had empathy. I would expect nothing less from the leaders of our church, especially of those victims in verbalising what they went through, to at least show them compassion and empathy.

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.

Connecticut Considering Legislation To Hinder Hiring Suspected Sex-Predator Teachers

CONNECTICUT
Hartford Courant

MICHELLE R. SMITH, SUSAN HAIGH
Associated Press

HARTFORD — It’s called “passing the trash”: A school suspects a teacher of sexual misconduct and forces the teacher out to protect the students. But that teacher can still get a new job in a new school, sometimes with a glowing recommendation.

Only Pennsylvania, Missouri and Oregon ban the maneuver, but a federal mandate passed in December now requires states to address its potential risks. Connecticut is considering such legislation.

One woman abused by such a teacher says it’s about time the problem is getting attention.

She was 16 when her English teacher at the exclusive Marlborough School in Los Angeles began grooming her. He showered her with praise, gave her gifts and pitted her against her friends. Then there was a sexual advance, and sex. Eventually, she became pregnant and miscarried.

She reported him only years later, after she learned he had targeted another girl more recently. A lawsuit she filed says he was accused of misconduct at two schools before Marlborough hired him. When he was finally pushed out of Marlborough, the school gave him a recommendation, the suit asserts.

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.

WHOLE FOODS FAILS ABUSE SURVIVORS

UNITED STATES
The Scripps Voice

March 4, 2016

By Evelyn Gonzalez ’18
Feminism Columnist

The personal stories and accounts of survivors get lost under the weight of a heavy silence when we, as a society, allow those in power to have so much influence over the relevancy and importance of our words. As a result of our reliance on a capitalist system that often thrives on the exploitation of society’s most vulnerable, very few mechanisms exist at the present to protect survivors of abuse if it means that the image of corporations might be damaged in the process. In allowing this to continue, we have created a culture that forces survivors of abuse to speak up; but those that speak up are faced by a society who refuses to listen, reinforcing a damaging culture of violence and injustice.

On December 25, 2015, The New York Times released a piece on the connection between Whole Foods Market co-founder John Mackey and sex offender and creator of the nonprofit Center for Integral Wisdom, Marc Gafni. Approximately one month later Sara Kabakov submitted an exclusive to Forward’s online website. In it she detailed her personal account of the sexual and spiritual violation and molestation she faced under the hands of Marc Gafni during the 80’s. Along with Kabakov, several other women, including one of Gafni’s ex-wives chose to come forward with their own descriptions of the violence enacted on them. The similarities in the stories written by these women were striking in that they highlighted the varying ways they were forced into silence by Gafni himself and from their own communities. In this current society, speaking out about one’s past experience, especially against people in positions of power, can often result in a high degree of danger and vulnerability. Gafni’s ex wife, who chose to stay anonymous when she published her story in The Times of Israel about Gafni’s abuses said, “there is also a risk to staying silent, staying safe. 20 years and untold numbers of victims later, I have learned that staying safe can also be risky business.” In exposing the connection between Whole Foods Market and Gafni, the voices of those who are most at risk can be brought to the forefront of the conversation.

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.

More delays mark Diocese bankruptcy

NEW MEXICO
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, N.M., March 2, 2016

By Elizabeth Hardin-Burrola
Independent correspondent
religion@gallupindependent.com

ALBUQUERQUE – The Diocese of Gallup’s bankruptcy case continues to be marked by a series of delays.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge David T. Thuma’s goal of seeing the Gallup Diocese file its plan of reorganization Monday failed to materialize after a status conference Friday was canceled and rescheduled for Tuesday.

A few weeks ago, the diocese’s own goal of filing its reorganization plan in early February became a casualty of a dispute between two other parties in the case — attorneys for Catholic Mutual, the diocese’s current insurer, and Michael P. Murphy, the former future claims representative who resigned his position.

During a brief court hearing Tuesday, Thomas Walker, a diocesan attorney, explained the latest delay was caused by the illness of the diocese’s lead bankruptcy attorney.

“We had a significant holdup last week because Susan Boswell got very sick and was out of commission for the week, and it did slow things quite a bit,” Walker told Thuma.

Boswell attended Tuesday’s hearing by telephone. Although both she and Walker expressed optimism that the diocese could get a reorganization plan on file next week, Thuma suggested a later date for the next hearing.

“I don’t want to have another conference where we don’t have a plan. … Once we get a plan on file, we’ll probably have enough to talk about,” Thuma said. “I’d like to have this soon afterwards so we can talk about scheduling of the disclosure statement hearing and plan confirmation hearing.”

Boswell then suggested the hearing be held March 21.

“That way no excuses — absolutely the plan and the relevant motions and the disclosure statement will be on file,” she said.

Thuma agreed and scheduled the continued status hearing for 11 a.m. March 21.

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.

Third Catholic teacher confesses to sexual abuse in Spain

SPAIN
Expatica

7th March 2016

A third teacher at a school run by a Roman Catholic order in Barcelona has confessed to having sexually abused students in a video released Monday, deepening one of Spain’s biggest paedophile scandals.

The man, who is in his 70s and was identified only by his initials A.F., can be heard in the video recorded with a hidden camera apologising to one of the victims he abused in the 1980s.

“I don’t know why I did it…it was like a child’s game,” he says in the video posted on the website of Barcelona-based daily newspaper El Periodico de Catalunya which masked his face.

The victim said he was sexually abused by the former teacher dozens of times when he was 8-14 years old. His allegations were not refuted by the former teacher.

The abuse took place at a Marist school in Les Corts, a Barcelona neighbourhood, at the centre of a paedophile scandal which erupted in February after the paper published the confession of a former gym teacher who said he had sexually abused his students.

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.

Preti pedofili, la mappa degli abusi. Le ombre sulle diocesi lombarde

ITALIA
Il Giorno

[Sex abuse in the Lombard diocese.]

Milano, 7 marzo 2016 – Era il 2003. Il parroco di Villa di Serio, seimila anime nella Bergamasca, è don Vittorio Damiani, 62 anni. Il 6 maggio i carabinieri bussano alla porta della canonica: il sacerdote è accusato di abusi sessuali su minori. Lui protesta la sua innocenza, ma non regge alla pressione. Si toglie la vita in cella, nel carcere di Bergamo, appena due mesi dopo l’arresto. È il primo clamoroso episodio di pedofilia in canonica a scuotere la diocesi di Bergamo e la Lombardia intera. Un episodio destinato a non restare isolato.

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.

Victim Of Clergy Sex Abuse Hopes Central Pa. Scandal Sends Harrisburg A Message

PENNSYLVANIA
CBS Pittsburg

[with video]

March 2, 2016 By Ralph Iannotti

VANDERGRIFT (KDKA) — Robert Mizic, 45, lives in the small Westmoreland County borough of Vandergrift.

Back in the late-1970s, when Mizic was growing up in suburban Philadelphia, he attended a small Catholic school in Pottstown where he served as an altar boy at St. Peter’s Roman Catholic Church.

That’s when he says the abuse began.

He says his mother, Bev, went to rectory and complained when he told her “the priest had asked me some lewd questions in the confessional.” He was never specific at the time.

After that, he says the priest first sexually and then physically abused him for a period of several months.

Mizic is going public now for the first time because of the Pennsylvania Attorney General’s report on the alleged widespread sex abuse of children in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese.

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.

Iowa pastor convicted of sexually abusing 5-year-old

IOWA
Brown County Democrat

By Associated Press – 3/7/16

SIDNEY, Iowa — A southwest Iowa pastor has been convicted of sexually abusing a 5-year-old girl.

A Fremont County jury Friday found 68-year-old Roger Kissel guilty of sex abuse and lascivious acts. Radio station KNCY in Nebraska City, Nebraska, reports (http://bit.ly/21S6L9r ) that the jury deliberated for about 2½ hours. Kissel’s sentencing is set for May 4.

When he was arrested, Kissel was a pastor at the nondenominational Sidney Cowboy Church. Police have said the allegations weren’t connected to the church. Prosecutors say the crimes occurred in 2013.

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

CRITICS OF CHURCH ARE ‘SENSATIONALIST’ AND HAVE ‘A SHORT MEMORY’, SAYS VATICAN

UNITED KINGDOM
The Tablet

07 March 2016 | by Megan Cornwell

The Holy See’s statement was a response to heightened scrutiny from the media

Critics of the Catholic Church’s response to the child sex abuse scandal are “sensationalist” and have “a short memory”, the Vatican has asserted in a scathing response to Cardinal Pell’s evidence in front of an Australian Commission.

Fr Frederico Lombardi SJ, Head of the Vatican press office, said in the statement that “those who are least informed or have a short memory” think the Church has done nothing to combat and respond to “these terrible problems”, but that “objective consideration shows that this is not the case”.

The Holy See’s statement was a response to heightened scrutiny from the media while Cardinal Pell was giving evidence to Australia’s inquiry into historic child abuse in the Church and as Spotlight won best film at the Oscars.

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.

Blunt, tough George Pell is the victim of a show trial

AUSTRALIA
The Age

[with video]

March 8, 2016

Peter Craven

Last week we saw Cardinal George Pell cross-examined for about 20 hours at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sex Abuse, with the 74-year-old prelate speaking via video link from Rome. Afterwards there was a meeting with victims who were pleased to hear he would try to set up a centre for survivors of abuse.

In an hour-long interview on Sky with Andrew Bolt, Pell said he wasn’t so stiff on the inside and, at one point, he appeared to weep. Yet none of this cut the mustard: from much of the response to Pell’s testimony, both during and after it, you would imagine he is personally responsible for the sins of the Church.

Why? Because we were witnessing a show trial. A week before the hearing began, the Herald Sun published a leak from Victoria Police that investigations were under way into possible crimes of the cardinal. No new lines of inquiry were offered, no reliable source was indicated and the one specific matter referred to allegations which had been laid to rest in 2002 when they were examined by Justice Southwell.

Still, the day after Pell made his notorious slip about not being “interested” in the sexual abuse, the front page of the Herald Sun said “Hear No Evil, See No Evil, Stop No Evil”.

It’s nonsense. When Pell initiated the Melbourne Response in 1996 he went further than any bishop had gone to fixing the problem. Yet a lot of people want to blame him for the horrors that were perpetrated for no better reason than they see his formidable, take-no-prisoners manner as the embodiment of the attitude of an arrogant and heartless church.

So, when he says that as a young priest in Ballarat he heard of a brother not only using excessive discipline but behaving dodgily with boys and he spoke with the chaplain who said the Christian Brothers were attending to the problem, this is met with derision.

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.

Can Cardinal Pell be judged by 21st century standards?

AUSTRALIA
The Age

Chris Davis

Autres temps, autres moeurs. French for “other times, other customs”. A phrase that is relevant as the media and the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse examine 20th century decisions using 21st century morality.

For those who weren’t there, I’ll share my 20th century experience. My boys’ only school was a place of great good, thanks to some exceptional teachers. The most enduring and inspiring was an English spinster who had lost her fiancé in World War I. Her surrogate children were her “boys”. She taught us English in the finest tradition, as well as a love of literature and a code of excellent conduct. Having been in the choir of St Paul’s Cathedral in London, she sang beautifully. She was strict, but with a delightful warmth and sense of humour. The headmaster was a World War II veteran, highly decorated for his skill and courage. He imparted wisdom and balance, acquired from having witnessed the best and worst of the human condition.

Sadly, there was a dark and unspoken side to it all. Older unattached male teachers who lived in at the boarding school. They invited schoolboy “pets” in for special tutoring and special occasions, and exclusive weekend camps. Given the status of teachers, amongst boys being a “pet” was seen as an achievement. Not that anyone talked about what actually went on behind closed doors, except when it emerged as unacceptable sexual behaviour amongst boarding school pupils. Some of it was seen as entertaining, such as when a “misbehaving pet” was backside up on the teacher’s lap for the duration of a lesson, whilst being intimately “spanked”.

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

“Spotlight” soars at Italy box office after Oscar win

ITALY
PanARMENIAN

March 7, 2016

PanARMENIAN.Net – Building on the momentum of its best-picture Oscar win, Spotlight grossed $1 million on 297 screens this past weekend in Italy, an increase of 43 percent from last weekend, The Hollywood Reporter reveals.

This is more than one-fifth of the $4.8 million international gross that Spotlight brought in overall this past weekend in its post-Oscar victory lap, a 124 percent increase across international territories. To date, it has grossed $2.6 million in Italy.

To compare, the $1 million weekend revenue is approximately 13 percent higher than Birdman’s post-Oscar weekend in Italy, when it grossed $885,000 on its way to a total of $5.4 million throughout its run in the country.

Spotlight has been a huge media draw in the Catholic country. Michael Keaton, and the man he plays in the film, Boston Globe editor Walter Robinson, toured Rome in January where they praised the investigative journalism behind the film that brought to light the abuses of the Catholic church from Boston all the way up to the Vatican.

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

Catholics react to Grand Jury investigation

PENNSYLVANIA
We Are Central PA

[with video]

By Marielena Balouris | mbalouris@wtajtv.com
Published 03/06 2016

Altoona, Blair County, Pa.

It’s been nearly one week since the Attorney General announced the results of a multi-year investigation into the Altoona-Johnstown Catholic Diocese. The findings revealed cases of sexual assault dating back to the 1940’s.

Even though there is overwhelming evidence of the abuse in the Grand Jury report, they cannot prosecute because the statute of limitations has run out. Local Catholics are upset by the findings of the investigation, but some say this hasn’t affected their faith.

Mike Glashauser has been a parishioner at Our Lady of Lourdes for 35 years. He says it’s a tight-knit community and the results of the Grand Jury investigation has shocked them all. But now, it’s time to move forward. He said, “I think now we just have to come together and have church and pray for the victims and their families. We have to keep the faith forward and God will lead us in the right direction.”

Glashauser knew one of the priests named in the report from when he was in grade school. He was not affected, but says he’s glad the truth is out. His father agrees.

Frank Glashauser said, “We’re losing so many people in the Catholic religion anyhow and then to have this happen to us, its you know, its uncalled for and for the priests to hide it, its really uncalled for and it should never be hidden, they should have dealt with it from the very beginning.”

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.

Poland mother who says her son’s suicide resulted from being sexually abused by a priest at JFK demands transparency

OHIO
Vindicator

Mon, March 7, 2016
Staff report

YOUNGSTOWN

The leader of a national support group for victims of sexual abuse by priests and other clergy is calling on county prosecutors in Mahoning and Trumbull counties to urge Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine to launch an aggressive investigation into sexual abuse within the Catholic Diocese of Youngstown.

At a press conference Sunday outside the headquarters of the diocese, Robert Hoatson, president of the New Jersey-based Road to Recovery support group, said, “We want the same type of investigation as was done in Altoona [Pa.].”

Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane last week released findings of her office’s investigation of the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese. It revealed that former bishops either covered up or didn’t do enough to respond to hundreds of allegations of abuse committed by more than 50 priests from 1966 to 2011.

“We want state officials to raid that building,” Hoatson said, referring to the West Wood Street headquarters of the diocese.

“In that building, I guarantee you are the same types of files found in Altoona,” Hoatson said. He added he would like the state to review records of all priests who have served in the diocese over the past 60 years or so.

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

Local pastors react to grand jury presentment

PENNSYLVANIA
Herald-Standard

By Mike Tony mtony@heraldstandard.com

Local priests in the Greensburg and Pittsburgh Catholic Dioceses were shocked by Tuesday’s grand jury presentment outlining child sexual abuse in the neighboring Altoona-Johnstown Diocese spanning some 60 years.

“As Bishop (David) Zubik (of the Pittsburgh Catholic Diocese) said, this is a devastating time for the church, and we’re definitely sorry for the hurt that’s been caused,” said the Rev. Pierre Falkenhan, pastor of Our Lady of the Valley Catholic Parish in Donora.

The Rev. Bill Berkey, pastor of St. Francis of Assisi Parish, Western Fayette County, said his parishioners in Masontown and New Salem will be reassured that the parish has done all necessary child protective clearances of church clergy, staff and volunteers. Clergy and volunteers in the Diocese of Greensburg, which includes parishes throughout Fayette, Westmoreland, Armstrong and Indiana counties, are required to have criminal background checks and child abuse clearances.

“I think we’re all shocked by it. It’s disheartening,” said the Rev. Vince Gigliotti, pastor of St. Anne Parish in Belle Vernon.

Neither Berkey nor the Rev. Wiliam Terza, pastor of St. Damien of Molokai in Monongahela, said they believed that their parishioners would have a crisis of faith or confidence in the church because of the grand jury presentment.

“I have not had anyone come up to me and make a comment about it,” Terza said. “I’m sure everyone is going to think, ponder, question.”

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Gallup diocese called on to release church records

NEW MEXICO
Albuquerque Journal

By Olivier Uyttebrouck / Journal Staff Writer
Monday, March 7th, 2016

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — An attorney who filed 13 lawsuits against the Diocese of Gallup on behalf of alleged victims of clerical sexual abuse said the disclosure of church records will be an essential part of any settlement in the diocese’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy case.

Robert Pastor, a Phoenix attorney, said claimants and their attorneys in the case are adamant that the diocese must release church records, including the personnel files of accused priests.

Attorneys working toward a settlement told U.S. Bankruptcy Judge David Thuma of Albuquerque last week that they intend to file a reorganization plan with the court later this month.

“Exposure of these facts is critical to why we bring these cases,” said Pastor, who filed suits against the diocese from 2010-13.

“We are not going to settle unless those files are exposed,” he said. “There may be a delay in exposure, but those files are coming out. They must.”

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‘Spotlight’ into crucial role of investigative reporting

UNITED STATES
Daily News Egypt

Rana Khaled

For centuries, investigative journalism is widely believed to have played an instrumental role in guarding the interests of society and giving a chance for the otherwise silenced victims of wars, natural crises, and sexual assaults.

The same can be said of the role of cinema in raising people’s awareness on divisive or underrepresented issues, and piquing the public’s attention to the major human stories that require public consideration. So what of a film that tells the story of one of the leading investigative reports that revealed scandalous facts about some of the biggest religious institutions in the world?

Spotlight’ “Spotlight”, based on the true story of the Boston Globe’s investigative team, achieved huge success, both critically and in box offices, despite its plot not necessarily adhering to a commercial formula. The film, starring Michael Keaton, Rachel MaAdams, and Mark Ruffalo, won the Best Picture and Best Original Screenplay at the Academy Awards, receiving a total of six nominations.

The film tackles the controversial issue of child sex abuse by a number of Catholic priests in Boston, inspired by the actual series of stories published by the team portrayed in the film.

On 6 January 2002, the Spotlight team, including reporters Matt Carroll, Sacha Pfeiffer, Michael Rezendes, and Editor Walter V. Robinson, published their first story, entitled “Church Allowed Abuse by Priest for Years”. The article shook not only for the Boston community, but thousands of readers around the world.

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Australian victim says pedophile priests hide behind God

AUSTRALIA
Anadolu Agency (Turkey)

By Recep Sakar

MELBOURNE, Australia

Days after Australia’s most senior Catholic gave evidence from the Vatican on sexual abuse by priests, one of those abused has told Anadolu Agency of the extent of the suffering.

“I was abused in my own house and my older brothers were abused and other siblings. I had three sisters — they were all abused,” says Tim Lane, who is now 44, but was just four-years-old when he became a priest’s victim in the Victoria state diocese of Ballarat.

“It is a terrible thing… a terrible thing to live with.”

Lane is just one of the many Australians who were abused by priests in their homes, at churches and at religious seminaries in the cities of Ballarat and Melbourne during the 1970s and 1980s.

Last Monday, senior Catholic Cardinal George Pell insisted to a royal inquiry into child sex abuse that while he was a priest in Ballarat, he was unaware such offenders were being moved between parishes to escape prosecution, and to protect the reputation of the church.

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A Crisis of Faith

PENNSYLVANIA
StateCollege.com

by Patty Kleban on March 07, 2016

In the Bible, (Matthew 15: 8-9) Jesus refers to hypocrisy when he says “these people honor me with their lips but their hearts are far from me.”

When the news came out last week that the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese of the Roman Catholic Church has joined the ranks of Boston and Philadelphia, to name just a few, in facilitating sexual abuse by priests, I could not help thinking about hypocrisy. According Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathy Kane who released the summary of grand jury proceedings and years of investigation, more than 50 priests and other diocesan personnel were involved the sexual abuse of minors. Leaders in the diocese then allegedly compounded those crimes by hiding the atrocities from the proper authorities and reassigning priests to other parishes where they inevitably continued their sickness. Few if any criminal charges will be brought forward in this case because of the statute of limitations.

Is it not the definition of hypocrisy for those who we looked to for spiritual guidance and who heard our confessions and baptized and confirmed our children to not only perpetuate but cover up the torture of the weakest members of their flock? Using their status within the church, and in some cases God’s name, the men sought sexual gratification and power over others. It is not only hypocritical but both legally and morally reprehensible.

And all the while they were preaching from the pulpit about sin, confession, penance and redemption.

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March 6, 2016

Protester calls for seizure of Youngstown Diocese records

OHIO
WFMJ

By Janet Rogers, Reporter

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio –
Youngstown Catholic Bishop George Murry is being called on to settle 28 cases of child sexual abuse allegedly perpetrated Brother Stephen Baker, who was a coach at Warren John F. Kennedy High School in the 1980’s and 1990’s.

“We want the county prosecutors in Mahoning and Trumbull Counties to request Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine to do the same kind of investigation that Pennsylvania’s Attorney General did,” said Dr. Robert Hoatson, who was among the protesters outside the offices of the Youngstown Diocese on Sunday.

The recently completed Pennsylvania investigation revealed decades of alleged systematic protection of sexual predators within the community of priests and religious leaders in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Altoona Johnstown, including Brother Stephen Baker.

In 2013 Baker committed suicide shortly after the church settled lawsuits filed by 11 victims who had been students at Warren JFK.

“We want a group of law enforcement officers to raid the Youngstown Diocese and take out the secret files on every priest, just like they did in PA. It is the only way we got to the truth in Altoona and Johnstown. It is the only way we will get to the truth in Youngstown, Ohio,” said Dr. Hoatson, who is a counselor with Road to Recovery based in New Jersey and works with victims of sexual abuse.

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Pell grieves for Ballarat: special interview

ROME
Bendigo Advertiser

By Melissa Cunningham in Rome
March 6, 2016

Cardinal George Pell says he grieves for Ballarat and prays daily for victims whose lives have been shattered by the Catholic Church’s scourge of sexual abuse.

In a his bid to try and set the record straight in his hometown, Australia’s most senior cleric spoke directly with The Courier in Rome on Saturday.

He accepted some victims may never be healed and others would never be willing to accept any help from an institution that failed to protect them.

During the rare interview, the Cardinal refused to answer questions relating directly to church’s handling of child sexual abuse allegations inflicted on children by clergy he work alongside for years.

“I spent nineteen and half hours refusing to defend the indefensible, I am not about to try and do that again,” he said.

“The Catholic Church has made enormous mistakes and I accept that.”

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Bishop’s message addressed grand jury report in Sunday mass

PENNSYLVANIA
WJAC

BY JILLIAN HARTMANN SUNDAY, MARCH 6TH 2016

JOHNSTOWN, Pa. – It was not your typical Sunday mass at St. John Gualbert Cathedral in Johnstown Sunday morning.

Bishop Mark Bartchak asked priests and religious leaders in the Altoona-Johnstown Roman Catholic Diocese to share a message to fellow Catholics during Sunday’s mass.

The message is in regards to the grand jury report uncovering alleged widespread sex abuse within the diocese.

“A number of people asked, ‘Do I want to be part of the church anymore?” Father James Crookston said while reading Bishop Bartchak’s message. “Where is God in all of this?”

Bishop Bartchak heard a number of questions asked from victims of abuse, their families and other Catholics responding to the grand jury report. He said this week was filled with darkness of sin.

“We will pass through this darkness,” said Crookston.

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Advocacy group calls for Youngstown Diocese investigation

OHIO
WKBN

By Molly Reed
Published: March 6, 2016

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (WKBN) – Road to Recovery, a group that represented and advocated for alleged victims of sexual abuse by a former Warren JFK baseball coach, was back in Youngstown on Sunday calling for an investigation.

The group wants Mahoning and Trumbull County prosecutors to request the state attorney general’s office launch an investigation of the Youngstown Diocese.

“We want a group of law enforcement officials to raid off that building, and to take out the files just the way they did in Pennsylvania,” said President Robert Hoatson.

The grand jury report in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese in Pennsylvania said the Diocese helped cover up the sexual abuse of hundreds of children.

In 2013, the Youngstown Diocese announced abuse settlements with 11 former students of Brother Stephen Baker while he was on staff at Warren JFK in the late ’80s. Students came forward years later, claiming they were also abused by Baker.

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Ballarat abuse survivors urge Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull to act on redress scheme

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

Child sexual abuse survivors from Ballarat who flew to Rome to watch Cardinal George Pell give evidence at the child abuse royal commission want the Prime Minister to commit to a redress scheme.

The Victorian group arrived home on Sunday after a crowdfunded trip to Rome.

“A lot of people might think this is the end of our journey. It’s not,” abuse survivor Andrew Collins told reporters at Melbourne Airport.

He said clerical abuse in Ballarat – including that by Australia’s worst paedophile priest, Gerard Ridsdale – and its long-term effects on victims highlighted the importance of supporting survivors.

“We call on the Turnbull Government to put into place the redress scheme that the royal commission has put forward,” Mr Collins said.

“The longer he holds off, the more people will die.”

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‘We are much bigger than these scars’ says priest in wake of child sex abuse scandal

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

Standing inside Our Mother of Sorrows’ stained glass doors before Sunday mass, Rick Messina had no trouble finding words to describe his reaction to new details released last week regarding decades of years-old child abuse by local Roman Catholic clergy.

The parishioner called it a striking reminder that “horrible and disgusting” things happened for far too long in churches like his. As hard as it was to hear, it was also a necessary reminder, he said.

“It’s sad that things that happened so many years ago are taking away from the beautiful things that are happening in this church,” Messina said. “But it’s happening right now because it needs to. This has to be out in the open so we can learn from it and people can heal.”

He was among parishioners Sunday who said the both decades-long and decades-old scandal has hung over the Roman Catholic Diocese of Altoona–Johnstown and its parishes for too long – but has done so because it was hushed rather than healed.

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State investigation of sex abuse in Youngstown Diocese sought

OHIO
Vindicator

Staff report

YOUNGSTOWN

The leader of a national support group for victims of sexual abuse by priests and other Catholic Church clergy today called upon county prosecutors in Mahoning and Trumbull counties to urge Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine to launch an aggressive investigation into sexual abuse within the Roman Catholic Diocese of Youngstown.

At a press conference this morning outside the headquarters of the diocese, Robert Hoatson, president of the New Jersey-based Road to Recovery, “We want the same type of investigation as was done in Altoona {Pa.].”

Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane last week released findings of an investigation of the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese. It revealed that former bishops either covered up or didn’t do enough to respond to hundreds of abuse allegations in the diocese by more than 50 priests from 1966 to 2011.

“We want state officials to raid that building,” Hoatson said, referring to the West Wood Street headquarters of the Youngstown Diocese.

“In that building, I guarantee you are the same types of files found in Altoona,” Hoatson said. He added his group recommends the state review records of all priests that have served in the diocese over the past 60 years or so.

Also speaking at the press conference today were Barbara Aponte, mother of a former student at Warren John F. Kennedy High School who says her son committed suicide due to the shame of abuse he suffered at the school; her husband Felix Aponte and “John Doe,” a former JFK student who described the long-term impact of abuse he said he suffered also at JFK in the 1980s.

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Magdalene women remembered in Mothers’ Day ceremony at Bohermore cemetery

IRELAND
Galway Bay FM

Galway Bay fm newsroom – Around 50 people attended a flower laying ceremony at the Magdalene graves in Bohermore cemetery this afternoon.

The event is part of the national ‘Flowers for Magdalenes’ event which saw flowers laid on Magdalene graves in cities and towns that had Magdalene Laundries.

The Galway event was sponsored by Galway City Community Network – the network of community, voluntary and environmental groups in the city.

The ceremony saw the womens’ names read out, while the crowd also heard some poems and a song, dedicated to the Magdalene women buried at Bohermore.

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Magdalene laundries victims remembered in Dublin

IRELAND
RTE News

Flowers were laid at five separate plots in Glasnevin Cemetery, in memory of the women who died in Magdalene laundries.

A special ceremony in honour of the women was held at the graveyard.

Several hundred people came to the event, which was organised by the Justice for Magdalenes Research group.

Spokesperson Claire McGettrick said there are seven known plots in Glasnevin where Magdalene women are buried.

She said it is estimated that the remains of up to 400 women were buried in the graveyard, but many of their identities remain unknown.

The women were from laundries in High Park, Drumcondra and Sean MacDermott Street in Dublin.

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‘Torn’ Andrew Bolt denies change of heart in Pell interview

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Michael Bodey
The Australian
March 7, 2016

Andrew Bolt has hit back strongly at the implication he changed his view of Cardinal George Pell’s testimony to the Royal Commission into child abuse.

Within hours of confirmation the News Corp Australia columnist had secured an exclusive interview with Cardinal Pell in Rome last week, Bolt turned on the Cardinal, saying his testimony that a particular case “wasn’t of much interest to me” was “disastrous” and “will be hung around his neck for the rest of his career”. The following morning, Bolt tempered his criticism, noting he felt “embarrassed because I think I’ve joined the pack attacking Pell” and joked “for the first time in my life I’m trending positive on Twitter as a result”.

He told The Australian he was offended by the implication he would be so “craven” as to change his opinion in order to curry favour with anyone.

“Even when I attacked Pell this week there was no suggestion that the interview would not proceed, or that some extra conditions would be imposed,” he said.

“I note that (ABC 7.30 host) Leigh Sales thought there was now such a good chance of my interview being cancelled that she offered to take over instead.”

Indeed, discussions between Bolt and Pell’s communications adviser at the Catholic Archdiocese of Sydney, Katrina Lee, began before Christmas, in a chance encounter in Sydney.

Bolt told Lee he believed Pell’s public responses had been poor and the public, and parishioners, needed to hear ­directly from him to “see if he really got it”.

Ms Lee made no promises but the Cardinal later agreed, with the only caveat being his health and that the interview take place after his testimony.

Cardinal Pell, the Vatican’s third highest-ranking official, is understood not to have sought counsel or permission from the Vatican or imposed any conditions for the interview. Bolt’s request that the interview be long enough to cover topics beyond the royal commission, and unedited, was amenable to the Cardinal. The only conditions placed on the interview, Bolt said, were his own: that he retain editorial control and that it run for an hour.

Bolt secured the interview without a broadcaster or producer, although he told the church he would be in Rome for the week covering the Cardinal’s testimony.

Bolt asked Simon Nasht, the producer of a documentary about indigenous constitutional recognition he is filming for the ABC, I Can Change Your Mind About Recognition, to produce the interview.
The documentary outfit Nasht formed with philanthropist Dick Smith, Smith & Nasht, is also producing the political two-parter, Howard on Menzies, for the ABC.

Nasht is understood to have shopped the Pell interview to commercial networks, at least one of which turned it down due to the inability to execute, repackage or edit the material.

Sky News Australia — for whom Bolt worked as a “contributor” in Rome during Pell’s testimony, ahead of what is expected to be a more substantial role this year (possibly making The Bolt Report a nightly program), could accommodate the one-hour, live broadcast, which aired on Friday night.

That format and broadcaster was also to Cardinal Pell’s liking; his advisers chose the venue in Rome.

Bolt said any implication he was a friend of Pell’s is incorrect. He, and sources at the church, say they’ve met less than a handful of times, and only once in private. Even so, the issues surrounding the Catholic Church’s behaviour, and its coverage in the Australian media, have been some of Bolt’s most wrenching topics.

Sources close to Bolt told Media they had not seen, in almost two decades’ writing, the normally forthright opinion-maker for the Herald Sun as torn and contemplative about his feelings on the matter. Previously, Bolt had described the media coverage of Cardinal Pell as a “witch-hunt” and he was furious his home paper, the Herald Sun, led two weeks ago with the story that the Victoria Police was investigating the Cardinal on separate matters to the royal commission. Yet he has also been disappointed at Cardinal Pell’s public attitude. Bolt’s about face on Wednesday was typical of his conflict.

But that’s off screen. “In the end, it is just another interview,” Bolt told Media.

“I asked. He accepted.”

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George Pell and Patrick Dodson: the functionary and the visionary

AUSTRALIA
The Age

March 5, 2016

Martin Flanagan
Columnist for The Age

Two faces of Australian Catholicism were on display this week. One was Cardinal George Pell’s testimony before the royal commission on child sexual abuse.

Pell could have been discussing the internal workings of a department store. He had his job, others had theirs, he didn’t “indulge rumours” and had “no interest” in tracking those rumours down even though they concerned the welfare of the youngest and most vulnerable members of what once would have been called his flock. What his testimony lacked was moral imagination.

Patrick Dodson has moral imagination and courage to match.

I do not equate religion with spirituality, but it is genuinely spiritual people who make religion meaningful by investing it with humility and compassion. Without those qualities, religion is no more than a series of empty rituals encased, in the case of the Catholic Church, in a medieval pomp which is supposed to embody a Jewish rebel who sided with social outcasts and was openly contemptuous of the religious authorities of his day for their double standards.

Also this week, Patrick Dodson was named as Bill Shorten’s pick to replace WA Labor senator Joe Bullock. If there’s a person whose vision contrasts with Pell’s, it is Dodson.

Dodson was sent to Monivae College in Hamilton as an Aboriginal kid from the Northern Territory at a time when Aboriginal people were still not counted in the census. Within three years, he was school captain. That achievement alone marks him as an extraordinary person.

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Will Catholics Ever Get Angry About Cover Ups?

PENNSYLVANIA
Catholic4Change

MARCH 6, 2016 BY SUSAN MATTHEWS

Click here to read: “Law officers, clergy forged ties stymieing prosecutions,” by Caitlin McCabe and Maria Panaritis, The Philadelphia Inquirer, March 6, 2016

Having faith and holding leadership accountable should not be mutually exclusive. We can have faith in God and send Bishops to jail. We can be Catholic and not tolerate the cover up of clergy child sex abuse. How many Saints died for their faith? The least we can do is speak up to protect our Catholic faith from its morally and criminally corrupt leaders. Or, we can sit in Church and put our blinders on. After all, everyone makes mistakes. Just so long as a priest doesn’t make a child rape “mistake” with their own grandson or granddaughter.

This is where I’d like to insert a string of expletives but I’ll continue to use the vocabulary the Immaculate Heart Sisters taught me. Pope Francis is a breath of fresh air but the Church needs a hurricane now. It needs every Catholic voice to say, “We will not tolerate this.”

If you can’t get angry about child rape then maybe muster up some irritation at the amount of money going to victim settlements that could have been avoided if predators had been stopped when they were first discovered. That money should have gone to feeding the hungry, sheltering the homeless or keeping your parish open. How much have you put into the collection basket over a lifetime? How much did your parents? Keep it coming.

According to the US Bishops Conference, the Catholic Church spent almost $3 billion on settlements, therapy for victims, support for offenders, attorneys’ fees and other costs in the United States from 2004 until 2013. Restitution to victims is fair and right. But I’m sure victims wouldn’t have traded their childhoods for it. Wouldn’t it have been better to shut the abuse down in its tracks before the numbers grew? Instead they covered it up and caused immeasurable emotional damage and still growing financial burdens.

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Back from the brink: taking back control after sexual assault

AUSTRALIA
Courier

By MELISSA CUNNINGHAM
March 6, 2016

Their extraordinary bond was formed under the most harrowing of circumstances.

They call each other “brothers.” They call themselves survivors.

They’re the the men who form Ballarat’s Centre Against Sexual Assault mens’ survivor group.

All have survived sexual abuse in some form but many suffered it at the hands of Ballarat clergy.

Since it was established in 2013 in response to the Victorian Parliamentary Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse the highly successful CASA men’s group has grown to more than a 100 members.

Behind the scenes, CASA senior counsellor Andrea Lockhart has worked tirelessly for years, directly with the men to rebuild their shattered lives.

Many of the men credit her with bringing them “back from the brink”.

Last week, Ms Lockhart was right beside them on arguably their biggest step in their a journey so far: A trip to Rome to bear witness to Cardinal George Pell’s evidence to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

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After Pell, the questions we all need to answer

AUSTRALIA
The Age

March 7, 2016

Phil Cleary

Church leaders were not doing anything that unusual when they covered for Ridsdale and his ilk.

Was anyone not moved to despair, or maybe even outrage, watching Cardinal George Pell’s evidence at the royal commission on child sexual abuse? Even if Pell didn’t know, as implausible as it looks, that Father Gerald Ridsdale and a cabal of priests and brothers was systematically raping children in the 1970s and ’80s, his church’s guilt is palpable.

Why was Pell, a big strong outspoken man in his younger years, so timid when a generation of children was being terrorised by cowardly, sadistic brothers and priests? If he’d been a reserved, retiring kind of man we might have imagined he didn’t have the nerve to confront those who covered for Ridsdale and his like. But Pell is not that kind of man. He’s never flinched in a public debate about Catholic doctrine or the failings of sinners. A man of the old world, George Pell was never one to mince his words.

Yet when acting as a “consultor” to Bishop Ronald Mulkearns it seems he never asked one forthright question about why a known sadistic “sinner”, Ridsdale, was being moved from parish to parish. All the while, says Pell, those with knowledge of these crimes either lied to or failed to confide in him. Whatever the truth of what he knew, there can be no mistaking his indifference to the lives of young boys at Catholic schools. While some men in his predicament might have shed a tear for those who have suffered, the cardinal from Ballarat is made of sterner stuff. His testimony was all about survival and proving that, because he was ignorant of the crimes, he had no moral culpability.

Now that we’ve established the church’s culpability, we need to answer other, very serious questions. Why could men supposedly called to God act so sadistically? Were there reasons, other than the protection of the church’s name, that induced its leaders to protect those men engaged in a brutal misuse of power? Were some church elders burdened by what they believed were their own guilty secrets?

Just as importantly, we must ask what part notions of male entitlement played in the crimes about which Pell has been interrogated. It’s all too convenient to reduce these crimes to the acts of “evil paedophiles”, as if men weren’t committing the same crimes against women and children with impunity in the broader society.

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Ruth Krall, A Considered Response to Lambelet and Hamilton: Vis-à-vis the Topic of Being Made Invisible…One More Time

UNITED STATES
Bilgrimage

William D. Lindsey

It’s my honor to share with you today an important essay by Ruth Krall responding to a recent report published by National Catholic Reporter regarding the discussion of the legacy of John Howard Yoder in the Mennonite Church. As I’ve noted repeatedly on this blog,* the work of Ruth Krall, a Mennonite peace-and-justice scholar, and of other Mennonite women has been critically important in making the Yoder story known to the public, and in forcing Mennonite institutions to come to terms with Yoder’s legacy of serial sexual violence towards female students and women he counseled pastorally, even as he represented the church in the public square as its most well-known advocate of non-violence.

And so, as Ruth herself is, I was dumbfounded to read the recent NCR article by two (male) scholars reporting on the discussion of Yoder’s legacy and not in any way referring to the ground-breaking work Ruth has done in this field. Here’s Ruth’s response to this article:

A Considered Response to Lambelet and Hamilton:
Vis-à-vis the topic of being made invisible…one more time

Lambelet, K. and Hamilton, B. (February 29, 2016). Viewpoint: Engage Survivors More, and Yoder Less (p. 1). National Catholic Reporter Online.

Ruth E. Krall, MSN, Ph.D.
Professor Emeritus and Program Director Emeritus
Goshen College
Goshen, IN

Thesis: When male Yoderian scholars seek to bury me and my academic scholarly work about John’s life and his patterns of victimization in silence, they simultaneously also bury the story of Yoder’s victims in the very same breath. These are the voices the Yoderians now claim they want to hear. They cannot have it both ways. Either the narrative, including my contributions to this narrative, is allowed to stand on its own and be recognized for what it is, or the narrative is skewed and we can learn nothing from it of value. When the narrative is manipulated and skewed, the victims’ voices are once more buried inside a dominant male prerogative to define reality.

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Whitley Bay vicar Leonard Skinner facing jail after admitting indecent assault against a boy

UNITED KINGDOM
Chronicle

A shamed vicar has pleaded guilty to four counts of indecent assault against a boy in the 1970s.

Leonard Skinner, 79, of North Tyneside , is now facing a possible jail sentence after pleading guilty to the four offences.

Skinner, of Brighton Grove, Whitley Bay, pleaded guilty to two counts of indecent assault on a boy aged under 14 and two counts of indecent assault on a boy aged under 16 at Highbury Magistrates’ Court.

The offences are understood to relate to when Skinner lived in the south of the UK. He moved to the region following his retirement in 2001 where he has performed “stand-in” duties at local parishes.

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​Meet Hilly. One of my new mates and heroes. And meet the courageous Ballarat group. Mates and heroes.

AUSTRALIA
Manny Waks

He only recently learned of his full name, Gordon Hill, and his date of birth. He used to be called Number 29.

You see Hilly was placed in the Catholic St Joseph’s orphanage in Ballarat when he was very young. He was just a number to them. And when, in his early teens, they needed to make room for the new-comers, they heartlessly kicked him out. Number 29 was around 14yo at the time, all alone in this world, left to fend for himself. St Joseph’s gave him the meagre sum of two shillings and nine pence, enough money to pay to return by post the suitcase they lent him. Because he couldn’t read, he didn’t realise he was meant to return it. So he kept it. He still proudly has the suitcase.

During his years at the orphanage, he was treated with brutal inhumanity, ostensibly by religious people. Individuals who pray regularly to their God, people who believed the rest of us were going to pay gravely for our sins, unless, of course, we joined them.

He was deprived of his dignity and basic human rights; no education, food deprivation, mental abuse, brutal physical and sexual assaults, and the like. The nuns used to force him and his peers to cut the whips from the trees with which they would brutally assault them. They even pulled out his teeth with pliers; he was caught eating a carrot he found while working because he was starving. While as an adult he received false teeth, they no longer fit in his mouth due to the damage they caused to his cheek bones when the brutes pulled out his teeth. As you can imagine, Hilly has scars all over his body – not to mention his emotional scars. As he tearfully told me, he never even got a hug. Listening to his harrowing ordeal, I had to wipe away my tears, too.

Hilly was constantly on the run. He pretty much ran as far as he could within Australia; from Ballarat (Victoria – Australia’s East) to Western Australia.

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Le cardinal Barbarin “n’a jamais couvert aucun fait de pédophilie”

FRANCE
L’Express

[Cardinal Barbarin never covered up pedophilia, according to the bishops conference in France.]

La Conférence des évêques de France a rappelé samedi sa “politique de fermeté” menée contre les actes de pédophilie commis par des prêtres, après les accusations de “non dénonciation de crime” contre des responsables du diocèse de Lyon, dont le cardinal Barbarin.

Dans un communiqué diffusé ce samedi, “la Conférence des évêques de France tient d’abord à redire sa profonde compassion et son soutien aux victimes” d’actes pédophiles. Une réaction après des accusations portée contre les responsables du diocèse de Lyon pour “non dénonciation de crime”.

Les évêques tiennent à réaffirmer “la politique de fermeté menée depuis plus 15 ans sur ces questions de pédophilie”, poursuit le texte, en répétant la “volonté de coopération complète avec la justice” et en assurant le cardinal Barbarin “de son soutien et de ses prières”.

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Une plainte contre le cardinal Barbarin et le Vatican

FRANCE
Liberation

[A complaint against Cardinal Barbarin and the Vatican.]

Par Bernadette Sauvaget — 4 mars 2016

Après l’ouverture d’une enquête préliminaire par le parquet de Lyon, une victime présumée du père Bernard P. porte plainte contre Philippe Barbarin et un puissant membre de la curie romaine.

Le ciel s’assombrit singulièrement au-dessus de l’évêché de Lyon. Une première victime présumée d’un prêtre pédophile, a déposé plainte, vendredi contre Philippe Barbarin, cardinal-archevêque de Lyon et un des hauts responsables du Vatican, le cardinal Ludwig Muller pour «non-dénonciation d’agressions sexuelles sur mineurs de quinze ans». Président de l’association La Parole Libérée, qui regroupe les victimes présumées du père Bernard P., mis en examen le 27 janvier, François Devaux a indiqué à Libération, que cette plainte concernait également le directeur de cabinet de Barbarin, Pierre Durieux et une bénévole du diocèse, Régine Maire. Cette dernière avait organisé, le 11 octobre 2014, une rencontre entre le père Bernard P. et l’une de ses anciennes victimes présumées.

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Spotlight – der Film. Und über das Fehlen des investigativen Journalismus zu Kirchenthemen in Deutschland

DEUTSCHLAND
Religions Philosophischer Salon

[Spotlight – the film. And about the lack of investigative journalism to topics Church in Germany.]

SPOTLIGHT: Der Film.

Über die gute Macht der kritischen Presse und das Fehlen des Recherche-Journalismus in Deutschland….

Ein Hinweis von Christian Modehn

Der große Spielfilm SPOTLIGHT (eigentlich auch ein „gespielter Dokumentarfilm“) beweist: Wenn der politische, der demokratische Wille bei Journalisten geweckt und dann tatsächlich auch gelebt wird, kann durch journalistische Recherche unglaublich Wichtiges und Wertvolles geleistet werden. Das Investigativ-Team der Zeitung „Boston Globe“ (USA) hat allen Einschüchterungen und Angstmachereien der „großen Herren“ ,vor allem in der römischen Kirche von Boston, widerstanden; die Journalisten haben in diesem Umfang sicher als die ersten (2002) der Welt gezeigt: Es gibt einen weit verbreiteten Missbrauch von Kindern durch Priester im Erzbistum Boston. So wurde die Wahrheit frei gelegt, die mit aller Macht zugedeckt und verschwiegen wurde von den Vorgesetzten, also den kirchlichen Bürokraten an der Spitze. Sie werden ja oft „Verantwortliche“ und „Elite“ genannt, ein seltsamer Titel angesichts ihrer Kumpanei, die eigenen Leute, die Kleriker, unter allen Umständen zu schützen. Diese Tatsache erschüttert genauso wie das Leiden der Opfer Mitgefühl weckt und Schmerz.

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Kardinal Pell missbraucht seine Kirche

DEUTSCHLAND
Publik-Forum

[Cardinal Pell abused his church]

von Thomas Seiterich 05.03.2016

Als Rambo hat George Pell gewirkt, seit ihn Papst Johannes Paul II. zum Erzbischof in der aufgeschlossenen australischen Metropole Melbourne und später in der liberal progressiven Millionenstadt Sydney machte. Auch als Kurienkardinal in Rom tritt der konservative Pell heute gern mächtig auf. Doch nun wendet sich das Blatt. Denn Pell hat offenbar sexuelle Gewalttaten von Priestern in Australien vertuscht

Die bösesten Seiten dieser Geschichte von sexueller Gewalt durch katholische Priester spielen in der australischen Provinz. Dort, wo es heiß, trocken und zumeist langweilig ist, im Städtchen Ballarat im Norden des Bundesstaates Victoria im Südosten des fünften Kontinents. George Pell wird dort geboren, im Weltkriegsjahr 1941. Später ist er – ein Hüne von Mann, ein erfolgreicher Football-Spieler und Priester – Weihbischof in der kleinen Diözese Ballarat.

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Sex abuse survivors accuse Scottish inquiry of ‘abusing’ them all over again

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

Vicky Allan, Senior features writer / Saturday 5 March 2016

SURVIVORS are growing so despondent at the progress of the Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry that many say they feel like they are being abused all over again.

Survivors say the Scottish government is failing them, and feel the slow progress and limited remit of the inquiry is adding insult to the already very grievous injuries they have suffered, and believe they will never see the justice they deserve.

Andi Lavery, of Catholic survivor group White Flowers Alba, has even declared that he no longer wants to testify at the inquiry. “They offer us only further trauma and intrusion upon our continued suffering,” he said. Alan Draper of survivor organisation In Care Abuse Survivors (INCAS) has also said that survivors have “lost all faith in the Scottish Government’s ability to help them to achieve justice, accountability and redress”.

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Leaks trial shelved as scandal swirls around Vatican

VATICAN CITY
The Sunday Times (UK)

Christopher Lamb Published: 6 March 2016

A VATICAN trial of a pregnant public relations consultant has been quietly shelved as Pope Francis fights to salvage a reform agenda overshadowed by scandal.

Francesca Chaouqui, a 34-year-old PR, is accused of leaking secret Holy See papers while Francis is beset by calls for the resignation of some of his closest allies.

Chaouqui told The Sunday Times last week that “proceedings are at a standstill ”, adding that she did “not know if it [the trial] will resume”.

It had been adjourned on December 7 but failed to restart on schedule at the end of February. A Holy See spokesman said no new date had been set.

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Cardinal George Pell obeyed canon law at the price of child victims

AUSTRALIA
The Courier-Mail

Karen Brooks
The Courier-Mail

AS THE Academy Awards were presented and Spotlight, (the film about the Boston Globe exposé on the clergy and child sex abuse) won the Oscar for Best Picture, Cardinal George Pell began giving evidence at the child abuse royal commission from the Hotel Quirinale in Rome.

Ironic really, as Pell’s adamant stance he “knew nothing”, “was deceived” and his consistent use of the “hierarchical defence” (it was someone else’s responsibility) was a performance in itself.

From confident and articulate to almost bumbling and vague, what became very clear over the four days of questioning was that, regardless of Pell’s protestations of innocence and/or ignorance, he never once asserted himself on any victim’s account, nor went out of his way to prevent what was clearly happening from continuing.

On the contrary, Pell did the minimum required at all times and then, it appears, dismissed it from his mind.

Like the stories of Father Gerald Ridsdale’s abuses, they were sad stories “and of not much interest to me”.

But, after all, Cardinal Pell had a career to shore up. Is it a coincidence that the more he “didn’t know” and act upon the harrowing tales of sexual abuse of children, the higher up the Catholic ladder he climbed?

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It’s time to spotlight a personal experience with priestly abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
Lancaster Online

Maureen Powers | Special to LNP

They say timing is everything.

In view of “Spotlight” just receiving an Academy Award for best picture, last week’s grand jury report on two Catholic bishops’ cover-up of rampant child sexual abuse by 50-plus priests over 40 years in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese couldn’t be more timely.

(“Spotlight” is the story of The Boston Globe’s investigation of massive child sexual abuse and its cover-up by Cardinal Law in the Archdiocese of Boston.)

I grew up in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese, and I can say unequivocally from personal experience that child sexual abuse by clergy existed more than 50 years ago. I was sexually molested by a prominent priest of that diocese between the ages of 12 and 14, and I can shed light on some ways in which these acts are kept secret from a victim/survivor’s standpoint.

Of course, there was the grooming of both me and my family. I played the organ in church from the time I was 12, and also volunteered in the church office. I accompanied my abuser on various overnight trips, one of which included my sister and parents.

This man was a real go-getter, universally admired and trusted. To be honest, I loved him and was flattered by his attention. He couched some of his actions as “research,” some as “educating” me, and some as “friendship.” When things got to a point that I drew the line — this was witnessed by a friend of mine — the behavior stopped.

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Carey’s fury at Church over abuse case bishop: Ex-Archbishop accuses officials of destroying dead priest’s reputation with unproven claims

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

By JONATHAN PETRE FOR THE MAIL ON SUNDAY

The former Archbishop of Canterbury Lord Carey has lambasted the Church of England for destroying the reputation of a celebrated bishop over unproven child abuse claims.

In a fierce attack on the church he once led, Lord Carey said he was ‘appalled’ at the way it handled the accusations against Bishop George Bell – whom he said had been judged guilty without a fair hearing.

Bishop Bell, who served in Chichester for 30 years until his death in 1958, was renowned during the Second World War as a peacemaker and almost certainly would have been Archbishop of Canterbury but for his denunciation of the Allied bombing of Dresden.

But last year an unnamed woman alleged that he had sexually abused her in the 1940s. The diocese gave credence to the claims, issuing an apology and paying compensation.

Chichester cathedral has now renamed its education centre –previously called Bishop George Bell House – and plans to change its prominent memorial to the bishop.

But in a move that will embarrass his former colleagues, Lord Carey has added his weight to protests that the diocese’s investigation into the claims had been flawed and unjust, saying an individual had been crushed by a ‘powerful organisation’.

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Lord Carey “appalled” at Church’s treatment of Bishop Bell

UNITED KINGDOM
Premier

Sun 06 Mar 2016
By Antony Bushfield

Former Archbishop of Canterbury Lord Carey has criticised the Church of England for the way it responded to allegations of abuse against Bishop George Bell.

He said he was “frankly appalled by the way the Church authorities have treated his memory”.

In October 2015 the Church of England released a statement apologising to a woman who claimed she was abused by the respected Bishop Bell in the late 1940s and early 1950s.

It also paid compensation to the woman who cannot be named for legal reasons.

Sussex Police has revealed it would have arrested Bishop Bell and interviewed him on suspicion of serious sexual offences had he still been alive.

In a letter to Bishop Bell’s niece Lord Carey is highly critical of the Church’s response to the allegations.

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‘Spotlight’ Oscar puts focus on clergy sex abuse of children | Opinion

UNITED STATES
NJ.com

By Mark Crawford

Last Sunday night at the Academy Awards, in many ways, was an event to remember. Not just because of the controversy so boldly acknowledged by the show’s host, Chris Rock regarding the lack of diversity among those nominated for awards, but also because it shined a light on the issue of sexual assault and abuse — an issue which, for much too long, has been one that we as a society would rather not talk about.

A highlight was the appearance of Vice President Joe Biden, who challenged those watching to “pledge to intervene on behalf of those woman and men sexually abused, who did not or cannot consent.”

He acknowledged sexual assaults happen to women and men at staggering proportions on college campuses. He then introduced pop star Lady Gaga — herself a sexual assault survivor — who performed a sobering rendition “Til it Happens to You” to the backdrop of a stage filled with sexual abuse survivors.

Finally, from the awarding of the first Oscar to the last — when the Academy chose to honor the movie “Spotlight” as Best Picture, a movie about the importance of investigative journalism and its responsibility to shine a light on issues that must be exposed in an effort to protect and maintain a healthy and safe society.

When “Spotlight” was named best picture, it also gave a voice to the countless victims of sexual abuse — I among them — who hoped this real life story would continue to shine a light on the long-held dark secrets of a powerful institution. It gave us a glimpse of the suffering of those sexually abused as children and the walls that were built to ensure the protection of the powerful, so their secrets remained hidden and victims suffered in silence.

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The faithful reflect at St Mary’s after a week of Cardinal Pell’s testimony

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

March 6, 2016

Stephanie Wood
Senior Writer

As Monsignor William Mullins led Sunday mass at St Mary’s Cathedral, some flapped the order of service booklets before their faces to keep cool; others absorbed the words on the pages in their hands.

If they’d started on the first page, they would have read an attention-grabbing introductory missive from St Mary’s Dean, Father Don Richardson. “I prayed six exorcisms last week,” the dean wrote.

It wasn’t just Cardinal Pell’s testimony that put the Catholic Church in the headlines last week: according to an ABC news report, the Psychology Council of New South Wales is investigating a Wollongong psychologist and priest for comments about exorcism he made to triple j broadcaster John Safran.

It was, thought Father Richardson, “an opportune teaching moment”.

What he was talking about and what he had prayed were “minor exorcisms”, the type performed at the celebration of Baptism – simply, prayers “that the candidates be kept safe from Satan”.

“My advice is not to give Satan a foothold … Try to have a healthy spiritual, mental and physical lifestyle. Don’t be complacent about sin and evil.”

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Clerical sex abuse survivors urge adopting redress scheme now

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

SURVIVORS of clerical sex abuse have called on the federal government to adopt a national redress scheme after returning from Rome.

The Ballarat survivors were welcomed by family at Melbourne Airport yesterday after returning from hearing Cardinal George Pell give evidence to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

“We call on the Turnbull government to put into place the redress scheme that the royal commission has put forward,” survivor Andrew Collins said.

“All we need is Malcolm Turnbull to stand up and say he’ll do it. The more he holds off, the more people will die.”

The commission recommended in September last year a national redress scheme to cost $4.3 billion over 10 years. The scheme would be largely funded by institutions where the abuse occurred, with an est­imated 60,000 abuse survivors able to receive payments of $10,000 to $200,000.

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Public asked to lay flowers on the graves of Magdalene women for Mother’s Day

IRELAND
Irish Independent

David Kearns
PUBLISHED
06/03/2016

To mark Mother’s Day members of the public are being asked to place flowers on the graves of Magdalene women.

A number of events are taking place today to honour the thousands of women who died in Magdalene Laundries, and Justice for Magdalenes Research (JFMR) is calling on the public to visit these graves and “lay a flower for those who lived and died behind convent walls”.

The Magdalene laundries, also known as Magdalene asylums, were institutions, generally run by the Catholic Church, that ostensibly housed “fallen women”.

Continuing to operate well into the late 20th century, an estimated 30,000 women are believed to have been confined in these institutions.

At least 1,663 former Magdalene women are buried in cemeteries across Ireland, many interred in unmarked graves.

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Editorial: Church sex abuse victims search for justice

PENNSYLVANIA
Daily Times

One week ago, “Spotlight” captured the Academy Award for Best Picture, detailing the gritty investigative journalism at the Boston Globe that blew the roof off the rampant problem of the sexual abuse of children by priests in the Boston Archdiocese.

In a sad bit of irony, just two days later Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane was shining another “spotlight” on the same problem, this time much closer to home.

In a horrifying 147-page grand jury report, Kane laid out the sordid details behind decades of predator priests who preyed on children in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese.

The saga was hauntingly familiar, especially here in the Philadelphia region, and not just because of the Oscar-winning film.

The grand jury report into the depravity in Altoona mimicked the findings of a grand jury report issued a decade ago detailing similar issues in the Philadelphia Archdiocese.

The Altoona report cites dozens of priests abusing hundreds of innocent children over a period of nearly a half-century. Even more damning, once again the grand jury found the leaders of the archdiocese seeming more concerned with their reputation and that of the church, as opposed to the kids who were routinely being molested.

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‘A crime scene’: Doveton priest haunted by parish’s dark history

AUSTRALIA
The Age

March 6, 2016

Carolyn Webb

A Catholic priest whose parish is at the centre of historical sexual abuse allegations has spoken of the burden of living in a possible “crime scene”.

Father Michael Shadbolt, parish priest of Holy Family church in Doveton for 17 years, said he was horrified by allegations that some of his predecessor priests had committed sexual and other assaults on parishioners.

He said he knew Peter Searson in 1996 when both were priests in the area, but he had not known he was a paedophile. “In a way I’m horrified,” Father Shadbolt said. “But I guess also in a sense I’m not surprised because he did seem a very strange personality.”

“I’m possibly living in a crime scene,” he told Fairfax Media before 9.30 Mass on Sunday. “It’s quite sad. Perhaps the presbytery is where some of the crimes were done, I don’t know for sure.”
“I like the house, but since this stuff has come up in the last couple of years, you can’t help have some feelings, that it’s my home but it also has a dark history.”

Searson, a priest at Doveton for 13 years, was stood down in 1997, after being charged with physical assault of two altar boys. He died in 2009.

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Pope Francis’ cardinal problem: an exit strategy for George Pell

ROME
Sydney Morning Herald

March 6, 2016

Christopher Lamb

For years he has been one of the big beasts of the Catholic Church.

When in Sydney, Cardinal George Pell would regularly make the gruelling 22-hour flight to Rome so he could keep his Vatican contacts warm and his ear close to the ground.

He impressed popes and fellow cardinals with his forthright, no-nonsense defence of Catholic teaching and, it is understood, would regularly send church leaders press cuttings of articles where he had been criticised in the Australian media for standing up for the faith.

But after four days of forensic cross-examination by the royal commission, where he repeatedly pleaded ignorance about clerical sexual abuse, the cardinal’s stock is no longer rising.

Senior figures in the Vatican were closely monitoring the video-link testimony at the Albergo Quirinale and will no doubt have noted the remark by Gail Furness, counsel assisting the commission, that she found Pell’s denials “implausible”.

Here in Rome the cardinal has a critical role in trying to clean up the Holy See’s finances – that in turn has made him enemies in a culture where accountability and transparency are in short supply. Even his staunchest defenders now accept that Pell is an embattled figure seemingly under attack from all sides.

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Abuse survivors urge PM to act on redress

AUSTRALIA
Otago Daily Times

Child sex abuse survivors have called on Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull to commit to a national redress scheme.

The group from ballarat in Victoria arrived home today after a crowd-funded trip to Rome to witness Australia’s Cardinal George Pell give evidence to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

“A lot of people might think this is the end of our journey. It’s not,” abuse survivor Andrew Collins told reporters at Melbourne Airport.

He said clerical abuse in Ballarat – including that by Australia’s worst pedophile priest, Gerard Ridsdale – and its long-term effects on victims highlighted the importance of supporting survivors.

“We call on the Turnbull government to put into place the redress scheme that the royal commission has put forward,” Mr Collins said.

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Survivor Reacts To New Church Sex Abuse Scandal

CALIFORNIA
KEYT

Tracy Lehr, KEYT – KCOY – KKFX Reporter, tracy@keyt.com

FILLMORE, Calif. –
Spotlight won two Oscars and the publicity has been followed by more cases of abuse.

One day after the Academy Awards Ceremony officers arrested Vidal Morales, 55 of Ventura. The longtime youth coordinator at St. Francis of Assisi Church in Fillmore is accused of committing lewd acts with a girl. The Ventura County Sheriff’s Department said Morales posted bail early Saturday. They also said other alleged victims have been identified.

Manny Vega is not surprised. “With this prestigious recognition of Spotlight, more folks understand what took place and the incredible power the church has. It is disheartening to hear of another case of childhood sexual abuse by a church member in our community. The absolute betrayal and abuse of power again proved to be an ongoing systemic problem within the Catholic Church. My hopes are that the church will fully cooperate with law enforcement and be as transparent as they say they are. However my experience and fear are more child victims and deception and delays by the church,” said Vega via text message.

Vega described it as a David and Goliath struggle that survivors have been engaged in with the church.

The former Oxnard Police Officer and Marine has been one of the most outspoken victims of the Catholic church priest abuse case that led to a multi-million dollar settlement.

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Reagan: ‘Soul murder’ in Altoona

UNITED STATES
Casper Star-Tribune

By Michael Reagan

If you’ve seen the excellent movie “Spotlight,” you know what it takes for a newspaper to expose the sexual abuse of children by priests in the Catholic Church.

“Spotlight,” which recently won the Academy Award for best picture, is the true story of how the Boston Globe’s investigative Spotlight team uncovered the massive scandal of child molestation and cover-up within the Boston Archdiocese.

Challenging one of the most powerful institutions in Boston, digging up the ugly truth and detailing it on Page 1 took a strong mix of principle and guts by the Globe’s editor, Marty Baron.

Many journalists around the country before him had heard similar charges about priests repeatedly molesting children in their cities and towns, but they had done nothing.

The Globe’s in-depth investigation, which began in 2001, made headlines around the world, shamed the Boston Archdiocese and shook the entire Catholic Church to its core.

It set off a series of exposes in other cities that proved that the problem the Catholic Church — my church — was having with serial pedophiles was nothing new or restricted to Boston.

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Former Whitley Bay vicar admits to sexual abuse in the 1970s

UNITED KINGDOM
ITV

A former Whitley Bay vicar is facing a possible jail sentence after pleading guilty to four counts of sexual abuse against two boys in the 1970s.

Reverend Leonard Harold Skinner, 79, of Whitley Bay has pleaded guilty to the offences, which took place while he was serving as a vicar in London.

The Archdeacon of Northumberland, the Venerable Geoff Miller, has offered an ‘unreserved apology’ to the victims.

We offer an unreserved apology to the survivors of the appalling abuse by the Reverend Leonard Skinner and acknowledge their courage in coming forward.

The Diocese of Newcastle treats all allegations of sexual abuse with the utmost seriousness and expects the highest standards from its clergy, including in retirement. As soon as the diocese was told that Leonard Skinner was under investigation by the Metropolitan Police, he was immediately prevented from carrying out any further duties in church.

Leonard Skinner moved to North Tyneside after he retired from his last post as Priest-in-Charge of a parish in 2001.

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No fallout from Altoona child abuse in York

PENNSYLVANIA
York Daily Record

Rick Lee, rlee@ydr.com March 5, 2016

While “profoundly” and “deeply” saddened by the child abuse allegations leveled by a grand jury against the Altoona-Johnstown Catholic Diocese last week, reverends at two York County parishes said there have been no repercussions here.

After mass on Saturday, both the Rev. Keith Carroll, of St. Patrick Catholic Church, and the Rev. Daniel Mitzel, of St. Rose of Lima Catholic Church, invoked the name of Bishop Nicholas C. Dattilo, the head of the Harrisburg diocese from 1990 to 2004, as the origin of the diocese’s youth protection policy concerning child abuse by the Catholic clergy or church employees.

Last week, Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane released the findings of a grand jury that determined two bishops who led the Altoona- Johnstown Diocese for 40 years were instrumental in covering up the sexual abuse of hundreds of children by over 50 priests or religious leaders.

Rev. Carroll and Rev. Mitzel said that none of their parishioners have approached them with questions or concerns about the allegations in the neighboring diocese. They have not, therefore, found it necessary to address it from the pulpit, they said.

“No one has approached me about it,” said Rev. Mitzel after Saturday’s evening Mass. “We do remind our congregation twice a year to be aware of and report anything of that nature.”

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Some good can come when survivors of sexual abuse denounce the criminals

AUSTRALIA
The Age

Michael Short
Journalist

In this column two weeks ago, I wrote about the experience of being painfully hit a few months earlier by flashback visions of a paedophile priest’s genitals.

The memory, which I had suppressed for about 35 years, was triggered by a joint email from the then headmaster (who retired at the end of last year) and the chairman of Ballarat and Queen’s Anglican Grammar School, seeking information about past abuse at the school, which I attended for the final five years of my secondary education.

I was, and remain, critical of that email – which, because of the school’s incomplete database, went only to a limited number of former students – as it seemed designed to keep things quiet, rather than exposing these crimes. Instead of urging victims to contact the police and the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, the authors claimed it was not prompted by the royal commission and asked people to contact the school, which would treat the information confidentially, or to contact the Anglican Church.

It is self-evident that institutions, I wrote then and repeat now, can not conduct independent inquiries into themselves.

That column triggered a community response that has left me drained and dismayed. I received many kind and gentle messages of support, which buoyed me, but I was saddened by the messages from people who shared harrowing tales of the sexual and physical abuse they suffered at the school.

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Dioceses more responsive to Catholic Church sex abuse scandals

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Review

BY JASON CATO | Saturday, March 5, 2016

Decades of silence by the Roman Catholic Church regarding child sexual abuse by priests has given way to an era of atonement, as public apologies and condemnation come from local dioceses up to the Vatican.

But that isn’t enough for some. The church needs to name priests suspected of abuse, like those outed last week in a 147-page grand jury report about the Altoona-Johnstown diocese, so more go to prison, said David Clohessy, national director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests.

“More words, clearer words, sadder words — it’s all words, and words protect no one. Decisive actions protect kids,” said Clohessy, expressing a desire for local dioceses to post online the names of priests accused of sexually abusing children. “They often are fixated on PR, policies, panels and protocols that look terrific on paper but essentially are worthless.

“Sincerity must be judged by actions, not words.”

Leaders of the Catholic Church in Pittsburgh and Greensburg said they are committed to stopping sexual abuse and righting decades of wrongs.

“I would hope in every diocese we realize we can never do enough to keep this horror from occurring,” said Pittsburgh Bishop David Zubik, who will host a special “Service of Apology” March 21 in St. Paul Cathedral in Oakland.

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Abuse Victims Hope ‘Spotlight’ Film Brings More People Forward

IOWA
WHO

BY REID CHANDLER

DES MOINES, Iowa – It’s Saturday morning, and Smokey Row Cafe is full the sounds of footsteps and coffee cups clanking down on ceramic plates. It’s a busy atmosphere, but in the noise, a small group of survivors are huddled in a back corner, hoping to meet some new faces.

The Iowa SNAP (Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests) group isn’t a large organization, but it’s a resource of support for anyone who needs it. People like John Chambers, who says he was abused by a priest while attending Dowling Catholic High School in the 1960s, joined SNAP only after the group was highlighted by a Boston Globe investigative report in 2002, uncovering a massive scandal within the Boston Archdiocese to cover up sexual abuse claims.

It’s that same group that’s highlighted in the Oscar Award-winning film, “Spotlight.” The 2015 film documents the true story of the Boston Globe’s uphill battle to uncover the truth. In the movie, a member of SNAP talks with Globe reporters about his experiences being abused in the church as a child. With the film’s success, local SNAP members are hoping more abused Iowans will come out of the shadows.

“If you need a therapist, if you need an attorney, if you need just a support group of other survivors that you want to meet with – any of these things, to recognize that there’s a community already out there that knows what you went through,” said Bill LaHay with Iowa SNAP. “A community out there that isn’t going to say, ‘Get over it.’ Or isn’t going to tell you, ‘No it didn’t happen.’ Isn’t going to do the stuff that non-survivors just can’t know.”

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Alvernia professor: We’ve become numb to priest abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
Reading Eagle

By Karen Shuey

Two Roman Catholic bishops who led a Pennsylvania diocese helped conceal the sexual abuse of hundreds of children by more than 50 priests and other religious leaders over a period of at least 40 years, according to a grand jury report made public this week.

The 147-page report unveiled by Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen G. Kane outlines how the two bishops filed away allegations from children in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese as part of an effort to avoid public scandal. And worst of all, Kane announced at a press conference, no criminal charges will be filed because some abusers have died, the statute of limitations has expired or victims are too traumatized to testify.

Corey Harris and Gerald Vigna, theology professors at Alvernia University, said the report contains tragic and horrific revelations. But they agreed the discovery of these crimes is not necessarily surprising given the dark cloud of abuse that still hangs over the church.

“The sad thing is that at this point I don’t feel much of anything because it happened with such frequency for such an extended period of time,” Harris said. “It doesn’t cause as much of a reaction as it once did. And that’s really upsetting.”

Especially since Harris grew up in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese.

“The fact that I didn’t even get a call from my mother when the news broke about this tells me that no one is really shocked by these horrible reports anymore,” he said. “It’s become a part of our history.”

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Law officers, clergy forged ties stymieing prosecutions

PENNSYLVANIA
Philly.com

by Caitlin McCabe and Maria Panaritis, STAFF WRITERS.

JOHNSTOWN, Pa. – In January, a deputy attorney general and two agents walked into a judge’s chambers here with questions. They wanted to discuss a meeting decades earlier that had ended with a “monster” priest being allowed to go free.

This undated photo shows Bishop James Hogan, right, and Pope John Paul II in Rome. Hogan and Joseph Adamec, two Roman Catholic bishops who led a Pennsylvania diocese, helped cover up the sexual abuse of hundreds of children by over 50 priests or religious leaders over a 40-year period.

Back in 1985, Cambria County Judge Patrick T. Kiniry had been a local prosecutor, and met with Bishop James Hogan to discuss a priest suspected of sexually abusing children. As leader of the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese, the bishop had outsize influence in the area. Kiniry, a former altar boy, had been excited to meet him.

Hogan didn’t dispute the claims about the Rev. Francis McCaa that day.

But nothing happened.

McCaa, suspected of abusing at least 15 boys, some as young as 8, lived another two decades without ever being charged.

“You have to understand: This is an extremely Catholic county,” Kiniry allegedly explained this year when Deputy Attorney General Daniel J. Dye and two agents came to talk to him about the case.

Such cozy alliances between law enforcement and church officials were pervasive and a central theme in a 147-page grand-jury report last week on decades of clergy sex abuse in the central Pennsylvania diocese.

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Man relives a personal hell to tell story of boyhood abuse by priest in Maine

MAINE
Portland Press Herald

BY ERIC RUSSELL STAFF WRITER
erussell@pressherald.com | @PPHEricRussell | 207-791-6344

For 40 years, Neal Gumpel kept the details locked away in a dark corner of his memory.

Details about the night he met the Rev. Roy Drake while visiting his brother at Maine Maritime Academy. The night Drake violently molested him. The night everything changed.

Though he kept it hidden, the encounter shaped his entire life. It led to alcohol and drug abuse, helped ruin his first marriage, kept him awake nights and even affected his health.

“It sounds dire, but I felt like I was at a point where I had to come forward or I was going to kill myself,” Gumpel said.

At the urging of his wife, Helen, who feared she was losing her husband, Gumpel contacted Mitchell Garabedian, the Boston lawyer who has represented hundreds of victims of sexual abuse by clergy and helped expose a massive cover-up of pedophile priests by the Catholic Church.

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Delays keep wounds open: Mother of boy allegedly sexually abused by Timothy Probert speaks of losing faith in justice system

WEST VIRGINIA
Bluefield Daily Telegraph

By SAMANTHA PERRY Bluefield Daily Telegraph

PRINCETON — The mother of a boy who was allegedly sexually abused by a church youth volunteer is losing faith in the justice system after the case has dragged on in the courts for more than two years.

The woman, who was interviewed by the Daily Telegraph on the condition of anonymity, is the mother of one of nine victims allegedly molested by Timothy Probert, a former volunteer at Westminster Presbyterian Church in Bluefield and mentor for the Working to Eliminate Child Abuse and Neglect (WE CAN) program in Mercer County.

“It keeps the wounds open and prevents us from healing like we need to be able to do,” the mother said. “How unfair is it that the victims have almost no say in any part of the process? We just have to wait for someone else to decide when this terrible time in our lives can come to an end.”

•••

Probert, 57, of Mercer County, is facing 50 charges relating to alleged sexual abuse of children.

Arrested in December 2013 on 38 counts of child sexual abuse related charges, Probert’s grand jury indictment in February 2015 included 12 new charges that stemmed from another victim coming forward and additional charges being added in other cases, Sgt. M.D. Clemons, with the Crimes Against Children Unit of the West Virginia State Police, said in a previous report.

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March 5, 2016

More alleged victims of sexual abuse by priests come forward after ‘Spotlight’ Oscar win

NEW YORK
PIX 11

WOODSIDE, Queens — The spotlight is still on “Spotlight” and the clergy sex abuse scandal.

Megan Peterson, 26, is a painter and a leader in the New York City branch of SNAP, the survivors network of those abused by priests.

When the movie, “Spotlight,” detailing the Boston Globe’s investigation into the Catholic Church sex abuse scandal won best picture, Paterson’s phone started ringing with more alleged victims coming forward.

“I think my phone started ringing an hour after,” Peterson told PIX11 News, “with new survivors and whistleblowers.”

“More victims are coming forward every day,” Peterson said.

Peterson herself said she was a victim herself. She was allegedly raped by her parish priest in Minnesota 12 years ago.

Peterson said Father Joseph Jeyapaul was convicted of sexual assault, served some time, but is now about to work as a priest again in a parish in his native India.

“There are children who, without a doubt, are going to be hurt,” Peterson said, fighting back tears. It’s because of “the Vatican’s decision to reinstate him,” she added.

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Advocate protests outside cathedral

PENNSYLVANIA
We Are Central PA

[with video]

By Karina Cheung | kcheung@wtajtv.com
Published 03/05 2016

Altoona, Blair County, Pa.

The victims of sexual abuse are seeing support from people outside of our state.

An advocate from New Jersey protested outside of the Blessed Sacrament Cathedral in Altoona Saturday.

Robert Hoatson is a former priest and now an abuse victim advocate.

He wants justice for the victims that suffered sexual abuse by church officials.

That’s why he traveled to Altoona from New Jersey to pass out leaflets calling for justice.

“We’re here today to call for finally the resignation of one of the men who lead the cover up,” explained Hoatson, “who is the reason why much of this has been covered up.”

Bishop Adamec and Bishop Hogan are cited in the Attorney General’s grand jury report for covering up sexual abuse crimes dating back to the 1940’s.

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Seattle priest, a known pedophile, was moved parish to parish

WASHINGTON
Seattle Times

[with map and documents]

The secret files on the Rev. Michael Cody show how the Seattle Catholic Archdiocese moved him from parish to parish, even after knowing he was a sick and dangerous pedophile.

By Lewis Kamb
Seattle Times staff reporter

They described his “deviant behavior,” recorded his “abnormal attraction toward young girls,” even warned “he will either blow his brains out or cause a major scandal in the parish.”

In letter after letter, supervising priests, the auxiliary bishop, even a noted psychiatrist alerted Seattle Archbishop Thomas Connolly that the Rev. Michael Cody was a sick and dangerous pedophile who posed grave threats to children and others in the Western Washington parishes he served during the 1960s.

“It is my diagnosis that he is suffering from a form of sexual deviation (Pedophilia) …,” Dr. Albert Hurley wrote in a letter to Connolly in March 1962. “It is my recommendation that he be removed from parish work as soon as possible.”

But instead of notifying police or removing Cody from his duties, Connolly’s response largely was to move him to unsuspecting parishes. First, within Seattle. Then, to Auburn. And finally, to Skagit and Whatcom counties, where Cody oversaw four different churches and a school into the mid-1970s.

When it placed him in Skagit County, the archdiocese provided Cody an isolated home where the unsupervised priest regularly brought youngsters, records and interviews show. All the while, he continued to prey on children.

The disturbing details about the archdiocese’s facilitation of the priest’s pedophilia are documented in internal correspondence, performance reviews and other records contained within what’s known as Cody’s “secret file.”

Portions of his decades-old file surfaced publicly last year in case filings for a lawsuit brought against the archdiocese by a Sedro-Woolley woman who, as a teenager, was sexually abused by Cody for two years.

Based on a consultant’s review of such secret files, the Seattle Archdiocese in January published a list identifying 77 clergy members who lived or worked in Western Washington and are known or believed to have sexually abused children.

When publicizing the list, Seattle Archbishop Peter Sartain said in a statement he took the action “in the interest of further transparency and accountability,” but church officials offered no details about abuse incidents.

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Cardinal George Pell says ‘I have never lacked any compassion for victims’ in rare interview

ROME
Sydney Morning Herald

March 6, 2016

Melissa Cunningham

Cardinal George Pell says he grieves for Ballarat and prays daily for victims whose lives have been shattered by the Catholic Church’s scourge of sexual abuse.

In a his bid to try and set the record straight in his hometown, Australia’s most senior cleric spoke directly with Fairfax Media’s Ballarat Courier in Rome on Saturday. After numerous requests for an interview, the Cardinal phoned from a car on his way to a religious retreat outside of Rome.
He accepted some victims may never be healed and others would never be willing to accept any help from an institution that failed to protect them.

During the rare interview, the Cardinal refused to answer questions relating directly to church’s handling of child sexual abuse allegations inflicted on children by clergy he work alongside for years.

“I spent nineteen and half hours refusing to defend the indefensible, I am not about to try and do that again,” he said. “The Catholic Church has made enormous mistakes and I accept that.”

But he pledged to help those wounded by the scourge of sexual abuse and push to end Ballarat’s hidden death toll made up of suicides and premature deaths of so many abused whose pain was too much to bear.

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‘It’s the pope’s loss’: Ballarat sex abuse survivors speak after return from Rome

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Australian Associated Press
Saturday 5 March 2016

Child sexual abuse survivors from Ballarat who flew to Rome to watch Cardinal George Pell give evidence say it’s the pope’s loss he didn’t meet with them at the Vatican.

The group of survivors arrived back in Melbourne on Sunday morning after a crowdfunding campaign made it possible for them to fly to Rome to witness Pell give evidence at the royal commission into institutional child sexual abuse.

“It’s been a whirlwind trip, nothing like we expected,” David Ridsdale told reporters at Melbourne airport.

Ridsdale – who was abused by his uncle and Australia’s worst pedophile priest, Gerard Ridsdale – says the group is disappointed it did not get a chance to meet with Pope Francis.

The Vatican said it did not receive a request for a meeting, even though the group followed Vatican protocol and faxed the application.

“The whole nonsense with the pope … the simple fact is it’s the pope’s loss,” Ridsdale said. “He misses out. It’s not our loss.”

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‘Spotlight’ just won an Oscar. So why am I so worried about the future of religion journalism?

UNITED STATES
Washington Post

By Bob Smietana
March 3

Last night I sat on the couch, turned on a rented copy of “Spotlight” and thought of my Uncle Jimmy.

Wish he’d been there to watch with me.

We didn’t talk much about religion at family gatherings when I was growing up. But when we did, it was loud.

The debate I remember most: the one about the case of the Rev. James Porter.

Porter, who died in 2005, spent more than decade in jail for abusing dozens of children. He admitted abusing as many as 100 kids, most from the diocese of Fall River, about an hour south of Boston.

In the early 1990s, however, Porter’s case was dismissed as “aberrant,” as Cardinal Bernard Law told the Boston Globe in 1992.

Not long after news of Porter’s misdeeds broke in the early 1990s, I sat at the table in my grandmother’s house, listening to an angry debate over the story. My uncle claimed that all the accusations against Porter were exaggerations.

It’s all lies, my uncle told us. The bishop said so.

Some of my other relatives were skeptical. My uncle believed that the church would never lie to him. But his faith in the church and the bishop was betrayed.

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Noted French Cardinal at Center of Priest Pedophilia Case

FRANCE
ABC News (US)

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PARIS — Mar 5, 2016

One of France’s best-known cardinals must defend charges that he failed to denounce a priest allowed to keep his job despite admitting to acts of pedophilia.

The Conference of Bishops of France said on Saturday that there would be “complete cooperation” by Cardinal Philippe Barbarin.

Barbarin and five others were handed preliminary charges last week by the Lyon prosecutor’s office for failure to denounce a crime and endangering others over a case that dated to 1991 — before Barbarin was named cardinal of Lyon. He has said he was convinced the priest had reformed in 2007-2008, when they met, and allowed him to stay on. The priest was removed last year after victims, now adults, stepped forward.

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Demonstration against church leaders planned

PENNSYLVANIA
We Are Central PA

Altoona, Blair County, Pa

Catholics in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese are still reeling over the findings of the alleged sex abuse cover-up. During the church’s holiest time of the year there are feelings of disbelief, sadness, and anger.

On Saturday, members of Road to Recovery, Inc., a non-profit charity based in New Jersey, which assists victims of sexual abuse and their families will be holding demonstrations at churches in Altoona and Johnstown.

The group’s co-founder and president, Robert M. Hoatson, a former priest, has been assisting victims of clergy sexual abuse. He will be calling for the removal of Bishop Joseph Adamec as a bishop of the Roman Catholic Church and the removal and resignation of anyone in the Diocese who covered up childhood sexual abuse.

At least 50 priests are accused of abusing hundreds of children over a four decade period. Many of those men have died and because the statute of limitations have passed, no criminal charges will be filed.

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‘Have their voices heard’: Legislators call for eliminating statute of limitations in child sex-abuse cases

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Democrat

By Dave Sutor
dsutor@tribdem.com

EBENSBURG – With a thunderous voice – reminiscent of an old-time preacher trying to stir souls – state Rep. Mark Rozzi cried out: “Legislators have failed to act, and that’s a fact.”

His last word literally echoed throughout the Cambria County Courthouse’s stone-wall-lined hallways.

Rozzi, a Democrat from Berks County, was speaking Friday about his work to have Pennsylvania eliminate all statutes of limitations for individuals accused of sexually abusing children. The laws came to the forefront this week when Attorney General Kathleen Kane released a grand jury report detailing allegations against more than 50 priests and other religious leaders within the Roman Catholic Diocese of Altoona–Johnstown.

Kane said charges cannot be brought at this time because the alleged acts occurred beyond the statutes of limitations.

Currently, sexual assault victims who were under the age of 18 when the abuse occurred can file civil charges until age 30. Criminal charges can be filed until age 30 if he or she was born before Aug. 27, 2002. That limit increases to age 50 for individuals born after Aug. 27, 2002.

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Area lawmakers rally to abolish statute of limitations on sex abuse charges

PENNSYLVANIA
WJAC

BY LAUREN HENSLEY FRIDAY, MARCH 4TH 2016

EBENSBURG, Pa.- Local lawmakers rallied at the Ebensburg courthouse Friday, asking for change. They want to abolish the statute of limitations on sex abuse charges. This is following a grand jury report uncovered widespread sex abuse and its cover up across the Roman Catholic Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown.

“These laws could have been passed 15 years ago;And we might not be in this position we are today. We could have saved hundreds of lives. Legislators have failed to act, and that is a fact,” said Rep. Mark Rozzi, (D)-126th District Berks Co.

Rozzi said this mission is personal. The 147-page grand jury report brought him back to his own nightmare. He was sexual abused repeatedly at the hands of a priest in 1983.

“I was never the same again,” Rozzi said.

By the time Rozzi came to terms with his abuse, he was out of time to pursue criminal charges or a civil suit. The statute of limitations ran out for Rozzi, and it’s run out for most of the victims in the grand jury report, which why he is taking a stand.

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Ballarat abuse survivors due back in Melb

AUSTRALIA
9 News

AAP

Child sexual abuse survivors from Ballarat are due back in Melbourne after flying to Rome to watch Cardinal George Pell give evidence.

The group of survivors used a crowd-funding campaign to get to Rome after Cardinal Pell was ruled too ill to travel to Australia to give evidence to the child abuse royal commission.

Cardinal Pell met with the survivors for two hours in Rome after giving four days of evidence via video link to the commission.

The group is due to land back in Melbourne at 6.30am on Sunday.

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Child sex abuse: Do Pa. laws thwart prosecution?

PENNSYLVANIA
York Daily Record

Brandie Kessler, bkessler@ydr.com March 5, 2016

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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I Was Sexually Abused By The Catholic Church

UNITED STATES
YouTube

Published on Mar 5, 2016

“We decided to keep it quiet because it was better that way.”

Follow all your BuzzFeed favorites in one app! Get the BuzzFeed Video app here: http://video.bzfd.it/jVwh/0sP9ew5bcr

WAYS TO GET HELP:

SNAP: http://www.snapnetwork.org/
1-877-SNAP-HEALS (1-877-762-7432)

Rape and Incest National Network
https://rainn.org/
800- 656-hope

Child Help – National Child Abuse Hotline
1-800-4-a-child
https://www.childhelp.org/

National Center for Victims of Crime

Home


855-4-VICTIM
VictimConnect.org

The Office for Victims of Crime
http://www.ovc.gov/

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With ‘7×7 Laments,’ artist explores revelations of sexual abuse within the church, evokes discord with ‘rays of hope’

UNITED STATES
Eastern Mennonite University

When Jerry Holsopple entered his sabbatical at Wesley Theological Seminary’s Luce Center for Art and Religion last year, he wasn’t sure where it would take him. It ended up being a journey through new ground and some rather dark valleys.

Holsopple, professor of visual and communication arts at Eastern Mennonite University, heard about the Luce Center’s Artist-in-Residence Program from a friend. It fit what Holsopple was looking for: a place where he could just focus on art, away from research and syllabi. The program provided a small stipend and an apartment on campus near a large and quiet studio space.

“Why don’t you apply?” his friend asked. And so he did.

Best known as a videographer and photographer, Holsopple instead spent his fall semester sabbatical in Washington D.C. engaging in a newer pursuit: painting. He says he “took the risk to learn how to paint” during his last sabbatical, a 2009-2010 Fulbright trip to Lithuania.

On that sabbatical, he learned the art of creating or “writing” icons in the Orthodox tradition. This time, he explored some darker places: stories of sexual abuse and the culpability of the church in some of those stories, particularly the revelations of sexual abuse by Mennonite theologian and church leader John Howard Yoder.

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Parpan Column: A ‘Spotlight’ on a story that needs to be told

UNITED STATES
Suffolk Times

by Grant Parpan | 03/05/2016

There’s a scene late in the Academy Award-winning film “Spotlight” in which a reporter visits a courthouse to secure a document sure to break open The Boston Globe’s investigation into the Catholic Church’s cover-up of allegations that priests had molested children.

Before he eventually obtains the information he is seeking, reporter Michael Rezendes, portrayed in the film by actor Mark Ruffalo, is stonewalled by what seems like every bureaucrat in the building.

The often menial task of acquiring court documents crucial to the telling of a news story is something that plays out every day in newsrooms and courthouses across this country. The lack of enthusiasm from the government worker on the other side of the transaction is something familiar to journalists who have flocked to see the film, which took home Best Picture honors at Sunday’s Oscars.

In the movie, where the stakes are so high and the tension has built for nearly 90 minutes, the scene manages to send a rush of adrenaline through audience members, even those who might not otherwise care about the type of work done by reporters at local newspapers.

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Loud showing of support for victims

AUSTRALIA
Daily Liberal

St Patrick’s Church and St Mary’s Catholic School have become one of the first organisations outside Ballarat to join The Loud Fence Movement.

Parish priest Carl Mackander said he was inspired to begin a local chapter of the movement following the wave of criticism over Cardinal George Pell’s comments at the Australian Royal Commission.

“Cardinal Pell appears to have softened his stance and met with the victims in Rome, and he is appearing more compassionate towards them. He seems to have retracted his earlier comments which were insensitive and showed a real lack of compassion,” Father Mackander said.

Wellington’s parish priest said he, like many, was shocked by Cardinal Pell’s words.

Father Mackander said the movement which began in Ballarat should bring people together.

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Cardinal George Pell is finished whatever way you look at it

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

Peter FitzSimons
Columnist

The Cardinal’s sins means he is finished

Staggeringly, even after all the testimony of Cardinal Pell this week at the royal commission, there is still a scattered band of supporters who refuse to accept the obvious: it is over, and he is finished. The absolute best case that can be made in his defence is that, instead of wilfully ignoring atrocities going on all around him, he just didn’t get that it was his duty to do something, to act for the children. This line of defence has it that he didn’t get it because that was the way things were done in those times, or, more to the point, not done. Now, even if you accept that – and I don’t – how obvious is it that the times have completely passed him by? The Catholic Church sits atop a crisis of its own making. For centuries it has made the sexual starvation of its employees a specific condition of their employment, even while placing many of them around vulnerable children. Notwithstanding the many great priests and nuns who have done wonderful work, such a policy has both attracted and helped to create deviants of indescribable evil, and has demonstrably done so around the world, for centuries. This royal commission is just one example of light currently being shone, globally, upon the horror. Now, in the wake of Cardinal Pell’s testimony, who thinks he is the man who should be in the vanguard of leading the church to the light? Please. “Still,” the supporters cry, “what about the Melbourne Response, that Pell pioneered?” Exactly. You only need to know one thing about the Melbourne Response. Beyond putting a cap on damages paid to victims, it did not result in a single call being made to police. Not one! As victims came forward, deals were done, and money paid, but not a call. Now, who still defends it? Yes, yes, yes, but apart from you, I mean, Gerard.

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Hackers direct users of Scottish Catholic website to online pornography in series of cyber attacks on church

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

Gerry Braiden, Local Government Correspondent / Friday 4 March 2016

VISITORS to the web page of Scotland’s largest Catholic congregation have been directed to a pornographic site, as it emerges the church has been the victim of a series of cyber attacks.

The Archdiocese of Glasgow said its website had been hacked by a group from Malaysia which had previously targeted HSBC and the Canadian military.

A spokesman for the Archdiocese said the church was now taking additional security precautions to guard against future attacks.

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Greek Orthodox priest relieved of duties pending disciplinary decision

ILLINOIS/WISCONSIN
Chicago Tribune

Robert McCoppin
Chicago Tribune

A priest who admitted to stealing more than $100,000 from a Greek Orthodox church has been relieved of his duties pending a final disciplinary decision, officials said.

The Rev. James Dokos, former pastor of Sts. Peter and Paul Church in Glenview, pleaded guilty to felony theft Feb. 22.

The Greek Orthodox Metropolis of Chicago, which oversees dozens of member churches in the Midwest, announced late Friday that the Spiritual Court of First Instance, a body that considers disciplinary actions against clergy members, has submitted a report on Dokos to the Eparchial Synod of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America, which will make a final determination.

Dokos admitted in court to stealing the money from a trust fund he controlled at his former parish, Annunciation Church in Milwaukee.

Under the terms of a plea agreement, Dokos repaid the money, and if he stays out of trouble for a year and performs 40 hours of community service, the felony theft charge will be reduced to a misdemeanor.

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Scituate parishioners petition Supreme Court to let them stay in church

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Herald

Brian Dowling Friday, March 04, 2016

Parishioners occupying St. Frances X. Cabrini Catholic Church in Scituate are making their last stand — petitioning the U.S. Supreme Court to let them stay in their beloved church, which the Archdiocese of Boston has sought to close for more than a decade.

“We made a promise from Day 1 that we would exhaust every avenue of appeal, and this filing to the U.S. Supreme Court completes that promise,” said Jon Rogers, spokesman for the churchgoers, who have held vigil at the church since October 2004. “If they take this, I believe we will win.”

A Norfolk Superior Court judge ruled last May that the people holding vigil at the church were “trespassing,” siding with the archdiocese’s request to evict the parishioners. In October, the state Appeals Court upheld that decision, and the Supreme Judicial Court declined to review the case.

A deal between the parishioners and the archdiocese struck in December allows those holding vigil to stay in the church until the U.S. Supreme Court rules on the petition for review — with the understanding that they would leave if the country’s highest court takes a pass on the case.

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Girl Scouts raise record funds despite archdiocese criticism

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Columbia Daily Tribune

ST. LOUIS (AP) — The Girl Scouts of Eastern Missouri has raised a record amount of money at its annual fundraiser, a week after the Archdiocese of St. Louis suggested local troops shouldn’t be a part of its parishes.

Girl Scouts spokeswoman Aurrice Duke-Rollings said the organization’s event in St. Louis netted more than $350,000 from 500 guests as they enjoyed a variety of desserts inspired by Girl Scouts cookies.

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports the event was planned far in advance of St. Louis Archbishop Robert Carlson’s unexpected announcement urging priests to sever ties with the Girl Scouts. He said the organization promotes values that are “incompatible” with Catholic teachings.

“We must stop and ask ourselves — is Girl Scouts concerned with the total well-being of our young women?” Carlson wrote in the letter. “Does it do a good job forming the spiritual, emotional, and personal well-being of Catholic girls?”

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Joe Spagnolo: Stolen innocence the cardinal sin

AUSTRALIA
PerthNow

JOE SPAGNOLO
Political Editor
PerthNow

I AM embarrassed to be a Catholic. It is with a heavy heart that I feel moved to say that. I’ve worn a crucifix around my neck for most of my 51 years — a gift from my devout Catholic Italian grandparents when I was born.

I was baptised Catholic, attended a Catholic primary school at Brunswick Junction, I was an altar boy, and was married in a Catholic Church. My children were baptised Catholic.

But this week, as the eyes of the world focused on Australia’s most senior Catholic, Cardinal George Pell — as he gave evidence to Royal Commission on Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse via video link from Rome — I was underwhelmed by his actions, his words and his attitudes towards victims of crime.

I just wanted to see some sympathy from Pell. I wanted to see some empathy.

Instead, all I saw was a church leader who was quick to blame others, and quick to blame ignorance, for the atrocities committed against Catholics by the very men who were supposed to protect them — priests.

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After twist in defamation case against Freeport man, judge suggests a settlement

MAINE
Portland Press Herald

BY SCOTT DOLAN STAFF WRITER
sdolan@pressherald.com | @scottddolan | 207-791-6304

While Freeport resident Paul Kendrick appeals a $14.5 million verdict against him in a complex defamation case, a federal judge held an unusual hearing Friday in which he encouraged the two sides to reach an out-of-court settlement instead.

Kendrick lost at trial in U.S. District Court in Portland last summer, but an appellate court in Boston issued a ruling last month that put the entire case in question by asking whether it ever belonged in federal court at all.

The appellate ruling raised so many new questions that Judge John A. Woodcock Jr., who presided over the trial, ordered all parties in the case to appear before him again on Friday.

Kendrick was accused of defamation after he began a widely broadcast email campaign in January 2011 in which he accused the American founder of an orphanage in Haiti of sexually abusing the boys in his care. Kendrick widened the campaign against the founder, Michael Geilenfeld, to include Hearts with Haiti, the North Carolina charity that raises donations to fund his orphanage.

The Portland jury did not believe the trial testimony by seven former orphans in Haiti about sexual abuse and found that Kendrick was reckless and negligent in making the accusations. It awarded actual damages of $7.5 million to Hearts with Haiti, and $7 million to Geilenfeld.

The 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals is still considering Kendrick’s appeal of the verdict, but it sent the unanswered question of whether federal court was the correct venue back to Woodcock to decide. If Woodcock decides the venue was correct, the appellate court would resume its review of the case.

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RETIRED BISHOP JOSEPH ADAMEC SHOULD RESIGN AS A BISHOP

PENNSYLVANIA
Road to Recovery

Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane’s release on March 1, 2016, of the Grand Jury Report that investigated childhood sexual abuse in the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown, Pennsylvania, indicates that hundreds of children were sexually abused in that diocese since the 1940s by many clergy members, and the sexual abuse of children was enabled, covered up, and mismanaged by at least two (2) Bishops of the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown

Since the hotline set up by the Pennsylvania Attorney General’s Office has already uncovered approximately one hundred more childhood sexual abuse victims, it is clear that many more children were sexually abused by clergy and other religious persons in the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown, Pennsylvania

WHAT
A demonstration and leafleting requesting parishioners attending Mass in the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown to alert their children, grandchildren, relatives, neighbors, fellow parishioners, and friends that hundreds of children were sexually abused by dozens of priests and other religious persons throughout the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown and that children continue to be at risk of sexual abuse in the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown, Pennsylvania

WHEN and WHERE
Saturday, March 5, 2016, from 11:30 am to 1:00 pm outside the Noon Mass at Blessed Sacrament Cathedral, One Cathedral Square, Altoona, PA 16601

Saturday, March 5, 2016 from 4:30 PM until 6:30 pm outside the 5:00 pm Mass at St. John Gualbert Cathedral, 117 Clinton Street, Johnstown, PA 15907

WHO
Members of Road to Recovery, Inc., a non-profit charity based in New Jersey, which assists victims of sexual abuse and their families, including its co-founder and President, Robert M. Hoatson, Ph.D., a former priest, who is assisting victims of clergy sexual abuse in the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown, Pennsylvania, and Jerry Sypek, a Boston clergy sexual abuse victim/survivor who lives in Williamsport, Pennsylvania

WHY
It is clear from the Grand Jury Report released by Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane on March 1, 2016, that children were, have been, and are at serious risk of sexual abuse by clergy and religious persons in the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown, Pennsylvania. Sexual abuse in the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown is rampant and must be stopped. Demonstrators will call on Catholics to demand the removal of Bishop Joseph Adamec as a bishop of the Roman Catholic Church and the removal and resignation of anyone in the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown who covered up childhood sexual abuse.

Courageous victims should come forward and be proud of themselves for confronting the evils of sexual abuse.

CONTACTS
Robert M. Hoatson, Ph.D. – Road to Recovery, Inc.
Attorney Mitchell Garabedian, Boston, MA – 617-523-6250

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IL–Victims to leaflet at prominent church

ILLINOIS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priest

Victims to leaflet at prominent church
It’s letting accused child molester preach
SNAP: “You’re intimidating abused children”
Group wants pastor disinvited from upcoming event
He’s been in leadership posts with national Baptist organization
“Kids suffer when clerics back other accused clerics,” victims say

WHAT
After a church service, clergy sex abuse victims and their supporters will pass out leaflets to congregants urging church officials to

–disinvite an accused, arrested predatory pastor who is set to speak later in the week, and
–apologize for their “callousness and hurtful behavior” for inviting him in the first place.

The victims will also

–beg anyone who may have seen, suspected or suffered child sex crimes to contact secular authorities, not church figures, and
–praise the three individuals who have reported being assaulted by the minister to law enforcement officials.

WHEN
Sunday, March 6 at 12:30 pm – 1:15 pm

WHERE
Outside Friendship Baptist Church of Chicago, 5200 W. Jackson Blvd. (corner of Laramie) in Chicago

WHO
Two-three members of a support group called SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, including a Chicago woman who is the organization’s founder and long-time president

WHY
Despite being arrested and charged with child sex crimes – and facing three accusers, a South Side pastor is set to preach next week at a historic African American church. Child sex abuse victims want him disinvited. They also want church officials who invited the controversial cleric to apologize for their decision.

Three month ago, Rev. George W. Waddles, Sr., was arraigned on charges that he molested a then-13 year old girl during counseling sessions in his office in 2011, according to Cook County Assistant State’s Attorney Tara Pease-Harkin.

Waddles is the minister at Zion Hill Missionary Baptist Church on the Southside. Despite Waddles admission and arrest, he remains in the pulpit.

At least two other church members have reported that Waddles also attacked them.

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George Pell forced to reveal Catholic Church’s woeful response to sexual abuse of Australian children

ROME
The Advertiser

Charles Miranda in Rome

AS HE lined up to join a guided tour of the Colosseum in central Rome, Paul Levey got to talking with the ticket seller about tattoos.

They compared their inks, shared a laugh then spoke of the stories behind them.

Paul’s yarns were dark, darker than the skies threatening to erupt overhead.

They spoke of unimaginable childhood horrors of abuse at the hands of the clergy in full view of others who actively chose to turn their backs; the physical trauma lasted years but the mental heartache much longer.

“No more silence,” one tattoo says, on the need to speak out about child sex abuses that have gone on within the Catholic Church in Australia.

On this particular stormy day Paul confined his description of them to just a few sentences along the lines of why he and partner Michele East were in Rome.

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Vatican praises Pell and abuse survivors

VATICAN CITY
9 News

AAP

The Vatican has praised Cardinal George Pell and a group of child sex abuse survivors who flew to Rome to hear him give evidence by video link to a royal commission sitting in Sydney.

But Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi said in a statement the “sensationalist” media coverage of Cardinal Pell’s testimony gave the impression the Catholic Church had done little or nothing to address the issue of clergy sex abuse, when that was not the case.

The head of the Holy See press office also said the recent awarding of a best picture Oscar to the film Spotlight about the uncovering of clergy sex abuse in Boston, had a similar sensationalist effect.

Cardinal Pell gave evidence for four nights from Rome’s Quirinale Hotel, admitting the church had made “enormous mistakes” and saying he regretted at times putting the church before victims.

But abuse survivors in the audience were unimpressed with his denials that he was aware of offending by pedophile priests when he served in the Ballarat diocese in Victoria and his shifting of blame to other clergy for cover-ups and scandals.

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