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.

April 5, 2016

Statement from the Chair of the Inquiry April 2016

UNITED KINGDOM
Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse

A number of commentators have this week spoken out, inaccurately, about the Inquiry Chair and the way in which the Inquiry will conduct its work. I want to correct those inaccuracies.

The Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse is unprecedented in both size and scope. It came about as a result of catastrophic failures of institutions to recognise and address the extent of child sexual abuse in England and Wales. Those failures destroyed the lives of children and left them growing up in a society that let them down.

We know of high profile cases where abusers, such as Jimmy Savile, used their positions of trust within institutions to gain unfettered access to children. And in towns like Rotherham, Oxford and Rochdale, we know that organised gangs and networks have targeted vulnerable children for sexual abuse. We also know that the widespread sexual abuse of children has taken place outside of the media spotlight, in the care system, in residential schools, in custody and in other institutional settings. And we know from recent research by the Children’s Commissioner that only around one in eight children who are sexually abused are ever identified by statutory agencies.

As Chair of the Inquiry, I have been asked to investigate the full range of institutions in England and Wales to identify the failures which may have contributed to the sexual abuse of children. The Inquiry is also asked to make recommendations that will help to keep children safe in the future.

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.

Another convicted serial clerical molester dead

CANADA
Sylvia’s Site

[PICOT, CHARLES JEAN – obituary]

Thanks to Derek we have news that 69-year-old thrice convicted serial molester Father Charles Picot is dead. He died 31 March 2016 in Montreal. His funeral will be held 15 April 2016.

Picot was scheduled for trial 10-11 May 2016 in Bathurst New Brunswick. No more adjournments and legal dilly-dallying around now. There will, obviously – and sadly for the complainants – be no trial.

This may seem strange to some, but I have found that the death of their molester is a difficult time for victims. Please keep the many Picot victims in your prayers at this time. Remember particularly those who had hoped to see justice done this May.

Note that the funeral will be held in the Magnus Poirier funeral home and not in a church.

(Father John Sullivan, another convicted serial molester, died in Montreal 27 March 2016. His funeral arrangements were also handled by Magnus Poirier.)

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

Child abuse prevention: Raising awareness and reporting within community

PENNSYLVANIA
WJAC

BY ERIKA STANISH TUESDAY, APRIL 5TH 2016

While legislation was introduced abolishing the statute of limitations on Monday, some are pushing for more to be done about child abuse.

The Pennsylvania Family Support Alliance is urging those in the community to step up and be vigilant in the role of protecting kids.

With April being Child Abuse Prevention Month, those involved in the PFSA hope to help the community raise awareness, recognize the signs and report child abuse if they see it.

“You can’t wait. If you wait, it might be too late,” said Angela Liddle, CEO and president of the PFSA.

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.

House panel approves bill to reform statute of limitations on sex crimes

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

By Ivey DeJesus | idejesus@pennlive.com

By an overwhelming margin, the Pennsylvania’s House Judiciary Committee on Tuesday morning gave its support to a bill that would reform the state’s sex crime law.

House Bill 1947, sponsored by Majority Chairman Ron Marsico (R-Dauphin), would abolish the criminal statute of limitations for future criminal prosecutions.

Under the proposed legislation no one accused of a sexual crime will ever be free from criminal prosecution because of a lapsed statute of limitations. The bill would also raise the civil statute-of-limitations age to age 50.

The bill does not include retroactive components. Victims advocates have long pushed for reforms to the retroactive parameters in the law to allow victims who have “timed out” of the legal system to seek legal recourse.

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.

„Viele reagieren bei der Kirche wie bei der Polizei“

DEUTSCHLAND
Frankfurter Allgemeine

Von KATJA THORWARTH

Der Politologe und Autor Carsten Frerk über Religionsgesellschaften als Wirtschaftsunternehmen, ihre immer noch starke Vernetzung und die Scheu der Politiker, sich mit ihnen anzulegen.

Herr Frerk, welchen Status haben die Kirchen im Staat?
Das ist nicht eindeutig geklärt. Nehmen Sie den Körperschaftsstatus: Eigentlich sind einige Religionsgesellschaften Körperschaften des öffentlichen Rechts. Die Kirchen aber sagen: Wir sind keine gewöhnlichen Körperschaften, die vom staatlichen Hoheitsrecht abgeleitet werden, sondern Körperschaften göttlicher Stiftung. In das Lobbyregister des Bundestages müssen sie sich trotzdem nicht eintragen, sondern haben quasi eine De-facto-Akkreditierung.

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.

NY TIMES ABUSE STORY OMITS KEY FACTS

UNITED STATES
Catholic league

Bill Donohue comments on an incomplete New York Times story:

On the front page of today’s New York Times there is a story about priestly sexual abuse that occurred “long ago” in a western Pennsylvania diocese. The story’s omissions are glaring. Here are some of them:

* Readers never learn what “long ago” means. In fact, the cases of alleged abuse extend back to World War II.

* Readers never learn why old cases of alleged abuse at one high school in the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown was sufficient cause for the local D.A. to refer these cases to the state Attorney General.

* Readers never learn why a grand jury of decades-old allegations in the diocese was summoned, but no other institution, public or private, was probed. It simply cannot be that there are no old cases outstanding in any other institution in the state. So why the cherry-picking?

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

Victims want Atlanta’s Catholic leader to ID accused pedophiles

GEORGIA
Atlanta Journal-Constitution

A victims’ support group says Atlanta’s top Catholic cleric isn’t being transparent about child sexual abuse by priests, instead withholding records that could protect children and help survivors.

For more than a year, the group has been pressing Archbishop Wilton Gregory to reveal the identities of any priests, deacons, brothers or nuns accused of molesting children who spent time working in the Atlanta area. The nationwide Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, wants a list of names posted on the archdiocese website, something more than 30 Roman Catholic bishops across the country have already done.

Such a list would likely include names that have never been publicized, where accusations were handled internally then locked away in church archives.

But Gregory, SNAP members claim, is being stubbornly opaque. About a half dozen activists, most of them victims, staged a small protest this week on the sidewalk outside the Cathedral of Christ the King in Buckhead, holding up posters that said “Protect children” and “Keep kids safe.”

“We think it’s time to stop the secrecy,” SNAP Outreach Director Barbara Dorris said. “We think it’s time to start putting the protection of children first.”

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.

Harsh words for former Sault priest and church

CANDA
The Sault Star

By Harold Carmichael, The Sudbury Star
Tuesday, April 5, 2016

The victim of a now-dead priest he calls a “serial molester” had harsh words for the Catholic Church after settling his lawsuit in Sudbury on Monday.

The victim, identified only as P.J.J., issued the statement following an out-of-court settlement with the Roman Catholic Episcopal Corporation of the Diocese of Sault Ste. Marie.

“This five-year ordeal has cemented my thoughts that this church from the top down is not truly interested in action “¦ only hollow words of apology to placate the masses,” he wrote in a statement released by Beckett Litigation Lawyers of London, Ont.

“If they were truly repentant I would call for them to immediately defrock the pervert collars (I cannot bring myself to ever use the term priest or father), and then offer all the support required to assist the victims. This would also mean to stop defending the convicted collars in litigation immediately.

“These moves would make the church much more acceptable to 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.

Broward ex-pastor convicted of child sex abuse dies while serving life in prison

FLORIDA
Sun Sentinel

Paula McMahon

Jeffery London, the former South Florida youth pastor and charter school official who was sentenced to life for a child sex abuse conviction seven months ago, has died in federal prison.

London, 52, formerly of Broward County, died last week, March 29, in custody at the United States Medical Center for Federal Prisoners in Springfield, western Missouri, the U.S. Bureau of Prisons confirmed Tuesday.

A prison spokesperson declined to provide the cause of death, writing in an emailed response that it “is not considered public information and will not be disclosed.”

London had survived cancer some years ago, according to trial testimony.

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

Editorial: Justice for clergy abuse victims remains a fight

MASSACHUSETTS
Daily Hampshire Gazette

Editorial

Tuesday, April 05, 2016

The Springfield Diocese took the unusual step last week of adding the name of a dead priest to a shameful list: Catholic clergy against whom “credible” allegations of child sexual abuse have been made.

The step came with word that the diocese just settled — for an undisclosed sum — a civil lawsuit brought in 2013 by a Chesterfield man. The suit alleged that this same priest, the late Rev. Paul Archambault, sexually abused the plaintiff for nearly four years, starting around 2006 when the victim was 13. The abuse occurred nearly 50 times in various locations, the man and his attorney claimed, from a Northampton home to a Chicopee parish to a Catholic shrine in Vermont. Confronted later, in 2011, the priest shot himself in the head at age 42 inside a closet at the Our Lady of the Sacred Heart Parish rectory.

All are sorrowful facts — for the Archambault family and all who loved this troubled man and for those he apparently subjected to inappropriate physical and sexual contact.

That’s about as much as most people can bear to hear. This settlement can seem like old news. It comes years after a landslide of legal actions against the Catholic Church. But protecting vulnerable people from sexual abuse demands rigor and attention. And that’s why we think this tragic case deserves closer consideration, in a spirit of moving this issue toward understanding and reconciliation.

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.

Raymond Edward Lavelle

OHIO
The Columbus Dispatch

Lavelle Reverend Raymond Edward Lavelle died on December 31, 2015 while under long-term care at Mohun Health Care Center. The son of Patrick and Celia (McNulty) Lavelle, he was born March 30, 1930 in Cleveland, Ohio. He graduated from the college program at Saint Meinrad Minor Seminary (Saint Meinrad, IN) in 1951, later completing his philosophy studies at the former Saint Charles Borromeo Seminary (Columbus) in 1953 and his theology studies at Saint Vincent Seminary (Latrobe, PA) in 1957. He was ordained on May 25, 1957 by Bishop Edward G. Hettinger. During his ministry Fr. Lavelle served on a number of diocesan boards and committees; he also served in several parishes until his retirement in 2000, spending part of his retirement years as a hospital chaplain and assisting at Saint Paul Parish (Westerville) before physical infirmities confined him to Mohun Health Care Center for several years prior to his death.

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.

Louis M. Diogo

RHODE ISLAND
Rebello Funeral Home

[assignment record – BishopAccountability.org]

December 11, 1920 – April 4, 2015
Resided in Pawtucket, RI

LOUIS M. Diogo, 94, Pastor Emeritus of St. Elizabeth Parish in Bristol, died peacefully surrounded by his family and friends on Holy Saturday, April 4, 2015 at home.

Born December 11, 1920, in Bretanha, Sao Miguel, Azores, a son of the late Jose and Helena (de Sousa Faria) Diogo, he attended public schools in Sao Miguel, Azores. He completed studies for the priesthood at the Seminary of Angra, Azores, and was ordained a priest on June 23, 1946 in the Cathedral Church of Angra by Bishop Guilherme A. C. Guimaraes.

From 1946 to 1953 Fr. Diogo was secretary in the Seminary in Angra. In 1954 he came to the United States and became assistant pastor for a short period at Jesus Saviour Parish in Newport then at St. Anthony Parish in West Warwick. In June 1957 he was transferred to St. Francis Xavier Parish in East Providence and in 1964 he returned to Jesus Saviour Parish in Newport. In December 1965 he became administrator of Our Lady of the Rosary Parish in Providence and served there until his transfer in 1972 to St. Elizabeth Parish, Bristol, also as administrator. In December 1983 Fr. Diogo was incardinated into the Diocese of Providence and appointed pastor of St. Elizabeth Parish, Bristol, where he served until his retirement in 1993.

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.

Another journey into the hell of sexual abuse by priests: Two Altoona-Johnstown questions

UNITED STATES
GetReligion

Terry Mattingly

Trust me. I understand that it would be almost impossible to write a daily news report about the hellish subject of sexual abuse by Catholic clergy that would please all readers. However, someone has to do this work and do it well.

It’s hard to talk about this story having “two sides,” unless you get more specific about the actual topic of a given report. After decades of reading this coverage – some of it courageous, some of it rather shoddy – I think it’s crucial for reporters to make it clear that there are multiple issues being discussed linked to these horrible crimes against God and innocent children and teens.

First, there is the issue of secrecy among high church officials. At this point, you will encounter few people anywhere in Catholicism who have the slightest interest in openly defending what cannot be defended. Maybe behind the scenes? If so, nail them.

However, this brings us to a more complex, and related, issue. How, precisely, should predators in the past be prosecuted and punished? The biggest issue is whether to lift the statute of limitations – which imposes deadlines on when victims can bring civil suits or state prosecutors can press charges against alleged abusers. In some cases, lawmakers have attempted to target the clergy, alone, in these legal efforts, even exempting, to name one example, teachers in public schools from facing new accusations.

The second question is also linked to the prosecution of priests. Should it be assumed that accused priests are guilty until proven innocent, if that can be proven? How do reporters handle cases in which memories have faded, or the details in stories have become muddled?

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

Why London must not be allowed to suppress the awful truth about Kincora

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

As the alleged VIP paedophile ring story at Westminster crumbles, there is still one scandal involving powerful people, blackmail and the abuse of children that continues to churn out disturbing, but credible, material from the past: Kincora.

The so-called former ‘boys’ home’ – an inappropriate, cruel misnomer if ever there was one – in east Belfast has this enduring ability to cast up fresh demons which haunt the lives of the victims that were sent there and also raise serious questions for the British state in Northern Ireland.

Last week’s revelations about the paedophile doctor, Morris Fraser, contained this killer line: that a Freedom of Information request about the child psychiatrist’s work in Belfast during the early years of the Troubles was blocked on the grounds of “national security”.

Which raised the possibility that Fraser, who – incredibly – was allowed to keep practising in his field of child psychiatry right up until the mid-1990s, despite a number of convictions for sexually abusing boys, was a “protected species” by the security services.

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.

Mount Cashel Civil Trial Begins at Supreme Court

CANADA
VOCM

Monday , April 4 2016

A civil trial involving the victims of Mount Cashel, the Catholic Church, and the Christian Brothers began today at Supreme Court in St. John’s. The complainants were all residents of the orphanage between the 1940s and 1960s. The trial is set to be lengthy, and will continue into June.

In his opening statement this morning, lawyer Mark Frederick said the Archdiocese is not responsible for the faults of the Christian Brothers, who he says essentially acted as wardens at Mount Cashel. Lawyer for the victims, Geoff Budden, says the church has not done anything to adequately address the years of sexual and physical abuse suffered by the boys who once lived at the orphanage.

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

Priest convicted of sexual assault pays $70,000 in fines

PENNSYLVANIA
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

April 5, 2016

By Torsten Ove / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

A Catholic priest convicted of molesting orphans in Honduras has paid $70,000 in court-ordered fines and restitution costs that were the subject of a tussle with the U.S. Attorney’s office last week.

Federal prosecutors had asked for a judge to freeze $1.2 million in assets held by Joseph Maurizio because they said he hadn’t paid the fine and they feared he was trying to transfer money and property to a relative.

But his lawyers have produced papers showing he has paid the money and U.S. District Judge Kim Gibson in Johnstown last week rejected the freeze request as moot.

Maurizio, 70, was sentenced March 1 to 17 years in federal prison and ordered to pay the fines within 10 days of sentencing. Prosecutors said he didn’t and also said he had deeded 42 acres in Paint Township and Windber to relatives for $1. In addition, Assistant U.S. Attorney Stephanie Haines said he had told his niece in a recorded jailhouse call that he intended leave his accounts with a “zero balance.”

But Maurizio’s lawyers later produced documents indicating he’d paid the money, saying there was no “malicious intent to not comply” with the judge’s order.

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

Jack the Insider: ‘The disgraceful life of Bishop Ronald Mulkearns’

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

One should never speak ill of the dead as the saying goes. I think we can rule it out in the case of the former Bishop of Ballarat Ronald Austin Mulkearns who died yesterday. He was 85 years of age.

Mulkearns’ predecessor, James Patrick O’Collins was five months shy of his 95th birthday when he passed away in 1983. Bishops tend to live long lives. Maybe it’s because they don’t have to worry about lay concerns like paying the mortgage or the rent or even where their next meal is coming from. Perhaps bishops like O’Collins and Mulkearns lived such long lives because God was not so keen to have them join him.

Both bishops oversaw and facilitated the activity of paedophile priests in the Ballarat Diocese. There are literally thousands of victims in the post-war to present period. Giving evidence at the Royal Commission in February, Mulkearns stammered out apologies and claimed he did not know what to do when it came to paedophile priests. He was, he said, simply ill equipped to deal with marauding serial offenders like Gerald Ridsdale and Monsignor John Day.

Last night I saw an SBS news report on Mulkearns’ death. The report concluded by saying Mulkearns had never reported offending clerics to police. It was a rookie mistake for any journalist who has put a toe into the foul water of the Ballarat Diocese. Of course Mulkearns had never reported to police that his priests had raped children. The real story is the cops came to him.

In the mid-1990s, Victoria Police looked to charge Mulkearns for his role in protecting and facilitating paedophile priests but the charges did not proceed. The truth is the police had plenty to charge Mulkearns with but that would mean opening up a dirty secret and one Victoria Police would hold close for more than forty years.

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.

Group wants list of Catholic sex abusers published

GEORGIA
11 Alive

[with video]

ATLANTA – A group of survivors is pushing Catholic bishops in Georgia to publish the names of every cleric involved in sexual abuse.

The demand comes from SNAP (Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests). The group rallied Monday afternoon near the Atlanta Catholic Cathedral of Christ the King, holding signs asking the church to “protect children” and “keep kids safe.” They also displayed photos of children from across the country at the age they say they first started to experience abuse. Most are now adults.

SNAP says too many of the bishops and deacons accused of hurting them have been quietly disciplined by the church, or not at all. That means there’s no criminal history to warn other groups about the dangers posed in letting them around children.

That’s why Barbara Blaine, who says she was raped for nearly four years starting in 8th grade, wants bishops to publish names, photos, and work histories of every cleric with a substantiated claim of sexual abuse filed against them. Today, they directed that request to the Archdiocese of Atlanta.

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.

Prestigious private schools face multi-million dollar lawsuits from alleged abuse victims

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

Exclusive by the National Reporting Team’s Lorna Knowles

Some of Australia’s most prestigious private schools are being sued for millions of dollars by men who allege they were sexually abused by teachers and staff.

Sydney lawyer Ross Koffel is bringing multiple claims for damages in the NSW Supreme Court against schools including The Scots College, Knox Grammar, Waverley College and De La Salle, Revesby Heights.

Mr Koffel told the ABC he had been approached by a large number of men who allege they were abused at private schools around the country.

“It just seemed to me to be the same problem in school after school after school and it surprised us how many schools, how many students are affected,” Mr Koffel said.

“It is a systemic problem in the institutions, in the schools. We’re alleging sexual abuse of the students during school hours in most cases and on the school premises, and it just really couldn’t be worse.”

Ten separate claims against The Scots College, Knox Grammar, Waverley College and De La Salle College, Revesby Heights have been lodged and another two claims will be lodged on the coming months.

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.

EXCLUSIVE: Sex abuse victims press Gov. Cuomo to support extending statute of limitations against abusers

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY REUVEN BLAU NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Tuesday, April 5, 2016

Sex abuse victims and child advocates turned up the heat Monday on Gov. Cuomo, calling on him to support legislation that would extend the statute of limitations for criminal charges and civil suits lodged against accused abusers.

For years, Joel Engelman, who was allegedly abused by a yeshiva principal, said he has lobbied Albany lawmakers to extend the statute — saying that school administrators can’t be trusted to do the right thing.

“The governor needs to take a stronger and more public stance on this issue,” said Engelman, 30. “The silence is deafening. The governor is pretty much saying he’s not interested in this bill passing.”

Cuomo said he was willing to consider some type of change to the law, but he did not elaborate.

“Those guilty of sexual abuse need to be held accountable, and we would support changes to help ensure victims have their day in court and maintain due process,” said Cuomo’s spokesman Richard Azzopardi.

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.

Hotline response validates lifting statute of limitations

PENNSYLVANIA
The Courier-Express

Joy Norwood Apr 2, 2016

The fact that 250 calls have been made to a child-abuse hotline since the recent report of decades-long sexual crimes across the Roman Catholic Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown is tragic, but not surprising.

On March 1, the Office of Attorney General said priests and others associated with the diocese had been abusing children for decades across eight counties. The AG’s report directly named 35 alleged abusers, and said their crimes had been hidden by bishops who chose to move the priests from parish to parish rather than involve legal authorities.

A subsequent grand jury presentment on March 15 accused three former leaders of the Third Order Regular, Province of the Immaculate Conception, of allowing Brother Stephen Baker to work among local children knowing he had been accused of sexual assault previously in Ohio and Michigan.

As many as 100 former Bishop McCort High School students have said Baker abused them when they were 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.

Commentary: Don’t discriminate against child-abuse victims

PENNSYLVANIA
Philly.com

APRIL 5, 2016

By Sue A. Fugate

The thought of child sexual abuse stirs emotions of fear and anger in me as a mother of two. The more I hear about this problem, the more troubled I am at its prevalence and the lack of consistency among institutions and governments trying to deal with it.

The recent grand jury report about crimes that date back as far as the 1950s in the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown is the latest revelation. I won’t pretend to know the pain survivors of abuse experience or the helplessness their families feel, but I do empathize with their suffering and support their need for healing.

In the name of healing, some legislators propose changes to Pennsylvania law that would waive the civil statute of limitations for some – but not all – abuse survivors. To that, I respond as an attorney. I can’t ignore the law, nor should any elected official pledged to serving the public good. After taking a long, hard look at the consequences of such proposals, I believe they should cause serious concern for anyone who believes the law must be applied fairly and equally to all.

Any such legislation would end up creating two classes of child victims in the name of a political quick fix wrapped in emotional expedience. It would also financially penalize innocent families – members of churches and parish communities – who had nothing to do with past evil actions by a criminal few.

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.

Father Fennessy Barred From Priestly Ministry

NEW YORK
Catholic New York

Father Keith Fennessy, who was discovered with pornographic material on his computer that violated the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People, may not return to priestly ministry.

Law enforcement officials and the archdiocesan review board both examined the details of the allegation. As a result of its investigation, the review board recommended earlier this month that Father Fennessy no longer be permitted to serve as a priest. Cardinal Dolan accepted the board’s recommendation.

Father Fennessy had most recently served as pastor of St. Columba’s parish in Manhattan from 2011 until June 15, 2015, when he was removed from ministry after the pornographic material was discovered.

The matter was also immediately turned over to the Manhattan and Staten Island District Attorney’s offices, said archdiocesan spokesman Joseph Zwilling.

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.

Report: Ex-Midland Beach pastor defrocked over computer porn

NEW YORK
Staten Island Advance

By Ryan Lavis | lavis@siadvance.com

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — A priest who once served as pastor of St. Margaret Mary R.C. Church in Midland Beach has been defrocked after pornographic material was allegedly discovered on his computer, according to a report in Catholic New York.

The material, the report said, was in violation of the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People, which is a set of procedures that were established in 2002 by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops for addressing allegations of sexual abuse of minors by Catholic clergy.

The Rev. Keith Fennessy was removed from the ministry in June 2015 after the pornographic material was discovered, according to the report.

Father Fennessy had served as pastor of St. Margaret Mary Church from 2006 to June 2010, when he left the parish amid a controversy over the sale of a portion of the church’s property to the Muslim American Society, according to previous Advance reports.

He also served as parochial vicar at St. Peter’s Church, New Brighton, from 2004-2005, and later as an administrator of Our Lady of Mount Carmel-St. Benedicta, West Brighton, according to Catholic New York. Most recently, Father Fennessy had served as pastor of St. Columba’s parish in Manhattan.

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.

‘Who were you going to tell?’

CANADA
The Telegram

Barb Sweet
Published on April 04, 2016

Catholic officials sat on one side of Courtroom No. 2 Monday at the Supreme Court of Newfoundland and Labrador while former Mount Cashel orphanage residents and their supporters sat on the benches across the aisle.

In the morning, the leads on two teams of lawyers outlined opposing arguments of whether the Roman Catholic Episcopal Corp. of St. John’s is liable for physical and sexual abuse of boys by members of the lay order Christian Brothers at the infamous orphanage from the 1940s to the 1960s.

And in late morning and all afternoon, the first of four men who will lay bare their experiences at this civil trial their life stories got to the unsettling descriptions of a childhood forever marked by his experiences with the Christian Brothers and a couple of employees at the orphanage.

The man cannot be named because of a publication ban in the John Doe case.

He told of grubs in daily rations of porridge, rat and mice droppings in bread and starved boys so desperate that they looked for scraps in a vat of swill collected from the leftovers of patients at city hospitals. That swill was meant for the pigs on the orphanage farm, but the boys would look for bits of meat and anything else edible.

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.

Details scarce in former Hazleton, Mountain Top priest abuse allegation

PENNSYLVANIA
Standard Speaker

KATHLEEN BOLUS, STAFF WRITER
Published: April 5, 2016

Diocese of Scranton and law enforcement officials would not release any more information Monday concerning the allegations the Rev. Martin M. Boylan engaged in sexual misconduct with a minor.

The allegation is still under investigation and no more information is available, Wayne County District Attorney Janine Edwards said Monday. However, she released a statement that the statute of limitations will run out when this victim reaches the age of 50. The age of the victim, who is now an adult, is unknown.

“No further comment will be issued at this time,” Edwards said.

State police will be investigating the allegation, she said.

The Diocese of Scranton immediately notified Edwards’ office on Friday evening after it received an allegation of sexual misconduct involving a minor against Boylan, 68. The alleged abuse took place in Wayne County, the diocese said in a Friday statement.

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.

French cardinal reiterates promise to cooperate with police on abuse

FRANCE
Catholic Herald (UK)

by Jonathan Luxmoore
posted Tuesday, 5 Apr 2016

Police raided the offices of Cardinal Philippe Barbarin to search for information related to the case of Fr Bernard Preynat

A French cardinal reiterated his promise to cooperate with law enforcement officials after his offices were raided in connection with charges of failing to discipline a priest now charged with abuse.

Police raided the offices of Lyon Cardinal Philippe Barbarin on March 30 to search for information related to the case of Fr Bernard Preynat, charged with “sexual aggression and rape of minors” between 1986 and 1991 at Lyon’s Saint-Luc parish, where he ran a large Catholic Scout group over two decades.

“The investigators conducted a search, and the Lyon Archdiocese was made to hand over items sought by the justice authorities,” the cardinal’s office said in a statement after the search.

“The cardinal has many times expressed his willingness to cooperate in full transparency with the judicial process and confidently remains at its disposal, hoping the authorities will calmly reveal the truth and allay the suffering of victims.”

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April 4, 2016

Group claims ‘predator priests’ worked for Archdiocese of Atlanta

GEORGIA
Fox 5

[with video]

ATLANTA – A sexual abuse survivor’s group alleges the Catholic Church knew about a so-called “predator priest” working in the Archdiocese of Atlanta. The group claims church officials covered up the allegations against him.

“This six were secret until today, we question how many more are secret and our concern is that these men are still out there,” said Barbara Blaine, founder of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

Blaine said she wants the Archbishop of Atlanta to do what 30 other bishops nationwide have done and make public any known sex offenders within the church.

“We say ‘Archbishop (Wilton Gregory) why haven’t you?’” Blaine demanded during a press conference on Monday from the steps of the Cathedral of Christ the King on Peachtree Road.

This fight is very personal for Blaine. She said that at the age of 12 she was rape by a member of her church. She reported it to Church officials years later, but nothing happened until she went on Oprah.

“Going on that show forced the church to remove him from ministry, but I found out later he continued to abuse more girls, seven years between the time I first reported and the time his name became public,” said Blaine.

Blaine believes there are priests who are still working who have sexually assaulted people, but are flying under the radar. She said the she found the names of six priests who have connections to Atlanta.

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PA–New bill will protect grandkids but let many ‘enablers’ off the hook

PENNSYLVANIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, April 4, 2016

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

A just-introduced bill in the Pennsylvania legislature will let many who commit or conceal child sex crimes off the hook. It will protect our grandkids, but not our kids. And for years, it will do little or nothing to expose and punish “enablers” – supervisors and colleagues who hid child sex crimes. We hope Rep. Ron Marsico (R-Dauphin) re-considers his opposition to a civil window.

[PennLive]

Marsico’s claim of concern for non-profits is baseless. We challenge him to name a single non-profit that has gone under or been severely hurt in any of the states that have enacted civil windows.

It always has and always will take decades for kids to grow up, understand they’ve been hurt, that the harm is severe, that the abuse cripples them as adults, that they legal options and the moral and civic duty to take action. That’s why we as a society must welcome and help victims of horrific childhood sexual violence, no matter when they are able to realize these realities and summon the strength to speak up.

Years and years of our own research, experience and advocacy (along with history, psychology and common sense) have convinced us that a civil “window” is the single most effective step toward preventing future abuse. Here’s how:

1) Exposing predators.
The “window” enables victims to publicly expose the predators who hurt them, through the open, impartial, time-tested American judicial system. It means that parents, neighbors and employers will know about potentially dangerous individuals.

2) Exposing and deterring enablers.
Through the balanced judicial process – depositions, discovery, interrogatories and sworn testimony – anyone who ignored a sex crime, shielded a molester, destroyed a document or deceived a victim’s family may also be exposed.

Families deserve to know whether their pastor or day care center director or athletic association harbored a sex offender, stonewalled a prosecutor, or lied to a parent.

Citizens deserve to know whether a diocese or a summer camp director knowingly hired child molesters.

3) Fear of litigation.
Without the “window,” a supervisor who’s been lax about child safety has no incentive to change bad habits or work harder.

With the “window,” decision-makers will know that if they insensitively shun a victim or recklessly endanger a child, they may be exposed in court and face consequences for having done so.

4) Fear of financial consequences.
Passage of the “window” will prod defense lawyers, public relations staff and others to beef up child sex abuse prevention and education.

Concerned employees will start asking their supervisors “Do we do background checks on everyone here?” and “Are we ready for a potential lawsuit?”

Smart organizations will start or expand efforts to train adults about reporting abuse and teach kids about “safe touch,” knowing that
– victims are less inclined to sue an institution that seems to take abuse seriously,
– judges and juries are more lenient with institutions that are already addressing the problem which led to a lawsuit.

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A matter of AP Style

UNITED STATES
Columbia Journalism Review

By Merrill Perlman

APRIL 4, 2016

ONE SURE SIGN OF SPRING is the sighting of new entries for The Associated Press Stylebook.

For the past few years, changes in the AP Stylebook have been announced to coincide with the annual conference of the American Copy Editors Society. (Full disclosure: This columnist is a member of the ACES board.) …

AP now recommends that writers avoid using the word “prostitute” when a child is involved, as in “child prostitute,” “teenage prostitute,” and so forth, because it implies that the child “is voluntarily trading sex for money,” Kent says, and a child, by definition, cannot do so.

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SCRANTON PRIEST SUSPENDED PENDING INVESTIGATION

PENNSYLVANIA
Church Militant

by Bradley Eli, M.Div., MA.Th. • ChurchMilitant.com • April 4, 2016

Allegations of pedophila is enough to have priest’s faculties removed in Scranton diocese

SCRANTON, Pa. (ChurchMilitant.com) – The Diocese of Scranton is suspending a longtime priest immediately after allegations of sexual misconduct with a minor surfaced late Friday night.

A diocesan statement released Sunday confirmed that Rev. Martin M. Boylan is the accused priest.

According to the statement, the accuser, now an adult, was a minor when the alleged abuse occurred. The name of the accuser has not been released, nor was it made clear when the alleged abuse took place.

The diocese, as per the statement, noted, “In response to the allegation, the diocese of Scranton immediately notified the Wayne County District Attorney’s Office, the county where the abuse is reported to have taken place.” …

ChurchMilitant.com has been covering the Altoona-Johnstown scandal since it broke last month with the release of a 147-page grand jury report outlining how the diocesan hierarchy helped cover up the sexual abuse of hundreds of children by dozens of priests and religious leaders over a 40-year period.

David Clohessy, director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, a Chicago-based support group, said the recent arrest of three Franciscan friars in Altoona and the revelation of a massive cover-up could have been a catalyst for the Wayne County victim to come forward.

According to Clohessy, “The victim may have said, ‘Things are changing. If I come forward now, maybe someone will listen.'”

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April 4 – Clergy Abuse In New Mexico Isn’t Going Away, But Neither Are Advocates For Justice (Pt. 1)

NEW MEXICO
KSFR

[with audio]

By KATE POWELL

Catholic dioceses in the United States have a problem with sexual abuse. It’s no secret anymore: Spotlight, a film documenting the work of a team of Boston Globe reporters investigating clergy abuse, took this year’s Academy Awards for Best Picture and Best Original Screenplay. But in New Mexico, where Roman Catholic traditions weave through the lives of even the most secular residents, the issue is harder to talk about, and justice seems harder to come by.

But that doesn’t mean no one is pursuing justice for New Mexicans abused by clergy. KSFR’s Kate Powell brings us interviews with an attorney who works to shed light on troubling practices by the Archdiocese, and a group of survivors who have broken their silence in hopes of making change for Catholic children today.

David Clohessy, Executive Director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, says New Mexico is still a “perfect storm” when it comes to clergy abuse. First, because there’s been virtually no independent investigation into clergy sex crimes in the state. Second, of the dozens of sexual abuse cases launched against the Santa Fe Archdiocese, not one has gone to a civil trial. And third, New Mexico has a strict statute of limitations to initiate prosecution in cases of sexual abuse.

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The absurdity of New York’s law barring child-rape victims from seeking justice as adults

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY KEVIN THOMAS MULHEARN SPECIAL TO THE NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Monday, April 4, 2016

In recent weeks, the Daily News has been commendably focused on the compelling need to reform the New York statute of limitations for survivors of alleged childhood sexual abuse. New York has one of the most regressive laws on this issue in the entire United States; it bars child victims from seeking justice against predators unless they file a claim before they turn 23.

But, unfortunately, that’s just half the problem. At the very same time, judges have been interpreting the law in a way that’s protective of institutions that may have been involved in lengthy cover-ups of abuse.

Although typically, in cases involving fraud, the clock on a statute of limitations should not begin to run until the moment fraud is discovered or — upon reasonable diligence — would have been discovered, in sex abuse cover-up cases, New York courts have stuck to the hard-and-fast rule that if a victim is 23 or older, he or she is out of luck.

Given the shame associated with sexual abuse, it is already difficult for a victim to bring a case against an individual teacher, coach, priest or rabbi by age 23. It’s absolutely absurd to pretend that young adults by that age would have discovered what they needed to discover to credibly accuse an institution of facilitating a pattern of abuse against scores of children.

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Investigating Abuse Allegations Against Priest

PENNSYLVANIA
WNEP

APRIL 4, 2016, BY JIM HAMILL

HONESDALE — The Diocese of Scranton suspended Fr. Martin Boylan after learning of alleged abuse on Friday.

Fr. Martin Boylan spent time at St. John the Evangelist in Honesdale and eventually ended up at St. Patrick parish in Scranton where he’s been suspended.

It’s unclear where in Wayne County Fr. Boylan is accused of sexual misconduct with a minor, but investigators have indicated the statute of limitations has not run out.

It’s been several years since Fr. Boylan served at St. John the Evangelist in Honesdale.

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Parishioners react to Scranton priest removal

PENNSYLVANIA
PA Homepage

By Eric Deabill | edeabill@pahomepage.com
Published 04/04 2016

SCRANTON, LACKAWANNA COUNTY (WBRE/WYOU) – Parishioners in the Diocese of Scranton are reacting to news of another potential sex scandal.

As Eyewitness News first reported Sunday night, a priest from West Scranton has been removed from his position after an allegation of sexual misconduct.

Father Martin Boylan’s name is still on the sign outside of Saint Patrick’s Parish on Jackson Street but the priest’s ability to perform mass has been suspended by the bishop.

Late Friday night, the Diocese of Scranton says it received an allegation against Boylan.

The accuser, who is now an adult, claims the abuse reportedly took place years ago in Wayne County.

“I’m just very shocked, disheartened,” Donna Gilroy of Scranton said.

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Pa. bill would update statute-of-limitations law

PENNSYLVANIA
ABC 27

By Myles Snyder
Published: April 4, 2016

HARRISBURG, Pa. (WHTM) – The majority chairman of the House Judiciary Committee says he’s introduced legislation to abolish the criminal statute of limitations in future child sexual abuse prosecutions.

Rep. Ron Marsico (R-Dauphin) said his bill would also raise the civil statute-of-limitations age from 30 to 50.

He plans to run his measure, House Bill 1947, through his committee on Tuesday.

“My choice to not include a retroactive period in this legislation was not easy,” Marsico said in a statement. “As a father and grandfather, I am horrified by allegations of sex abuse. But, I also fear the huge negative impact it would potentially have on many nonprofit community groups and the services they provide due to the massive lawsuits they might end up facing for actions that may have occurred decades ago by people who are no longer even affiliated with those nonprofit groups.

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State lawmaker pitches bill to reform sex crime laws; no recourse for past victims provided

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

By Ivey DeJesus | idejesus@pennlive.com

on April 04, 2016

The senior ranking member of the state House Judiciary Committee on Monday unveiled legislation designed to reform Pennsylvania’s sex crime laws.

The legislation introduced by Majority Chairman Ron Marsico (R-Dauphin) would overhaul the law going forward but contains no retroactive components. Retroactive measures have been a key demand from victims of sexual abuse who have “timed out of the system,” particularly victims who were abused as children.”

“My choice to not include a retroactive period in this legislation was not easy,” Marsico said in a written statement. “As a father and grandfather, I am horrified by allegations of sex abuse. But, I also fear the huge negative impact it would potentially have on many nonprofit community groups and the services they provide due to the massive lawsuits they might end up facing for actions that may have occurred decades ago by people who are no longer even affiliated with those nonprofit groups. These groups were created to help people and I would not want those people to lose access to life-supporting services.”

Marsico’s proposed legislation would abolish the criminal statute of limitations for future criminal prosecutions.

“That way, justice will always be served because no one who sexually abuses a child then will ever be free from criminal prosecution merely because of a lapsed statute of limitations,” he said.

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Sudbury civil sexual abuse case ends in a settlement Monday

CANADA
CBC News

A lawsuit alleging sexual abuse at the hands of a retired Sudbury priest has ended in a settlement.

The civil case involved a former altar boy who says he was sexually assaulted as a teenager by father John E. Sullivan nearly 50 years ago.

The lawsuit names Father Sullivan and the Diocese of Sault Ste Marie for damages amounting to $3 million.

Sullivan was criminally convicted in the early 1990s for sexual crimes against boys – 15 in total, according to the plaintiff’s lawyer, Rob Talach, from Beckett Personal Injury Lawyers based in London.

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UNH to host Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist behind ‘Spotlight’

NEW HAMPSHIRE
fosters.com

Posted Apr. 4, 2016

DURHAM — The University of New Hampshire will host Walter Robinson, the Boston Globe journalist whose work inspired the Oscar-winning film “Spotlight,” April 12, at 5 p.m. in the Memorial Union Building, Theatre II.

Robinson of The Boston Globe led a team of reporters that uncovered sweeping sexual abuse by Catholic clergy in New England and beyond. The investigation won the 2003 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service and inspired the 2016 Oscar-winning movie “Spotlight.” Robinson will lead a conversation about investigative journalism, the role of the press and more.

This event is made possible by the support of the McLean Family Fund for Journalism Excellence at UNH. Contact the UNH English Department for more information at 603-862-1313.

The event is free and open to the public.

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Mount Cashel civil trial starts

CANADA
The Telegram

Barb Sweet
Published on April 04, 2016

A civil trial is underway at Newfoundland and Labrador Supreme Court to determine whether the Roman Catholic Episcopal Corp. of St. John’s, is liable for physical and sexual abuse by Christian Brothers of boys at the former Mount Cashel Orphange from the 1940s to 1960s.

In opening statements, lawyer Geoff Budden, said the church owes a duty to the boys who were abused there. There are four test cases, representing about 60 claimants who are clients of Budden’s firm. He also said church officials were the lead when it came to dealing with government, in the orphanage’s founding and setup.

But Toronto lawyer Mark Frederick said the Christian Brothers were the wardens of the boys, and his client, the Roman Catholic Church, isn’t liable because it wasn’t involved in the facility’s operation.

The first witness in the John Doe case began testimony this morning, recalling how life was happy for him and his four brothers until his mother died of cancer at age 31, when he was seven. He recalled how the boys kissed their mother in the coffin each night during the wake, then after she died, his inconsolable father stayed away from home a lot and drank.

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Stories of residential school abuse can be destroyed after 15 years: court

CANADA
CBC News

Colin Perkel, The Canadian Press
Published Monday, April 4, 2016

TORONTO — Survivors of Canada’s notorious residential school system have the right to see their stories archived if they wish, but their accounts must otherwise be destroyed in 15 years, Ontario’s top court ruled in a split decision Monday.

At issue are documents related to compensation claims made by as many as 30,000 survivors of Indian residential schools — many heart-rending accounts of sexual, physical and psychological abuse.

Compensation claimants never surrendered control of their stories, the Appeal Court said.

“Residential school survivors are free to disclose their own experiences, despite any claims that others may make with respect to confidentiality and privacy,” the court said.

The decision came in response to various appeals and cross-appeals of a ruling by Superior Court Justice Paul Perell in 2014 related to claims made under the confidential independent assessment process — or IAP — set up as part of an agreement that settled a class action against the government.

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Fugitive Jewish school principal Malka Leifer sued for sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

KATHERINE TOWERS
THE AUSTRALIAN
APRIL 5, 2016

Fugitive Jewish headmistress Malka Leifer will now battle ­authorities in two countries after a former student and teacher at a Melbourne girls’ school last week launched legal action against the former principal for serial sexual abuse.

The woman is the sister of ­another victim who was last year awarded $1.27 million for molestation at the hands of Ms Leifer while she was principal of the ultra-orthodox Adass Israel school at Elsternwick in Melbourne’s inner southeast.

The Melbourne woman, who cannot be named, has followed her sister in suing Ms Leifer in Victoria’s Supreme Court, alleging years of abuse by the former headmistress while a student and then teacher at the school.

Students at the female-only Adass Israel school are brought up in ultra-orthodox Jewish families and have limited access to members of the opposite sex, no television, radio, internet, magazines or newspapers, and have no sexual education. Ms Leifer fled Australia for ­Israel in 2008 in the middle of the night within hours of being made aware of allegations she had sexually abused more than eight girls at the school. Some members of the Adass Israel school board are under investigation by Victoria Police for helping Ms Leifer and her family leave to avoid a criminal investigation and possible prosecution.

Ms Leifer has been under house arrest in the ultra-orthodox enclave of Bnei Brak in ­central Israel since 2014 after ­Israeli authorities responded to an extra­dition request by ­Canberra. Australia wants her to face 74 criminal charges for sexual abuse of children while head of the school, but the mother of eight has avoided extradition, claiming psychiatric distress.

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FACSA Response to 4/1/2016 PA Catholic Conference (PCC) Memo to PA General Assembly Members

PENNSYLVANIA
The Foundation to Abolish Child Sex Abuse (FACSA)

As in many other states before PA, the Catholic Conferences have tried many tactics to prevent state legislators from doing what is in the best interest of children and the worst interest of those who have committed the crimes of child sex abuse and and even more so those who covered up the crimes for decades.

The PCC recent memo to the PA General Assembly 4/1/2016 is one of those tactics that twists or omits facts about the proposed legislation and its impact and what has actually happened in other states where this legislation has been passed. FACSA has strongly supported the current HB 655 (sponsored by Rep. Ed Gainey) which eliminates both criminal and civil statutes of limitations going forward and HB 951 (sponsored by Rep. Tom Murt) which opens a two year civil window for past victims of child sex abuse. While HB 655 appears on the House Judiciary calendar for discussion on Wednesday, in actuality, it will not be discussed at all. Rather, the chairman, Rep. Ron Marsico will be introducing new legislation that will likely eliminate only the criminal statue of limitations. He does this so he can look like he wants to protect children, but for more than a decade he has refused to consider the legislation that will provide justice for victims of child sex abuse and protection from criminals who can still be abusing children.

Below is an important rebuttal of the PCC “facts” which was written by Marci Hamilton, JD, a nationally renowned expert on first amendment law and a long time advocate for children everywhere.

NOTE: Please contact Marci Hamilton below with further questions regarding her document.

TO: Members of the PA General Assembly
FROM: Marci A. Hamilton www.SOL-reform.com
PHONE: 215-353-8984 | FAX: 215-493-1094 E-MAIL: hamilton.marci@gmail.com
RE: Omissions in Pennsylvania Catholic Conference Memo on Effects of Retroactive
Civil Legislation for Child Sex Abuse

The Pennsylvania Catholic Conference (“PCC”) has submitted misleading arguments against the value of retroactive civil statutes of limitations (“SOLs”) reform for child sex abuse in a memo dated April 1, 2016. It also has omitted numerous relevant facts. The following are the facts, gleaned from my academic study of SOL Reform over the last decade, based on research for my book, Justice Denied: What America Must Do to Protect Its Children (Cambridge University Press 2008, 2014), and www.SOL-Reform.com, my website, which documents and tracks statutes of limitations for child sex abuse victims in every state and globally, for the purpose of public education on access to justice for victims.

1. The PCC states: facts solely related to abuse in the Catholic community, leaving the impression that revival legislation only benefits victims of the Catholic Church.

The PCC omits: all of the other organizations and individuals that have been and will be disclosed through civil SOL revival legislation across the U.S.: healthcare providers including pediatricians, a wide variety of religious organizations, numerous scouting organizations, elite preparatory high schools, universities, drama schools and theaters, modeling agencies, coaches and sports organizations, and, the largest category: families.

2. The PCC states: “sexual abuse is a serious crime” in an attempt to focus all fault on the perpetrators.

The PCC omits: (a) The endangerment of children through covering up child sex abuse is also a serious crime and Msgr. William Lynn (Philadelphia Archdiocese) was convicted for this crime and three Franciscans were recently charged by the Pennsylvania Attorney General with this serious crime.

(b) Putting children at risk of sex abuse is also a serious tort, committed by numerous dioceses worldwide. The Catholic cover up is not over, as the recent Pennsylvania Attorney General Grand Jury Report on the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese documents.

3. The PCC states: revival of civil SOLs for child sex abuse “will throw justice out of balance.”

The PCC omits: The current “balance” endangers children by keeping predators hidden and institutions unaccountable.

4. The PCC states: revival of civil SOLs for child sex abuse will “jeopardize every church, nonpublic school, and charity that serves children in Pennsylvania.”

The PCC omits: The actual number of claims is relatively small in the states where revival has been implemented, compared to the actual number of survivors and state population. The PCC’s statement is a gross exaggeration disproved in each state with revival legislation.

5. The PCC states: “Pennsylvania’s 3 million Catholics cannot afford to defend their parishes and Catholic schools from expensive and indefensible lawsuits.”

The PCC omits: The Catholic cases are typically proven by the dioceses’ own, copious records documenting the abuse and the cover-up. They are only “indefensible” because of the failures of the hierarchy to protect children from known predators.

6. The PCC states: Parishes in Delaware were sued. There was a $3 million verdict against a parish.

The PCC omits: The cases against the Delaware parishes were settled as part of the settlement with the Wilmington Diocese and 124 victims, for significant changes to improve child safety in the diocese, totaling $77 million. Survivors were paid from $75,000 to 3 million depending on severity of the abuse. No Catholic settlement in the United States has afforded survivors remotely close to $3 million on average. The dioceses settle to avoid verdicts yielding actual compensatory damages.

7. The PCC states: In Wilmington, “2 struggling inner-city schools were closed, “10%” of diocesan workforce was laid off, and funds needed for the hungry were “depleted.”

The PCC omits: This is a shell game the diocese has never substantiated. These changes are taking place across the country because giving and attendance are down, and the next generation prefers spirituality (or agnosticism) over organized religion. It hasn’t helped that the cancer of covering up child sex abuse festers in dioceses like Altoona-Johnstown, PA.

8. The PCC states: “Not one pedophile was taken off the streets in states that retroactively nullified their statute of limitations.”

The PCC omits: Dr. Earl Bradley, the worst pedophile pediatrician in history, was charged and convicted after the Delaware window was put in place. The bishops’ cover-up of its priests and employees deliberately ran out the criminal SOLs; it is unconstitutional to revive a criminal SOL; therefore, the civil revivals are the only option for justice for the vast majority of the Catholic victims. Over 300 pedophiles were identified in California through the window—inside and outside the Catholic universe.

9. The PCC states: “(68 percent) of the accused perpetrators identified with California’s ‘window” were already dead or were very old, infirm, or long removed from ministry at the time the claims were filed.”

The PCC omits: (a) Assuming the 68% is true, that means 32% were active and Californians learned the identities of at least 100 pedophiles operating in anonymity in schools and elsewhere.

(b) The entities’ endangerment of children through negligent and failed policies is an ongoing threat to child safety whether a particular pedophile is alive or dead.

(c) Pedophiles do not “age out” of abusing children. Fr. John Geoghan in Boston was abusing children in his 80s.

(d) Removal from ministry means only that the bishops released problem priests or employees into the general population without naming them. They are hidden predators who need to be named.

10. The PCC states: “Very few victims or defendants had their day in court; guilt or innocence was not the deciding the factor.”

The PCC omits: The bishops typically settle right before any trial to avoid having the hierarchy testify in public about the facts of callous child endangerment. They then often file voluntary bankruptcy to protect assets, reduce the claims per survivor, and avoid any trials. Not one false claim arose from the Catholic bankruptcies to date except when the San Diego Diocese asserted it needed to be in bankruptcy due to a lack of assets, which turned out to be categorically false.

11. The PCC states: “Bankruptcy and severe debt was the only option for most dioceses in the states with retroactive windows.”

The PCC omits: No diocese has ever filed for involuntary bankruptcy or been forced into bankruptcy. In Milwaukee, then-Archbishop Timothy Dolan hid $55 million in a so-called “cemetery trust” to avoid compensating 11 known victims who had filed suit. The Archdiocese then filed voluntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy, invited all known victims to become part of the bankruptcy claims for their healing, and then refused to compensate the vast majority of survivors. No California diocese was permitted to pursue bankruptcy (San Diego is the only one that tried).

The Catholic dioceses, taken together, are the largest landowners in the United States. When they reveal their annual “finances” they never include their actual wealth, which is typically hidden in countless real property holdings, under a wide variety of names.

12. The PCC states: Plaintiffs attorneys are paid as part of settlements.

The PCC omits: Plaintiffs attorneys foot the full cost of sex abuse litigation and victims pay nothing, whether the case goes forward or not. The hierarchy has paid millions to engage in hardball litigation tactics against the victims and their families in the few cases that have been able to go forward in Pennsylvania despite the short SOLs, regardless of the merits of the case.

13. The PCC states: Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed window legislation.

The PCC omits: This was a second window, that was pushed in large part for Buddhist and other victims who were unaware of the original 2003 window. The California Catholic Conference lobbied against this second revival law, and succeeded in keeping the vast majority of California’s sex abuse victims out of court.

14. The PCC states: “There comes a time when an individual or organization should be secure in the reasonable expectation that past acts are indeed in the past and not subject to further lawsuits.”

The PCC omits: This argument makes no sense when it comes to murder or child sex abuse.

Disclaimer: the views expressed here are solely those of the author in her private, academic capacity and do not represent the views of Cardozo Law School or Yeshiva University.

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Start by Believing

UNITED STATES
The Good Men Project

Last week, I attended the annual conference of End Violence Against Women International (EVAWI) whose signature awareness campaign, “Start By Believing,” aims to validate those who have experienced sexual or domestic violence.

When I think about men who have had those experiences, I’m often reminded how the expectation of invulnerability that most cultures demand of males leaves many men feeling like

The theme of this year’s EVAWI conference was “Engaging Men,” so we were excited to have a chance to be a part of this important dialogue.

In the context of ending sexual and domestic violence, “Engaging Men” is often interpreted as recruiting males as allies in the critical work of preventing and confronting gender-based violence perpetrated by men and boys against women and girls. For an organization whose very name sets out that challenge, it would have been easy for EVAWI to end the conversation there.

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‘Child sex abuse by Catholic priests not rampant in India’

INDIA
FirstPost

Panaji: Cases of child sex abuse are not rampant among Roman Catholic priests in India as appears to be the case abroad, senior Catholic priests who arrived in Goa for a high-level conference said on Monday.

They said the Vatican, the global seat of Catholicism, has approved guidelines for India as far as handling cases of priests found accused of child sex abuse is concerned.

“In India, it (child sex abuse) is not very rampant, maybe in foreign countries (it is),” Fr. Philemon Doss, president of the Conference of Diocesan Priests of India, told IANS ahead of the three-day conference of Diocesan priests which gets underway in Goa on Tuesday.

The aim of the conference, in which 275 priests from across India are expected to participate, is aimed at helping priests in India foster a expert understanding of their priesthood and encourage collegiality amongst priests of the Diocesan order, which runs several premier educational institutes in the country.

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Ronald Mulkearns’ sin was putting church ahead of children

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

APRIL 5, 2016

John Ferguson
Victorian Editor
Melbourne

As far as we will ever know, Ronald Mulkearns never molested anyone.

But through his cover-up of priests who did, the former bishop of Ballarat arguably inflicted more damage on children under his care than any other figure in the Catholic Church in Australia.

Such was his culpability that Mulkearns will go down on a world scale as having created a system in which paedophilia could thrive.

His death presents the modern church with a dilemma: how to farewell a servant of the church who got it so wrong, while honouring the faith’s core belief of forgiveness.

Those who say Mulkearns was all bad will get it wrong, but his gravest sin was to put the church ahead of the children.

The church, from the 1950s until the extent of the sex-abuse scandal became known in the 1990s, was powerfully proficient at covering up offending, aided by compliant community attitudes.

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Abuse royal commission: Mulkearns death leaves Pell isolated

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

APRIL 5, 2016

Tessa Akerman
Reporter
Melbourne

John Ferguson
Victorian Editor
Melbourne

The death of Bishop Ronald Mulkearns, who shifted pedophile priests between western Victorian parishes to conceal their offending, has left George Pell as the standout senior church figure to face the royal commission findings into the Ballarat scandal.

Bishop Mulkearns’s death yesterday morning all but brings to an end the child sex abuse royal commission’s examination of the abuses of hundreds of children committed in the Catholic diocese of Ballarat between the 1960s and 90s.

Bishop Mulkearns, who was 85, living in a nursing home and stricken with cancer, was part-way through his testimony to the royal commission, having run a criminally negligent diocese from 1971 to 1997 with the worst record of Catholic sex abuse in Australia.

Cardinal Pell became ­embroiled in controversy over his tenure as a priest in the Ballarat diocese under Bishop Mulkearns and has faced intense questioning over what he knew — and when — about offending.

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Missbrauch in der Kirche: Ein Verdacht für immer und ewig

DEUTSCHLAND
Sueddeutsche

[The Würzburg judiciary is investigating a priest who allegedly abused a young years ago. The accused denies the allegations in the 44-year-old woman.]

Von Katja Auer, Würzburg

Es gibt nur zwei Leute, die genau wissen, was damals im Spätsommer 1988 im Exerzitienhaus Himmelspforten wirklich passiert ist. Deren Versionen sind aber gänzlich unterschiedlich. Eine Frau, heute 44 Jahre alt, wirft einem Geistlichen vor, er habe sie damals zum Oralsex gezwungen. Der Priester bestreitet das.

Wer recht hat, wird möglicherweise nie geklärt, denn einen Prozess wird es wahrscheinlich nicht geben. Zu lange ist alles her, strafrechtlich ist womöglich alles verjährt. Das prüft die Staatsanwaltschaft Würzburg gerade, sie hat Ermittlungen eingeleitet. Ein paar Wochen werden die zunächst dauern. 1988 betrug die Verjährungsfrist für Sexualdelikte 20 Jahre vom 18. Geburtstag des Opfers an, es kann also gut sein, dass gar nichts passiert.

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Kindesmissbrauch: Verharmlosung und Vertuschung

DEUTSCHLAND
Main Post

[Child Abuse: downplaying and covering up]

Das Thema sexueller Missbrauch durch Pfarrer wird die katholische Kirche nicht los. Aktuell hat eine 44-Jährige schwere Vorwürfe gegen einen Geistlichen der Diözese Würzburg erhoben, der sie vor 28 Jahren sexuell missbraucht haben soll (wir berichteten).

Erschütternde Berichte über den Missbrauch von Kindern und Jugendliche durch katholische Pfarrer hat Johannes Heibel in seinem Buch „Der Pfarrer und die Detektive“ beschrieben.

Im Mittelpunkt stehen dabei – wie ebenfalls berichtet – zwei Fälle, die mit unserer Region zu tun haben, einer sogar indirekt mit Schweinfurt. Das Buch ist im Mai 2014 erschienen. Beide Missbrauchspfarrer waren da noch im Amt. Sie sind es jetzt nicht mehr. Den heute 76-jährigen W., der lange Zeit als Pfarrer in der Diözese Würzburg wirkte, hat Papst Franziskus im Juli 2015 seiner priesterlichen Rechte und Pflichten enthoben. Er ist also kein Priester mehr.

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Plan B: Kinderschänder bleiben straffrei

MEXIKO
NPLA

(Mexiko-Stadt, 7. März 2016, cimacnoticias).- Der Vater einer 13-Jährige entschied, dass niemand seine Tochter entjungfern dürfe – niemand außer ihm. Freund*innen und Bekannte hätten niemals vermutet, dass er, der angesehene Architekt, ein Kinderschänder sein könnte. In Puebla vergriff sich ein katholischer Priester regelmäßig an einem der Messdiener. Für den Jungen, der bereits im Kinderheim gewalttätige Übergriffe erlebt hatte, war das Recht auf Schutz in einer von Erwachsenen dominierten Welt bis dahin ein Fremdwort. Eine Kirchgängerin wurde schließlich Zeugin der Übergriffe und beschloss, das eingeschüchterte Kind zu retten.

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Sexueller Missbrauch zweier Domspatzen? Staatsanwalt klagt Baumers Ex-Verlobten an

DEUTSCHLAND
Wochelblatt

[The former fiancee of the dead Maria Baumer is charged for sexual abuse of two Domspatzen choir members.]

Der ehemalige Verlobte der toten Maria Baumer wird angeklagt – wegen sexuellen Missbrauchs zweier Domspatzen. Im September 2013 hatte man die Überreste Baumers gefunden, der Ex-Verlobte gilt nach wie vor als Verdächtiger.

Der Fall Maria Baumer ist um ein weiteres Rätsel reicher: Laut Staatsanwaltschaft Regensburg ist ihr früherer Verlobter nun angeklagt, zwei Domspatzen sexuell missbraucht zu haben. Das berichtete die Mittelbayerische Zeitung online.

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Diocese breaks its silence

NEW MEXICO
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, NM, April 2, 2016

Public never informed of sexual misconduct claims against priest

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

GALLUP – Eight months after the Diocese of Gallup filed its Chapter 11 petition in U.S. Bankruptcy Court, another priest in the diocese was accused of sexual misconduct in July 2014.

In many other Catholic dioceses, that accusation would have generated an announcement to Catholic parishioners and a news release to the general public. After an investigation, the diocese would issue another news release explaining if the allegation had been found to be unsubstantiated or whether it was deemed to be credible.

That’s a “best practice” scenario, according to what Gallup Bishop James S. Wall said in an interview in September 2009, just months after he was installed as Gallup’s Roman Catholic bishop.

But that’s a practice Wall has not followed in at least a half-dozen cases where diocesan, religious order or visiting international priests suddenly disappeared from their ministry assignments with no explanation to local Catholics or news releases to the public.

In the case of the July 2014 allegations, the Gallup Diocese has been silent until this week. On Friday, the diocese responded to questions raised by a police report obtained by the Gallup Independent.

Two allegations

The Rev. Eugene R. Bowski is the accused priest. In a McKinley County Sheriff’s Office report from July 2014, two allegations were made against Bowski, who was described as being a retired priest residing in Williams Acres and who had recently been the priest at St. Patrick’s Mission, located south of Gallup.

The report was made by two individuals from out of state who were serving as volunteers in the diocese. One was reportedly the Safe Environment trainer at their home parish. According to the report, Bowski had allegedly sexually propositioned a young man, and Bowski had allegedly exhibited grooming behaviors toward the young man when he was a minor. The second allegation was that Bowski was spending unsupervised, one-on-one time with a boy younger than 10.

In addition to filing a report with the sheriff’s office, the two volunteers called in a report to the New Mexico Children, Youth and Families Department and also reported the allegations to the Rev. Kevin Finnegan, then the vicar general for the Diocese of Gallup.

The Gallup Independent does not identify alleged victims of sex abuse without their consent. Although a family member of the young man and the mother of the minor boy were interviewed by phone, identifying them by name would compromise the youths’ identities.

Bowski, however, commented about the allegations in several phone conversations this week.

One mother’s support

According to Bowski, he did nothing inappropriate in either situation, and he said the mother of the young boy had even written a letter of support for him. When contacted Wednesday, Bowski said he had just had a phone conversation with the mother earlier in the morning and would ask her to call and offer her comments.

Later that day, a woman, who identified herself as the child’s mother, called and said she did not believe anything inappropriate had happened between Bowski and her son. She said she allowed her child to participate in a forensic interview, which she believes was arranged by diocesan officials.

“They did not find any evidence of abuse,” she said. “They told me that nothing had happened.”

The woman said she only left her son alone with Bowski “maybe one time,” and other times she was nearby to frequently check on her child or he was accompanied by an older sibling.

Bowski said he only remembered being alone with the child once and that was when the mother asked him to transport the boy in his car.

Other family’s view

Bowski does not have that same support from the other family. According to the sheriff’s office report, officers questioned the young man and one of his close family members. Both claimed Bowski sexually propositioned the alleged victim, but the young man rebuffed the priest’s request and immediately went home and reported the incident to his family.

The sheriff’s office closed the case because no criminal activity took place since the alleged victim was not a minor.

When contacted Tuesday, that family member expressed anger at Bowski. The individual stated Bowski had befriended the young man for a number of years while he was still a minor, and stated they believed Bowski used that friendship as a pretext to groom him for abuse.

Bowski, however, has a different perspective.

“He was an adult at the time,” Bowski said when asked about the July 2014 incident. “He wasn’t a child. It’s not against the law.”

“I have always said he misunderstood me,” Bowski added, “and I maintain that.”

Bowski also disputed that he had ever tried to groom the young man for abuse. He said he just tried to befriend the youth and offer him assistance with opportunities.

“I don’t think it’s criminal to be someone’s friend,” Bowski said.

Restrictions by bishop

According to Bowski, he doesn’t know why the Diocese of Gallup never publicly announced the allegations made against him.

“I would be interested in the answer to that too,” he said.

Under restrictions imposed by the bishop, Bowski said he can no longer celebrate Mass publicly like other retired priests. However, Bowski said, he believes he might be able to do so if he moved to another diocese.

“The case against me isn’t even flimsy,” he said. “It doesn’t even rise to that standard.”

In an email Friday, Suzanne Hammons, the diocese’s spokeswoman, addressed both allegations. Regarding the minor child, she said, the diocese retained an outside firm that conducted an independent investigation.

“No further claims nor evidence of criminal activity, including no claims of any abuse or attempted abuse of minors was discovered and none have been made since the 2014 incident,” she said.

As to the allegations by the young man, Hammons said, “While Fr. Bowski’s actions with respect to this adult male may not have been illegal, these actions were contrary to his position and obligations as a priest. Fr. Bowski’s faculties have been withdrawn and he is not ministering nor working in any capacity in the Diocese nor will he be allowed to do so.”

Hammons did not explain why the Gallup Diocese did not inform the public about the allegations, the results of the investigations or the removal of Bowski’s priestly faculties. Nor did she explain why the diocese no longer posts its Pastoral Code of Ethics on its website for public review.

Church law

The Rev. James Connell, a retired priest with the Archdiocese of Milwaukee and a church canon lawyer, has become a national advocate for clergy sex abuse victims and survivors.

When contacted Thursday, Connell said church law doesn’t just look at an incident of sexual abuse by itself, but also considers the entire grooming period that led up to the abuse incident. For that reason, he said, officials with the Diocese of Gallup should take a closer look at whether the alleged grooming in this case took place while the young man was still a minor.

“It is seen as one continuous action,” he explained.

In an email Friday, Connell said Catholic bishops “committed to openness and transparency with the public” in matters of clergy sexual abuse when the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops adopted the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People.

“Any diocesan bishop who does not fulfill the commitment made in the Charter contributes to scandal in the community because the bishop’s behavior encourages people to lose trust in the moral leadership of the bishop that in turn can lead to people altering the practice of their faith,” Connell said. “And the creation of scandal is against divine law and church law.”

Hammons said the Gallup Diocese takes the “protection and well-being of all children, young people, and adults very seriously, and in this case the Charter and all legal and ethical guidelines were followed” by church officials.

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As Pennsylvania Confronts Clergy Sex Abuse, Victims and Lawmakers Act

PENNSYLVANIA
New York Times

By LAURIE GOODSTEIN

APRIL 4, 2016

LORETTO, Pa. — By the age of 12, Maureen Powers, the daughter of a professor at the local Roman Catholic university, played the organ in the magnificent hilltop Catholic basilica here and volunteered in the parish office. But she said she was hiding a secret: Her priest sexually abused her for two years, telling her it was for the purpose of “research.”

By her high school years, she felt so tied up in knots of betrayal and shame that she confided in a succession of priests. She said the first tried to take advantage of her sexually, the second suggested she comfort herself with a daily candy bar and the third told her to see a counselor. None of them reported the abuse to the authorities or mentioned that she could take that step.

So when a Pennsylvania grand jury revealed in a report in March that the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown, which includes Loretto, engaged in an extensive cover-up of as many as 50 abusers, Ms. Powers, now 67, decided to finally report her case. She called the office of the Pennsylvania attorney general and recounted her story, including the name of her abuser, a prominent monsignor who was not listed in the grand jury report.

“I just felt like now, someone will believe me,” said Ms. Powers, who retired after 30 years in leadership positions at the Y.W.C.A. in Lancaster, Pa.

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Former Ballarat Bishop Ronald Mulkearns dies

AUSTRALIA
The Courier

By Matthew Dixon
April 4, 2016

Former Ballarat Bishop Ronald Mulkearns has died.

Bishop Mulkearns, aged 85, died on Sunday night after a long battle with cancer. Church officials confirmed his death to The Courier this morning.

He was considered the “keeper of secrets” in the Catholic Church, with many clergy sex abuse survivors believing he could have stopped much of the horrific abuse to occur throughout the region.

Bishop Mulkearns made his much-anticipated appearance at the child sexual abuse inquiry via videolink from the nursing home where he had lived February.

He told the inquiry he was “terribly sorry” he did not take the mounting sexual abuse allegations about offending clergy seriously and admitted he did not know how to handle the situation.

The hearing was adjourned after about 90 minutes due to Bishop Mulkearns’ ill health and he did not reappear.

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Children’s hospital cash funded cardinal’s plush apartment

ROME
The Freethinker

Funds designated for sick children were allegedly diverted to pay for costly renovations to the apartment of the Vatican’s former Secretary of State, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, 81, above.

According to estimates published in the Italian press, each of the bedrooms has its own private bathroom, and the kitchen facilities are befitting a banquet hall. Bertone spent $22,000 on eight independent sharable audio programmes and audio controls with LCD display for each environment.

That, writes Barbie Latza Nadeau of the Daily Beast:

Essentially boils down to a sound system where each room in the lavish apartment, including the rooftop chapel, can be programmed with its own mood music. This, for a prelate and three nuns who have no official role whatsoever in Francis’s church.

She adds:

The massive-for-Rome apartment is being floored with 2,400 square feet of expensive herringbone oak parquet which cost the cardinal and the hospital $28,000. A smaller 750-square-foot area is being covered with luxury white Carrara marble at a price tag of $11,000. The double-glaze energy efficient windows cost $80,000 and the front security door is priced at $6,000.

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Police drop sex abuse probe into Italian bishop

ITALY
The Sun Daily

ROME: Italian police are dropping an investigation into a bishop for the alleged sexual abuse of seminarists, media reports said Sunday.

Prosecutors in Cassino, south of Rome, had opened a probe into monsignor Gerardo Antonazzo after receiving a letter from a seminarian accusing the bishop of sexually molesting him and others.

But prosecutor Luciano d’Emmanuele on Sunday released a statement saying no charges would be brought, La Repubblica daily said.

Antonazzo had been quoted on Saturday stressing “how utterly unfounded the accusations are”.

Sex abuse scandals have dogged the Catholic Church in recent years with alleged victims breaking their silence in the United States, Ireland, the Netherlands, Australia France, Germany, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Mexico and Poland.

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Former Ballarat bishop Fr Ronald Mulkearns dead at 86

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

April 3, 2016

Shannon Deery
Herald Sun

THE Ballarat bishop who failed to stop the abuse of hundreds of children over three decades has died.

Fr Ronald Mulkearns who was battling cancer died overnight aged 86.

It comes just two weeks after he gave secret pre-recorded evidence ahead of an upcoming criminal trial.

Under his watch, between 1971 and 1997, hundreds of children were molested by notorious paedophiles including Gerald Ridsdale and Robert Best.

At the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in February Fr Mulkearns admitted he had failed as a bishop.

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Ronald Mulkearns takes his secrets – and his guilt – to the grave

AUSTRALIA
The Age

April 4, 2016

Konrad Marshall
Senior writer

He was born Ronald Austin Mulkearns, in Caulfield. He died on Monday one of the most reviled Catholic leaders in the country.

He came into the world in 1930, and was ordained as a priest in 1956 – a full six decades ago.

He is now dead but the damage he did is long done. Indeed the suffering caused is continuing.

He was the sixth Bishop of Ballarat, a man Most Reverend, a Knight Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, and the singular soul in charge of the largest Catholic diocese in Victoria, throughout its most shameful and destructive era, from 1971 to 1997.

Only this year he faced questions about that period, and his own catastrophic negligence in failing to halt the egregious behaviour of the black-collar criminals under his watch.

He was sorry, he said.

“I didn’t do enough,” he was quoted as admitting.

And yet not doing enough is not even close to the reason the world hates former bishop Ronald Mulkearns. The depth of feeling against the man comes from the belief that he actually did … nothing.

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10 ways every church ought to combat sexual violence and domestic abuse

UNITED STATES
Baptist News

OPINION

KYNDALL RAE ROTHAUS | APRIL 4, 2016

Recently some colleagues of mine and I hosted a four-part series on Baylor University’s campus for survivors of sexual assault and their advocates. We created a space for lament, then silence, next anger, and finally hope. We acknowledged in each service that everyone’s pace of healing is unique, and that the stages of healing are never linear.

It was the first time many of us had ever experienced an intentional space crafted to address the anger we feel about these injustices and violations. It was one of the rare moments when religious leaders acknowledged publically in a liturgical context the cultural and institutional silence surrounding sexual violence.

The rarity of what we created strikes me as a sad failure of the church. When I think back over my long history as an active part of the church, I cannot remember a single instance when I heard a sermon on rape, aside from the ones I have preached myself.

It occurs to me that perhaps not all pastors realize that around one quarter of the women in their congregations have been (often silent) victims of sexual or interpersonal violence/abuse. Some of the men in their congregations have been victims too. Maybe the pastors who are aware of the horrifying statistics simply do not know what to do about it. I have compiled a list of concrete, easy things every pastor and/or church can (and ought) to do.

1. Every time (and I do mean every time) you preach or teach on marriage, divorce or relationships, always include a section where you acknowledge publically that some people do need to leave a relationship for their own safety or the safety of their children. I’m serious. Never talk about marriage or divorce again without that public caveat, even if it feels a little out of place. Maybe it is only one sentence in your whole sermon or Bible study lesson, but that one sentence could save someone’s life.

Do you know how many people stay in severely abusive situations because they’ve never heard their pastor say it was OK to leave? When you talk about forgiving your spouse, they might hear you saying that they have to keep being beat and accept it. Please, be clearer. If some other person in your congregation pushes back at you for saying divorce is an option, just take the heat and do not budge. It’s not your life that’s in danger. Let your words make someone else uncomfortable if it could save a life.

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After Nearly Six Decades, Woman Reveals Rape Allegation Against Priest

MICHIGAN
Deadline Detroit

Silence.

Judy Larson was silent for nearly 60 years. Then apparently, she couldn’t hold it in any longer.

Aftab Borka of the Oakland Press reports that Larson, 68, in January contacted the Archdiocese of Detroit alleging that Richard Lauinger, a priest in the 1950s at Our Lady of Sorrows in Farmington, had raped her when she was 10.

On March 28, the Archiocese reported that the allegations against Lauinger, now 85, were found to be credible, the paper reported. He moved out of Michigan in 1985.

“He (the priest) told me then that nobody would believe me. I believed it all my life,” Larson, recounting her days at the old church in Farmington, told the Oakland Press. “And now there are people who are saying ‘We believe you’.”

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Retired Ballarat Bishop Ronald Mulkearns, who appeared at child sex abuse inquiry, dies

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

Retired Bishop Ronald Mulkearns, who oversaw the Ballarat diocese during a notorious period of sexual abuse by clergy, has left a “catastrophic legacy”, an abuse survivor has said.

The Catholic Archdiocese of Melbourne announced Bishop Mulkearns’ death from cancer at age 85 on Monday.

Bishop Mulkearns, who retired in 1997, was to be requestioned by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse after Cardinal George Pell said he was not briefed properly about abuse in Ballarat.

The retired bishop told a commission hearing in March he was not sure if he knew child abuse was a crime during his time in charge of the Ballarat diocese, but he knew it was wrong.

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Hotline response validates need to lift time limits

PENNSYLVANIA
Sharon Herald

Editorial

THE fact that 250 calls have been made to a child-abuse hotline since the recent report of decades-long sexual crimes across the Roman Catholic Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown is tragic, but not surprising.

On March 1, the Office of Attorney General said priests and others associated with the diocese had been abusing children for decades across eight counties in Pennsylvania. The AG’s report directly named 35 alleged abusers, and said their crimes had been hidden by bishops who chose to move the priests from parish to parish rather than involve legal authorities.

A subsequent grand jury presentment on March 15 accused three former leaders of the Third Order Regular, Province of the Immaculate Conception, of allowing Brother Stephen Baker to work among local children knowing he had been accused of sexual assault previously in Ohio and Michigan.

As many as 100 former Bishop McCort High School students have said Baker abused them when they were students.

Past Franciscan group officials Giles Schinelli, Robert D’Aversa and Anthony Criscitelli were formally charged March 18 in Blair County with conspiracy and endangering the welfare of children.

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Paedophile priest protector Ronald Mulkearns dies

AUSTRALIA
The Standard

THE former Ballarat bishop who protected paedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale has died.

Ronald Mulkearns, who had colon cancer, died on Monday morning, the Catholic Diocese of Ballarat said.

The child abuse royal commission has heard the 1971-1997 Ballarat bishop knew paedophile priest Gerald Francis Ridsdale and others were sexually abusing children and moved them between parishes.

The commission also heard Bishop Mulkearns destroyed documents in Ridsdale’s file.

Bishop Mulkearns was living in an aged care facility recently and was reported to be suffering from a range of illnesses.

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Diocese: Sexual misconduct alleged against the Rev. Martin Boylan, who served locally

PENNSYLVANIA
Times Leader

April 3rd, 2016

By Travis Kellar – tkellar@timesleader.com

SCRANTON — The Diocese of Scranton issued a statement on Sunday regarding an allegation of sexual misconduct that was made last week against a priest serving in the diocese.

According to a prepared statement, Diocesan officials received an allegation of sexual misconduct on Friday involving a minor against the Rev. Martin M. Boylan. The allegation is reported to have occurred when the accuser, now an adult, was a minor.

It was not made immediately clear as to when the alleged abuse happened.

In response to the allegation, the diocese immediately notified the District Attorney’s Office for Wayne County, which is where the alleged abuse is reported to have happened. The alleged incident was also reported to authorities via the Pennsylvania ChildLine.

As a result of the accusation, Boylan was removed from ministry and his faculties to exercise priestly ministries have been suspended pending an investigation of the accusation, the diocese said.

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Ronald Mulkearns, bishop accused of child sex abuse cover up, dies

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Ronald Mulkearns, who was bishop of Ballarat during some of the worst episodes of child sex abuse perpetuated by priests, has died aged 86.

Mulkearns, who had colon cancer, died on Monday morning, the Catholic diocese of Ballarat said.

The child abuse royal commission has heard that Mulkearns, who was bishop between 1971 and 1997, knew the paedophile priest Gerald Francis Ridsdale and others were sexually abusing children and moved them between parishes. He also destroyed documents in Ridsdale’s file, the commission heard.

One victim, Stephen Woods, who was abused as a child in Ballarat, said on Monday the church should not stage a high-profile funeral for Mulkearns.

“The most sensitive route for the Catholic church in Ballarat now is to have a very modest funeral, where it is recognised that the legacy of this man is one of trauma and devastation of individuals, of families and of communities,” Woods told Guardian Australia.

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‘Keeper of secrets’ bishop who protected vile pedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale dies before he can finish giving evidence to royal commission into child sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
Daily Mail

By FREYA NOBLE FOR DAILY MAIL AUSTRALIA

A Victorian bishop who moved pedophile priests as he tried to protect the Catholic Church’s reputation has died of cancer.

Retired Ballarat bishop Ronald Mulkearns, 85, died on Monday morning after a battle with advanced colon cancer, the Catholic Diocese of Ballarat confirmed.

Bishop Mulkearns – know as the ‘keeper of secrets’ – was a bishop in Ballarat from 1971-1997, and knowingly moved pedophile priests, including Gerald Francis Ridsdale, between parishes.

He died before he could finish giving evidence to the child abuse royal commission.

Bishop Mulkearns appeared before the commission via videolink from his Ballarat nursing home in February, but his questioning finished after 90 minutes on doctor’s advice.

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A shameful past

MINNESOTA
Brainerd Dispatch

By Chelsey Perkins on Apr 3, 2016

Nearly 50 years ago, a dynamic priest left an impression on parishioners at St. Christopher’s Catholic Church in Nisswa.

“Father (Alfred) Longley was a priest who had attracted a bit of a following in that when he showed up at St. Christopher’s, he was a dramatic presence,” said Rick Herder, a former Lake Shore resident who attended the church as a boy. “He wore colorful garb when he said the Mass. … He tended to gather a flock of acolytes around him, because he was an outgoing, colorful personality and an intellect. A very bright guy and a raconteur.”

Longley was memorable for other, more sinister reasons as well, recorded in a series of documents released as part of a successful lawsuit against the Diocese of Duluth by a victim of sexual abuse. The documents, including official reports from the Crow Wing County Sheriff’s Office, detailed interviews with juveniles staying at Longley’s Gull Lake residence, describing wild parties and sexual advances by the priest. Letters to and from the Diocese of Duluth also show church officials were aware of Longley’s chronic alcoholism and apparent homosexuality, for which he received treatment at a psychiatric hospital. In one letter, Longley’s case was described as a “very long and involved one” by the bishop of the Duluth diocese.

Although Longley was permanently removed from the ministry in March 1968 by the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, the Duluth diocese granted Longley permission to celebrate Mass through the early 1970s. He is described as “Father” in all of the released documents, dated between April 1971 and May 1972. Herder, who shared his own experience of a 1970 sexual advance from Longley with the Brainerd Dispatch, recalled Longley serving as a substitute priest at St. Christopher’s in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

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Ronald Mulkearns: Ex-bishop accused of abuse cover-up dies

AUSTRALIA
BBC News

A former Catholic bishop accused of covering up the sexual abuse of children in Ballarat, Australia between the 1970s and 1990s has died.

Retired bishop Ronald Mulkearns died aged 85, the Catholic Church confirmed.

Last month he was asked once again to testify before a child sex abuse inquest following evidence from Cardinal George Pell.

Cardinal Pell said the bishop deceived him about the activities of notorious paedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale.

Ridsdale committed more than 130 offences against young boys while working as a chaplain at Ballarat’s St Alipius school between the 1960s and the 1980s.

“I can’t nominate another bishop whose actions are so grave and inexplicable … His repeated refusal to act is, I think, absolutely extraordinary,” Cardinal Pell said of Bishop Mulkearns in March.

In February, Bishop Mulkearns told the Australian Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse he was sorry for moving paedophile priests.

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Former Ballarat bishop Ronald Mulkearns dies at 85

AUSTRALIA
The Age

April 4, 2016

Jane Lee

Known as the “keeper of secrets”, a key bishop responsible for moving paedophile priests around Victorian parishes for decades, has died.

Ronald Mulkearns, who was the Catholic bishop of Ballarat for nearly 30 years, died on Sunday night at the age of 85 after a long battle with colon cancer.

The Catholic Diocese of Ballarat confirmed his death on Monday morning.

Bishop Mulkearns headed the Ballarat diocese between 1971 and 1997, when Catholic clergy, including teachers, abused hundreds of children.

Many clergy sex abuse survivors believe he could have stopped much of the horrific abuse that occurred in the region.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has heard the bishop moved priests, including serial child sex offender Gerald Ridsdale around the diocese despite being told they had abused children, and also destroyed documents in Ridsdale’s file.

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April 3, 2016

Priest Removed After Being Accused of Sexual Misconduct

PENNSYLVANIA
PA Homepage

SCRANTON-LACKAWANNA COUNTY(WBRE/WYOU)- The Diocese of Scranton has removed a priest after receiving reports of sexual misconduct.

Reverend Martin Boylan was most recently serving as pastor at Saint Patrick’s Parish in West Scranton.

But the alleged abuse happened in Wayne County.

The alleged abuse was reported on Friday and diocese officials say they immediately notified the Wayne County District Attorney.

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Former Bishop of Grimsby denies disgraced vicar’s sex abuse was ‘swept under carpet’

UNITED KINGDOM
Grimsby Telegraph

A former Bishop of Grimsby claims the behaviour of a disgraced vicar who subjected a child to sex abuse was not swept under the carpet when it was first reported to him.

Stephen Crabtree, a former rector in East Lindsey, was jailed for three years by Lincoln Crown Court after admitting six counts of indecent assault on a 15-year-old victim.

In court, it was said the victim had reported the offences to the then Bishop of Grimsby, the Rt Rev David Rossdale.

Crabtree subsequently admitted the offences to the Bishop on two occasions but was only arrested in 2015 after the church carried out a review of past complaints and the matter was passed on to police.

Speaking to the BBC, the Rt Rev Rossdale said he was first made aware of the offence in 2000 by the victim and had tried to pursue it.

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Scranton priest removed from ministry after allegation of sexual misconduct with child

PENNSYLVANIA
Times-Tribune

JOE HEALEY
Published: April 3, 2016

SCRANTON — A longtime Diocese of Scranton priest was removed from his ministry after an allegation of sexual misconduct with a minor surfaced late Friday night.

The Rev. Martin M. Boylan most recently served as pastor of St. Patrick’s Parish in Scranton, and was the episcopal vicar for the Northern Pastoral Region of the Diocese of Scranton, according to a statement from the Diocese.

The alleged misconduct occurred when the accuser, now an adult, was a minor, according to the statement. The Diocese said it notified the Wayne County district attorney because the alleged abuse took place in that region.

The Rev. Boylan previously served as administrator and pastor of St. Rita’s in Gouldsboro, and pastor of St. John the Evangelist Parish in Honesdale, and St. Joseph Parish in White Mills, Texas Twp., all in Wayne County.

The Diocese suspended the Rev. Boylan’s “faculties to exercise priestly ministries within the Diocese” pending an investigation of the accusation, according to the statement.

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STATEMENT REGARDING REVEREND MARTIN M. BOYLAN

PENNSYLVANIA
Roman Catholic Diocese of Scranton

Posted on: 04-3-2016

Late Friday evening, April 1, 2016, Diocesan officials received an allegation of sexual misconduct involving a minor against the Reverend Martin M. Boylan. The allegation is reported to have occurred when the accuser, now an adult, was a minor. In response to the allegation, the Diocese of Scranton immediately notified the Wayne County District Attorney’s Office, the county where the abuse is reported to have taken place; reported the incident through Pennsylvania ChildLine; removed the accused cleric from ministry and suspended his faculties to exercise priestly ministries within the Diocese pending an investigation of the accusation. The Diocese of Scranton will cooperate fully with all civil authorities in their investigation of this matter.

Ordained in 1980, Father Boylan was serving as pastor of St. Patrick’s Parish, Scranton, and Episcopal Vicar for the Northern Pastoral Region of the Diocese of Scranton at the time of the accusation.

Prior assignments were as follows: Assistant Pastor at St. Jude Parish, Mountaintop, St. Gabriel Parish (now Annunciation Parish), Hazleton, St. Patrick Parish, Scranton, St. Peter’s Cathedral Parish, Scranton, and St. Mary of the Immaculate Conception Parish (now Our Lady of Fatima Parish), Wilkes-Barre; Chaplain at Bishop Hannan High School, Scranton and Marywood College (University), Scranton; Residence at St. Clare Parish, Scranton and St. Luke Parish, Stroudsburg; Administrator at Blessed Sacrament Parish, Wilkes-Barre and St. Rita Parish, Gouldsboro; and Pastor, St. Rita Parish, Gouldsboro, St. John the Evangelist Parish, Honesdale, St. Joseph Parish, White Mills, SS. Peter and Paul Parish, Towanda, St. Michael Parish, Canton, St. John Nepomucene Parish, Troy, and St. Aloysius Parish, Ralston.

The Diocese of Scranton encourages anyone who has been sexually abused by a member of the clergy or anyone else, to immediately notify local law enforcement authorities; and to contact Joseph DeVizia, Victim’s Assistance Coordinator, at (570) 862-7551; or Monsignor Thomas M. Muldowney Vicar General of the Diocese of Scranton at (570) 207-2269. We also urge anyone to report incidents of child abuse immediately to Pennsylvania ChildLine. The toll-free number is 1-800-932-0313.

The Diocese of Scranton is committed to protecting children and to providing support to victims of sexual abuse. In acknowledging the pain suffered by survivors of abuse, the Most Reverend Joseph C. Bambera, Bishop of Scranton, requests the faithful of the Diocese to join him in praying for the healing of all who have been harmed by abuse, for the countless lives affected by such actions, and for the many priests of the Diocese of Scranton who have been faithful to their vocation and the people they serve.

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Catholic Priest Accused of Sexually Abusing Child in Wayne County

PENNSYLVANIA
WNEP

APRIL 3, 2016, BY BILL MICHLOWSKI

SCRANTON — A Catholic priest is off the job after church officials say allegations arose that he sexually abused a child in Wayne County.

The district attorney says the accusations against Father Martin Boylan are under investigation after the Diocese of Scranton made prosecutors aware of the allegations.

The Diocese suspended Boylan after learning of the allegations Friday from the alleged victim, who is now an adult.

Boylan was pastor of St. Patrick’s Parish in Scranton, but served at several parishes in Wayne County over the years.

Any suspicions of child abuse can be reported to Pennsylvania ChildLine at 1-800-932-0313 as well as to police.

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Laicos de Osorno marcharon hasta Valdivia en protesta contra Barros

CHILE
Bio Bio

[About 60 members of the Lay Movement of Osorno reached Valdivia demanding the resignation of Bishop Juan Barros after walking more than 40 kilometers from Osorno.]

Cerca de 60 integrantes del Movimiento de Laicos de Osorno llegaron hasta Valdivia exigiendo la renuncia del obispo Juan Barros tras haber caminado más de 40 kilómetros desde Osorno.

Los miembros del movimiento de Osorno llegaron hasta la capital de Los Ríos durante la mañana de este domingo luego de trasladarse desde Paillaco en buses para comenzar su caminata hasta la catedral valdiviana.

El vocero del movimiento, que inició su marcha el viernes desde Osorno, Juan Carlos Claret, señaló que si bien con esta manifestación se espera que en la nueva asamblea de la Conferencia Episcopal se trate el tema de Osorno y una posible solución a la permanencia del Obispo Juan Barros, también indicó que se busca el despertar de los Laicos para que su parecer sobre las decisiones de la jerarquía católica sea tomada en cuenta.

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PA–Victims applaud federal probe of Catholic officials

PENNSYLVANIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, April 1, 2016

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

We’re grateful that a US attorney in Pennsylvania is talking about using RICO laws against Catholic officials.

[CBS Pittsburgh]

This law, known as RICO, the Racketeering Influence and Corruption Organization Act, usually applies to criminal organizations. But we believe it can and should be used against bishops and other church staff who repeatedly endanger kids, deceive parishioners, move predators, hide evidence and refuse to call law enforcement about known and suspected clergy child sex crimes and cover ups.

We agree with U.S. Attorney David Hickton who said that people have “a hollow sense that there is justice that has not been dispensed” in clergy sex abuse and cover up cases. That “sense” is based on reality. Despite more than 6,400 accused child molesting US Catholic clerics, only two US Catholic officials have been convicted for concealing their crimes.

We urge others in law enforcement to consider RICO and other charges – endangering kids, obstructing justice, destroying evidence, intimidating victims, threatening whistleblowers and failure to report abuse – against current and former Catholic officials who put their comfort and careers ahead of the safety of innocent kids and vulnerable adults.

And we urge every single person who saw, suspected or suffered child sex crimes and cover ups in Catholic churches or institutions – especially in Altoona– to protect kids by calling police, get help by calling therapists, expose wrongdoers by calling journalists, get justice by calling attorneys, and get comfort by calling support groups like ours. This is how kids will be safer, adults will recover, criminals will be prosecuted, cover ups will be deterred and the truth will surface.

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Police Drop Sex Abuse Probe into Italian Bishop

ITALY
Outlook (India)

April 3

Italian police are dropping an investigation into a bishop for the alleged sexual abuse of seminarists, media reports said today.

Prosecutors in Cassino, south of Rome, had opened a probe into monsignor Gerardo Antonazzo after receiving a letter from a seminarian accusing the bishop of sexually molesting him and others.

But prosecutor Luciano d’Emmanuele today released a statement saying no charges would be brought, La Repubblica daily said.

Antonazzo had been quoted yesterday stressing “how utterly unfounded the accusations are”.
Sex abuse scandals have dogged the Catholic Church in recent years with alleged victims breaking their silence in the United States, Ireland, the Netherlands, Australia France, Germany, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Mexico and Poland.

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Feds May Seek Racketeering Suit for Clergy Abuse in Diocese

PENNSYLVANIA
ABC News

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
PITTSBURGH — Apr 3, 2016

A federal prosecutor may file a racketeering lawsuit against a Roman Catholic diocese where a state grand jury found two former bishops helped cover up the sexual abuse of hundreds of children by more than 50 clergy over a 40-year period.

The ongoing investigation of the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese grew out of the prosecution of the Rev. Joseph Maurizio Jr., U.S. Attorney David Hickton said Friday.

The 71-year-old Somerset County priest was convicted last year of molesting two street children during missionary trips to Honduras. He was sentenced to nearly 17 years in prison, fined $50,000 and forced to pay his victims $10,000 each.

Hickton said the ongoing investigation concerns whether diocesan officials engaged in a pattern of criminal activity that would fall under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, commonly referred to as RICO.

The statute of limitations has lapsed on criminal racketeering charges, but there is no time limit for filing a RICO lawsuit, Hickton said. KDKA-TV first reported that Hickton was considering such a lawsuit. A diocesan spokesman didn’t immediately comment.

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Pennsylvania lawmakers: Victims of child sexual abuse deserve to have their day in court

PENNSYLVANIA
Lancaster Online

Editorial

THE ISSUE

The movie “Spotlight,” which won the Best Picture Oscar this year, detailed the Boston Globe’s tenacious reporting on the sexual abuse scandal and cover-up in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston, under Cardinal Bernard Law. In 2002, the Globe wrote some 600 stories on the subject of abusive priests, and the church’s system of covering up the priestly abuse. A similar pattern of cover-up took place in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese, according to Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane. A statewide investigating grand jury determined that hundreds of children in that diocese were sexually abused over a period of at least 40 years by at least 50 priests or religious leaders. “Evidence and testimony reviewed by the grand jury also revealed a troubling history of superiors within the Diocese taking action to conceal the child abuse as part of an effort to protect the institution’s image,” Kane’s office said in a March 1 statement.

If only “Spotlight” was a fictional creation of Hollywood, and not the all-too-real story of the Catholic Church’s systematic pattern of hiding priestly child sexual abuse.

If only the story told by The Boston Globe pertained only to Boston, and not to Philadelphia, and Milwaukee, and Los Angeles, and Altoona-Johnstown, and dioceses across the globe.

Unfortunately, wishing doesn’t make it so.

“Spotlight” highlighted just how essential newspaper journalism can and should be. It showed how the unglamorous work of poring through documents, filing Right-to-Know requests and doggedly pursuing sources can yield a story that changes institutions and, more importantly, people’s lives.

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Pittsburgh: Federal police seek ‘organised crime’ suit for Catholic paedophilia cover-up

PENNSYLVANIA
International Business Times

By Joe Gamp
April 3, 2016

A federal prosecutor in the US may file a racketeering lawsuit against a Roman Catholic diocese after a state grand jury found two bishops guilty of covering up the abuse of hundreds of children.

Reports suggest that more than 50 clergy abused hundreds of children over a 40-year period at the Altoona-Johnstown diocese – based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania – following the conviction of Reverend Joseph Maurizo.

According to Press Association, 71-year-old Somerset County priest Maurizo was last year convicted of molesting two street children during missionary trips to Honduras. He was sentenced to nearly 17 years in prison, fined $50,000 and forced to pay his victims $10,000 each.

US Attorney David Hickton said on 1 April that the ongoing investigation over whether diocesan officials engaged in a pattern of criminal activity that would fall under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), normally used to prosecute organised crime.

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Christian School Principal Arrested For Horrific Case Of Child Rape (VIDEO)

WASHINGTON
Addicting Info

April 2, 2016

It really is beginning to seem like some church communities are full of child molesters. Then again, those of us not brainwashed by propaganda already knew that. Here’s another case of two children’s lives being ruined by a devout ‘Christian’ in a position of authority.

Douglas J. Allison is the 55-year-old principal at a small Christian school that is an arm of the Seventh Day Adventist Church in Port Angeles, Washington. He is one of two teachers, as well as the principal of Mountain View Christian School. Detectives heard the creepy old man confess to raping one of his young victims — the girls were ten and eleven, respectively — on a taped conversation. He also never tried to say he was not guilty of what he was being accused of when officers arrived at his house to take him away for his horrific crimes. In fact, this monster confessed to raping those little girls again – to the arresting authorities.

Allison is in jail on $100,000 bail, and hopefully no one pays it. He is charged with eight counts of molestation and four counts of child rape. Detectives are also working with authorities in California, as Douglas worked in a school there as well. There are likely more victims of his horrible and gross behavior.

Associate Pastor Collette Pekar says of the situation:

“We are very, very sad. Our congregation is grieving. We love our kids, we love our families. We’re praying for complete healing, for complete justice.”

The thing is, though, this sort of thing is all too common in religious communities. Some Christian cultures teach complete submission, and those in positions of authority, and often the churches are more concerned about their images and their collection plates than they are about the victims. It’s disgusting and despicable, but true. That is why sexual predators are allowed to run rampant in those communities.

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“Nobody offered a way forward” – Bishop knew of child sex-attack by ex-vicar 15 years ago

UNITED KINGDOM
Lincolnshire Echo

A senior clergyman claims the behaviour of a disgraced vicar who subjected a child to sex abuse was not swept under the carpet when it was first reported to him.

Stephen Crabtree, former rector of Washingborough and Heighington until 2014, was jailed for three years by Lincoln Crown Court after admitting six counts of indecent assault on a 15-year-old victim.

In court, it was said the victim had reported the offences to the then Bishop of Grimsby, the Rt Rev David Rossdale.

Crabtree subsequently admitted the offences to the Bishop on two occasions but was only arrested in 2015 after the church carried out a review of past complaints and the matter was passed on to police.

Speaking to the BBC, the Rt Rev Rossdale said he was first made aware of the offence in 2000 by the victim and had tried to pursue it.

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Mark Ruffalo knew Spotlight would hit right notes

UNITED KINGDOM
Film News

Mark Ruffalo knew that his Oscar-winning movie Spotlight would resonate with the world.

The 48-year-old actor stars as real life reporter Mike Rezendes in the true tale about how a group of Boston Globe journalists blew the lid of a Catholic priest paedophile ring.

The Tom McCarthy-directed feature also stars Michael Keaton, Rachel McAdams and Liev Schreiber, and scooped two Academy Awards, a BAFTA and a SAG at the 2016 awards shows.

“I’m in the entertainment business, and we get to make different kinds of movies,” Mark pointed out to Cover Media. “Some are just purely for entertainment and then sometimes you make a movie that culturally will push the culture to a particular place. I read the script and I immediacy felt this is a story that we have heard, but it’s time to revisit it again and the culture is ready to revisit it and we have this new Pope and there’s a space open for this to really resonate in the world.”

Mark worked closely with Mike before shooting began, and got to study the journalist as he went about his job. The three time Oscar-nominated star has a healthy respect for the press, but none more so than Mike.

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La Iglesia enfrenta a su peor fantasma

URUGUAY
El Pais

PAULA BARQUET
03 abr 2016

La película Spotlight volvió a poner sobre el tapete el abuso sexual en la Iglesia Católica. ¿Ocurrió en todo el mundo y no aquí? Las autoridades uruguayas, obsesionadas por la transparencia, revelan en este informe los casos que llegaron a sus manos.

Hace más de 10 años que la Iglesia Católica comenzó a transitar el camino de la “tolerancia cero” a la pederastia. Desde que inició su papado, en 2005, Benedicto XVI dejó de quejarse de campañas mediáticas contra los curas y pasó a hablar de “suciedad clerical”. Él, que había dirigido el órgano dedicado a sancionar los pecados —la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe—, sabía bien que la postura oficial había sido ocultar esa “suciedad”.

Con Benedicto XVI el Vaticano instó a las autoridades de la Iglesia en todo el mundo a elaborar protocolos de actuación ante denuncias de abuso sexual infantil. Si bien Francisco tomó la posta —por ejemplo, con la creación de la Comisión Pontificia para la Tutela de Menores, dedicada a la prevención del abuso—, el grueso de la “limpieza” fue durante el papado del alemán. Entre 2004 y 2013 hubo unas 6.000 denuncias. De esas, más de 3.000 fueron “casos creíbles”, según datos oficiales difundidos hace poco por El Diario, un medio español. En total, 848 religiosos fueron reducidos al estado laical, la máxima sanción posible dentro de la Iglesia. Del período de Francisco no hay todavía información disponible.

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Norbert Baumann, OLG-Richter gibt “Tipps”, wie man Missbrauchsverdacht gegen Kirchenfreund vertuscht?

DEUTSCHLAND
martindeeg

Und wieder: die strukturellen Probleme im Raum Würzburg….

“Bei der momentanen Praxis würde ich jedem Opfer abraten, auf diese Institution zu hoffen. Stattdessen würde ich raten: Macht die Taten öffentlich, schreit sie heraus und schließt euch zusammen – nicht nur gegen Täter, sondern gegen ihre Helfer, die Vertuscher in den Institutionen, übrigens nicht nur in den Kirchen.”….

Dr. Norbert Baumann, der ehemalige Vorsitzende des 1. Strafsenats des OLG Bamberg ist – Thema im Blog hier – einer der für die Freiheitsberaubung im Amt gegen mich hauptverantwortlichen Täter, als solcher angezeigt und geltend gemacht.

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Auch ein medienethisches Drama

DEUTSCHLAND
Herder Korrespondenz

Kann eine ganze Stadt Missbrauchsvorfälle an Kindern über Jahre vertuschen? In Boston scheint das lange der Fall gewesen zu sein. Faktisch nahm 2001 der Missbrauchsskandal in der katholischen Kirche in den Vereinigten Staaten dort seinen Anfang. In Boston leben mehr als 50 Prozent Katholiken, Kirche und Gesellschaft sind in der Stadt eng miteinander verwoben. Anzeichen und Missbrauchsvorwürfe gegen Priester hat es über Jahre hinweg immer wieder gegeben. Nur wurden sie nicht öffentlich benannt, maximal in einer Randspalte der Zeitungen erwähnt. Dies ändert sich, als der „Boston Globe“ 2001 einen neuen Chefredakteur bekommt: Marty Baron.

Damit nimmt der Film „Spotlight“, der in diesem Jahr den Oscar für den „besten Film“ erhalten hat, seinen Lauf. Die Enthüllung des Systems Missbrauch in der katholischen Kirche Bostons behandelt der Film dabei sehr emotional. Baron (Liev Schreiber), selbst Jude, hat als Außenstehender keine Bedenken, sich mit den Schattenseiten der katholischen Kirche auseinanderzusetzen; keine Zugehörigkeit verpflichtet ihn zu Loyalität. Auch der katholische Katechismus, den er von Kardinal Bernhard Law persönlich geschenkt bekommt, vermag ihn nicht „in die Spur zu holen“. Marty beauftragt das Spotlight-Team der Redaktion mit der intensiven Recherche und Aufklärung eines erneuten Missbrauchsfalls des Priester John Geoghan.

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Lowell Goddard: my child abuse inquiry is not just targeted on the famous

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Saturday 2 April 2016

A number of commentators have in past weeks spoken out, inaccurately, about the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse, which I chair and the way in which the inquiry will conduct its work. I’d like to correct those inaccuracies, specifically that the inquiry relates to individuals of public prominence.

The inquiry is unprecedented in both size and scope. Let’s remember that it came about as a result of catastrophic failures of institutions to recognise and address the extent of child sexual abuse in England and Wales. Those failures destroyed the lives of children and left them growing up in a society that let them down.

We know of high-profile cases where abusers, such as Jimmy Savile, used their positions of trust to gain unfettered access to children. And in towns such as Rotherham, Oxford and Rochdale, we know that organised networks have targeted vulnerable children for sexual abuse. We also know that the widespread sexual abuse of children has taken place – outside the media spotlight – in the care system, in residential schools, in custody and in other institutional settings. And we know from recent research by the Children’s Commissioner that only about one in eight children who are sexually abused are ever identified by statutory agencies.

I have been asked to investigate institutions in England and Wales to identify the failures that may have contributed to the abuse of children. To discharge the challenging mandate in a timely manner, I have announced 13 investigations to date. Most do not relate to individuals of public prominence.

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Hospital Funds Diverted to Cardinal’s Villa

ROME
The Daily Beast

Barbie Latza Nadeau

A top Vatican cardinal is defending a glitzy renovation to his private apartments, apparently funded by money meant for a children’s hospital.

ROME—It is hard to imagine two men more different than frugal Pope Francis and the Vatican’s former spendthrift secretary of state Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone. The Pope lives in a spartan 750-square-foot apartment inside the Vatican’s modest Santa Marta guesthouse. Cardinal Bertone, meanwhile, is caught up in a spending scandal surrounding lavish renovations for his penthouse apartment nearly 10 times that size.

Bertone—who served in the Vatican’s No. 2 position as secretary of state from 2006 until Francis essentially retired him in 2013—decided to combine two vacant Vatican-owned rooftop apartments for himself and his three service nuns at an estimated cost of around half a million euro, which was discounted by 50 percent, according to official estimates published by the Italian newspaper Il Tempo.

But despite the considerable savings, the renovations were apparently paid for twice, meaning the discount was likely down to creative—or corrupt—accounting, which is being investigated by a Vatican Tribunal that opened a criminal dossier into the matter last week.

According to journalist Emiliano Fittipaldi, who first broke the news of Bertone’s lavish penthouse being funded by a children’s hospital in his book Greed last year, the renovation cost was funneled through a London-based holding company run by Bertone’s personal friend. “The money destined for sick children was in actuality used for the renovations and then sent on to London,” Fittipaldi wrote. “Bertone’s name is not cited in the magistrates’ document but the Holy See will find it hard to overlook his direct involvement in the scandal.”

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Illegal Jewish schools: Department of Education knew about council faith school cover-up as thousands of pupils ‘disappeared’

UNITED KINGDOM
Independent

Siobhan Fenton @siobhanfenton

A London council’s education authority destroyed evidence of children being educated in illegal faith schools at the request of religious institutions, The Independent can reveal.

The Department for Education has been aware of the problem since 2010 but does not appear to have taken any steps to act against the destruction of these records.

An investigation by The Independent also found that more than 1,000 children are missing from schools in London and are at risk of abuse in illegal faith schools. The schools are ultra-Orthodox Jewish faith schools at which boys are placed from the age of 13, and where they receive no education beyond studying religious texts. A number of pupils leave school with little or no ability to speak English, and few – if any – qualifications or skills which equip them to work, or live independently.

Former pupils, campaigners and whistleblowers say that the schools have been operating in plain sight without government action for more than 40 years, despite the fact that running a non-registered school is a criminal offence, and physical violence and sexual abuse of children is alleged to have taken place inside the schools.

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‘My childhood was stolen from me’: Pupil of illegal Jewish faith school reveals physical abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
Independent

I was a pupil at illegal ultra-Orthodox Jewish schools in Hackney and was left alone and vulnerable in schools, while authorities failed to protect me. Because life inside these schools was all I knew, I didn’t even realise how wrong my experiences were until I left aged 18. Now I can see how my childhood was stolen from me – both by these illegal schools and by authorities who have no grasp on or interest in protecting children like me.

My school was a cabin. The roof was falling in with water and there were two toilets for 300 children. There was no concept of health and safety as our teachers told us, ‘God will protect you’ from anything bad happening. There was no playground, just a large concrete space. We spent break times playing with the wheels of old cars, or would kick around plastic bottles as makeshift footballs.

Other than occasional short breaks, we would spend entire days studying religious texts, normally starting at 6am and finishing at around 10pm or 11pm. Lessons were only in Yiddish and I left aged 18 unable to speak more than a few sentences of English. You sit in one seat all day, being taught pretty much the same thing every day. For young children, it’s very hard. But you have to do it, out of fear.

I was beaten physically by teachers and saw children beaten on a daily basis. We were hit with all sorts of objects. They had sticks which were colour coded for different types of bad behaviour and we would be hit with them; a red stick for one transgression, a yellow stick for another. I saw children really quite badly hurt. One got their knuckle broken. Others were marked with bruises. There is an internal first aid centre in Stamford Hill for Orthodox Jews. Children would be brought there to be tended to quietly so that it wouldn’t come out.

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Officials hunting 1,000 London boys in illegal schools

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

Chris Cook
Policy editor, Newsnight

As many as 1,000 boys from strictly Orthodox Jewish families may be pupils at a network of between 12 and 20 illegal private schools in east London.

These schools are not registered with the authorities, which makes them illegal, and they offer a narrow, religious syllabus.

The Department for Education is working with Ofsted to find and shut them.

Some of the illegal schools, however, are registered as charities, gaining them an advantaged tax status.

These private schools serve the small so-called Charedi community – a grouping that contains within it a wide variety of strictly Orthodox Jewish traditions. Hackney council estimates there are around 30,000 Charedi Jews in the borough.

Charedi parents are more likely to want a relatively mainstream education for their girls. There is demand, however, from parts of the community for a narrow education for boys, one that is largely focused on religious education and delivered in the Yiddish language.

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Goddard inquiry ‘will not ignore false abuse claims’

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

The public inquiry into child sexual abuse will not ignore the damage done to prominent people who were falsely accused, Justice Lowell Goddard says.

The judge, who chairs the inquiry, said in an article in the Observer it must strike a balance between the rights of accusers and the accused.

But she also dismissed claims it would mainly focus on famous people.

The inquiry is examining how public bodies handled their duty of care to protect children from abuse.

In the article she said a number of commentators “have in past weeks spoken out, inaccurately, about the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse, which I chair and the way in which the inquiry will conduct its work. I’d like to correct those inaccuracies.”

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Local woman shares the story, impact of her son’s sexual assault

TEXAS
Seguin Gazette

Posted: Sunday, April 3, 2016

Jennifer Luna jennifer.luna@seguingazette.com | 0 comments

EDITOR’S NOTE: The names of the victim and his mother have been altered to protect their identity.
***

In Seguin’s working-class neighborhoods, Joy raised her family promoting education, tolerance, and above all else, follow the word of Christ, she said. Joy has a close relationship with her son, James, and described herself as James’ anchor.

When James was a boy, he was active with his church. That’s where he met 18-year-old, church youth group volunteer Christopher Wayne Brown — the man who would eventually sexually abuse him. The two hit it off, becoming friends, James’ mother said.

At one point, Joy had to have back surgery that’s when Brown worked his way into their home. He helped around the house, aiding the family in a time of need.

“He befriended us, pulled himself into our family, so that we would trust him implicitly,” Joy said. “And I did, I trusted him implicitly.”

After gaining their trust, Brown started sexually assaulting James when he was on 12 years old, Joy said.

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Mirror, mirror on the wall

MALTA
Times of Malta

Sunday, April 3, 2016 by Fr Joe Borg

Had Pope Francis been a political leader he would have cracked open a bottle or two of Dom Perignon White Gold, one of the most exclusive champagnes by Moët et Chandon, to celebrate with his Council of Nine helping him reform the Roman Curia.

Costing around €13,000 per bottle, the good pope would not order too many, but given the nature of the good news, he might consider it. Mind you, I am not referring to Easter. There was grander news in the air. Malta Today told us that a whopping 92.9 per cent of Maltese “judge positively” the way Francis is leading the Church.

Alas, Archbishop Charles Scicluna would have to settle for good old Mass wine. The approval rating for his leadership is only 47 per cent; a measly D-grade by university standards. Quite naturally, Scicluna would find some solace, had he been the type to find solace in such things, in the fact that a Malta Today poll gives 37 per cent trust ratings to the Prime Minister and 33.5 per cent to the leader of the Nationalist Party.

The study by Malta Today is interesting but at least two questions beg for an answer.

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Should dioceses use grand jury probes?

PENNSYLVANIA
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

By Peter Smith / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

In the past 11 years, grand juries in Pennsylvania have investigated two Roman Catholic dioceses and issued reports with the same narrative line:

Dozens of priests molested hundreds of children across the latter decades of the 20th century as their bishops and other higher-ups ignored or downplayed credible evidence of their offenses and even kept predators in ministry assignments with access to children.

That’s what grand juries reported about the Archdiocese of Philadelphia in 2005 and 2011 and the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown last month.

Because those investigations largely delved far into the past, they yielded thick reports but few prosecutions due to the statute of limitations.

They did, however, yield a rarity: Four of the five Roman Catholic officials ever charged in the United States for covering up the sexual abuse of a subordinate, as opposed to committing the abuse themselves, have been accused as a result of these grand jury probes.

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Salesian priest charged with string of sex offences

AUSTRALIA
The Advertiser

April 3, 2016

A PRIEST who worked at schools linked to one of the state’s most notorious paedophile rings has been charged with sex offences, decades after allegations first surfaced.

Salesian priest Father Frank De Dood has been charged with a string of offences, including the rape and indecent assault of young boys, between 1978 and 1983.

Police claim five people fell victim to offences committed at Chadstone and Sunbury, where Fr Dood worked at the order’s Salesian College, ­Rupertswood. So far, at least five former Rupertswood staff, including principals, have been jailed for child sex crimes.

The Salesians have admitted paying out thousands of dollars to victims.

In 2008, the Salesians made a confidential payment to a former Rupertswood student who complained of being abused in the 1980s. The ex-­student claimed that “as a result of such assaults, he has sustained loss, damage and injuries that may require specialist counselling and therapy”.

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April 2, 2016

Jesus wept: There were 12 reported incidents of Christian pastors molesting kids — in just the last month<

UNITED STATES
Raw Story

TOM BOGGIONI
02 APR 2016

The arrest of a Christian school principal in Port Angeles, Washington for sexually assaulting two pre-teen girls brings to light, once again, what appears to be an epidemic of sexual predators in Christian churches and schools.

According to the Crimes Against Children Research Center, 1 in 5 girls and 1 in 20 boys is a victim of child sexual abuse. The exact number of actual sexual assaults is unknown since many victims never speak up or, in some cases like Florida, the sexual assault is hushed up.

Sexual abuse within the Christian community that either ignores it or attempts to sweep in under the rug became a hot topic in 2015 after it was revealed that popular Christian celebrities Jim Bob and Michelle Duggar attempted to hide the fact that their son Josh had molested several of his sisters when they were younger. The resulting scandal forced the family’s popular reality show off the air after sponsors fled.

According to Christian writer Tom Challies, sexual predators gravitate to churches because Christians are taught to submit to authority in an atmosphere that encourages trust. Church programs also offer easy access to the children of parishioners.

Quoting from writer Deepak Reju’s On Guard: Preventing and Responding To Child Abuse At Church, Challies writes: “Many Christians don’t know how to distinguish likability and trustworthiness. They confuse the two categories, assuming that if someone is courteous and nice, they must also be trustworthy. Moreover, some Christians behave as though the problem doesn’t exist, and some look with suspicion on reports of abuse. They believe children are lying and are more prone to take an adult’s word. Sexual predators know that these dynamics operate in churches, and they know they can get away with a lot on account of it”

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‘Confidential archives’: Experts divided on impact of Canon Law in Diocese of Altoona–Johnstown child sexual abuse scandal

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Democrat

By Dave Sutor
dsutor@tribdem.com

The Pennsylvania Office of Attorney General knew the Code of Canon Law required the Roman Catholic Diocese of Altoona–Johnstown to keep a “secret archive” and other closely guarded documents that only the bishop and – in some cases – a few other high-ranking officials could access.

When investigators finally obtained the private information, as part of a grand jury investigation, it provided a trove of details about an alleged decades-long coverup – orchestrated by former Bishops James John Hogan and Joseph Victor Adamec – to keep silent allegations of child abuse made against at least 50 priests and other religious leaders.

Finding that archive was one of the key turning points in the entire two-year process.

And the discovery shined a light on the importance of the church’s Code of Canon Law, which was comprehensively codified for the first time in 1917 and revised in 1983.

“I don’t know if I would go as far as to say that canon law made it possible to cover up,” Deputy Attorney General Daniel Dye said. “But we looked at Canon law in the course of the investigation.”

Use of the “secret archive” description took on an almost sinister connotation, considering what kind of information was reportedly revealed in the more than 115,000 diocesan documents examined by the attorney general’s office.

“I don’t like that translation. It makes it sound like more than it was,” said Prof. Nicholas P. Cafardi, dean emeritus for the Duquesne University School of Law. “I would call it ‘confidential archives’ that very few people in the church have access to.”

‘Foulest crime’

The Crimen sollicitationis is a 1922 document – later amended in 1962 – that codified procedures to be used when priests or bishops were accused of using the sacrament of penance to make sexual advances toward penitents. The document also dealt with “crimen pessimum” – “the foulest crime” – described as “any external obscene act, gravely sinful, perpetrated or attempted by a cleric in any way whatsoever with a person of his own sex” or “pre-adolescent children (impuberes) of either sex or with brute animals (bestialitas),” according to a translation on the Vatican’s website.

Section 11 of Crimen sollicitationis has been cited by individuals and organizations that allege the Catholic Church has systemically covered up child abuse.

It states: “Since, however, in dealing with these causes, more than usual care and concern must be shown that they be treated with the utmost confidentiality, and that, once decided and the decision executed, they are covered by permanent silence (Instruction of the Holy Office, 20 February 1867, No. 14), all those persons in any way associated with the tribunal, or knowledgeable of these matters by reason of their office, are bound to observe inviolably the strictest confidentiality, commonly known as the secret of the Holy Office, in all things and with all persons, under pain of incurring automatic excommunication, ipso facto and undeclared, reserved to the sole person of the Supreme Pontiff, excluding even the Sacred Penitentiary.

“Ordinaries are bound by this same law, that is, in virtue of their own office; other personnel are bound in virtue of the oath which they are always to swear before assuming their duties; and, finally, those delegated, questioned or informed (outside the tribunal), are bound in virtue of the precept to be imposed on them in the letters of delegation, inquiry or information, with express mention of the secret of the Holy Office and of the aforementioned censure.”

In a 2010 article in Commonweal magazine, titled “The Scandal of Secrecy,” Cafardi wrote: “In fact, No. 11 of Crimen does say that the church’s internal legal process regarding crimes reserved to the Holy Office is covered by the Holy Office secret, now called the pontifical secret. But that’s all the secrecy requirement covers: the internal church legal process, not the crime itself. It does not prevent victims, their families, or even church officials from reporting a civil crime to the civil authorities or to the media.”

Commonweal is an independent Catholic opinion publication.

During an interview, Cafardi said that in his view those rules do not prohibit the church from involving law enforcement when sex abuse allegations are made.

“Canon law doesn’t say take it to law enforcement, but it also doesn’t say that you can’t,” Cafardi said. “It doesn’t say one way or another.”

‘Kept secret’

Crimen sollicitationis frequently cites canon law. And, according to Cafardi, Crimen sollicitationis was part of canon law from 1922 until 2001 when it was replaced by Sacramentorum sanctitatis tutela, which dealt with several issues, including sexual abuse.

Also, canon law explains that “a criminal action is extinguished by prescription after three years, except for: 1) offences reserved to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith; 2) an action arising from any of the offences mentioned in cann. 1394, 1395, 1397, 1398, which is extinguished after five years,” creating a self-imposed statute of limitations.

All of those different laws combined to create what some outspoken critics of the diocese have described as a veil of secrecy that blocked child abuse within the church from public view.

“Canon law states that sex abuse matters should be kept secret,” said Mitchell Garabedian, a Boston attorney who represented more than 30 of the victims who were abused by Brother Stephen Baker during his time at Bishop McCort High School.

Crimen sollicitationis, which was to be “kept carefully in the secret archive of the Curia for internal use,” and “not to be published or augmented with commentaries,” per its own text, was discussed openly in 2001, according to Cafardi. The practice then came to the forefront during an investigation into child sexual abuse and a coverup within the Archdiocese of Boston.

Garabedian played a major role in that case, obtaining a $10 million settlement for 86 victims of Rev. John Geoghan or their survivors and, along with other lawyers, getting an $85 million settlement against the archdiocese for victims and survivors of more than 40 different priests.

Gaining access to the archdiocese’s secret documents was key to that case, according to Garabedian.

“In those files is usually the most damaging information for the church,” Garabedian said.

Sin or crime?

The AG’s office has not pointed to any direct connection between adhering to canon law and Crimen sollicitationis and the diocese allegedly perpetrating the Altoona-Johnstown coverup.

Except for one press conference held by Bishop Mark Bartchak, the diocese has declined to comment on the matter, since the attorney general’s office considers the investigation to be ongoing.

Adamec defended himself in a statement released through his attorney that stated between 1987 and 2002, the former bishop learned about allegations made against 14 living diocesan priests and one living member of a religious order with nine of the priests being suspended from public ministry or retiring “many with the imposition of conditions prohibiting public ministry.”

But Rev. Kevin Annett, a Nobel Peace Prize nominee who recently visited western Pennsylvania, described the alleged Altoona-Johnstown Diocese coverup as an example of how the church views child abuse as a sin and not a crime, in his opinion.

“It’s setting themselves outside the law of the land under their own rules,” Annett said.

He concluded: “Their main concern – from my experience – is not the children. It’s the financial impact on the church.”

Dave Sutor is a reporter for The Tribune-Democrat. He can be reached at (814) 532-5056. Follow him on Twitter @Dave_Sutor.

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Frank Brennan, S.J. on the Sex Abuse Scandal in Australia

AUSTRALIA
America

Bill McGarvey | Apr 2 2016

As a lawyer, professor and human rights activist, Frank Brennan, S.J. occupies a unique position in Australian civil and religious society. He is well known throughout the country, both inside and outside the church, for his decades-long work as an advocate in the areas of law, social justice and reconciliation with Aboriginal Australians.

For services to Aboriginals, He was named an Officer of the Order of Australia and the National Trust has classified him as a Living National Treasure. In addition to his work in his native Australia, Father Brennan recently held the Gasson Chair at Boston College’s Law School.

On a recent trip to Australia just before Holy Week, I sat down with Father Brennan in Melbourne to discuss the state of the church in Australia in light of the ongoing Royal Commission on child sexual abuse and the unprecedented 20 hours of testimony from Cardinal Pell that was televised nationally.

The following interview is being published in partnership with Eureka Street, an online journal of politics, religion and culture sponsored by the Australian Jesuits.

America: What sense do you have regarding the sex abuse scandal here in Australia and how it compares to the US?

Frank Brennan, SJ: In Australia we are not as litigious as you are in America and damages are usually not as high as they are in the United States. But having said that I have no doubt there will be further developments in the law here in Australia. Particularly in light of much of the evidence that many of the bishops have given that seems to indicate that prior to 1996 it would be very difficult to argue that the best interests of the child was the highest priority. Prior to 1996 there was a great lack of awareness among the senior church leaders and there was a lack of action by senior church leaders.

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NSPCC criticises Church of England over abuse case ‘reported to Bishop of Grimsby’

UNITED KINGDOM
Grimsby Telegraph

Leading children’s charity NSPCC has criticised the Church of England over the abuse of a 15-year-old by a minister.

The victim of the “appalling abuse” at the hands of the minister told the then Bishop of Grimsby of the offences, as reported.

Stephen Crabtree carried out the offences in the early 1990s after forming “an inappropriate relationship” with the 15-year-old victim following the breakdown of his marriage.

Crabtree, 59, who now lives in Bradford, West Yorkshire, admitted six charges of indecent assault on dates between 1992 and April 1993. He was jailed for three years and placed on the sex offenders’ register for life.

Lincoln Crown Court heard the victim later told the then-Bishop of Grimsby what happened between them and was advised to report the matter to police.

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