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.

August 16, 2016

PORTLAND DIOCESE SETTLES OVER HIERARCHICAL SEX ABUSE COVER-UP

MAINE
Church Militant

by Joseph Pelletier • ChurchMilitant.com • August 16, 2016

Fr. James Vallely was allegedly protected by Portland’s bishop for years

PORTLAND (ChurchMilitant.com) – A settlement has finally been reached in the case of a decades-old hierarchical cover-up of abusive clergy.

In a deal reached August 15 between the diocese of Portland, Maine and a group of plaintiffs, the diocese agreed to pay out $1.2 million to six men who allege they were sexually abused by Fr. James Vallely throughout the 1950s and 1970s. According to documents obtained by the prosecution, the diocese and then-Bp. Daniel Feeney had been made aware of the abuse, but took no action regarding Fr. Vallely.

“There is no excuse for this immorality,” asserts Boston attorney Mitchell Garabedian, who represents the plaintiffs and gained nationwide recognition for handling the homosexual priest abuse scandal in Boston in 2002. “Once again, you have purportedly the most moral institution in the world acting most immorally.”

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

Former Grizzlies announcer Rick Trotter reportedly recorded women at another church in 2010

TENNESSEE
The Commercial Appeal

By Jody Callahan of The Commercial Appeal
Aug. 11, 2016

Former Grizzlies announcer Rick Trotter used a hidden camera to record numerous women and minors in a restroom at Fellowship Memphis in 2010, several alleged victims told The Commercial Appeal.

And those alleged victims said that after the camera was discovered, church co-founder John Bryson, and possibly others, discouraged the victims from going to the police.

Four of Trotter’s alleged victims told their accounts to The Commercial Appeal this week. The women would only talk under condition of anonymity, saying they feared possible reprisals or being ostracized from local religious organizations affiliated with Fellowship.

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.

Churches tried to help Trotter; what about victims?

TENNESSEE
The Commercial Appeal

By David Waters of The Commercial Appeal
Aug. 13, 2016

Leaders of both churches seemed to go the extra mile not once but twice to help Rick Trotter deal with his demons.

After Fellowship Memphis leaders fired him for “inappropriate conduct of a sexual nature” in 2010, they supported his wife and children while they paid for him to get three months of counseling.

They took him at his word there had been only a “single incident” of that conduct during his five years as the congregation’s worship leader.

They allowed him to read “a letter of apology confessing sexual addiction along with other improprieties of a sexual nature to the members of the church body.”

Confession is good for the soul.

After Trotter applied for a job at Downtown Church in 2011, pastors and elders of both churches met and discussed his past transgressions.

They got his permission to speak openly about how he used his smartphone to secretly record women in Fellowship’s restroom.

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.

Missbrauchsvorwürfe gegen Ex-Bischof von Hildesheim

DEUTSCHLAND
Zeit

[The Hildeshein diocese has approved independent investigation of abuse allegations against the late ex-Bishop Heinrich Maria Janssen and against Father Peter R. A specialized institute from Munich will conduct the investigation.]

16. August 2016

Hildesheim (dpa) – Das Bistum Hildesheim lässt Missbrauchsvorwürfe gegen den 1988 gestorbenen Ex-Bischof Heinrich Maria Janssen und gegen Pater Peter R. von einem spezialisierten Münchner Institut untersuchen.

Beauftragt wurde dafür das Institut für Praxisforschung und Projektberatung (IPP), das bereits den Missbrauch von Schülern im Benediktinerkloster Ettal sowie an der Odenwaldschule untersuchte, wie das Bistum am Dienstag mitteilte.

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.

Schweiz: Fribourger Bischof suspendiert Priester

SCHWEIZ
Radio Vatikan

[Bishop Charles Morerod suspended a priest in the Fribourg canton of Switzerland at the end of July for allegatations of immoral contacts.]

Der Westschweizer Bischof Charles Morerod hat einen im Kanton Fribourg wohnhaften Priester per Ende Juli von seinem Dienst suspendiert. Dem Priester werden „unsittliche Berührungen“ vorgeworfen, wie die Informationsbeauftragte des Bistums Lausanne-Genf-Freiburg, Laure-Christine Grandjean, gegenüber kath.ch sagt.

Der Priester war im Ruhestand, übte aber noch gelegentlich priesterlichen Dienst aus, wie es in der Mitteilung des Bistums heißt. Die Diözese habe eine Untersuchung auf Ebene des Kirchenrechts in die Wege geleitet. Diese wird durch die vatikanische Glaubenskongregation durchgeführt, die sich bei ihrem Entscheid auf Informationen seitens des Bistums stützt. So lange die Untersuchung läuft, wird der Priester suspendiert bleiben, vermeldete das Bistum.

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.

Bistum Hildesheim lässt Missbrauchsvorwurf gegen zwei Geistliche prüfen

DEUTSCHLAND
SAT.1

Das Bistum Hildesheim lässt Missbrauchsvorwürfe gegen Ex-Bischof Heinrich Maria Janssen und Pater Peter R. von einem spezialisierten Institut untersuchen. Beauftragt wurde das Institut für Praxisforschung und Projektberatung (IPP) aus München, das bereits den Missbrauch von Schülern im Benediktinerkloster Ettal sowie an der Odenwaldschule untersuchte, teilte das Bistum am Dienstag mit. Janssen soll in seiner Amtszeit als Bischof von 1957 bis 1982 einen Jungen sexuell missbraucht haben, 1988 starb der Geistliche. Der Vorwurf gegen ihn wurde erst im vergangenen Jahr mehr als 50 Jahre nach dem vorgebrachten Missbrauch erhoben.

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.

Bistum Hildesheim beauftragt Gutachter mit Missbrauchsklärung

DEUTSCHLAND
Domradio

Das Bistum Hildesheim lässt die Missbrauchsvorwürfe gegen den verstorbenen Bischof Heinrich Maria Janssen und den pensionierten Priester Peter R. durch unabhängige Gutachter klären. Man erhofft sich so eine größere Transparenz.

Mit der Aufklärung wurde das Institut für Praxisforschung und Projektberatung (IPP) in München beauftragt, wie die Diözese mitteilte. Deren Mitarbeiter sollen prüfen, ob es neben den bereits bekannten Verdachtsfällen weitere Hinweise auf sexuelle Übergriffe durch die beiden Geistlichen gibt.

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.

IPP München übernimmt Gutachter-Aufträge

DEUTSCHLAND
Bistum Hildeshein

[The Diocese of Hildesheim has commissioned the institute for practical research and consultancy project (IPP) from Munich with the external treatment of two cases of suspicion of sexual abuse which have been reported to the diocese.]

16.08.2016

Das Bistum Hildesheim hat das Institut für Praxisforschung und Projektberatung (IPP) aus München mit der externen Aufarbeitung von zwei Fällen des Verdachts des sexuellen Missbrauchs beauftragt, die der Diözese gemeldet worden sind.

Dabei handelt es sich um den Vorwurf des sexuellen Missbrauchs gegen den verstorbenen Hildesheimer Bischof Heinrich Maria Janssen, außerdem um verschiedene Vorwürfe sexuellen Missbrauchs gegen den pensionierten Priester Peter R.

Die Mitarbeiter des IPP sollen klären, ob es neben den bekannten Missbrauchsvorwürfen weitere Hinweise auf sexuelle Übergriffe durch die beiden Geistlichen gibt. Darüber hinaus sollen sie bewerten, wie die Entscheidungsträger des Bistums mit den Fällen umgegangen sind und ob es ein institutionelles Versagen gegeben hat, das die mutmaßlichen Missbrauchstaten erleichtert und deren Verfolgung erschwert hat.

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.

Christian brother denies child-sex charges

AUSTRALIA
7 News

By Margaret Scheikowski – AAP on August 16, 2016

A Christian brother accused of sexually abusing a student decades ago was invited to his 21st and played the organ at his wedding, a judge has been told.

Christopher Rafferty, 65, has pleaded not guilty in the District Court in Sydney to six sex offences from when the boy was aged 14 until he was 16.

They allegedly occurred in the mid-1980s at St Patrick’s College at the NSW town of Goulburn.

In the crown opening at the judge-alone trial on Tuesday, prosecutor Lou Lungo said the complainant alleged Rafferty rubbed himself up against him during one-to-one piano accordion lessons.

He is also accused of sex acts involving the boy, that ended when he was “a bit older and knew what the accused was doing was wrong” and he kept away from Rafferty, Mr Lungo said.

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

There can be no turning a blind eye to religious coercion when a child’s future is at stake

UNITED KINGDOM
Independent

Editorial

Ultra-Orthodox Jews in north London are raising £1m to fight legal cases to try to stop children leaving the community when their parents divorce, as we reported today. The fundraising drive in the Charedi community aims to try to “rescue” children in custody cases when one parent wants to leave the community and its strict culture of refusing to engage with wider society.

At the level of abstract principle, there is nothing wrong with this. In a free society – even one ironically regarded by the Charedi as “evil” – people are free to raise money to help fight court cases in defence of causes they support. Supporters of the 130,000 Labour Party members of less than six months’ standing were entitled, for example, to crowdfund the costs of their unsuccessful case to overturn the decision of the party’s National Executive to exclude them from voting in the leadership election.

There is no doubt, too, that the Charedi community feels that its culture is threatened by the prevailing norms of British society. It may be a paradox, but its members feel that they are entitled to use whatever methods they can under the law of the land to defend what they call their “pure and holy” children from corruption by the irreligious outside world.

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

Why we should worry about the link between politicians and abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
Belfast Telegraph

The Independent Inquiry into Child Sex Abuse, or IICSA, is in crisis. Its third chair, New Zealand judge Dame Lowell Goddard, has just resigned and a replacement, Professor Alexis Jay, appointed. Dame Lowell and her predecessors were appointed by Theresa May in her previous role as Home Secretary to chair the inquiry examining the institutional abuse of children in England and Wales.

The two previous appointees had to step down because of their closeness to the very Establishment that they were supposed to be examining. More than a year on from its formation the inquiry has barely got into its stride.

One of the central roles of IICSA is to look at allegations against senior politicians who have been accused of abusing children. It is hoped the inquiry will consider whether Establishment abusers had been protected, and to determine what changes to the child protection system should be made in light of allegations against prominent people.

Two now-deceased politicians – Lord Greville Janner and Sir Cyril Smith – faced extremely serious allegations of serial sexual child abuse which are central to the inquiry and which were to be examined in detail. Both were accused during their lifetime, but the allegations were rejected as unfounded. But there is now uncertainty over the Janner strand of the inquiry. His family have stated that they intend to take legal action to prevent the allegations made against him from being considered by the inquiry. Meanwhile, the police are continuing to investigate people alleged to have abused children alongside Janner.

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.

Over $100K raised after bullied 13-year-old kills self

NEW YORK
CBS 19

NEW YORK – An online fundraiser launched with a $10,000 goal to pay funeral expenses for a 13-year-old New York City boy who took his own life has raised over $107,000 from more than 2,800 donors in three days.

Danny Fitzpatrick’s sister found him dead late Thursday in their attic.

The teen left behind a hand-written note describing the alleged abuse by five boys at Holy Angels Catholic Academy in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn.

“They did it constantly,” Danny said in a note, adding that he told his teachers, but they did nothing.

“I gave up the teachers … they didn’t do ANYTHING,” Danny wrote.

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

Pope Francis strives to back up apologies with action

VATICAN CITY
Crux

Inés San MartínAugust 15, 2016
VATICAN CORRESPONDENT

ROME- It might be a cliché, but actions generally speak louder than words, and rarely is that more evident than when a pope apologizes.

On his way back from Armenia in late June, Pope Francis suggested that Christians probably should ask forgiveness from gays who have been offended by the Church, from the poor, from women who have been mistreated, from children exploited for labor, and for having blessed so many weapons – basically, from anyone whom the Church could have defended and failed to do so.

Last Friday, when Francis visited a Rome center for women rescued from prostitution rackets, he delivered an apology for one of these issues through both deeds and words, asking forgiveness from the women there, in the name of Christianity, for the suffering they’ve endured. …

Although a supporter of John Paul’s proclivity to ask for forgiveness, Benedict XVI was more guarded when apologizing – but like Francis, he also backed most of the ones he delivered with actions.

To give one example, in 2010 Benedict delivered what was deemed an unprecedented apology in the form of an 8-page letter to the victims of clerical sexual abuse in Ireland. In it, he expressed his “shame and remorse” for “sinful and criminal acts.”

He admitted that years of crimes committed by clergy and lay Catholics in schools and orphanages had shattered faith in the Church, and was highly critical of the way that the Irish Church had handled the cases of abuse.

Addressing the victims and their families directly, Benedict said: “I know that nothing can undo the wrong you have endured. Your trust has been betrayed and your dignity violated.”

During Benedict’s papacy, the Vatican laicized over 800 priests for sexual abuses and more than 2,500 received other punishments, such as a life of penance and prayer or a ban on public ministries.

Pope Francis has apologized for the crime of sexual abuse by clergy as well, and backed his statements with actions- though, as is usually the case when the scope of the apology is so big, many have deemed those actions insufficient.

For instance, last September, when meeting a group of survivors of sexual abuse in Philadelphia, Francis expressed “deep regret” over the betrayal the victims suffered, the times when the Church ignored survivors or their families speaking out and some bishops’ failure in their responsibility to protect children.

“I pledge to you that we will follow the path of truth wherever it may lead. Clergy and bishops will be held accountable when they abuse or fail to protect children,” he said.

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

Controversial principal leaves Orange County yeshiva

NEW YORK
News 12

KIRYAS JOEL – The principal of an Orange County yeshiva, accused of inappropriately touching a student, has left the school.

Sources tell News 12 that the principal at the United Talmudical Academy in Kiryas Joel is no longer at the school.

Video of the educator, apparently caressing and possibly kissing a young Hassidic boy while between his legs, caused controversy when it was exposed in May.

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.

Queensland may allow child sex abuse victims to revive previously settled claims

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Joshua Robertson
@jrojourno
Monday 15 August 2016

Queensland could be the first Australian jurisdiction to enable victims of child sex abuse to revive previously settled claims against churches and schools under a state opposition proposal to broaden their legal rights.

With the Palaszczuk government tabling its bill scrapping age limits on abuse claims on Tuesday, the Liberal National party announced it would move amendments to allow victims to have a court strike down settlements made lower because they fell outside the statute of limitations.

Lawyers and advocates for victims have argued the ability to revive such claims is the key to fair redress and in line with recommendations by the ongoing royal commission.

The Queensland government, like the New South Wales and Victorian governments when they previously scrapped age limits on civil claims, declined to include scope for setting aside past settlements in its bill.

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.

State introduces bill to remove time limit for legal action against child abuse in institutions

AUSTRALIA
The Courier-Mail

Clare Armstrong, The Courier-Mail
August 15, 2016

THE STATE Government has introduced a bill to remove the time limit for undertaking legal action in cases of child abuse in institutions.

Under the current legislation, victims of child abuse are only able to lodge a claim to commence legal proceedings within three years of turning 18.

Premier Anastacia Palaszczuk said the Government’s bill would allow survivors of abuse to receive justice.

“Over and over again I have been told that this period of time is woefully inadequate to allow victims of childhood abuse to even come to terms with their abuse on a personal level, let alone find the strength to address their pain and to commence the daunting and arduous task of litigations in the courts,” she said.

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

Child abuse claims: Rival bills in Queensland Parliament to remove child abuse claim time limit

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Sharnie Kim

Child protection advocacy group Bravehearts is backing a private member’s bill in Queensland Parliament to remove time limits for lodging damages claims for child sexual abuse.

Two competing bills aimed at improving victims’ access to justice will be introduced into the State Parliament today — one by the State Government and the other by independent MP Rob Pyne.

Under Queensland law, a child who has been sexually abused has three years from when they turn 18 to bring a civil action to court.

Both bills remove the time limit for bringing claims.

However it is expected the State Government’s bill will only help victims of abuse in institutions such as schools, while Mr Pyne’s bill will go further, removing the three-year limit for survivors of abuse outside of institutions, such as those abused by family members.

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.

Prep school denies it wants sex assault victim’s name made public

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Boston Globe

By Nestor Ramos GLOBE STAFF AUGUST 16, 2016

Victims advocates and legal observers expressed consternation on Monday about a New Hampshire prep school’s request to reveal the identity of a teenage sexual assault victim if her family’s lawsuit against the school reaches trial.

In raising the issue of the girl’s continued anonymity, St. Paul’s School is leaning on legal strategies that are common in high-profile civil cases involving sexual assault, lawyers said. But because St. Paul’s is an educational institution responsible for keeping children safe, the tactic left some scratching — or shaking — their heads.

“I find it really troubling,” said Christina Gagnier, a lawyer who is on the board of directors of Without My Consent, a nonprofit organization that combats online privacy invasions. “You set a very dangerous precedent, particularly when it’s an educational institution.”

In the federal court system, where the lawsuit against St. Paul’s was filed, plaintiffs legally must file with their real names. Anonymity is granted to plaintiffs only in exceptional cases. In deciding whether to permit a civil lawsuit to be brought anonymously, judges must balance the interests of the plaintiff and the defendant.

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Notorious paedophile priest Vince Ryan tried to say sorry, but ended up talking about himself

AUSTRALIA
Bendigo Advertiser

JOANNE MCCARTHY
16 Aug 2016

NOTORIOUS Hunter Catholic priest Vince Ryan took to the witness box in Sydney on Monday with a plan to break the silence of decades and apologise to more than 30 victims he sexually abused from the age of five.

Instead he spoke about himself and his fearful life.

“I’ve always been afraid of everything,” said Ryan, 78, during a sentencing hearing at Darlinghurst court after entering guilty pleas to three charges of sexually abusing a boy aged between 13 and 15 at East Gresford in the mid 1980s.

Ryan’s victim was described to the court as the boy Ryan had “forgotten”, after the priest volunteered the names of victims to police following his arrest in the 1990s.

Ryan told the court: “I couldn’t walk down the street. I’ve been terrified of my own shadow my whole life.”

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After Goddard: what the Child Abuse Inquiry must do next

UNITED KINGDOM
Family Law

Natasha Phillips
15 AUG 2016

While current and past child abuse inquiries around the world seem to take the challenges of such large investigations in their stride, the UK’s Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (‘the Inquiry’) continues to stumble on the starting block. The reasons for this have been in plain sight for some time – but will the Inquiry listen to reason before it’s too late?

Having appointed its fourth Chair (former panel member Professor Alexis Jay), the Inquiry has taken on a very different hue. Professor Jay is the first Chair not to have had any legal or judicial background, but will be nestled in among a lawyer-heavy team who have shaped the Inquiry to look and feel like a court of law. This could pose some challenges, as Professor Jay may have a view to reshape the Inquiry in the coming weeks – and so she should.

There is no question that the Inquiry should either start afresh or shut down completely, as sources quoted by the media have suggested. A UK Inquiry into non-recent child sexual abuse was always going to be a considerable undertaking: after decades of ignoring one of the most ingrained and on-going abuses of human rights in the UK, how could it be anything but extensive?

The good news is that the Inquiry doesn’t need to go back to the beginning to get back on track, but it does need to become much more familiar with the mindset of survivors.

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

Former St Stanislaus’ College priest faces new charges after release from jail

AUSTRALIA
Western Advocate

16 Aug 2016

A FORMER St Stanislaus’ College priest will face Sydney’s Central Local Court on Wednesday on 14 charges of indecent assault and sexual assault dating back to the 1970s.

Detectives attacked to Strike Force Belle arrested 63-year-old Glenn Michael Humphreys in Western Australia on Tuesday, after he finished serving a two-year sentence there.

He has been extradited to NSW to face the further charges.

Chifley local area command acting crime manager Inspector Chris Reay said the charges against Humphreys related to offences allegedly committed against students at St Stanislaus’ College between 1975 and 1982.

Humphreys had previously been charged by police in relation to the allegations, but was already incarcerated in Western Australia at the time.

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: Path to moving forward from tragedy becomes clearer

AUSTRALIA
Bendigo Advertiser

16 Aug 2016

As the Royal Commission into sexual abuse draws to a close, there are some first glimpses of some key objectives that will be instrumental in establishing its worth, framing the path toward healing communities and even shaping the future of the nation.

Importantly Justice Peter McClellan’s address to the children’s welfare conference has highlighted the broader cultural issues which have underlined and exacerbated many of the horror stories which have emerged at the Commission.

“Although the primary responsibility for the sexual abuse of an individual lies with the abuser and the institution… we cannot avoid the conclusion that the problems faced by many people who have been abused are the responsibility of our entire society,” he said. “Society’s values and mechanisms which were available to regulate and control aberrant behaviour failed.”

McClellan has hinted we are all as a society to blame for this shameful period of neglect and indifference because of the cultural influences that shaped the high-risk environment. The victims were paid too little heed. The voices of children went unheard, while the authority of institutions went unquestioned. The ghastly silence which encouraged perpetrators was exacerbated by unfounded respect in the institutions that hid them and a cursory dismissal of the young people who were calling for help. By accepting some degree of the culpability for the broader forces which shaped this failure, there is the chance for greater vigilance and compassion in the future.

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Sex abuse as child identified as main factor in patient’s condition

IRELAND
Irish Times

Paul Cullen

The patient in the St Patrick’s Mental Health Services case was seven or eight when he was sexually abused by an elderly cleric in his home town.

The abuse took place up to five times over the course of a summer. “I can recall trying to get out of the room. He had an old-fashioned walking stick which he used to stop me leaving,” the victim said.

He told no one of his experience at the time. The cleric died a few years later, in the mid-1960s.

The man got married in his 20s but experienced severe facial pain during sex. From 1980, he attended a doctor who diagnosed anxiety and an obsessive personality and prescribed benzodiazepines. Now in his 60s, he has been on tranquillisers ever since.

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Priest James Vallely Sex Abuse: Diocese Paid 6 Victims $1.2M To Settle Case

MAINE
Morning News USA

BY SHAURYA ARYA MORNINGNEWSUSA PUBLISHED: AUG 16, 2016

A settlement of $1.2 million was reached between the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland and six men who say that leaders of the church, despite having knowledge, hid allegations of sex abuse against a former priest.

According to the lawsuit, the diocese was aware that Father James Vallely was involved in sexual abuse against children in the church as early as 1956, but nothing was done to stop it.

Priest James Vallely Sex Abuse: Diocese was aware, hid allegations

Vallely, now deceased, was a priest in the Bangor area in the 1950s. As reported by the Portland Press Herald, the plaintiffs claim that they are victims of Vallely, who they say abused them from a period of 1958 to 1977.

“We have another instance of a diocese hiding the truth for the sake of its appearance and monetary concerns,” Mitchell Garabedian, the attorney of the plaintiffs, said.

One of these victims was Lawrence Gray, who said the priest molested him as early as when Gray was eight years old. At the time, Gray was an altar boy at St. Dominic’s Parish, Portland. Afraid of disclosing the abuse, he said the molesting continued until he was 13 years old.

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August 15, 2016

Absuelven a padres acusados de pederastia en Tijuana

TIJUANA (MEXICO)
Semanario Zeta [Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico]

August 15, 2016

By Redacción Zeta

Read original article

A DOS AÑOS DE LA INVESTIGACIÓN POR PEDERASTIA DE SIETE SACERDOTES DE LA ARQUIDIÓCESIS DE TIJUANA, BAJO LA PROTECCIÓN DEL EX ARZOBISPO ROMO MUÑOZ ALGUNOS REGRESARON A LAS PARROQUIAS DONDE LOS HABÍAN SUSPENDIDO, OTROS FUERON COLOCADOS AL FRENTE DE NUEVAS IGLESIAS Y SOLO UNO FUE REMOVIDO. PARA ROMO, QUIEN EL 11 DE AGOSTO FUE REEMPLAZADO COMO ARZOBISPO, LAS DENUNCIAS QUEDARON SOLO COMO UN RECUERDO “DOLOROSO”

Hasta su último día al frente de la Arquidiócesis de Tijuana, Rafael Romo Muñoz cobijó a un grupo de siete sacerdotes investigados en el Vaticano por pederastia, llamó “falsas” las acusaciones de jóvenes que señalaron los actos de los padres, y a uno de los clérigos señalados le otorgó el privilegio de regresar a la iglesia donde fue denunciado.

Desde 2012, los padres Jeffrey Newell, Enrique Tenorio Pérez, Aurelio Castillo Aguilar, Danilo Pietro Zanini y Benigno Medrano Flores fueron denunciados por acoso sexual, pero no ante las autoridades ministeriales, sino al interior de la Iglesia católica.

La investigación inicial, realizada entre junio y julio de ese año, fue conducida por el padre Eduardo Ortiz, quien en ese entonces fungía como rector del Seminario de Tijuana. Acusaciones y testimonios de víctimas y sus familiares, así como de testigos, conformaron un expediente que fue entregado a la Nunciatura Apostólica en México y eventualmente llegó hasta el Vaticano.

En el Vaticano encontraron elementos suficientes para ordenar una investigación oficial. En octubre de 2012, a Romo Muñoz se le informó que el Arzobispo de Hermosillo, Sonora, Ulises Macías estaría al frente de la investigación.

Una vez que el sacerdote asignado viajó a Tijuana para entrevistarse con señalados y víctimas, preparó un informe que se analizaría desde el Vaticano para determinar si los párrocos son culpables o inocentes.

En junio de 2014, la Santa Sede informó que los siete sacerdotes debían ser removidos temporalmente de sus iglesias para permitir el desahogo de la investigación.

Sin embargo, desde Tijuana e incluso en Roma, Romo Muñoz defendió a sus sacerdotes. Específicamente a aquellos que se encuentran en su círculo más cercano, entre ellos al norteamericano Jeffrey Newell, quien meses después regresó a la iglesia a su cargo.

Otros párrocos no corrieron con la misma suerte. Algunos de ellos, a pesar de ser apoyados con cartas de sus feligreses, tuvieron procesos más lentos.

Tres de los sacerdotes quedaron absueltos desde el Vaticano, informó el anterior Arzobispo de Tijuana, Rafael Romo Muñoz. Además, una persona que colabora con la Arquidiócesis desde hace más de 20 años confío a este Semanario que en algunos casos se ignoró evidencia de acoso sexual.

No obstante, ante la falta de presencia de los denunciantes, algunos de ellos eran jóvenes seminaristas, las autoridades eclesiásticas consideraron que los padres acusados estaban libres de culpa.

Solamente un sacerdote fue expulsado de la Iglesia porque se comprobaron ciertas las acusaciones, pero no se le fincaron cargos penales. Mientras que uno más continúa bajo investigación.

Dos continúan sin una parroquia asignada, a pesar de haber sido encontrados no culpables.

Jeffrey Newell, el consentido 

Uno de los sacerdotes eximidos, Jeffrey David Newell arrastra consigo un historial de acusaciones por acoso sexual. Se trata del mismo que fue restituido en la iglesia Nuestra Señora de la Encarnación en la colonia Camino Verde.

En su momento, Romo Muñoz explicó que los padres denunciados no podían regresar a las parroquias de las que habían salido porque éstas habían sido ocupadas con nuevos párrocos que llegaron a cubrirlos durante el proceso de investigación.

Pero no fue el caso del padre Newell. Dentro de la Arquidiócesis, el estadounidense es identificado como uno de los sacerdotes que integran el círculo más cercano al ex Arzobispo Rafael Romo Muñoz. Y esto le valió que éste interviniera por él ante los jerarcas católicos.

Para diciembre de 2014, seis meses después de la suspensión ordenada desde el Vaticano, el padre Newell vestía nuevamente su hábito, oficiaba misa y estaba al frente de su parroquia, donde una gran parte de la comunidad lo apoya.

Apenas el domingo 7 de agosto, encabezó los festejos por el octavo aniversario de Alianza Koinonia, una comunidad dentro de la Iglesia católica que cuenta con su propia estación de radio.

En sus 26 años como sacerdote, Newell ha enfrentado tres acusaciones, en Tijuana fue por acoso sexual. Previamente, en 1991, un año después de haber abandonado el Seminario de Los Ángeles, California, fue denunciado por abuso sexual, como muchas de las acusaciones que enfrenta la Iglesia católica, el caso concluyó con un arreglo privado antes de llegar a los tribunales.

Sin embargo, en 1993 el actual padre de la iglesia Nuestra Señora de la Encarnación fue removido como sacerdote. En parte debido a mantener “conductas sexuales indebidas con un adulto”.

Ya en 2010, quien lo denunció en la primera ocasión, entabló una demanda penal contra la Arquidiócesis de Los Ángeles por el delito de fraude, ya que había encontrado el perfil de MySpace de Newell, en el que aparecían imágenes del sacerdote con menores de edad en una iglesia.

Lo anterior porque una de las condiciones para que la víctima no prosiguiera legalmente la primera ocasión, era que la Iglesia le aseguró que Newell no estaría en una posición que le permitiera convivir con menores.

En la actualidad, Newell sigue al frente de la parroquia, en contacto con menores de edad y sigue dirigiendo la estación de radio donde también participan adolescentes y niños.

Abogando en el Vaticano 

Al ser cuestionado sobre su participación en el proceso de investigación de los sacerdotes, Rafael Romo Muñoz comentó “son procesos netamente eclesiásticos, llevamos mensajes, nos piden información y la llevamos”.

De acuerdo con las tradiciones católicas, cada cinco o seis años, cada país visita, representados en sus obispos, el Vaticano. En 2014, Rafael Romo Muñoz viajó con la comitiva mexicana.

“Aproveché para ir a las congregaciones o dependencias donde se ventilan estos asuntos para que ya de palabra y verbalmente, pueda bajarse más a detalles”, dijo sobre su intervención a favor de los clérigos.

A la par de homicidios y secuestros de sacerdotes pertenecientes a la Arquidiócesis de Tijuana, Romo Muñoz considera que las acusaciones que enfrentaron por pederastia son “una situación dolorosa” durante sus 20 años como Arzobispo.

Los reacomodos

Al hablar sobre estos casos, Romo Muñoz insiste “se pudo llegar a clarificar que habían sido falsas. Sí, dos sacerdotes hubo necesidad, uno de ellos quedó fuera de circulación, no es de aquí, es de la Ciudad de México. Se hizo la investigación y la comprobación y se le destituyó. El otro todavía no se concluye”.

De los sacerdotes absueltos, explicó, “están fungiendo, repuestos en otras parroquias, se les repone porque las parroquias que tenían había que ocuparlas”.

Se trata del padre Aurelio Castillo Aguilar, quien al momento de ser denunciado fue removido de la iglesia Santiago Apóstol en la colonia Reforma y ahora en la parroquia Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe Reina de México en la colonia Ejido Matamoros.

También fue recolocado el sacerdote Benigno Medrano Flores en la parroquia Divino Rostro del fraccionamiento Cortez.

Mientras que al padre Enrique Tenorio Pérez, quien antes estaba al frente de la la iglesia San Martín Caballero de la colonia Las Villas, todavía no se le asigna nueva parroquia.

Por último, Danilo Pietro Zanini, quien estaba siendo investigado en 2014 mas no había sido removido de la iglesia San José de la colonia Durango, ahora se encuentra como vicario (sacerdote sustituto) en la parroquia San Antonio de Padua del fraccionamiento La Gloria.

“Yo no dejo de ser Arzobispo”

Durante su última misa de domingo en la Catedral de Tijuana, Rafael Romo Muñoz se extendió más de una hora en su sermón. El calor del mediodía entraba por los portones de la iglesia, junto con el ruido de los carros que bajan por la Calle Segunda, de los gritos de los vendedores de artículos religiosos en puestos ambulantes y los murmullos de quienes ocupaban las banquetas.

La iglesia estaba abarrotada. Decenas de personas escuchaban la misa de pie, los ventiladores no arrojaban aire y Romo Muñoz compartía anécdotas y moralejas recolectadas en sus 20 años al frente de la Arquidiócesis de Tijuana.

Una de sus favoritas, confió, es la del ex secretario de gobernación del panista Vicente Fox, Carlos Abascal, cuando frente a obispos mexicanos confió “que su razón de vivir es Cristo, imagínense el segundo hombre más importante en el país, solo debajo del presidente, nos dice que su razón de vivir es Cristo habiendo tantos que no lo quieren admitir”.

Romo Muñoz habla del fallecido el funcionario como el ejemplo a seguir. El mismo que siendo secretario de Trabajo exigió la renuncia de una profesora de tercero de secundaria por considerar “inapropiada” la lectura del libro de Carlos Fuentes, Aura, asignada a su hija en un colegio de monjas.

Al término de la misa, justo antes de la bendición, Romo Muñoz se dirigió una vez más a sus feligreses. Les avisó que el 11 de agosto arribaría el nuevo Arzobispo a la ciudad, que oraran por él, pero también por su persona. “Oren por su servidor para que pueda continuar con lo que Dios quiera”, les dijo.

Y sentenció “yo no dejo de ser Arzobispo, quedo a disposición de lo que él diga, en lo que lo pueda suplir o ayudar, lo haré”.

Y como indicación final, les pidió que al Arzobispo Francisco Moreno Barrón, lo hagan sentir feliz en Tijuana, “que sienta cariño, gratitud y obediencia”.

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Child sex abuse changes in Qld parliament

AUSTRALIA
7 News

Jamie McKinnell – AAP on August 16, 2016

Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk will personally introduce into parliament a bill to lift time restrictions on when survivors of institutional child sex abuse can sue the perpetrators.

Currently, survivors can only pursue civil action within three years of their 18th birthday, but lifting that statute of limitations was a key recommendation from the child sex abuse royal commission.

Ms Palaszczuk announced the plan at the beginning of August, saying the restraints had “effectively barred these victims from seeking justice”.

Attorney-General Yvette D’Ath also signalled the government would release an issues paper on whether the restrictions should be lifted for abuse outside institutions and other forms of abuse, such as physical and psychological.

The change will have bipartisan support from the Liberal National Party (LNP) opposition, however leader Tim Nicholls was eager to highlight that his party announced it as a policy two weeks before Labor.

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Lawsuit accuses Stockton priest, once in Manteca, of harassment

CALIFORNIA
Modesto Bee

Bee Staff Reports

A lawsuit has been filed alleging sexual harassment and retaliation by a Diocese of Stockton priest who served at least several years at St. Anthony’s in Manteca.

The lawsuit was filed Thursday in San Joaquin County Superior Court by Irvine-based law firm Manly, Stewart & Finaldi. It alleges that on July 26, Monsignor McGovern sent sexually explicit photographs to the victim, a pool maintenance contractor, then terminated his employment after the victim reported the incident.

“This is a classic case of sexual harassment and retaliation,” said the alleged victim’s attorney John Manly in a news release. “Monsignor McGovern texted a graphic photograph of his naked genitalia to my client, then terminated his employment after my client reported the lewd photo to the police.”

Friday, the diocese’s director of communications, Sister Terry Davis, issued a brief statement: “Today the Diocese of Stockton learned for the first time of employment related allegations against Monsignor Lawrence McGovern, the Pastor of Presentation Parish in Stockton. In accordance with the Canon Law of the Church, Bishop Stephen Blaire has placed Monsignor McGovern on administrative leave pending a full and complete investigation.”

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Maine diocese settles sex abuse lawsuit for $1.2m

MAINE
Boston Globe

By Trisha Thadani GLOBE CORRESPONDENT AUGUST 15, 2016

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland, Maine has settled a sexual abuse lawsuit for $1.2 million, according to a lawyer for six men who accused the church of covering up abuse allegations against a former priest.

Boston lawyer Mitchell Garabedian said the men were childhood victims of the Rev. James Vallely between the late 1950s and late 1970s. The lawsuit claimed that church leaders were aware of multiple abuse allegations against Vallely for decades but “fraudulently concealed it.”

Instead of removing Vallely from ministry, church leaders transferred him to another parish “where children were placed at risk of further sexual abuse by a serial pedophile priest,” Garabedian’s office said in a press release.

Garabedian is holding a news conference Monday to announce details of the settlement, which was reached about two weeks ago.

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Stockton Priest Accused of Sexting Male Pool Worker—So What’s That Gotta Do with OC?

CALIFORNIA
OC Weekly

BY GUSTAVO ARELLANO

Last week brought news that Monsignor Larry McGovern of the Diocese of Stockton is getting sued by a pool maintenance contractor who alleges that the priest sexted a photo of his junk to the poor guy, then fired him after reporting the padre to the cops. But McGovern—who’s currently on administrative leave—ain’t just any normal cleric: he was one of the key witnesses in lawsuits filed last decade against the pedo-priest-loving Diocese of Stockton.

Who’d find such a crazy case? The Irvine-based firm of Manly, Stewart & Finaldi, of course, the crusading lawyers who’ve sued pervert-loving Catholics across the world. Though John Manly and Vince Finaldi remain in OC, their connections to the Stockton pedo-priest scandal runs deep: it was Manly who deposed former Archdiocese of Los Angeles Cardinal Roger Mahony over a particularly egregious kid rapist named Oliver O’Grady, a case that served as the key story in the important documentary Deliver Us from Evil. And it was Manly and Finaldi’s dogged pursuit of the truth that unearthed the crazy allegation against McGovern.

“Monsignor McGovern was a witness and denied knowing of any sexual improprieties by [pedo-priests, including O’Grady], despite living with them in the rectory for years and contrary to victim statements,” Finaldi is quoted as saying in a press release announcing the lawsuit. “It is sad but not suprising that he now stands accused of sexual misconduct.”

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Maine Catholic diocese pays $1.2 million to 6 victims of abusive priest

MAINE
Bangor Daily News

By Judy Harrison, BDN Staff
Posted Aug. 15, 2016

PORTLAND, Maine — A $1.2 million settlement has been reached between six childhood sex abuse victims of the Rev. James Vallely and the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland, the diocese announced Monday.

The lawsuits, filed separately in November in Cumberland County Superior Court, sought unspecified compensatory and punitive damages.

“The Diocese of Portland has settled six claims alleging abuse by the Rev. James Vallely in the 1950s and the 1970s,” Dave Guthro, spokesman for the diocese, said Monday in an email.

Vallely died in 1997.

“The diocese hopes that this settlement brings a measure of peace to the people involved. The diocese respects the privacy and confidentiality of the victims/survivors involved in cases of sexual abuse of minors by clerics,” Guthro said. The Bangor Daily News is not naming them because they may be victims of sexual abuse.

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Diocese in Portland, Maine, Settles Sex Abuse Suit for $1.2M

MAINE
ABC News

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
PORTLAND, Maine — Aug 15, 2016

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland, Maine, has settled a lawsuit by six men who said church leaders concealed sex abuse allegations against a former priest.

More details of the $1.2 million settlement are expected to be released at a Monday morning news conference from Boston lawyer Mitchell Garabedian, who has represented dozens of sex abuse victims.

The lawsuits were filed in November by men from Maine, New Hampshire and New York. They accused the diocese of covering up abuse by Rev. James Vallely. The men alleged Vallely sexually abused them as children from 1958 to 1977.

Garabedian has said the Portland diocese had knowledge of multiple accusations but didn’t remove Vallely from ministry.

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Ultra-Orthodox Jews launch million-pound fundraising bid to stop children living with ‘irreligious parents’

UNITED KINGDOM
Independent

Siobhan Fenton, Dina Rickman @siobhanfenton

Ultra-Orthodox Jews are raising £1m to prevent “pure and holy” children from leaving the strict faith community and living with “irreligious parents” in an “evil culture”, The Independent has learned.

The fundraising drive has been established to fund the legal fees of divorcing parents involved in child custody battles with ex-partners who want to join mainstream society.

The Independent has seen flyers for a fundraising event in the Stamford Hill area of London that call for the community to back the bid, saying: “Rescue The Children Convention: We now need one million pounds and therefore the community is requested to join in with a minimum sum of £500.”

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Portland Diocese reaches settlement with alleged sex abuse victims

MAINE
WMTW

Lawyer: Letter opens door to more lawsuits against diocese

New allegations center around the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland

BOSTON —The Portland Diocese has reached a settlement with six plaintiffs in a lawsuit related to sexual abuse and what the diocese knew and when, according to a lawyer for the plaintiffs.

The lawsuit centers around a letter written by a priest in 2005 which indicates then-Bishop Daniel Feeney knew of allegations of sexual abuse against Father James Vallely earlier than previously stated.

Six men, from Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont, claimed Vallely sexually abused them from 1958 to 1977 when they were between the ages of 8 and 15.

Vallely died in 1997. He worked in parishes in Bangor, Portland and South Berwick. The lawyer for the plaintiffs, Michael Garabedian, said instead of removing Vallely from St. John’s Parish in Bangor, the diocese transferred him to another parish.

The diocese confirmed the settlement to WMTW News 8. “The diocese hopes that this settlement brings a measure of peace to the people involved,” communications director Dave Guthro said in a statement. “The diocese respects the privacy and confidentiality of the victims/survivors involved in cases of sexual abuse of minors by clerics. We maintain that privacy and confidentiality even if an individual or their legal representation chooses to discuss their situation publicly,” Guthro wrote.

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Portland Catholic diocese settles with six sexual abuse victims for $1.2 million

MAINE
Portland Press Herald

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

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland has settled a lawsuit for $1.2 million with six sexual abuse victims of a former priest.

Additional details are expected to be released at a press conference late Monday morning at the office of Boston lawyer Mitchell Garabedian, who has represented dozens of victims of pedophile priests.

The six plaintiffs are all victims of Father James Vallely, a longtime priest in the Bangor area dating back to the 1950s. He is now deceased.

According to a press release from Garabedian’s office, the Portland diocese, which oversees all Catholic parishes in Maine, had knowledge of multiple accusations of abuse against Vallely but did not remove him from the ministry. Instead, Vallely was transferred to other parishes, including St. Dominic’s in Portland and St. Michael’s in South Berwick.

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Diocese of Portland, Maine settles child sex abuse case for 1.2 million dollars

MAINE
WLBZ

NEWS CENTER and Elle Ousfar , WLBZ August 15, 2016

BOSTON, Massachusetts (NEWS CENTER) – – The Law Office of Mitchell Garabedian confirmed that a 1.2 million dollar settlement has been reached between Diocese of Portland, Maine, and six childhood victims of sexual abuse of Fr. James Vallely.

According to the press release, the Diocese of Portland, Maine, and Bishop Daniel J. Feeney had knowledge of multiple accusations of sexual abuse of minor children against Fr. James Vallely for decades but fraudulently concealed it.

“As a result of litigation in an earlier case against Fr. James Vallely and the Diocese of Portland, Maine, the diocese produced a copy of a letter written by a currently-retired priest in 2005 which revealed that the Diocese of Portland, Maine, and Bishop Daniel J. Feeney had knowledge of multiple accusations of sexual abuse of minor children against Fr. James Vallely as far back as 1956,” said Garabedian.

The press release said Fr. James Vallely was assigned to St. John’s Parish in Bangor, Maine, in the 1950s. Instead of removing him from priestly ministry and notifying the public, Bishop Daniel J. Feeney transferred Fr. James Vallely to another parish where children were placed at risk of further sexual abuse by a serial pedophile priest.

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Dr Ciara Kelly: Celibacy is the elephant in the room

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Ciara Kelly
PUBLISHED
15/08/2016

Nearly 30 years ago in the early 1990s, when I was first in college, I had a pal who had just left a seminary. He was a young gay man who, like a lot of young gay people at that time – and before and indeed since – found Ireland to be a cold house for him. He decided, after much reflection on what he could do to better fit into Irish society – and because being gay was a very hard road – to enter the priesthood.

He was in a seminary – not Maynooth – for about a year. He entered it very young, directly from school, and was a virgin. But over that year he became sexually active with many of the other seminarians and he left, because he had become increasingly comfortable and happy with being gay. He said everyone in the seminary was doing it, and even if he was exaggerating, I presume that meant it was lots.

Interestingly, and perhaps unsurprisingly, the one other ex-seminarian I knew from Rome, told the exact same (albeit slightly racier, Italian) story. He described the Vatican in the 1990s very simply as ‘an orgy.’

It has always seemed self-evident to me, that young gay men in the homophobic past would have been drawn to the priesthood. The combination of celibacy and penitence could so easily be perceived to be the ‘answer to their prayers’ as it were. It might contain them. It might save them if not from actually being homosexual then at least from the terrible sin of being a practising homosexual. Or from having to live a lie with a woman.

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Campaigner’s ‘grave concerns’ over new directives for Jehovah’s Witnesses

UNITED KINGDOM
Hartlepool Mail

Monday 15 August 2016

A former Hartlepool Jehovah’s Witness who campaigns for tougher child protection policies of the church says he has “grave concerns” about updated directives to elders.

Steve Rose says the new instructions to local leaders on dealing with allegations of child abuse features some improvements but believes they do not go far enough.

Mr Rose, 52, who used to be a member of Hartlepool’s Kingdom Hall in Ashgrove Avenue, believes the guidance could put child victims at risk. He said: “All child abuse that is reported to the elders must be reported to the service department of Jehovah’s Witnesses and not the secular authorities (police).

“This puts the child in danger because the elders are not qualified to handle such delicate matters.” The document says alleged victims and parents have an “absolute right” to report allegations to the authorities.

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NI child abuse: Safeguarding board criticised by independent panel

NORTHERN IRELAND
BBC News NI

By Marie-Louise Connolly
BBC News NI Health Correspondent

An independent review has criticised the board set up to oversee the safeguarding of children in Northern Ireland for failing to deliver its main statutory responsibility.

The Safeguarding Board for Northern Ireland (SBNI) was tasked with improving protection for children.

But the authors of a report on its work raised concerns that it spent too much time on the “wrong issues”.
They added that “tensions” existed among senior board members.

Alarmingly, among the 11 recommendations from the review panel is a warning that all agencies must ensure the board is notified of cases where a child has died or been significantly harmed.

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Archbishop Hon leaving archdiocese temporarily

GUAM
KUAM

Updated: Aug 15, 2016

By Krystal Paco

Guam’s interim Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai will be leaving the Archdiocese of Agana temporarily. According to the latest issue of Umatuna Si Yu’os, Hon says the local church will be under the watch of the delegate of the administrator, Father Jeff San Nicolas.

Father Jeff will be assisted by the chancellor, Father Lito Abad. His scheduled absence is a result of pastoral visits abroad. These commitments were made months prior as part of his duties as secretary of the Congregation for the Evangelization of the Peoples. Hon was just in Saipan over the weekend for the ordination of Bishop-Elect Ryan Jimenez.

Hon’s travel is scheduled for August 17 through 25.

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Picketing persists outside Hagatna Cathedral

GUAM
KUAM

Updated: Aug 15, 2016

By Krystal Paco

Their numbers are growing. Picketers continued their Sunday ritual outside the Hagatna Cathedral. Their signs demand that Archbishop Anthony Apuron be defrocked as well as question the actions of Guam’s interim Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai.

Archbishop Hon was appointed by the Vatican to care for the Archdiocese of Agana while Apuron was placed on leave amid allegations of molestation.

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Ex-priest apologises to his sex victims

AUSTRALIA
9 News

AAP

A pedophile priest who “overlooked” one victim when he confessed to sexually abusing dozens of boys should not be sent back to jail, a judge has been told.

Former NSW Hunter region priest Vincent Gerard Ryan, who was released in 2010 after 14 years behind bars, said when he had tried to “wipe the slate clean” he had “no memory” of a case now before the District Court.

The 78-year-old’s lawyer, Mark Preece, submitted it would be a “truly crushing and horrible outcome” for the aged and rehabilitated offender to return to jail.

The notorious pedophile has pleaded guilty to attempting homosexual intercourse with a male under 18, indecent assault and gross indecency of an altar boy in the mid-1980s.

The abuse was revealed when that victim faced a sentence hearing for sex offences.

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Time to include children in conversation

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

15 Aug 2016

If a nation’s greatness is gauged by how it treats its weakest members, then its morality must also be gauged on how it treats its most innocent.

And, if we are to use barometers such as the royal commission and exposure of extreme disciplinary measures at the Don Dale detention centre in the Northern Territory, then we, as a country, have failed.

And we continue to fail.

However, is the very public disclosure of abuse doing more than just exposing our deep-seated wrongdoings and failings?

Is the fact that we are being forced to watch on as the undeniably horrific truth is laid bare in front of us, and not be given a chance to look away like we had conveniently done in the past, helping to build momentum for real change about how we deal with our youngest and most vulnerable?

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Media release

MAINE
Law Office of Mitchell Garabedian

August 15, 2016

1.2 million dollar settlement reached between Diocese of Portland, Maine, and six (6) plaintiffs in fraudulent concealment lawsuits who are also childhood victims of sexual abuse of Fr. James Vallely

What – A press conference announcing a 1.2 million dollar settlement of six (6) fraudulent concealment lawsuits between the Diocese of Portland, Maine, and six (6) plaintiffs and childhood sexual abuse victims of Fr. James Valley

When – Monday, August 15, 2016 at 11:30 am

Where – Law Office of Mitchell Garabedian, 100 State Street, Boston, MA, 02109

Who – Lawrence Gray, a plaintiff in fraudulent concealment lawsuits; Attorney Mitchell Garabedian; and, Dr. Robert Hoatson, President of Road to Recovery, Inc., a non-profit charity based in New Jersey that assists victims of sexual abuse and their families

Why – As a result of litigation in an earlier case against Fr. James Vallely and the Diocese of Portland, Maine, the diocese produced a copy of a letter written by a currently-retired priest in 2005 which revealed that the Diocese of Portland, Maine, and Bishop Daniel J. Feeney had knowledge of multiple accusations of sexual abuse of minor children against Fr. James Vallely as far back as 1956. Fr. James Vallely was assigned to St. John’s Parish in Bangor, Maine, in the 1950s. Instead of removing Fr. James Vallely from priestly ministry and notifying the public, Bishop Daniel J. Feeney transferred Fr. James Vallely to another parish where children were placed at risk of further sexual abuse by a serial pedophile priest. The Diocese of Portland, Maine, was aware of this information for decades but fraudulently concealed it. Approximately two weeks ago, the Diocese of Portland, Maine, and six (6) plaintiffs, childhood victims of sexual abuse by Fr. James Vallely, settled the fraudulent concealment lawsuits for 1.2 million dollars.

Contacts – Attorney Mitchell Garabedian, 617-523-6250; Dr. Robert Hoatson, 862-268-2800

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Chaminade must live up to its motto: Answers and actions needed following sexual abuse allegations

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY
CHARLES COWELL
ANTHONY VENTURA
ANTHONY CLARK
JAMES COTTER
CHARLES GIVENS
ED KLESS
ANTHONY NOTAROBERTA

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Monday, August 15, 2016

We are graduates of Chaminade, the Catholic boy’s high school in Mineola, L.I. All have, at one time or another, made charitable contributions to, or paid to attend events at or in support of the school.

We made lifelong friends there. The children of many of our closest friends are graduates or current students. Some of us worked there in the past. Some of our classmates are current or former teachers there, as well as at Kellenberg in Uniondale and St. Martin de Porres in Hempstead, schools also run by the same Marianist Province of Meribah that administers Chaminade.

We are not inclined easily to criticize publicly the school or its leaders; we are not detractors, opponents or enemies, but only seek answers to important questions.

We have been guided for decades by the ideals instilled in us during our four challenging years at Chaminade. We have tried to live up to the standards the faculty set for us as students and as men, and to which we believed they held themselves.

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Comment: Nauru, Don Dale, and Ballarat – Australia routinely ignores the abuse of people in its care

AUSTRALIA
SBS

By Alex McKinnon
Source: The Feed 15 AUG 2016

“It’s a sad story, and not of much interest to me.”

Back in March, that’s how Cardinal George Pell recalled the crimes of paedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale. That throwaway comment, given during testimony to the Royal Commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse, resonated so profoundly for more than its apparent callousness. For abuse survivors and their loved ones, it perfectly encapsulated the culture of silence, blame-shifting and sheer apathy among church and secular authorities that allowed men like Ridsdale to commit their crimes in the first place, and operate unchecked for decades.

Watching Peter Dutton’s 7.30 interview with Leigh Sales last week, after the Guardian Australia’s release of the Nauru Files revealed in horrifying detail the extent of abuse, assault, and mental anguish inflicted on asylum seekers in Australian offshore detention, those words came to mind again.

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August 14, 2016

Kinah for Tisha b’Av, from a survivor of child sexual abuse

Manny Waks

14/8/2016

Today is Tisha b’Av, the ninth day of the Jewish month of Av, when we commemorate the destruction of the Jewish temples. Traditionally we read from Eicha, the Book of Lamentations.

A courageous victim/survivor of child sexual abuse has written their own powerful version, which I’m sharing below with their permission:

Kinah, from a survivor of child sexual abuse.

אֵיכָה
How
How did you let this happen to her?

בָּכוֹ תִבְכֶּה בַּלַּיְלָה וְדִמְעָתָהּ עַל לֶחֱיָהּ אֵין לָהּ מְנַחֵם מִכָּל אֹהֲבֶיהָ כָּל רֵעֶיהָ בָּגְדוּ בָהּ הָיוּ לָהּ לְאֹיְבִים:

She weeps, yea, she weeps in the night, and her tears are on her cheek; she has no comforter among all her lovers; all her friends have betrayed her; they have become her enemies.

How do you, a rav, an askan, a dayan, a teacher, see the pain of an adult still hurt from the pain inflicted upon them as a child, and turn the other check ‘because it happened ten years ago’?

How do you, a rav, an askan, a dayan, a teacher, see the pain of a parent begging on behalf of their betrayed child, and say, well, we can’t believe the testimony of a child, and there is no one else who witnessed the act?

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Sexting scandal allegedly involving priest rocks Northern Calif. church

CALIFORNIA
CBS News

STOCKTON, Calif. — A Northern California Catholic church is embroiled in a sexting scandal.

A Stockton parishioner claims he was fired from his job after his priest sent him an explicit text message, CBS San Francisco reported.

Now the parishioner has filed a lawsuit.

The incident allegedly happened at the Presentation Church and School. The man bringing the lawsuit has maintained the fountains and pool there for the past seven years.

His attorney, Irvine-based John Manly, said while the married man in his 40s cleaned the pool, Pastor Lawrence McGovern would often sunbathe and make flirtatious comments, “Laying around in a speedo, making our client very uncomfortable.”

“Our client’s a married man,” said Manly. “This is his pastor.”

The suit claims in late July, McGovern texted the man a picture of his genitals.

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Chair of Royal Commission Justice Peter McClellan calls for ‘child-safe’ checklist

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

Helen Gregory
@HGregory_Herald

15 Aug 2016

THE chair of the royal commission into child sexual abuse believes institutions should have to adopt a 10-point checklist of national standards to be classified as “child safe” – and monitored for compliance.

Justice Peter McClellan discussed implications of findings from the royal commission in a key note address to be given on Monday at the Association of Children’s Welfare Agencies National Conference.

Justice McClellan said the commission had identified a preliminary list of 10 “elements” it considered “fundamental to a child-safe institution”.

The list included that children participate in decisions affecting them and are taken seriously; families and communities are informed and involved; staff are equipped to keep children safe through continual education and training; and physical and online environments minimise the opportunity for abuse to occur.

“Child safe standards should be nationally consistent and there should be some form of compliance mechanism,” Justice McClellan said.

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Hay pruebas de que sacerdote violó a joven en Oaxaca, pero sigue libre

(MEXICO)
La Jornada [Mexico City, Mexico]

August 14, 2016

By Sanjuana Martínez

Read original article

La defensa de la víctima presentó parte médico de la Cruz Roja, fotos y testigos

En el sitio del abuso hay cámaras, pero el arzobispo se niega a entregar grabaciones, denuncian

Les serví un mezcal para que se relajen, tuvimos un día muy pesado, les dijo el sacerdote Carlos Franco Pérez Méndez, vicario pastoral de la Catedral de Oaxaca, a los catequistas Lenin Moisés López Jiménez, de 19 años y su compañero menor de edad, antes de irse a dormir, después de ocho horas de trabajo.

Era la una de la mañana del pasado 24 de marzo y acababan de terminar los servicios religiosos en plena Semana Santa, pero luego de ingerir la bebida alcohólica, ambos se sintieron mareados, situación que el sacerdote aprovechó para acariciar la entrepierna del menor y sobarle la espalda bajo el pretexto de ayudarlo a relajarse.

La actitud cariñosa del presbítero no le gustó a Lenin Moisés, quien protegió y acompañó a su compañero hasta la habitación ubicada en la parte posterior de la catedral: El padre Carlos Franco quería entrar al cuarto y no lo dejé. Le reclamé, discutimos, forcejeamos y me pegué en la cabeza con la esquina de la puerta porque me sentía muy mareado. Perdí la conciencia, pero seguía forcejeando con él. Luego fue cuando pasó todo.

Lenin Moisés cuenta que se despertó sin camisa, con los pantalones desgarrados a la rodilla, varias contusiones, una costilla rota, un fuerte dolor de testículos y un terrible desgarramiento anal que no le permitía caminar o sentarse: Me violó. Durante todo el día me sentí muy mal, ni siquiera me podía levantar del dolor. Tenía moretones por todos lados. Pensamos que nos echó algo en la bebida, que incluso sabía medio rara, dijo en entrevista con La Jornada.

Las pruebas

Sus padres lo llevaron entonces a la Cruz Roja. El parte médico firmado por el doctor Gustavo A. Torres López, del cual tiene copia La Jornada, no deja lugar a dudas: contusión en región genital. Le dieron cinco días de incapacidad y dosis fuertes de analgésicos para combatir los dolores.

Al día siguiente interpusieron la denuncia contra el sacerdote y la Fiscalía General de Oaxaca abrió el expediente 274/2016. Cuatro meses después, el 15 de julio, el sacerdote fue detenido y trasladado al penal de Miahua-tlán de Porfirio Díaz, acusado de violación equiparada agravada. Pero tres días después fue liberado por el juez cuarto penal, Juan Gómez Ríos, por falta de pruebas.

Sin embargo, Lenin Moisés dice que entregaron varios dictámenes médicos particulares, de la Cruz Roja y del Ministerio Público; fotografías y declaraciones de suficientes testigos: Tenemos todas las pruebas, pero el padre Carlos Franco sigue libre e incluso lo van a colocar en otra parroquia. Lo que tememos es que siga violando. No queremos que siga ocurriendo esto en la diócesis de Oaxaca, que siga dañando, pero lo están protegiendo.

En especial, dice, el arzobispo de Oaxaca, José Luis Chávez Botello, quien sencillamente niega los hechos: Lo hemos visto sin interés en mi caso y, lo que es peor, trató de ocultar muchas cosas, no aceptó que se hicieran las averiguaciones dentro de lo que es el curato de catedral. Hasta ahorita no ha querido dar las grabaciones de las cámaras de la planta baja donde ocurrieron los hechos.

El sacerdote Carlos Franco ha cambiado sus declaraciones, primero dijo que tuvo sexo consensuado, luego que encontró a Lenin y su compañero teniendo relaciones y después lo negó todo.

No es congruente. Mi caso está lleno de irregularidades. Las autoridades lo están protegiendo; sólo estuvo tres días en la cárcel. No han actuado conforme a derecho, a pesar de que existen otros casos de abusos cometidos por él, señaló el joven.

El caso de Lenin Moisés ha pasado por tres jueces y en este momento se encuentra en apelación: Lo que pido es que se haga justicia y que mi caso no quede impune, para que el sacerdote no siga lastimando más niños y jóvenes. Exigimos justicia al igual que en otros casos de sacerdotes que se han estado cometiendo en Oaxaca. Las autoridades eclesiásticas han tratado de esconder todo durante muchos años.

Lenin Moisés se refiere al caso del sacerdote Gerardo Silvestre Hernández, acusado de violar a más de 100 niños indígenas de la Sierra, preso, pero sin sentencia y protegido por las autoridades eclesiásticas y civiles.

Curas pederastas

Las víctimas han acudido con el sacerdote Alejandro Solalinde buscando apoyo: Es muy grave que el vicario de pastoral estando en catedral en Jueves Santo haya abusado de estos chavitos. El sacerdote los emborrachó y con el primer menor hubo acoso, pero él se escondió, se encerró y se libró, pero no así Lenin, quien sufrió claramente una violación.

En entrevista, el sacerdote cuyo albergue para migrantes está ubicado en Ixtepec, Oaxaca, explica que el arzobispado se ha negado a proporcionarles pruebas fundamentales: El arzobispo no ha querido entregar las grabaciones de las cámaras que hay en catedral, allí se comprobaría el encubrimiento. Están protegiendo al padre Franco, y el nuevo sacerdote que pusieron en catedral no garantiza algo diferente.

Hace referencia a decenas de víctimas de sacerdotes pederastas igualmente protegidos por autoridades eclesiásticas y civiles: Con la complicidad del sistema de justicia no dudo ni tantito que reinstalarán al padre Franco, porque el arzobispo lo está defendiendo y no ha tenido ninguna consideración para con las víctimas, con eso el arzobispo consumaría su encubrimiento.

Si hubiera justicia en Oaxaca y si no existiera esa connivencia de la Iglesia con el Estado, se haría justicia en el caso de Lenin, pero se van a seguir encubriendo. Ojalá haya más víctimas de sacerdotes pederastas que se atrevan a hablar. Hay más, pero tienen miedo, declaró.

Por lo pronto, Lenin Moisés asume las consecuencias de haber denunciado públicamente al sacerdote en una conferencia de prensa que éste dio hace un mes, donde el joven se atrevió a gritarle frente a la prensa que lo había violado.

Ahora recibo insultos, como que soy un maricón, un pagano. También recibo amenazas de grupos de choque dentro de la diócesis y me han querido golpear. Además, todas las personas que me apoyaron que trabajaban en la catedral fueron despedidas por el nuevo sacerdote y no los quieren aceptar en otras parroquias.

Lenin Moisés llevaba toda su vida sirviendo en la Iglesia, formando parte de varias pastorales en el coro, con los acólitos, la liturgia y como parte del proceso evangelizador. También era encargado de las festividades y los domingos, durante todo el día, de las misas y el mantenimiento de la catedral.

Ahora está sometido a terapias porque sufre fuertes depresiones: Gracias a Dios mi amigo quedó ileso, pero el que terminó mal fui yo. Ahora quiero ser astrónomo, antes quería ser sacerdote, pero después de estos sucesos estoy muy decepcionado. Todavía sigo creyendo en Dios, mi fe nunca nadie me la va a quitar, ni el amor a Dios.

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Dallastown pastor urges parish to report abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
York Daily Record

Angie Mason, amason@ydr.com August 14, 2016

The pastor at St. Joseph Church in Dallastown on Sunday urged parishioners to report suspected abuse, after a York Daily Record story that named a priest accused of abuse in Boston who later worked in Dallastown for a period.

In response to the York Daily Record, the Diocese of Harrisburg recently acknowledged by name 15 priests who have been accused of sexually abusing children and who at one time worked in the diocese, which covers York County and 14 others. One of the priests was the Rev. Raymond Prybis, who was accused of abuse during his time at a Boston-area parish before he was transferred to St. Joseph’s in Dallastown, where he worked from April 1989 to June 1990.

The diocese said it had no record of any credible allegation against Prybis during his time in the Harrisburg diocese.

Rev. John McCloskey reinforced those points with parishioners during the 9 a.m. Mass on Sunday. He called abuse “evil” and “criminal” and said that it should not happen, though it does throughout society.

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Variable state laws ‘are putting children at risk of sexual abuse’

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

August 15, 2016

DAN BOX
Crime reporterSydney
@DanBox10

Children are being put at risk of sexual abuse because of gaps and contradictions between different state and territory legislations or systems of oversight.

“These inconsistent systems are impossible to justify,” the chairman of the royal commission, Peter McClellan, will tell the Association of Children’s Welfare Agencies conference in Sydney today.

“The safety of a child should not depend on the state or territory in which they reside,” he will say, arguing that it is time for a greater uniformity of laws across the country.

Over the past three years, the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has held 42 public hearings and referred more than 1600 matters to police across the country, Justice McClellan will say. More than 60 matters are before the courts as a result.

As a result of its work, Justice McClellan will say the commission has identified inconsistencies and flaws between com­pet­ing systems of child protection, particularly the lack of a national system of working-with-children checks.

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Judge says children reporting abuse must be taken seriously

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

Tom McIlroy

Authority and respect for trusted institutions in Australian society should never override reports of danger to young people, the chair of the royal commission into child sexual abuse will argue on Monday.

Justice Peter McClellan will use a speech to the Association of Children’s Welfare Agencies in Sydney to call for allegations made by children to be appropriately heard and investigated, regardless of where they originate, and without institutions or their leaders being able to diminish the preparedness of adults to act.

The speech comes days after human rights groups called for the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse to investigate Australia’s immigration detention centre on Nauru amid leaked reports of sexual violence, abuse and self-harm by refugees and asylum seekers detained at the facility.

The commission says investigating alleged child abuse on Nauru or Manus Island is outside its jurisdictional powers, and the speech does not cite immigration detention abuse allegations.

Justice McClellan will tell the conference the commission has heard from more than 5500 survivors of abuse in Australia in private sessions so far, and has referred more than 1600 allegations to police and other authorities.

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Shock As Catholic Priest Discovered to Have Married Two Wives

NIGERIA
Information Nigeria

Wonders they say, shall never end. Parishioners of the Queen of Apostles Catholic Church, Kakuri parish, Kaduna State, are still reeling from shock after the revelation that Very Reverend Father Peter Zuni, 54, was secretly married to two women.

What the congregation didn’t know is that, one of the wives is dead, while the surviving one who leaked the age-long secret about three weeks ago, is nursing a child for the embattled priest.

The doctrine of the Catholic Church forbids men ordained into priesthood to get married. They are by obligation, to swear to an oath of celibacy and observe perfect and perpetual service for the sake of the kingdom of heaven. This, it is believed, would enable the priests to easily remain close to Christ with an undivided heart, and dedicate themselves more freely to the service of God and the congregation.

Checks at the Queen of the Apostles parish confirmed the report as parishioners were shocked and surprised to learn of a petition to the Bishop of Kaduna Archdiocese, Bishop Ndagoso Manoso, that two women had children for their parish priest, an act considered to be an abomination and grave sin against the Catholic doctrine.

They pointed out that in order to cover up the priest’s ‘sin’ from spreading to the larger public, the Archdiocese allegedly organised a send off for the embattled priest to a remote village in Jaba Local Government Area of Kaduna State.

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Inside Spain’s Right-Wing Rebel Catholic Cult

SPAIN
The Daily Beast

Itxu Diaz

The ex-pontiff says his crypto-Fascist church (which made Franco a saint) was only ever intended, really, to bring its leaders sex and money.

ORENSE, Spain — She was called Nieves, and he, Gregorio. They fell in love in torrid, romantic Andalusia. She had had her eye on him, it was said, since they were teenagers and she was an aspiring nun. Now he was 56 and they could confess their mutual adoration. It would be one of those beautiful love stories that plays well on daytime television, and nothing more, had Nieves not spent years digging into certain scandals surrounding the Palmarian Catholic Church, and were Gregorio not Gregorio XVIII, said by the several thousand followers of the schismatic sect to be the one true Catholic pope.

Since May there has been a new pope, Peter III, in the would-be “Spanish Vatican,” because Gregory XVIII “lost his faith,” he said, and eloped with Nieves. She had uncovered plots against him, according to various reports. And, having left the fold, he decided to tell all he knew (or said he knew) about this sect and the millions of dollars in donations the Palmarian Church receives each year.

If you have never heard of it, you are forgiven.

Ex-Pope Gregory XVIII, now simply Ginés Jesús Hernández, told the press that “from the beginning,” when the church was founded in 1974, “everything was a farce” created to satisfy the tastes of its leaders, both financially and sexually.

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‘They’re monsters,’ emotional dad says of kids who bullied his son

NEW YORK
Staten Island Advance

By Mira Wassef | mwassef@siadvance.com

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — The father of the 13-year-old West Brighton boy who committed suicide posted an emotional video where he calls the kids who bullied his son “monsters.”

“They’re monsters.. disgusting little monsters,” Daniel Fitzpatrick says in the nearly 20 minute Facebook video. “I hope the memory of what you’ve done to my son is burned in your brain for the rest of your life and you suffer as much as he has suffered.”

“Danny was a kind, gentle, little soul,” he said. “He didn’t have a mean bone in his body.”

On Thursday, the younger Daniel Fitzpatrick hanged himself in the attic of his Davis Avenue home, his family told the Daily News. Daniel’s older sister found him dead around 5:30 p.m., the report said.

In a letter penned last month, Daniel detailed his struggle with bullying at the Holy Angels Catholic Academy in Brooklyn.

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Staten Island Teen Takes Own Life After Being Bullied By Classmates

NEW YORK
CBS New York

[with video]

NEW YORK (CBSNewYork) — A 13-year-old Staten Island boy took his own life after he was mercilessly bullied by his classmates at a private Catholic school.

CBS2’s Brian Conybeare reported Danny Fitzpatrick hung himself in the attic of his home on Thursday. The teen left behind a hand-written note describing the abuse by five boys at Holy Angels Catholic Academy in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn.

“They did it constantly,” Danny said in a note, adding that he told his teachers, but they did nothing.

“I gave up the teachers…they didn’t do anything,” Danny wrote.

Daniel Fitzpatrick, Danny’s father, said in a video on Facebook his son “was a kind, gentle little soul” and “didn’t have a mean bone in his body.”

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Catholic priest sacked after he was discovered to have 2 wives

NIGERIA
NAIJ.com

Adams Odunayo

Parishioners at Queen of Apostles Catholic Church, Kakuri parish in Kaduna state were left in shock when they got to know that their 54-year-old parish priest, Very Reverend Father Peter Zuni, was married to two women.

A case which negates the doctrine of the Catholic church. Only unmarried men are ordained into the priesthood and they are to swear an oath of celibacy. Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Very Reverend Father Peter Zuni

The Sun reports that although one of the two wives was late, the second wife who is still alive and has a baby for the priest, blew the whistle about three weeks ago. When some of the parishioners were interviewed, they confirmed the report, which they said was initially thought to be mere rumour.

One of them who spoke on the condition of anonymity revealed that the case of the priest who had children from two women had gone to the Bishop of Kaduna Archdiocese, Bishop Ndagoso Manoso. And that in order to help cover up for the embattled priest, the Archdiocese allegedly organised a send off for him to move to a remote village in Jaba local government area of the state.

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No righting the wrong when there’s no justice for victims

WEST VIRGINIA
Bluefield Daily Telegraph

It begins tentatively. A polite hug by strangers thrown into a horrific, tumultuous situation by a roll of the dice of the fates.

In seconds it becomes real — arms holding each other tight. Emotions draining. Tears flowing. I mutter the only words I can find at the moment.

“I am so sorry.”

The words seem trite — small in comparison to the gravity of the verdict that has rocked the courtroom audience. But in the shock of the moment I am at a loss for eloquence.

What does one say to the victim of a child sexual predator who is victimized, once again, by the state’s judicial system?

•••

I ignore the hard seat of the wooden courtroom pew as I watch Timothy Probert’s facial expressions. As in previous hearings, he keeps his head low, avoiding eye contact with victims and others in the room.

Silently, I will him to turn his head. Be a man. Look at those who have been harmed through his depraved, sexual appetites. It does no good. His head remains bowed.

I am reminded of a bully who is busted, when the world is shown his true colors.

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Screening out sex predators

MALAYSIA
New Straits Times

BY NST EDITORIAL – 14 AUGUST 2016

THE rising number of child sex abuse cases in Malaysia is a wake-up call for us to get a grip on the situation. It is an appalling crime, perpetrated on the most innocent and vulnerable members of society. For many Malaysians, the thought of an adult sexually abusing a child is inconceivable. We seem reluctant to bring up the issue in polite conversation, even when the crime recurs day after day in our homes, schools and institutions, including religious establishments that house the young. Social activist Syed Azmi Al Habshi, who actively champions the prevention of child sex abuse on social media, reports cases of pupils being sexually attacked by their peers in religious schools, or maahad.

A news report last year stated that instances of child abuse, molestation and rape in the country were on the rise. In the first half of 2009, 2,193 of such cases were reported to police, while in 2007 and 2008, the number stood at 4,278. The forecast is that there will be more than 10,000 cases in Malaysia over the next 10 years. The figure is just the tip of the iceberg, as most cases of child abuse remain unknown, with the victims suffering in silence. The growing number of cases underscores the need for stricter scrutiny of those who work with children and youth. It feels horrible to regard fathers, guardians, uncles, brothers, teachers and social workers, among others, with suspicion and distrust, but we have reached a stage where there is little choice in the matter. Reverend Father Gregory Chan, director of the Archdiocesan Single Adults and Youth Office of the Roman Catholic Diocese in Bukit Nanas, agrees. The Richard Huckle case exposed the shortcomings of the church system, which calls for the screening and supervision of volunteers and pastoral workers prior to and during their recruitment, to assess how they interact with youngsters. Mainstream society is just beginning to learn about the nature of sex predators, who are usually people with authority, such as teachers.

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Sunday Spotlight: It takes a village to raise a child

MALAYSIA
New Straits Times

BY SUZANNA PILLAY – 14 AUGUST 2016

EARLIER this month, a 50-year-old English teacher at a primary school in Jerteh, Terrenganu, was detained for allegedly molesting three children at the school’s computer lab.

Serial child abuser Richard Huckle, 30, a British photographer suspected of abusing up to 200 children aged between 6 and 12 months during his stay in Malaysia from 2006 to 2014, had volunteered as an English teacher and at a church while insidiously targeting poor and marginalised communities.

Social activist Syed Azmi Al Habshi, who actively champions the prevention of child sexual abuse on social media, shared stories from Facebook followers of how students were sexually attacked by their peers in religious schools or maahad.

These cases highlight the fact that preventing child sex abuse requires strict scrutiny of child protection policies in schools and organisations that work with children and youth.

Director of the Archdiocesan Single Adults & Youth Office of the Roman Catholic Diocese, Bukit Nanas, Reverend Father Gregory Chan says child sexual abuse cuts across all boundaries and involves babies, preschoolers and primary and secondary school students.

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Young Limerick priest denies Maynooth ‘gay culture’ claims

IRELAND
Limerick Leader

Donal O’Regan
14 Aug 2016

A COUNTY Limerick priest, who is one of the youngest in Ireland, has defended the national seminary in Maynooth from anonymous allegations of “homosexuality and misconduct”.

Fr Ger Fitzgerald, Castleconnell, who only left St Patrick’s College in 2011 and is still in contact with priests there, says it is being portrayed as a “golden house of debauchery, sin and squalor”.

“In my time, this was not the case. No parties were had and there were no drinks in rooms. This simply did not happen during my years,” said Fr Fitzgerald, who entered the seminary in August, 2005.

Now based in Ennis, the 36-year-old says he felt he “should say something considering the recent storm that appears to have engulfed my old alma mater”. To have an image of Maynooth as a replica of a Christmas party in The Wolf of Wall Street is an “inaccurate representation”, he said.

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August 13, 2016

Open Letter Urges New York Times to Help Reverse ‘Culture of Silence’ on Child Sexual Abuse

UNITED STATES
truthdig

Author and activist Nancy Levine on Thursday published an open letter on Medium directed at Liz Spayd, The New York Times’ public editor. Levine asked the Times to provide better coverage of child sexual abuse.

Levine also asked for transparency about a potential conflict of interest she believes is limiting the publication’s coverage of the proposed Child Victims Act, a piece of New York state legislation that would eliminate the statute of limitations for prosecuting cases of abuse against underage children. So far, 38 survivors of abuse and advocates fighting against the problem have signed Levine’s letter.

“As advocates working to raise awareness of issues surrounding child sexual abuse, we would like to ask The Times to elevate its editorial sensitivity to covering related news,” Levine writes. “Can we, the community of survivors of child sexual abuse and advocates, count on The Times to elevate its editorial sensitivity to covering news that affects us?”

In the letter, Levine also refers to “an appearance of a conflict of interest” in “The Times’ absence of recent coverage of the Child Victims Act of New York.” In a separate piece, also published on Medium, Levine outlines the potential conflict and shares her correspondence with Times Executive Editor Dean Baquet.

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Lowell Goddard accused of treating sex abuse victims with contempt

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Daniel Boffey
Saturday 13 August 2016

Lawyers for nine men said to have been repeatedly sexually abused at school have accused Justice Lowell Goddard of treating their clients with contempt and costing them money by “walking off” from the troubled child abuse inquiry.

The men who attended Stanhope Castle approved school in Co Durham travelled to the high court in London, days before the judge from New Zealand resigned, to offer evidence as to why they should take part in the independent inquiry into child sex abuse.

Even though the men – one of whom has been bed-bound for more than a decade – are vulnerable individuals who claim to have been “seriously and repeatedly sexually abused” as children, they were not offered any resolution on their application for “core participant” status before Goddard quit.

Their lawyer, David Enright of Howe & Co solicitors, has written to Keith Vaz, chair of the Commons home affairs select committee, to complain about the treatment of his clients by the judge, who was on an annual pay package of £500,000. In a letter obtained by this newspaper, Enright says: “My clients were shocked that, subsequently and just days after they had made their renewed application for core participant status to Justice Goddard, she resigned with immediate effect.

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Opinion: Bill 326-33 raises concerns

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Zoltan Szekely

August 13, 2016

I would like to acknowledge the alleged victims of childhood sexual abuse and their families who came forward with complaints in the last few months. Their testimonies detailing events that happened over 40 years ago must be heard with attention and sincerity. The proposed bill tries to make justice for the alleged victims. However, some of the circumstances of this piece of legislation raise concerns.

Parts of the bill remain unclear and unexplained. It applies to alleged victims whose claimed abuse occurred a long time ago and the statute of limitation prevented them in the past and still prevents them now from filing a lawsuit. The Guam Legislature had already chosen a solution in 2011. The statute of limitation was lifted for two years, but nobody came forward with a sexual abuse complaint.

Simply overriding an existing law without substantial and compelling reason raises serious doubts. Bill Pesch writes in the PDN on June 26: “Although appellate courts may allow a legislature to alter the civil statute of limitations for pursuing cases of child sexual abuse once, there is serious doubt that they will allow it twice. This may well be considered an ‘expo facto’ law,” a law enacted backward in time.

It was said that the “intent is to remove the current section requiring ‘certificates of merit,’ as such information would have a chilling effect on those sexual abuse survivors who choose to seek justice against their victimizers.” Well, was it not the Guam Legislature that created the Certificates of Merit section in the current law at the first place? We need at least some explanation here.

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EXCLUSIVE: Staten Island boy, 13, kills self after Holy Angels Catholic Academy staff ‘didn’t do anything’ to stop bullying

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY ADAM SHRIER ROCCO PARASCANDOLA THOMAS TRACY NANCY DILLON
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Updated: Friday, August 12, 2016

Before he took his own life, Daniel Fitzpatrick, taunted and bullied, wrote a final, heartbreaking letter lamenting that nearly no one tried to help him.

The 13-year-old Staten Island boy, mercilessly badgered over his weight, grades and his innocent heart, pleaded to his school for help.

But teacher after teacher at Holy Angels Catholic Academy — the principal, too — turned a deaf ear, refusing to intervene, he said in the letter that was never sent.

Finally, overwhelmed by the torment, Daniel hanged himself, his family said.

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High Ranking Stockton Priest Accused of Sending Sexually Explicit Pictures to Parishioner

CALIFORNIA
Fox 40

AUGUST 12, 2016, BY KAY RECEDE

STOCKTON — As a monsignor, Larry McGovern is supposed to be a person Catholics can respect and trust. However, with recent allegations of sexual harassment, it seems that trust has been broken.

According to attorney Vince Finaldi, his client, a parishioner with the Church of the Presentation, claims McGovern sent him sexually explicit pictures.

“It’s extremely disturbing that the person’s who is head of this parish would be sending text with photographs of his exposed genitals,” Finaldi said.

Finaldi claimed his client, who is also a pool maintenance contractor for the church, was sent a text message of McGovern’s private parts in July.

“Someone’s who’s engaging in that type of conduct has very, very serious credibility issues and issues with judgement,” Finaldi explained.

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Stockton Priest Named In Retaliation Lawsuit Over Alleged Sexting

CALIFORNIA
CBS 13

[with video]

August 13, 2016 By Shirin Rajaee

STOCKTON (CBS13) — There’s more trouble for the Catholic church. A Stockton pool man claims he was fired after a priest sent him sexually explicit text messages. He has now filed a civil lawsuit and wants the priest removed.

The lawsuit was filed Thursday in San Joaquin County

Monsignor Larry McGovern is not just the head of Presentation Church in Stockton, but also the head of a Catholic school. Some parishioners say he’s been a role model to them and the allegations against him are unbelievable.

“I cannot believe it, I cannot believe, there are so many things that I just pray to God that this is not true,” says parishioner Claudia Liborio.

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‘Unholy’ mess in Maynooth shows how out of touch Archbishop is

IRELAND
New Ross Standard

David Looby
PUBLISHED
13/08/2016

So the hallowed halls of the National Seminary Maynooth are, in fact, dens of hormonal young men seeking companionship and love.

Surprise, surprise. The Catholic Church has tried to shape the sexual mores of this country’s people for hundreds of years. I have clear recollections – as recent as the bank holiday weekend – of my father recalling the proselytising and pontificating of men of the cloth on the pulpit, getting all hot and bothered as they told the poor souls in the congregation about how they’ll go to hell for sins of the flesh.

Today we live in less prehistoric times and yet the church is still clinging to its dogma.

Archbishop Diarmuid Martin’s decision to transfer three seminarians to Rome smacks of other transfer decisions made by the Irish Catholic Church down through the years. For men of faith who avouch believing while not seeing, it seems strange that they so often believe that shunting the trouble makers out of sight will get rid of the ‘problem.’

From what I gather some seminarians were using the gay dating website Grindr and there was some homosexual activity in the college. I have friends who are gay and can clearly recall how difficult it was for them to come out. The country still treats gay people as second class citizens and that is wrong.

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Bishop Doran reaction to Maynooth

IRELAND
The Sligo Champion

PUBLISHED
13/08/2016

The Bishop of Elphin Kevin Doran has not ruled out sending a local seminarian for training to St Patrick’s Seminary in Maynooth.

In a statement to The Sligo Champion, Bishop Doran said: “As it happens, the Diocese of Elphin does not currently have any seminarian in Maynooth. When making a decision as to where a candidate would be sent for seminary formation, the bishop is guided by the particular formation needs and personal aptitudes of the individual concerned.” Archbishop Diarmuid Martin said there were “strange goings-on there”.

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Fraters Tilburg betalen ruim drie miljoen aan slachtoffers misbruik

NEDERLAND
BN

[The Brothers of Tilburg pay more than three million euros to victims of abuse.]

TILBURG – De misbruikaffaire in de katholieke kerk is formeel bijna afgesloten. Bij de Fraters van Tilburg resteren nog vijf gevallen die moeten worden afgehandeld.

Overste Jan Koppens verwacht dat zijn orde straks in totaal ruim drie miljoen heeft betaald aan slachtoffers van (vooral) seksueel misbruik en geweld.

De Fraters van Tilburg zijn ‘koploper’ als het gaat om misbruik zoals die door de commissie-Deetman is onderzocht. De orde heeft met 123 slachtoffers een financiële regeling getroffen, na klachten over in totaal 74 fraters.

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Turkey’s Constitutional Court stirs outrage by annulling child sex abuse clause

TURKEY
Hurriyet Daily News

The Constitutional Court has ruled to annul a provision that punishes all sexual acts against children under the age of 15 as “sexual abuse,” stirring outrage from academics and women’s rights activists who warn that the decision will lead to cases of child abuse going unpunished.

The Constitutional Court discussed the issue upon an application from a district court, which complained that the current law does not discriminate between age groups in cases of child sexual abuse and treats a 14-year-old as equal to a four-year-old.

The local court said the law does not provide legal consequences for the “consent” of victims in cases where the child victim is from 12 to 15 years of age and able to understand the meaning of the sexual act. “This creates an imbalance between legal benefits and sanctions that should be preserved in crime and punishment,” the application stated.

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Victim sexually abused by Probert describes ‘every parent’s nightmare’

WEST VIRGINIA
Bluefield Daily Telegraph

By SAMANTHA PERRY Bluefield Daily Telegraph

During a sentencing hearing for Timothy Probert, who pleaded guilty in April to 37 charges related to sexual abuse of boys while a church volunteer and mentor for at-risk youth, two victims addressed the court. Following is the full statement of one of those victims:

“I am thankful for the opportunity to address this court. I intend to do so plainly, directly and honestly.

“I am here as a victim of Tim Probert.

“I am here because Tim Probert systematically and methodically groomed me as a 14 year old boy to feed his twisted, pathetic sexual appetites. Tim Probert was an elder in my church. He was a family friend. He was trusted by the family of my closest friend.

“Tim Probert was strategic to establish a friendship with me so that I would become increasingly sexual with him. Over the course of approximately two years I spent about four different nights at Tim Probert’s house. The progression was always the same. First friendship through shooting pool; sharing meals; watching movies. Along the way alcohol was always introduced. Then Tim would provide us with pornography to watch with him. As a 14-year-old, pubescent boy with my earliest access to alcohol I masturbated in the presence of Tim Probert. As a grown man, a trusted citizen of our community, a family friend, an elder of the church of Jesus Christ, Tim Probert masturbated in my presence. Tim Probert asked me if he could masturbate me, which I declined. I was unable to see it at the time, but have come to believe this was the carefully choreographed work of a seasoned sexual predator.

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Royal Commission and its investigation of Newcastle Anglicans

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

12 Aug 2016

FOR the past two weeks, the Hunter public has heard graphic and often shocking details of sexual abuse of children by priests of the Anglican diocese of Newcastle.

Other actions, while perhaps not illegal, are nonetheless hard to reconcile given the role of the church in its devotion to the spiritual and pastoral well-being of its flock.

As its title suggests, this Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is more concerned with the ways that allegations of abuse were historically handled, than with the detail of the allegations themselves.

That said, the commission has established that at least 30 cases of child sexual abuse by priests were known to the diocese. It has also become clear that senior figures in the diocese had ample knowledge of the misdeeds of its clergy, at the time their crimes or moral failings were committed, or very soon after. Unfortunately, it was not until the current director of professional standards, Michael Elliott, began in 2009 at the behest of business manager John Cleary that the diocese did anything to clear the sexual skeletons from its closet.

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Anglican policy on sex abuse flawed: Archbishop Roger Herft

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

August 13, 2016

SIMONE FOX KOOB
JournalistSydney
@SimoneFoxKoob

A former bishop of Newcastle who presided over the diocese while convicted pedophile Peter Rushton was a priest has admitted the Anglican Church’s policy on abuse allegations during the 1990s was “totally unacceptable”.

Roger Herft, now the Anglican Archbishop of Perth, gave evidence at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse yesterday and admitted he took the word of priests accused of sex offences.

“The view that I had of the priesthood was one in which the person who had made the commitment to sacred orders was of such a high calling and calibre they would seek to tell me the truth and seek to be responsive to vulnerable people,” he said. “It was difficult to me to associate that people living by these vows could even begin to associate with this kind of ­offence.”

The archbishop was in charge in Newcastle from May 1993 to February 2005, a time when there were numerous abuse allegations against priests in the diocese.

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Irish theologian criticizes bishops’ absence at Fagan funeral

IRELAND
National Catholic Reporter

Sarah Mac Donald | Aug. 12, 2016

A prominent Irish theologian has strongly criticized the absence of Irish bishops from the funeral Mass of moral theologian, Marist Fr. Sean Fagan, who was censured by the Vatican in 2008, and who died on July 15.

Augustinian Fr. Gabriel Daly, 88, wrote in a blog on the Association of Catholic Priests’ website that the presence of a bishop at Fr Fagan’s funeral would have been “a golden occasion to express metanoia and the readiness to respond more sensitively to the message of the Gospel” and it would have meant so much to the Marist priest’s family.

The Augustinian, who recently published The Church — Always in Need of Reform, said the presence of a bishop at Fagan’s funeral would have given witness to the triumph of Gospel values over institutional church attitudes. “Regrettably no bishop was present,” he wrote. “I believe that this omission was not personal; it was institutional.”

“It is highly probable that many bishops knew that the Roman Curia had behaved in a thoroughly unjust and unchristian fashion when it attacked six Irish priests who were giving admirable and enlightened service to God’s people,” he continued. “No bishop expressed public disapproval of what was happening, or came to the defense of priests who were being treated so appallingly by men who would have described themselves, somewhat implausibly, as Christians.”

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I failed to act on sex abuse: Herft

AUSTRALIA
The West Australian

Phoebe Wearne, Newcastle – The West Australian on August 13, 2016

Perth’s Anglican Archbishop Roger Herft has told a royal commission that he struggles “to find an answer” for failing to act on warnings about a notorious paedophile priest abusing at least one boy in his diocese.

Archbishop Herft gave evidence to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse yesterday, focusing on his level of knowledge of historic claims of child sexual abuse during his time as Bishop of Newcastle between May 1993 and February 2005.

Asked by counsel assisting the royal commission Naomi Sharp if he dropped the ball with serial abuser Father Peter Rushton, Archbishop Herft said he “should have acted more effectively” but did not.

“I don’t know whether ‘dropped the ball’ is an adequate phrase,” Archbishop Herft said.

“I’ve asked myself a number of times why was I not more alert, why weren’t the people around me more alert, why weren’t the other Archdeacons outside of the particular group that we have spoken about more alert. And I struggle to find an answer for that.”

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Whistleblower in Anglican church child sex abuse case in Australia claims attacks by vandals

AUSTRALIA
Christian Today

Jonah Hicap 13 August 2016

A church official in Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia who exposed the child sex abuse cover-ups in an Anglican diocese has disclosed that he has been subjected to attacks by unidentified vandals.

Director Michael Elliott of the Anglican Diocese of Newcastle professional standards board on Thursday testified before the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse that he had to transfer residences several times because of the attacks.

He said spiked objects were placed under his car, the fly screens were removed from his children’s bedrooms and his dog is now missing, according to News.com.au.

Elliott told the Royal Commission, which is investigating the child sex abuse scandal, that the diocese made a move to undermine the board as it began investigating the case against four clerics and a teacher.

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Pair jailed for a total of 15 years for abusing vulnerable boys at St Ninian’s Catholic school in Falkland

SCOTLAND
The National

AUGUST 13TH, 2016

JANICE BURNS

VICTIMS wept in court as the headmaster and a teacher from a former Catholic school for troubled boys were jailed for a total of 15 years for a catalogue of horrific physical and sexual abuse against six pupils more than 30 years ago.

One person shouted “hope you enjoy every day of it” as priest John Farrell, 73, and Paul Kelly, 64, were led away to serve their jail terms.

The pair preyed on youngsters between the ages of 11 and 15 at St Ninian’s in Falkland, Fife, run by the Christian Brothers organisation before its closure in 1983.

Sentencing the pair at the High Court in Glasgow yesterday, the judge condemned them for committing a “gross abuse of trust” in one of the biggest abuse inquiries of its kind ever carried out by Police Scotland.

Farrell, of Motherwell, North Lanarkshire, was jailed for five years for three counts of indecent assault. Kelly, of Plymouth, Devon, was given 10 years in prison for four counts of indecent assault and two assault charges.

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‘Monster’ unmasked: Timothy Probert sentenced to 15 to 35 years for sexual abuse of boys

WEST VIRGINIA
Bluefield Daily Telegraph

Victim sexually abused by Probert describes ‘every parent’s nightmare’

By SAMANTHA PERRY Bluefield Daily Telegraph

PRINCETON — Tears flowed down anguished faces in a Mercer County courtroom Friday as victims of a man described as “every parent’s nightmare” learned he would spend a mere fraction of time behind bars rather than the hundreds of years he was facing.

Members of the courtroom audience sat in shocked silence as the judge delivered his sentence and they watched deputies lead a handcuffed Timothy Probert out of the room.

Victims, family members, prosecutors and others then lingered in the courtroom, sharing hugs, openly weeping and expressing dismay at the judge’s mandate.

•••

Probert, 58, of Princeton, pleaded guilty in April to 37 charges related to child sexual abuse that occurred while he served as a youth volunteer at Westminster Presbyterian Church and mentor for the Working to Eliminate Child Abuse and Neglect (WE CAN) program.

Probert, who was facing 171 to 489 years in prison, was sentenced to 15 to 35 years by retired Fayette County Judge Charles Vickers. Vickers was appointed as a special judge on the case in 2015 after Mercer County Circuit Court judges Omar Aboulhosn, Derek Swope and William “Bill” Sadler recused themselves citing conflicts of interest.

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Timothy Probert case timeline:

WEST VIRGINIA
Bluefield Daily Telegraph

By SAMANTHA PERRY Bluefield Daily Telegraph

• December 12, 2013: Timothy Probert, a former youth volunteer at Westminster Presbyterian Church and mentor with the Working to Eliminate Child Abuse and Neglect program, is arrested on 38 counts of child sexual abuse related charges.

• December 18, 2013: A Bluefield Daily Telegraph investigation reveals Probert was accused of similar crimes in 1999.

• February 4, 2014: Graphic testimony is recounted during Probert’s preliminary hearing by Sgt. M.D. Clemons, with the West Virginia State Police Crimes Against Children Unit. Probable cause is found, and the case is bound over to the grand jury.

• March 2014: Probert is placed on house arrest after a man testifies at a hearing that he was propositioned by Probert when he went to his Bluefield home seeking to do yard work or other labor.

• February 10, 2015: Probert is indicted on 50 charges related to alleged sexual abuse of children. The new charges stem from another alleged victim coming forward, and additional charges added in other cases.

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Advocacy group denied appeal to order to hand over information about St. Louis priest’s accusers

MISSOURI
St. Louis Post-Dispatch

By Nassim Benchaabane St. Louis Post-Dispatch

ST. LOUIS • An advocacy group won’t be allowed to appeal a federal court’s order to hand over private information about people who accused a St. Louis-area priest of sexual abuse of a minor.

A federal judge in St. Louis ruled Friday that the Survivor’s Network of those Abused by Priests has to hand over emails, text messages and contact information of people who accused Rev. Xiu Hui “Joseph” Jiang of sexually abusing a boy in a Catholic school bathroom on charges that were later dropped.

Jiang filed a civil lawsuit against the boy’s parents, police and SNAP leaders David Clohessy and Barbara Davis, alleging they conspired against him for monetary gain, and that police officers went after him because of his religious and racial background.

SNAP refused to comply with the order, which also required turning over all records of donations attorneys for SNAP have made to the organization. The order said federal law does not guarantee privacy in the production of pre-trial evidence.

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Abuse suit filed against former priest

NEWMEXICO
Albuquerque Journal

By Olivier Uyttebrouck / Journal Staff Writer
Friday, August 12th, 2016

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — A New Mexico native has filed a lawsuit alleging he was sexually abused in the 1970s by a former priest who turned up in Morocco earlier this year, more than a quarter century after he vanished from his Albuquerque parish.

Arthur Perrault, who helped ignite the clerical abuse crisis in New Mexico in the 1990s, was served with an unrelated lawsuit in May at an English-language school in Tangier where he apparently worked at the time.

The new lawsuit, filed Aug. 4 in 2nd Judicial District Court in Albuquerque, alleges that an unidentified man was sexually abused by Perrault from 1975 to 1977, both on and off church property.

The man, who now lives outside New Mexico, was abused when he was a child parishioner at Our Lady of Assumption Parish in Albuquerque, the suit says.

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What are the long term consequences for survivors of child abuse?

SCOTLAND
The Courier

by Michael Alexander
August 13 2016

As two men are jailed for abuse at the former St Ninian’s School in Falkland, Fife, what are the long term consequences for survivors of child abuse as they move into adulthood? Michael Alexander spoke to some of the survivors to find out.

It was the day that the headmaster and a teacher of a former Fife school for troubled boys were finally convicted of physical and sexual abuse against six pupils more than 30 years ago.

John Farrell, 73, and Paul Kelly, 64, were sentenced to five and 10 years respectively for assaulting vulnerable pupils at St Ninian’s in Falkland, Fife, which was run by the worldwide Congregation of Christian Brothers.

The pair abused the boys – many who already had a chaotic upbringing and whom they should have been protecting – to satisfy their depraved needs.

On Friday August 12 at the High Court in Glasgow, judge Lord Matthews said they had committed a “gross abuse of trust”.

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Lawsuit accuses Stockton priest of sexual harassment

CALIFORNIA
News-Sentinel

Friday, August 12, 2016 1

By Christina Cornejo/News-Sentinel Staff Writer

Allegations of sexual harassment have surfaced against Monsignor Lawrence McGovern, the pastor of Presentation Catholic Parish in Stockton.

Attorneys at Manly, Stewart and Finaldi, a Southern California law firm, filed suit on Thursday in San Joaquin County Superior Court on behalf of a victim who alleges that McGovern sent sexually explicit pictures to him. The victim was working as a pool maintenance contractor for the pastor and also alleges that McGovern ended the victim’s employment in retaliation for reporting the behavior to police.

After he received the photograph, attorneys said the victim asked why McGovern texted him a graphic photograph of his naked genitalia, pointing out that he assumed the priest was celibate. McGovern allegedly responded that “celibate means not married,” according to victim.

“This would be a clear violation of the law by any employer, but it is even more disturbing when committed by a member of the clergy,” said attorney John Manly.

Since hearing about the allegations for the first time on Friday, the Diocese of Stockton announced that Bishop Stephen Blaire has placed McGovern on administrative leave pending a full and complete investigation.

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August 12, 2016

Retired priest recalls his Maynooth battle

IRELAND
The Argus

Anne Campbell
PUBLISHED
13/08/2016

Recently retired Knockbridge Parish priest, Fr Gerard McGinnity, has revealed how he is thinking of writing a book about his life and his role in highlighting problems at St Patrick’s Seminary, Maynooth, days after Archbishop Diarmuid Martin revealed he is to send trainee priests from his diocese to the Irish College in Rome.

A series of senior bishops have backed the college amid allegations of a ‘gay culture’ in St Patrick’s College. Archbishop Martin has withdrawn his trainee priests from Maynooth due to what he described as allegations of a ‘homosexual, gay culture, that students are using an app called Grindr, a gay dating app’.

However, the leader of the Catholic Church in Ireland, and Dundalk’s parish priest, will continue to send trainee priests to Maynooth. A spokesman for Archbishop of Armagh Eamon Martin, the Primate of All Ireland, said the Archdiocese was ‘extremely grateful to St Patrick’s College, Maynooth, for the spiritual, human, pastoral and academic formation that he received there’.

Fr McGinnity is a former senior dean at Maynooth and in the 1980s was relieved of his post after he raised complaints seminarians then had brought to him. Speaking to RTE Radio 1’s News at One last week, Fr McGinnity he said the current controversy was ‘like deja vu in many respects’ and recalled what happened when he brought trainee priests’ complaints to the hierarchy.

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‘St Ninian’s paedophiles destroyed our lives – they should have got life behind bars’: Victim of child abuse school hits out

SCOTLAND
Daily Record

12 AUG 2016

BY PAUL O’HARE

DAVE SHARP endured hell at the school run by the Catholic order and says the sentences handed down to Priest John Farrell and teacher Paul Kelly today were not enough.

A VICTIM of historical child abuse today blasted the sentences handed down to two paedophile teachers at a residential school run by a Catholic order.

Priest John Farrell and teacher Paul Kelly were jailed for a total of 15 years for brutalising young boys at St Ninian’s in Falkland, Fife, in the 70s and 80s.

But Dave Sharp, who endured hell at the school run by the Christian Brothers, said the men should have been caged for longer.

Dave said: “Child abuse on this scale should carry a life sentence.

“To destroy somebody’s life as a child should not be treated the same as burgling a house or robbing a bank.

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Texarkana pastor accused of sexual assault arrested again

TEXAS
TXKtoday

By Field Walsh – August 12, 2016

Texarkana pastor David Farren was arrested Friday on a sexual assault charge for the second time this month.

Farren, 41, was taken into custody Friday on a felony charge of second degree sexual assault and a misdemeanor charge of violation of mandatory reporting requirements. Farren was arrested Aug. 3 on three counts of felony first degree sexual assault for misconduct which allegedly occurred in 2013 when the girl was 16, according to an earlier press statement from Texarkana, Ark., police. The newest sexual assault charge involves a different alleged victim than the charges which led to Farren’s Aug. 4 arrest.

Farren currently serves as pastor of Anchor Church in Texarkana. Previously he worked as a youth director and pastor at Heritage Baptist Church, Trinity Baptist Church and Faith Church, according to statements made in court at a hearing Aug. 4.

Violation of mandatory reporting requirements involves the legal duty of people in certain professions, such as the clergy, medical professionals, and teachers to report to law enforcement any allegation of child abuse. If a mandatory reporter fails to disclose alleged child physical or sexual abuse whenever they become aware of its possible existence.

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Pool maintainer sues Stockton Diocese, alleging sexual harassment, wrongful termination

CALIFORNIA
Stockton Record

By Jason Anderson
Record Staff Writer

Posted Aug. 12, 2016

STOCKTON — Attorneys from a Southern California law firm announced Friday they have filed a lawsuit alleging sexual harassment and retaliation by a pastor at the Roman Catholic Diocese of Stockton.

The lawsuit, filed Thursday in San Joaquin County Superior Court, alleges that Monsignor Larry McGovern sent sexually explicit photographs to the victim, a pool maintenance contractor, and then terminated his employment after the victim reported the incident.

“This is a classic case of sexual harassment and retaliation,” attorney John Manly, who is representing the unidentified victim, said in a written statement. “Monsignor McGovern texted a graphic photograph of his naked genitalia to my client, then terminated his employment after my client reported the lewd photo to the police. This would be a clear violation of the law by any employer but it is even more disturbing when committed by a member of the clergy.”

The diocese, which oversees Catholic parishes in San Joaquin, Stanislaus, Calaveras and Tuolumne counties, has not commented on the lawsuit. Sister Terry Davis, a spokeswoman for the diocese, said “we’re in the process of deciding what we’re going to do,” adding that she expected to issue a statement later this afternoon.

The lawsuit comes as another blow to the diocese, which filed for bankruptcy in January 2014 after paying millions of dollars to settle years of child sex abuse lawsuits. According to the Manly, Stewart and Finaldi law firm, the diocese spent $14 million in judgments, settlements and legal expenses in dozens of cases of clergy sexual abuse filed over a period of 20 years.

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Anglican Archbishop of Perth admits he knew of abuse in Newcastle diocese

AUSTRALIA
ABC – 7.30

Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Broadcast: 12/08/2016
Reporter: Anne Connolly

One of Australia’s most senior Anglican’s has admitted he didn’t act on complaint of a paedophile ring operating in the Newcastle diocese, which he led for more than a decade. Roger Herft said he regretted he had not been more alert to what was going on.

Transcript
MATT WORDSWORTH, PRESENTER: One of Australia’s most senior Anglicans today admitted he didn’t act on complaints about sex abuses within the diocese he led for more than a decade.

It comes after 7:30 revealed last month that a senior priest, Father Peter Rushton, led a paedophile network in the Hunter region for years. The focus of today’s Royal Commission hearings was Roger Herft, now the Archbishop of Perth.

Anne Connolly has been following the stories of the victims whose lives have been destroyed by the dark deeds within the church.

And a warning: this story contains material that may distress some viewers.

(Footage of Paul Grey giving evidence to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Abuse)

PAUL GREY (sobbing): I was chased by two men… to the edge of the cliff and I hid in the bushes. After a while, I was dragged from the bushes. I was raped by the two men. And while I was being raped, I could hear another boy screaming.

(Footage ends)

ANNE CONNOLLY, REPORTER: Paul Grey is describing the horror he experienced as a victim of an Anglican paedophile network. The ringleader was his godfather, Father Peter Rushton, one of Newcastle’s most powerful Anglican priests.

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Victims’ Attorneys Manly, Stewart & Finaldi File Sexual Abuse And Harassment Suit Against Stockton Priest And Parish

CALIFORNIA
PRNewswire

STOCKTON, Calif., Aug. 12, 2016 /PRNewswire/ — Attorneys representing a victim of alleged sexual harassment and retaliation by the Pastor of a Stockton Roman Catholic parish filed suit yesterday in San Joaquin County Superior Court.

The suit alleges that on July 26, 2016, Monsignor Larry McGovern sent sexually explicit photographs to the victim, a pool maintenance contractor, then terminated his employment after the victim reported the incident.

“This is a classic case of sexual harassment and retaliation,” said victim’s attorney John Manly. “Monsignor McGovern texted a graphic photograph of his naked genitalia to my client, then terminated his employment after my client reported the lewd photo to the police. This would be a clear violation of the law by any employer but it is even more disturbing when committed by a member of the clergy,” said Manly.

After receiving the photograph, the victim asked him why he sent it, pointing out, “I thought you were celibate, Monsignor,” to which Monsignor McGovern replied with a statement that is directly contrary to Catholic theology, stating, “celibate means not married…”

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MO–In sudden shift, accused priest wants deposition stopped

MISSOURI
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, Aug. 12, 2016

For more information: Amy Lorenz-Moser 314 312 4979 (attorney), David Clohessy 314 566 9790, davidgclohessy@gmail.com, Barbara Dorris 314 503 0003,SNAPdorris@gmail.com

Twice-accused priest wants his deposition stopped
Cleric claims “I’m innocent & want to clear my name”
“So why delay and what are you hiding?” SNAP asks
Meanwhile, support group seeks to appeal to another court

In a bizarre civil case, a St. Louis priest who has twice been charged with child sex crimes wants a judge to block his deposition. SNAP (the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests) calls the move “hypocritical” and the group’s attorney is planning to proceed with the deposition.

Fr. Xiu Hui “Joseph” Jiang, has been criminally charged in two eastern Missouri counties with molesting a boy and a girl. Last summer, Fr. Jiang filed a civil lawsuit alleging “a conspiracy” by SNAP, prosecutors, two police officers and the parents of a boy, to deprive the priest of his civil rights because he is Chinese and Catholic.

[St. Louis Post-Dispatch]

SNAP calls the accusation “absurd yet chilling.” The group believes Fr. Jiang’s testimony will show that his claim has no merit.

“Time and time again, Fr. Jiang claims ‘I’m innocent and want to clear my name,’” said SNAP outreach director Barbara Dorris. “If that’s true, he should welcome the chance to testify. If he’s innocent, what’s he got to hide?”

“We have turned over hundreds of pages of emails and other records to this alleged child molester,” said SNAP director David Clohessy. “Fr. Jiang, on the other hand, has responded to none of our document requests. He can’t have it both ways – insisting that we give up information so the case can move forward while he stonewalls and dodges and delays.”

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Church official: 2 former altar boys say priests abused them

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Haidee V Eugenio, Pacific Daily News August 13, 2016

At least two former altar boys have reached out to the Catholic Church to say priests abused them, the church’s new sexual abuse response coordinator said.

Deacon Leonard Stohr, who Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai recently appointed as the church’s new sexual abuse response coordinator, said he’s “very encouraged” that people are reaching out to the church for help.

Stohr said he’s following up on both cases, but declined to comment further.

A sexual abuse response coordinator is a person appointed by the archbishop to coordinate the archdiocese’s response to allegations of sexual misconduct.

Stohr encourages others who’ve been abused by priests or other members of the clergy to contact him at 727-7373.

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A CBC Q&A with Buddhist Rob Hogendoorn, who investigates abuse in Buddhism

CANADA
CBC News

A Buddhist monk in Windsor is facing two counts of sexual assault against a child.

Windsor Police allege the crime took place two years ago, when child was six, and they believe there could be more victims.

Rob Hogendoorn is a Dutch journalist who is investigating 17 abuse cases involving Buddhist monks in the Netherlands.

Hogendoorn is also a Buddhist.

CBC News spoke to him over the phone from Maasland, Netherlands.

Here are edited excerpts of the interview.

In Windsor, this case is rare. But elsewhere in the world, how common are allegations of sexual assault within the Buddhist faith?

Unfortunately, there have been widespread reports on abuse cases within Buddhist communities worldwide; not just in Asia but in the West as well, especially in the United States but also in many European countries.

How has the Buddhist leadership handled these allegations elsewhere?

There have been some exceptions but mostly the Buddhist community has remained silent.

For instance, the Dalai Lama has spoken out against sexual abuse in the past. But, so far, he has never [outlined] concrete steps to end it or to help remedy it. But, in Buddhism, there is no central hierarchy. So, the Dalai Lama has very little to say to, for example, Zen Buddhists. So that’s part of the problem I think.

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Lawyers told of victim’s helpline calls

AUSTRALIA
4 BU

Details of confidential phone calls to an Anglican Church abuse helpline were handed over to the legal team defending the priest accused by the caller of being a child sexual predator.

A royal commission inquiry into an apparent web of collusion by some clergy and officials associated with the NSW Anglican Diocese of Newcastle to cover-up child abuse is hearing evidence from Peter Mitchell, a former registrar.

Mr Mitchell, who has spent time in jail for defrauding the diocese of about $193,000 said on Wednesday he produced the helpline information for the legal team defending his “close friend” a priest referred to by the pseudonym CKC.

On Wednesday Mr Mitchell was asked about CKC, a priest who may now face a re-trial for allegedly sexually molesting two brothers CKA and CKB is the 1970s.

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Jehovah’s Witnesses under pressure over handling of sexual abuse claims

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Alice Ross
Friday 12 August 2016

The Jehovah’s Witnesses organisation is under increasing pressure to address its handling of sexual abuse allegations as it faces legal setbacks, bills of over £1m and a fight to prevent the Charity Commission examining its records of abuse claims.

Last month a judge upheld a ruling against the UK’s leading Jehovah’s Witnesses charity, the Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society of Britain (WTBTS), that the Jehovah’s Witnesses had failed to protect a woman, known in proceedings as A, from sexual abuse starting when she was four years old.

Now the supreme court has rejected a highly unusual attempt by the WTBTS to block a Charity Commission inquiry into how the Jehovah’s Witnesses charity handles allegations of abuse.

The extent of the charity’s challenges and the length of time they have gone on for are unprecedented in recent times, a spokesman for the Charity Commission said.

In A’s case the high court awarded damages and the WTBTS have been left facing legal fees totalling about £1m after attempting to appeal against the judgement three times.

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Royal Commission hears bishop handled abuse case by telling alleged perpetrator

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

IAN KIRKWOOD
12 Aug 2016

TWO weeks of Royal Commission sittings have finished with sensational evidence that former Newcastle bishop Roger Herft tipped off his dean at the time, Graeme Lawrence, about child sexual abuse allegations against him.

Reverend Herft has been Archbishop of Perth since leaving Newcastle in 2005 and he opened his evidence by telling the commission he put in place the first system to investigate sexual abuse by priests when he arrived in 1993.

But by the end of his evidence, the reverend had to admit his handling of the issue had been “totally unacceptable” and he never did “find out what on earth was going on”, despite being repeatedly warned about paedophiles in his diocese.

Just before the commission adjourned until Monday, August 29, Reverend Herft was asked about a husband-and-wife team of youth camp leaders who had told him in 1995 that two “boys” had told them of being sexually abused by Lawrence.

The couple, from Muswellbrook, had made a statement to the commission, saying that Reverend Herft was “more interested in standing up for Lawrence” than anything else, and that “if they continued to complain about Lawrence, they would be facing legal action for defamation of character”.

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GOTHARD EXPLAINS WHY GOD ALLOWS CHILD MOLESTATION: PART I

UNITED STATES
Homeschoolers Anonymous

Recently, Homeschoolers Anonymous was given access to a worksheet from The Institute of Basic Life Principles‘ training center. It is titled ”Why Did God Let A Four Year Old Boy Be Molested By A Fifteen Year Old Neighbor?’. The Institute of Basic Life Principles is run by Bill Gothard, who is currently facing a lawsuit for molestation, rape, and sexual harassment. The Institute of Basic Life Principles has many training centers around the world.

Most of these training centers were used for all ATI students, offering “apprenticeship opportunities” and training. However, this piece of literature (dated around 1994-1995) came from the Indianapolis Training Center, which was special. This training center was used for for troubled teens and juvenile delinquents. This literature, while old, reflects the current beliefs of the Institute of Biblical Life Principles.

Each handout of this type contains a lengthy list of victim blaming statements, complete with verses. They detail the reasons God not only did not prevent the abuse, but allowed it for His purposes. Victim blaming is very common in fundamentalism, with leadership doing everything they can to assign responsibility to the victim instead of the abuser. The stated goal of such literature is supposed to prevent bitterness and force repentance upon abuse victims. In reality, it revictimizes victims, causing them more pain.

According to them, we are to recognize our own culpability and then confess our sins.

Fundamentalism, by its very nature, requires victims to submit their pain and their autonomy to the leadership. The leadership is always presented as a spokesman for their God and demands complete abject obedience.

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Disturbing Lesson from Christian Workbook Discusses Why God Allowed a Little Boy to “Be Molested”

UNITED STATES
Friendly Atheist

August 11, 2016 by Hemant Mehta

The folks at Homeschoolers Anonymous recently got their hands on some old workbook pages used at the Institute of Basic Life Principles. That would be the Christian ministry founded by Bill Gothard, a man who resigned as President a couple of years ago after 34 women accused him of sexual harassment.

In these workbook pages, which are approximately 20 years old but still aligned with the ministry’s current teachings, students are presented with a question: “Why did God let a four year old boy be molested by a fifteen year old neighbor?”

Besides the odd phrasing that suggests the four-year-old did something to get molested instead of focusing on the teenager who committed the crime, it’s also a really weird way to talk about why God allows bad things to happen…

And the responses on the page were no better, blaming the victim time and time again.

Just look at Reason #3: “To give him a ‘moral vaccination’ against future temptations.”

God will severely judge the fifteen year old boy for the evil that he did. However, your son can turn what was meant for evil into good. The vaccinations we receive for various diseases contains a small amount of the actual disease. Our immune system builds up a reaction to it so that if our body is exposed to the disease, it is prepared to fight it off. A similar result can occur in the life of your son if this matter handled in a Scriptural way.

So… it’s a good thing the boy got molested because, now that it’s happened, he’ll be better equipped to fight it off in the future? That is some fucked up reasoning right there. I don’t need to get stung by a swarm of bees, either, to know I never want it to happen.

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Bellows Falls Jehovah’s Witnesses ask court to toss lawsuit

VERMONT
Brattleboro Reformer

By Robert Audette
raudette@reformer.com @audette.reformer on Twitter

POSTED: 08/11/2016

BELLOWS FALLS — Attorneys for the Bellows Falls Congregation of Jehovah’s Witnesses are asking the United States District Court for the District of Vermont to dismiss a lawsuit alleging a congregation member committed sexual abuse 25 years ago.

The lawsuit, filed by Annessa Lewis, names congregation member Norton True and the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of New York as co-defendants in the suit. The attorneys are asking that the congregation and Watchtower be dismissed from the suit. They do not represent True.

The abuse is alleged to have occurred in the early 1990s at True’s home in Rockingham, while his adult daughter was babysitting Lewis, who is now 29 and lives in Texas. True’s daughter was a friend of Lewis’ mother.

“To be clear, the (Jehovah’s Witnesses and Watchtower) do not concede that there was an incident of abuse,” wrote attorneys from Downs Rachlin and Martin, which is representing the congregation and Watchtower.

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Catholic bishops ‘don’t get it’—the fundamental problem is a corrupt clerical culture

UNITED STATES
Catholic Culture

By Phil Lawler
Aug 11, 2016

“Who is going to save our Church? Do not look to the priests. Do not look to the bishops. It’s up to you, the laity, to remind our priests to be priests and our bishops to be bishops.”
– Archbishop Fulton Sheen

Archbishop Sheen was right, as usual. Our pastors cannot lead us out of the current crisis in the Catholic Church, because they, as a group, do not recognize the nature of the crisis. In fact, despite the abundant evidence all around us, they are not prepared to admit that there is a crisis. They do not see the problem, because they are the problem.

The crisis is—let’s speak plainly—a crisis of clerical corruption. Our priests and especially our bishops have failed as Church leaders, because they adopted the wrong standards of leadership. They are using the wrong yardsticks to measure success and failure. And this clerical system tends to perpetuate itself: bishops train and promote priests who adopt the same skewed standards.

(It should be obvious, I hope, that I am making sweeping generalizations. There are many exemplary priests, and some of them become fine bishops. But the most energetic and evangelical clerics, I would argue, rise to leadership despite a system that rewards timidity and complacency. Individual priests may be holy men, but the clerical system is corrupt. By that I mean that while there are both good men and bad men in the system—as in any human institution—the good men are unable to establish control and institute reform.)

In June 2002, I was one of the scores of reporters covering the historic Dallas meeting of the US bishops’ conference. With the sex-abuse scandal at its peak, and ugly new stories exploding across the headlines every day, the atmosphere crackled with a sense of urgency, if not outright panic. The American bishops were under intense public pressure to take decisive action, and they did; the “Dallas Charter” was born. Even before they left Dallas, the bishops were proclaiming the Charter a great leap forward in the handling of sexual abuse, congratulating themselves for their achievement.

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