ABUSE TRACKER

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

January 19, 2017

Baptist Pastor Says Jamaica Is In A Period Of Religious, Moral Distress

JAMAICA
The Gleaner

The keynote speaker of the National Leadership Prayer Breakfast Reverend Burchell Taylor this morning appealed for Jamaicans to pursue justice.

Speaking to political and religious leaders at the annual event, Reverend Taylor said justice should be pursued as at the policy level with human dignity.

Reverend Taylor stressed that justice is the responsibility of every Jamaican adding that no one should be content with being a beneficiary of injustice.

Reverend Taylor’s appeal comes amid immense backlash aimed at the church amid the Moravian sex scandal involving a 64-year-old Moravian pastor who is charged with the sexual abuse of a 15-year-old girl.

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.

Pastor accused of not reporting sexual abuse accepted into ARD program

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

By John Beauge | Special to PennLive
on January 19, 2017

SUNBURY – The pastor of a Northumberland County church charged with failing to report to authorities an alleged sexual abuse incident has been accepted into a special probation program that does not require admission of guilt.

Gregory L. Clendaniel, 54, of Paxinos, on Thursday in Northumberland County court was accepted into the accelerated rehabilitative disposition program.

If he successfully completes terms of his probation he could apply to have his record expunged.

District Attorney Tony Matulewicz said he normally would not approve ARD in cases in which the victim was a minor, but there were issues when Clendaniel learned of the incident.

Clendaniel, as the pastor of the Augustaville Wesleyan Church, is under the law required to report sexual abuse incidents.

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.

Ottawa priest convicted of molesting boys back in jail after allegedly visiting kids pool 96 times

CANADA
The Ottawa Citizen

JOE LOFARO, THE OTTAWA CITIZEN

A disgraced Ottawa priest convicted of molesting altar boys in the 1960s and 1970s has been re-arrested after he allegedly visited a Lowertown swimming pool frequented by children – a breach of his release conditions – nearly 100 times.

Gatineau police arrested Jacques Faucher, 80, on Monday, nine days before he was scheduled to be sentenced on historical sex crimes involving three children. Faucher was free on bail while awaiting sentencing.

Police allege he attended the kids section of the Ottawa Lowertown Community Centre and Pool 96 times between Nov. 24, 2015 and Dec. 22, 2016, according to court documents. The documents claim he did not once visit the adult swimming pool in that one-year period. Neither the police, nor the court documents viewed by the Citizen detailed how authorities determined Faucher had visited the pool 96 times.

Ottawa police arrested the former priest in 2013 after five male complainants came forward with allegations he molested them when they were between the ages of nine and 13 at the former Notre-Dame-des-Anges parish near Tunney’s Pasture.

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.

Ex-worker sues priest sex-abuse victims advocacy group, says it exploited survivors

ILLINOIS
Chicago Tribune

Manya Brachear Pashman
Chicago Tribune

A former employee of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests has sued the victims advocacy group, alleging that SNAP exploited victims of sexual abuse by clergy in return for financial kickbacks from attorneys.

According to a lawsuit filed this week in Cook County Circuit Court, Gretchen Rachel Hammond worked as a director of development from July 2011 until she said she was fired in February 2013, shortly after asking superiors whether SNAP was referring potential clients to attorneys in exchange for donations.

In addition to the organization, defendants named in the lawsuit are Barbara Blaine, its founder and president; David Clohessy, executive director; and Barbara Dorris, outreach director.

Blaine said in a statement that “the allegations are not true.

“This will be proven in court,” she said. “SNAP leaders are now, and always have been, devoted to following the SNAP mission: To help victims heal and to prevent further sexual abuse.”

Neither Clohessy nor Dorris could be reached for comment.

Though it did not name attorneys, the lawsuit said several high-profile litigators across the country had donated a large percentage of SNAP’s income.

Jeff Anderson, a prominent Minnesota attorney for victims of clergy sex abuse, confirmed that he makes regular donations to SNAP, as well as other nonprofit organizations that advocate for the safety of children. But he said he does not do it in exchange for referrals.

“I have supported SNAP and a lot of other organizations that help survivors throughout the country, unapologetically,” he said.

“The allegation is explosive because it’s unethical,” he added. “I’ve never done it nor would I ever do it.”

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

Man files suit against former midstate youth minister for alleged sex abuse

GEORGIA
The Telegraph

BY AMY LEIGH WOMACK
awomack@macon.com

A man who attended Macon’s Mulberry United Methodist Church in the 1980s has filed suit against a former youth minister there, alleging that he was molested as a child.

The lawsuit, which names Perry Sandifer as the sole defendant, alleges that the man was 12 or 13 years old when Sandifer groped him and engaged in other “unwanted and non-consensual sexual contact.”

Darl Champion, the plaintiff’s lawyer, said his now 46-year-old client suppressed many of the memories from the alleged molestation, but they later resurfaced after he become an adult.

“It’s about accountability,” Champion said when asked why his client filed the suit.

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.

SNAP denies ex-employee’s claim of kickback scheme

ILLINOIS
Crux

The country’s most visible advocacy group for survivors of clerical sexual abuse is denying claims made by an ex-employee, who charges in a lawsuit that the group “does not focus on protecting or helping survivors, it exploits them,” including taking kickbacks from lawyers suing the Church.

A lawsuit by an ex-employee charges that the Survivors Network Of Those Abused By Priests (SNAP), a highly visible advocacy group for survivors of clerical abuse, is actually “a commercial operation motivated by … personal and ideological animus against the Catholic Church,” and that it routinely engages in kickback schemes with lawyers suing the Church.

“SNAP does not focus on protecting or helping survivors – it exploits them,” says the lawsuit, filed Jan. 17 in the Circuit Court of Cook County, Illinois.

“SNAP routinely accepts financial kickbacks from attorneys in the form of ‘donations.’ In exchange for the kickbacks, SNAP refers survivors as potential clients to attorneys, who then file lawsuits on behalf of the survivors against the Catholic Church,” the suit alleges.

“These cases often settle, to the financial benefit of the attorneys and, at times, to the financial benefit of SNAP, which has received direct payments from survivors’ settlements.”

News of the lawsuit was first reported on Wednesday by National Catholic Reporter editor Dennis Coday.

On Thursday, a SNAP official denied the claims in a brief written statement to Crux.

“The allegations are not true,” said Barbara Blaine, the group’s president.

“This will be proven in court. SNAP leaders are now, and always have been, devoted to following the SNAP mission: To help victims heal and to prevent further sexual abuse,” 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.

Arrestan a exvoluntario de una iglesia en el norte de Texas con cargos de abuso sexual a menores

TEXAS
Univision

NORTH RICHLAND HILLS, Texas.- Un exvoluntario de la iglesia católica San Juan el Apóstol en North Richland Hills, Texas, fue arrestado este miércoles y se le imputaron cargos por abusar sexualmente de menores de edad mientras laboraba en la guardería del recinto religioso.

Francisco Guevara, de 65 años de edad, enfrenta dos cargos por abuso sexual continuo a un menor y uno por cometer actos indecentes con un menor.

De acuerdo con las autoridades, los actos ocurrieron alrededor de 2009 y se estima que sus víctimas tenían entre cuatro y nueve años de edad. Asimismo, informaron que dos de los tres incidentes por los que es acusado ocurrieron en North Richland Hills, mientras que el otro sucedió en Colleyville.

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.

Ridsdale in Vic court over child sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
SBS

Former Catholic priest Gerald Ridsdale will face court over dozens of fresh historical sexual abuse offences.

The 82-year-old has been charged with more than 36 offences including rape, buggery, indecent assault and assault.

It’s alleged the offences occurred at various locations in the western region of Victoria between the 1960s to the 1980s.

Ridsdale was charged by the Sano Taskforce, which was set up to investigate historical and new allegations of child sex abuse involving religious and non-government organisations.

He is due to appear at the Melbourne Magistrates’ Court on Friday via video link.

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.

Historic child abuse inquiry will be judged on ‘truth it delivers’

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

Northern Ireland’s public inquiry into child abuse at residential homes run by churches and the state will be judged on the extent to which it delivers truth and justice, campaigners said.

The Historical Institutional Abuse (HIA) inquiry is due to publish its report on Friday.

Evidence from hundreds of witnesses during 223 days of hearings outlined claims of brutality and sex abuse dating back to the 1920s at the homes. Some of those allegations have been challenged by the religious orders involved.

Retired judge Sir Anthony Hart chaired an independent panel which investigated, helped by a team of lawyers and researchers.

Sir Anthony has already indicated that compensating victims will be among his recommendations.

Stormont ministers will have to decide on what happens next amid a crisis engulfing powersharing.

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

New Book by Vatileaks Journalist Alleges Vatican Inaction on Abuse

ITALY
America

Gerard O’Connell | Jan 19 2017

Emiliano Fittipaldi, one of the two Italian journalists charged in the Vatileaks 2 trial, has written a new book called Lust (Lussuria) in which he accuses several high-ranking prelates in the Vatican, Italy and elsewhere, some close to Pope Francis, of covering up or undermining investigations of priests under their jurisdiction who sexually abused minors over past decades.

In the 200-page book, published on Jan. 19, Mr. Fittipaldi recycles stories already published in the Italian or international media about the abuse of children and minors by clergy and recounts denials or cover-ups related to these crimes. Some cases date back 40 or more years; others are more recent. He also cites scandals of adult homosexual behavior involving clergy.

The Vatican has declined to comment on the book, but an authoritative source in Rome who wished to remain anonymous told America that he was struck by the “animus” against the church and the Vatican that comes through page after page of Mr. Fittipaldi’s book. He noted moreover that the author gave scant attention to the significant progress made on this problem over the past 16 years, starting under John Paul II and followed with greater impetus by Benedict XVI. Progress on ensuring a safe environment for children throughout the Catholic Church is moving forward under Francis, who is pursuing a “zero tolerance” policy on reports of abuse.

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

Report cites pastoral protection in Virginia abuse case

UNITED STATES
Mennonite World Review

Jan 19, 2017 by Mennonite World Review staff

An external review of responses to reports of sexual abuse in a Virginia congregation has led Mennonite Church USA staff to conclude the lead pastor acted in ways that protected the alleged perpetrator, to the detriment of caring for the victim.

In their response to the report, the staff members recommend ways to prevent future problems, including “regular trainings on healthy boundaries” for all pastors in the denomination.

On Jan. 14, MC USA released a report by D. Stafford and Associates, along with a list of findings by MC USA Executive Board staff. The findings state that Pastor Duane Yoder of Lindale Mennonite Church near Harrisonburg did not disclose everything he knew about allegations of sexual abuse that have been deemed credible.

According to the findings, “on multiple occasions, the decisions, actions and inactions of Pastor Yoder resulted in protection of [former Eastern Mennonite University vice president of enrollment Luke] Hartman rather than support for [Lauren] Shifflett,” who approached Lindale staff.

The investigation was formally requested by Virginia Mennonite Conference in May. On March 20, Lindale pastors and elders acknowledged that an alleged “abusive relationship” involving Hartman was brought to staff attention in August 2014 when Shifflett approached associate pastor Dawn Monger.

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.

‘Predator!’ Neighbor Of Paula Deen’s ‘Pedophile’ Priest Says He Hid Sick Double Life

GEORGIA
Radar Online

By Melissa Parrelli
Posted on Jan 19, 2017

As police dig into their suicide investigation of Paula Deen’s alleged “pedophile” priest brother-in-law , Henry Groover III, neighbors told RadarOnline.com that they are completely “shocked” and “saddened” to hear that an accused “sexual predator” was so close to their children for all these years!

Henry — known as Hank by longtime neighbors who told Radar they consider themselves “like family” — is the brother of Deen’s husband Michael Groover and the man Deen called her “spiritual advisor.” In fact, he had been spending time on the Groover family compound in Savannah for the past two months, according to neighbors, after bouncing back-and-forth between New Orleans and Texas for his work as a priest.

A few neighbors, who choose to remain anonymous, told Radar that they grew up with brothers Hank, Mike and Nick in the same neighborhood where the Groover family has had property for decades. One said they “have nothing but good things to say about the whole family.”

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When your beloved pastor/priest turns into your betrayer

NIGERIA
Pulse

Inemesit Udodiong

Growing up in Nigeria, the only person that offers the type of peace, security that you should expect from parents is your priest in my case, pastors in other cases.

In fact, some children/young adults would often run to the church for refuge when the home fails to provide the safety they need.

Thus, the church becomes this sanctuary in a hostile world, while the Men of God become the closest thing to our Father in Heaven.

So, it is safe to say that any form of sexual abuse by these highly regarded people is something that can not even be imagined.

Unfortunately, the sad, painful reality is that these things happen. Sometimes, our beloved pastor becomes our very own worst nightmare.

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Prete accusato orge, 9 donne coinvolte

ITALIA
ANSA

[A priest is accused of having orgies and nine women were involved.]

E’ una storia boccaccesca che pare senza fine quella delle orge in canonica organizzate da un prete padovano, don Andrea Contin, con parrocchiane e altri amici sacerdoti. Emerge dall’inchiesta che sono almeno nove le donne che avrebbero avuto rapporti sessuali con il religioso e con almeno un altro sacerdote: è stato lui a confessarlo, confermando agli investigatori di aver avuto incontri hard ‘a tre’ – con l’amante del parroco, e quest’ultimo – in un’altra parrocchia della provincia di Padova.

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Don Andrea Contin, l’amante: “Ha un figlio”. Altro prete che partecipava alle orge doveva celebrare le nozze di Belen

ITALIA
Il Fatto Quotidiano

Una rivelazione al giorno, una storia che sembra non aver fine. L’inchiesta su don Andrea Contin e la sua attività sessuale sfrenata riserva novità a getto continuo. Adesso trapela la notizia che a una delle sue amanti il parroco di San Lazzaro a Padova avrebbe rivelato di avere un figlio di 4 anni, non riconosciuto, ma che contribuisce a mantenere. E spunta il nome del secondo prete che avrebbe partecipato a orge in canonica, si tratta di don Roberto Cavazzana, parroco di Rovolon, il sacerdote che alcuni anni fa avrebbe dovuto celebrare le nozze di Belen Rodriguez. Ce n’è abbastanza da alimentare gossip e settimanali scandalistici. Non bastava un prete trasgressivo che si circondava di parrocchiane di mezza età e praticava scambi di coppia, adesso spunta il secondo religioso, un personaggio già noto alle cronache rosa.

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TheMediaReport.com SPECIAL REPORT *** Lawsuit by Ex-SNAP Insider Exposes Lawyer Kickback Schemes, Exploitation of Victims, and Corruption of SNAP [w/ Court Docs]

ILLINOIS
TheMediaReport

David Pierre

A callous disregard for victims. Financial kickbacks from Church-suing tort lawyers. Retaliation.

A stunning new civil lawsuit filed in Illinois by a former insider at SNAP confirms what many of us have known all along: SNAP is not an organization designed to help victims of clergy sex abuse but a gang hellbent on shaking down the Catholic Church through a seedy web of lawyer kickback schemes, lawsuits, and bigotry.

Dennis Coday at the National Catholic Reporter was the first to report the news of this stunning lawsuit.

Gretchen Hammond was hired by SNAP in 2010 as director of development to oversee the group’s fundraising operations and to boost cash inflow to the group. Ms. Hammond did so with great success, but the more she learned about the inner workings of SNAP, the more she came to learn that SNAP was not simply an innocent “victim advocacy group.” Hammond began “collecting documents in preparation of exposing SNAP’s acceptance of kickbacks from attorneys.”

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Opposition parties table motion on HIA Inquiry

NORTHERN IRELAND
News Letter

Opposition parties in Northern Ireland have requested the Speaker allow the Assembly to discuss the recommendations of the report from the Historical Institutional Abuse (HIA) Inquiry next week.

The motion, signed by the Ulster Unionist Party, SDLP, Alliance Party, Green Party, People Before Profit and TUV, would see the Assembly have the opportunity to discuss the report by the inquiry before dissolution.

Ulster Unionist Party leader, Mike Nesbitt said there has been anger that the report now cannot be actioned due to the current political crisis at Stomont. He added: “Of all the people who will suffer because of this current political impasse, victims and survivors of historical institutional abuse are at the forefront.

To prolong the wait for redress for those who suffered would be unforgivable. “The publication of the report will have been a day survivors have waited decades for. Yet they find themselves plunged into further uncertainty without an Executive in place to action the recommendations.

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Duterte tells Church: ‘Preach about drug problem’

PHILIPPINES
Sun.Star

By RUTH ABBEY GITA

IN A series of tirades against the Catholic Church, President Rodrigo Duterte called out the priests anew to preach about the effects of the drug problem, instead of lambasting his administration’s war on drugs.

“You keep on yakking. I heard there was one church allegedly exhibiting extrajudicial [killings],” Duterte said Thursday at the oath-taking of the Philippine National Police at the Palace’s Rizal Hall. …

Despite the Church’s call, the President remained unfazed and merely taunted the priests, attacking their luxurious lifestyle.

“What did the Church do? The Catholic Church has collected millions [of pesos] every week, all throughout many churches. Where is the people’s money? We [in the government] can explain where the money went. How about you?

The priests, bishops have decent clothing, cars, and house,” Duterte said. “Even your chalice is gold while your followers have nothing to eat. If you want, I can melt the Malacañang’s chandelier to give you an additional gold,” he added.

Duterte also accused the church of asking former president Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo to give them cars even though there was a principle of separation between the church and the state.

“Let’s be frank here. We don’t have to hide anything. You expose me, fine. I will expose you. Why is it okay [if you commit] mistake while it’s not okay for us? Bull**t. That’s absurd. Just help [if you want to address] extrajudicial killing,” Duterte 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.

After Pope blessing, Duterte challenges abusive priests to ‘showdown’

PHILIPPINES
Reuters

Thursday, 19 January 2017

By Neil Jerome Morales

MANILA, Jan 19 (Reuters) – Undeterred by a blessing from Pope Francis, Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte launched an angry rebuke on Thursday of priests and bishops critical of his drugs war, accusing them of homosexuality, corruption and of abusing children.

Duterte was furious over concerns by the Catholic Church of alleged extrajudicial killings during his crackdown and lambasted clergymen for denouncing him instead of using their influence to get people off drugs.

His no-holds-barred tirade came a day after one of Duterte’s top advisers met Pope Francis at the Vatican and said the Pontiff had told him he would bless the Philippines, and “also bless your president”.

In a speech to policemen, the firebrand leader of one of only two majority Catholic Asian countries challenged the church to a “showdown” and threatened to expose priests and bishops for a litany of abuses.

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Child sex abuse victim’s identity accidentally revealed by royal commission

AUSTRALIA
Brisbane Times

Jorge Branco

The royal commission into child sex abuse has broken its own non-publication order, revealing the identity of the victim of a notorious paedophile.

The former Brisbane Grammar School student was among many victims who gave statements or fronted the commission under a pseudonym to protect them.

But the royal commission failed to redact his name in a statement given to its investigation into the horrific abuse carried out by serial paedophiles Kevin Lynch and Gregory Robert Knight in two Brisbane private schools.

That statement, which was properly redacted after Fairfax Media brought it to the commission’s attention on Wednesday, had been published on its website, likely during hearings held across two weeks in November 2015.

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Sexual Assault in the Amazon

UNITED STATES
New York Magazine

By RACHEL MONROE
PHOTOGRAPH BY ALEXANDRA PAVLOVA
January 18, 2017

Ainlay Dixon, her husband, and three of their four children were in a town in central Ecuador, midway through a South American tour, when a guide approached and offered to take them on a four-day jungle excursion to see the “authentic” Amazon: an indigenous village led by a real shaman. To get there, the family took a 4×4 as far as they could down a rutted road, which soon dwindled to a trail; they made the rest of the way on foot. Eventually, they arrived at a small village where they were introduced to the village chief, a well-known shaman who’d had tourists flocking to his remote village ever since he’d been featured on a news show in Ecuador. That night, the shaman held a welcome ceremony for the new guests. They sat in a thatched roof hut while he blew pungent tobacco smoke on them, invoking a charm of protection. The novelty of the experience was tempered by the presence of another American — a strawberry-blonde Harvard Divinity School student named Lily Ross, who had been living in the village for the past few weeks, working for a grassroots nonprofit and researching shamanic practices.

Over the next few days, the Dixons’ children played soccer with the village kids. The family went on walks in the jungle with the shaman’s son, who rattled off the names and medicinal uses of the plants they came across. The day before the Dixons were set to depart, Ross asked Ainlay if they could speak privately. The two women found a space to sit in a guest hut, and Ross said that she and the shaman were in love. Something immediately struck Ainlay as off. “She would say that it was meant to be, and she would say that it was forever — but she was in a daze, talking almost in a monotone,” Ainlay said. Her concern piqued, Ainlay gently suggested that Ross was so isolated in this village, and so immersed in a culture that wasn’t her own, that perhaps she had lost her bearings a little bit. “That’s when she told me that they were bonded through this — I forget the name of the drink that they do. You know, the medicine. Through the medicine, they were bonded. And that he was really powerful.”

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Volunteer in nursery at Tarrant County church jailed on child sex charges

TEXAS
Dallas Morning News

Matt Peterson, Breaking news editor

A one-time volunteer in the nursery at a North Richland Hills church was arrested Wednesday on charges of child sexual abuse, police said.

Francisco Guevara, 65, of Colleyville was booked on two charges of continuous sexual abuse of a child and one count of indecency with a child.

He remains in the North Richland Hills Jail on $125,000 bail.

The allegations date back seven years when Guevara was working at St. John the Apostle Catholic Church, police said.

At the time of the alleged abuse, the victims were between 4 and 7 years old. Two of the offenses occurred in the nursery, police said, and the third took place in Colleyville.

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Former Church Volunteer Arrested For Sexual Offenses

TEXAS
CBS DFW

NORTH RICHLAND HILLS (CBSDFW.COM) – North Richland Hills police have arrested a former volunteer of St. John the Apostle Catholic Church for sexually related offenses.

Francisco Guevara, 65, of Colleyville, was arrested Wednesday on two charges for continuous sexual abuse of a child and one charge of indecency with a child.

His bond was set at a total of $125,000 for the charges.

Guevara is currently being held at the North Richland Hills Detention Facility.

Police said detectives and the church were made aware of multiple offenses after an “outcry statement” was made by one of the victims last July.

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Alleged victim of sexual abuse steps forward

RHODE ISLAND
Providence Journal

By Karen Lee Ziner
Journal Staff Writer

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Meg Yarbrough will join the Women’s March on Washington on Saturday as a personal statement against sexual abuse; and against a president whom she opposes.

The 48-year-old registered nurse is also shedding anonymity in her own allegations against former Episcopal priest Howard W. “Howdy” White Jr. Previously quoted anonymously in The Providence Journal, Yarbrough says she wants to use her name because “hiding implies I did something wrong, which I certainly did not.”

White, ex-assistant chaplain at St. George’s School in Middletown, was one of six named alleged perpetrators in a scandal involving widespread sexual abuse dating to the 1970s, that roiled the elite Episcopal school last year. He was charged last month with sexually assaulting a St. George’s student in Boston in 1973.

“I’m tired of being quiet,” Yarbrough said in a phone interview Wednesday from her suburban Washington home. While she cannot change the past, “what I can control is how my life is now. And this is my first step.”

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No public hearing into Bathurst schools’ historic sex abuse cases

AUSTRALIA
Western Advocate

JACINTA CARROLL
19 Jan 2017

CALLS to have a public hearing into historic child sexual abuse which occurred at three Bathurst schools have gone unanswered.

Retired Bathurst journalist Terry Jones says “he can’t believe” the Royal Commission investigating Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse will not hold an open public inquiry into any of the abuse which occurred at St Stanislaus’ College, The Scots School or All Saints’ College.

Prior to his 2012 retirement, Mr Jones covered court matters for the Western Advocate involving former staff from both St Stanislaus’ and All Saints’.

He said at the time, former St Stanislaus’ headmaster John Edwards opened his door “on every occasion” responding to media inquiries because “he wanted transparency”.

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Devon Dick | Wickedness vs weakness in sex scandal

JAMAICA
The Gleaner

January 19, 2017

The recent report that a married pastor has been charged with carnal abuse and rape of an underage child raises issues for Christians as to whether a paedophile is a sign of weakness, wickedness or sickness.

Glenn Tucker in the Letter of the Day (January 13) argued based on the work of James Cantor of the University of Toronto who theorises that paedophilia is caused by biological susceptibility. Tucker concludes that ‘nobody chooses to be a paedophile’. How he knows that not even one paedophile made a conscious decision? However, because one has a predisposition to certain action it does not mean he has no control over sexual urges. One does not have to act on one’s preferences and proclivities. If Tucker is correct, then we will no longer have just LGBT but we would have to add a ‘P’ for paedophile to make it LGBTP because some argue that nobody chooses to be LGBT. However, paedophiles make a conscious decision. It is not a sickness.

But is it a weakness? The Bible has different words for the English word ‘sin’. Weakness would be when one misses the mark and fall short of expectations. So when a man and a woman, who are not in love, become intimate out of lustful desires, then that could be considered weakness. However, there is wickedness which is rebelling against God’s will; engaging in lawlessness; deliberately and stubbornly engaging in iniquity. It is presumptuous sinning. It is flying in the face of God.

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Safety within our churches

GEORGIA
LaGrange News

by Melanie Ruberti
Melanie.ruberti@lagrangenews.com

LaGRANGE – The issue of child sexual abuse still remains a taboo topic of conversation in many churches around the nation – and in Georgia.

Sadly, the abuse is the number one reason congregations ended up in court between 2010 – 2014, according to Twin Cedars Youth and Family Services.

But the organization hopes to change that statistic and start conversations about sexual abuse in churches around Troup County.

Twin Cedars held a Church Safety Summit for members of the faith community and local law enforcement agencies on Tuesday at the Coleman Center off Lincoln Street. The group trained participants to recognize the signs a child may have been abused and how to prevent an incident from happening within their church.

“We hope these churches that are here today will take this information and talk to their congregation members about it,” explained Kim Adams, executive director of the Child Advocacy Center of Troup County. “We hope they’ll use the information to change or shape new policies regarding children within their church.”

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January 18, 2017

‘Stop subsidie voor stichting slachtoffers misbruik in kerk’

NEDERLAND
NRC

Jolanda van de Beld
17 januari 2017

Het ministerie van Volksgezondheid, Welzijn en Sport (VWS) gaat deze woensdag in gesprek met de stichting Koepel Landelijk Overleg Kerkelijk Kindermisbruik (KLOKK) na klachten van onder anderen een voormalig lid van de Raad van Toezicht. Deze Frans Verhallen, die in november uit onvrede opstapte als toezichthouder, vindt dat de overheidssubsidie voor de stichting moet worden stopgezet. Hij zegt zijn werkzaamheden als gevolg van „de halsstarrigheid van de directeur” te hebben gestaakt. De directeur, Guido Klabbers, „doet niet wat de Raad van Toezicht vraagt”, aldus Verhallen. „Ik word gebruikt als entourage.” Volgens betrokkenen zijn ook de andere twee leden van de Raad van Toezicht recentelijk opgestapt.

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Priest named in lawsuit commits suicide

GEORGIA
WTOC

Wednesday, January 18th 2017

SAVANNAH, GA (WTOC) –
The priest named in a recent lawsuit has committed suicide.

According to the Savannah-Chatham Metro Police Department, a suicide investigation was launched Tuesday into the death of Henry Groover III.

Groover was arrested in 2003 for exposing himself to a Metro officer.

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Sex abuse advocacy group SNAP sued by former employee

ILLINOIS
National Catholic Reporter

Dennis Coday | Jan. 18, 2017

A former employee of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests is suing the advocacy group, claiming she was fired after she learned that SNAP’s principal officers collude with attorneys representing sex abuse survivors and that SNAP accepts financial kickbacks for referring abuse victims to attorneys.

The charges by Gretchen Rachel Hammond were made in papers filed with the Circuit Court of Cook County, Illinois, yesterday, Jan. 17. Hammond worked as a director of development, raising funds for SNAP from the summer 2011 until February 2013 when she was fired.

The filings say Hammond was fired after she “learned … [that] SNAP does not focus on protecting or helping survivors — it exploits them. SNAP routinely accepts financial kickbacks from attorneys in the form of ‘donations.’ In exchange for the kickbacks, SNAP refers survivors as potential clients to attorneys, who then file lawsuits on behalf of the survivors against the Catholic Church. These cases often settle, to the financial benefit of the attorneys and, at times, to the financial benefit of SNAP, which has received direct payments from survivors’ settlements.”

Defendants in the lawsuit are SNAP, Barbara Blaine, the founder and president of SNAP, David Clohessy, the executive director of SNAP, and Barbara Dorris, SNAP’s outreach director.

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Former North Richland Hills church nursery worker accused in child sex abuse case

TEXAS
Star-Telegram

BY RYAN OSBORNE
rosborne@star-telegram.com

A former volunteer at St. John the Apostle Catholic Church in North Richland Hills was arrested Wednesday, accused of sexually abusing children while working in the church nursery.

Francisco Guevara, 65, of Colleyville faces two charges of continuous sexual abuse of a child and one charge of indecency with a child, police said.

The allegations stem from incidents that happened up to seven years ago when the victims were between 4 and 7 years old, police said.

Two of the offenses happened in North Richland Hills and one in Colleyville, police said.

Read more here: http://www.star-telegram.com/news/local/community/northeast-tarrant/article127288214.html#storylink=cpy

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Pastor, 2 others convicted of child abuse at Mobile religious private school

ALABAMA
AL.com

By The Associated Press
on January 18, 2017

Three people have been convicted on child abuse charges linked to a private church school on the Alabama coast.

A statement sent by twitter from Mobile County prosecutors Wednesday says 55-year-old Pastor John Young was convicted on five counts of aggravated child abuse related to the Saving Youth Academy, which was also called Restoration Youth Academy.

“A lot of us didn’t make it to freedom.”

Forty-eight-year-old William Knott and 42-year-old Aleshia Moffett were convicted on three counts each. Sentencing for all three is scheduled for Feb. 22.

Authorities say they three were linked to a Christian, boot camp-style residential school for troubled young people.

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Who Blames the Victim?

UNITED STATES
New York Times

When and Why We See Victims as Responsible: The Impact of Ideology on Attitudes Toward Victims

When and Why We See Victims as Responsible

By LAURA NIEMI and LIANE YOUNG
JUNE 24, 2016

IF you are mugged on a midnight stroll through the park, some people will feel compassion for you, while others will admonish you for being there in the first place. If you are raped by an acquaintance after getting drunk at a party, some will be moved by your misfortune, while others will ask why you put yourself in such a situation.

What determines whether someone feels sympathy or scorn for the victim of a crime? Is it a function of political affiliation? Of gender? Of the nature of the crime?

In a recent series of studies, we found that the critical factor lies in a particular set of moral values. Our findings, published on Thursday in the Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, show that the more strongly you privilege loyalty, obedience and purity — as opposed to values such as care and fairness — the more likely you are to blame the victim.

These two sets of values have been the object of much scholarly attention. Psychologists have found that when it comes to morality, some people privilege promoting the care of others and preventing unfair behaviors. These are “individualizing values,” as they can apply to any individual. Other people privilege loyalty, obedience and purity. These are “binding values,” as they promote the cohesion of your particular group or clan.

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Audit Finds Archdiocese Compliant With Charter For Protection of Children, Young People

NEW YORK
Catholic New York

By CHRISTIE L. CHICOINE

The archdiocese has been found in compliance with all audited articles within the U.S. Bishops’ Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People for the 2015-2016 audit period.

StoneBridge Business Partners of Rochester performed the on-site audit of the archdiocese Dec. 7-8, according to Edward Mechmann, director of the archdiocesan Safe Environment Program.

The conclusions are based upon inquiry, observation and review of specifically requested documentation to StoneBridge during the audit.

“It’s a real testament to how significant the charter has been to us,” and how committed both Cardinal Dolan and his predecessor, the late Cardinal Edward Egan, have been to it.

“It’s a very gratifying accomplishment,” Mechmann added. “It was a serious, good audit.”

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A mix of rage and compassion as news of child sexual assault charges sinks in

CANADA
Guelph Today

by: Rob O’Flanagan

From rage to compassion.

People living in close proximity to the Elora Road Christian Fellowship north of Guelph are trying to make sense of recent troubling news involving the church and school at 5696 Wellington Road 7.

Alleged sexual assault incidents involving children under the age of 16, and dating back to the 1980s, came to light this week.

Henry (Henk) Katerberg, founder and former pastor of the church, has been charged with sexual assault on a person under 16. Now an old man, Katerberg is said to still live in Guelph-Eramosa. He was pastor when the sexual assault is alleged to have taken place.

Arend “John” Dekorte, 66, of Fergus, faces a similar charge. He is the current principal of the Elora Road Christian School, and was a teacher between 1981-86, the time in question.

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Paula Deen ‘Pedophile’ Priest Suicide: Cops Begin Death Probe

GEORGIA
Radar Online

By MELISSA CRONIN & Dylan Howard
Posted on Jan 18, 2017

New details of the disturbing suicide of Paula Deen‘s “pedophile” priest brother-in-law are expected to emerge later this week, RadarOnline.com can reveal.

A rep for the Georgia Bureau of Investigations confirmed to Radar that the autopsy of Henry B. Groover, II – Deen’s brother-in-law and the man she called her “spiritual advisor” – will take place on January 19.

As Radar reported, Savannah police opened told Radar that a suicide investigation was opened on January 17.

Groover – the brother of Deen’s husband Michael Groover and a Dominican priest – committed suicide just days after he was served with an explosive new lawsuit that accused him of drugging and sexually assaulting a young man, Ancil Harvey Gordon III.

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Die wichtigsten Fakten seit 2010

DEUTSCHLAND
Focus

[The scandal surrounding the decade-long sexual abuse of many children and adolescents in institutions of the Catholic Church shattered throughout Germany. A review.]

Der Skandal um den jahrzehntelangen sexuellen Missbrauch vieler Kinder und Jugendlicher in Einrichtungen der katholischen Kirche erschütterte 2010 ganz Deutschland. Ein Rückblick:

Januar 2010: Am Berliner Canisius-Kolleg werden erste Verdachtsfälle bekannt. Ein Untersuchungsbericht enthüllt später, dass der Orden sexuelle und körperliche Gewalt gegen Kinder über Jahrzehnte vertuscht hat.

Februar 2010: Triers Bischof Stephan Ackermann wird zum Beauftragten der katholischen Kirche für Missbrauchsfälle ernannt.

März 2010: Der Skandal erreicht die Regensburger Domspatzen. Es wird bekannt, dass es auch bei dem weltberühmten Knabenchor Fälle von Missbrauch gegeben haben soll.

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Altri parroci alle orge con don Andrea

ITALIA
Corriere del Veneto

[Other pastors were at orgies with Don Andrea. A priest confesses: “I too was attending.”]

PADOVA Adesso agli atti c’è pure una confessione. Succede tutto venerdì pomeriggio. Interrogato in procura come persona informata sui fatti, un cinquantenne sacerdote e parroco di una comunità nei colli Euganei cede e ammette di essere lui «l’altro prete» ad aver partecipato alle orge di don Andrea Contin, l’ex parroco di San Lazzaro indagato per violenza privata e favoreggiamento della prostituzione. A parlare di lui, che non è indagato ma ha ammesso di aver fatto sesso con don Contin e la sua amante, è la stessa parrocchiana di 49 anni che il 6 dicembre ha vuotato il sacco nella stazione dei carabinieri di Padova principale, dando la mossa decisiva per far partire l’inchiesta. In una riga la donna indica con precisione l’identità del sacerdote e la sua parrocchia. La stessa dove don Contin la portava per fare sesso. Incontri a tre o di coppia, a cui in alcune occasioni l’ex parroco di San Lazzaro preferiva partecipare soltanto nel ruolo di attento spettatore.

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‘Lussuria’ gives paedophilia figures

ITALY
ANSA

New book by Fittipaldi, Holy See gets over 400 cases per year

(ANSA) – Rome, January 18 – Despite a crackdown announced by Pope Benedict XVI and Pope Francis, some 518 reports of ‘graviora delicta’ were made in 2015, “the vast majority of which involving sexual abuse of minors”, according to a document from the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the Catholic Church department that deals with priestly sex abuse. Sexual abuse within the Catholic Church, long covered up by ecclesiastical authorities, is the subject of Emiliano Fittipaldi’s new book ‘Lussuria’ (Lust), which will be in Italian bookshops from Thursday. The journalist, who went on trial and was acquitted for the ‘Vatileaks 2’ case and his previous book, ‘Avarizia’ (Avarice), has once again focused on the Vatican. ANSA has seen an advance copy of ‘Lussuria’, which recounts how the Vatican said that of the 587 cases opened in 2014 by its disciplinary office, over 500 involved the crimes of ‘the most dishonorable type’. In 2013, the first year of Pope Francis’s papacy, out of 522 complaints filed by dioceses and ecclesiastical institutes and bodies from “various parts of the world”, some 84.8% (443 cases) were ‘graviora delicta’, including “401 charges against priests with a child under 18 years old”, Monsignor Silvano Tomasi said in May 2014 at a Committee against Torture hearing that requested information on the issue.

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How Problematic Priests Are Warehoused

TEXAS
Houston Press

The Buried Abuse of the Galveston-Houston Archdiocese

BY CRAIG MALISOW

Since at least 1947, when a religious community called the Servants of the Paraclete opened one of the first treatment centers for priests grappling with pedophilia and substance abuse, dioceses have often warehoused problematic priests.

The “rehab” facility closest to Houston is Splendora’s Shalom Center, whose website states, “We genuinely seek to create a spirit of Gospel compassion, a nonjudgmental atmosphere and a safe environment where healing and growth can happen.”

The Shalom Center is included in a 1995 U.S. Conference of Bishops survey on treatment centers, in which it’s described as dealing mostly with priests suffering from “behaviors related to pornography, sexual exploitation, exhibitionism, voyeurism, and prostitution.” The survey, available on the Bishop Accountability website, notes that initial assessments and referrals are available for priests dealing with “pedophilia and ephebophilia [sexual attraction to adolescents].”

In the survey’s anonymous comments section, where diocesan officials can share their thoughts, one official wrote that Shalom is “sometimes too eager to ‘excuse’ priest offender[s]”

More severe cases, such as that of the Reverend Donald Leroy Stavinoha, are usually sent to facilities in New Mexico and Missouri.

On a May night in 1986, Stavinoha stopped by the home of a parishioner, a single mother whose young son he’d taken a special interest in, according to court records. For two years (beginning when the boy was seven), “Father Don” would stop by the home, which was within walking distance of Immaculate Heart of Mary in the East End, sometimes bringing San Juan candles. Once he performed a blessing of the house.

But on that night, Stavinoha told the nine-year-old boy’s mother that he was taking the boy “to play video games.”

Instead, Stavinoha went to 7-11, where he bought a Slurpee for the boy and a six-pack of beer for himself.

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New Hampshire sexual assault evidence bill meets strong opposition

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Concord Monitor

By ALYSSA DANDREA
Monitor staff
Tuesday, January 17, 2017

No one witnessed the repeated sexual abuse of Angie Semertgakis at the hands of her stepfather, beginning when she was just 9 years old.

Semertgakis, now in her 30s, testified Tuesday before the House Committee on Criminal Justice and Public Safety that she lived in “hate, fear, and shame,” and for years was afraid to tell her story. The abuse took place when no one was home and under the darkness of night, she told lawmakers in her plea for them to shoot down a bill that would require more proof in certain sexual assault cases.

When prosecutors filed the sexual assault case against Semertgakis’ abuser decades ago, he had no criminal record. If the case had gone to trial, jurors would have decided the man’s fate based on the girl’s testimony alone. In the end, he took a plea deal.

Existing law in New Hampshire does not require corroboration of a sexual assault. A bill introduced by a Wolfeboro Republican is proposing to change that by requiring corroboration in cases where the defendant has no prior convictions. The bill, however, leaves the definition of corroboration open-ended.

Semertgakis and many other opponents called the bill “dangerous” for New Hampshire.

“This bill is an abolishment to the empowerment of a child who finally breaks free from their offender and finds their voice and courage to talk about their abuse,” she said.

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Proposed change in sexual assault statute called ‘pedophile protection act’

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Union Leader

By DAVID SOLOMON
New Hampshire Union Leader

CONCORD — A proposal to change state law regarding evidence in sexual assault cases amounts to “nothing more than a pedophile protection act and rapist shield law,” according to Concord Police Detective Sean Ford.

But the sponsor of House Bill 106, Rep. William Marsh, R-Wolfeboro, says no one should be charged, let alone convicted, solely on the basis of an alleged victim’s testimony with no other corroboration.

The two men took turns at the witness table on Tuesday, as the House Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee heard nearly four hours of testimony on a bill that would require the allegations of victims to be corroborated by other evidence in sexual assault cases where the defendant has no prior conviction.

Marsh, a board certified ophthalmologist, said he was moved to sponsor the bill after Bow psychologist Foad Afshar was convicted last year of sexually assaulting a 12-year-old male patient in 2015 solely on the patient’s testimony.

The hearing room was packed with opponents of the bill, many mobilized by the N.H. Coalition Against Domestic and Sexual Violence, wearing pink stickers that read, “I believe victims. Oppose HB 106.”

– See more at: http://www.unionleader.com/state-government/Proposed-change-in-sexual-assault-statute-called-pedophile-protection-01182017#sthash.2AXUdJm1.dpuf

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Gardner vows to clear his name

JAMAICA
The Gleaner

The Rev Dr Paul Gardner, former president of the Moravian Church in Jamaica, has issued a statement indicating that he will be working assiduously to clear his name.

Gardner resigned last Thursday, two days after a woman wrote to the bishops of the Moravian church raising damning allegations against him. This follows the arrest and charge of their colleague pastor, Rupert Clarke, who was caught in a compromising position with a minor last year. Gardner’s deputy, Jermaine Gibson, against whom similar allegations were made, also resigned.

The former president described the allegations as “vile and unfounded” and noted that while he remains committed to the church, he has stepped aside to allow thorough investigations to take place.

“I have been committed to a life of service to my church and my country, which I always did with unquestioned integrity for more than 30 years,” he declared.

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Committee Identified To Probe Allegations Against Moravian Ministers

JAMAICA
The Gleaner

The acting president of the Moravian Church in Jamaica and the Cayman Islands Reverend Phyllis Smith says the members of an independent committee have now been identified to probe complaints against two senior ministers.

The President Dr Paul Gardner and Vice-President Jermaine Gibson resigned last week after the complaints were made in a seven-page email containing damning allegations against them.

The independent committee is to be mutually agreed by the complainant and the bishops of the Moravian Church.

The acting church president Reverend Phyllis Smith Seymour says the invitations to the prospective committee members are now being dispatched and she is hoping they can complete their deliberations and make their recommendation by April 17.

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‘HELL NO, I WON’T GO’: Hampton principal stays put

JAMAICA
Loop

BY: PAUL HENRY
January 18, 2017

Heather Murray — the Hampton High School principal, who came under intense public criticism for attending Moravian pastor Rupert Clarke’s bail hearing — has refused to take a recommended two-week leave stemming from the controversy.

Murray said that she didn’t agree to going on leave and will be staying put.

As such, Murray was on the job Monday after shooting off a letter — through her attorney Andre Earle of the form Earle & Wilson — informing Trevor Blake, chairman of the school board, over the weekend that she would not be going on the announced two weeks leave.

The leave should have commenced on Monday, January 16. The announcement of the leave followed a meeting with Education Minister Ruel Reid, Blake, Murray and other education officials.

The meeting was to discuss allegations that Murray interfered with journalists trying to capture images of Clarke being led from the St Elizabeth Parish Court on January 4.

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Inquiry calls for whistleblowers on child abuse

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

Stephen Naysmith

THE inquiry into historic cases of childhood abuse has called for whistleblowers to shed light on past offences as it emerged costs have risen by £1 million in the last three months.

As the Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry published updated details of how it will handle anonymity for witnesses and manage evidence, it urged foster carers, health staff and children’s home workers to come forward insisting they will be protected.

It comes as overall costs for the inquiry rose to £3.5m.

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Child abuse inquiry costs soar by £1m in 3 months

SCOTLAND
The Times

Will Humphries
January 18 2017
The Times

The cost of the historical child abuse inquiry in Scotland has risen by £1 million over the past three months.

The inquiry has published updated details of how it will handle anonymity for witnesses and manage evidence, urging foster carers, health staff and children’s home workers to come forward, insisting they will be protected.

The update also shows that overall costs for the Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry have risen to £3.5 million, with more than £1 million spent in the last three months of 2016.

Set up by the Scottish government in October 2015, the inquiry is expected to last four years. Lady Smith, the chairwoman, is expected to hold a preliminary hearing on January 31.

Campaigners believe that there are potentially thousands of survivors in Scotland and overseas who could provide evidence to the inquiry, although the number of those who have so far come forward has not been disclosed.

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Gardner’s lawyer says accusations ‘completely untrue’

JAMAICA
Jamaica Observer

ALPHEA SAUNDERS Senior staff reporter saundersa@jamaicaobserver.com

Wednesday, January 18, 2017

Attorney Lambert Johnson yesterday dismissed accusations of sexual misconduct made by a church member against his client, Dr Paul Gardner, who last week stepped down as head of the Moravian Church in Jamaica in order to facilitate a probe.

“They are completely untrue, have no basis in reality or in fact, and seem to be the wild imaginings of someone who is just determined to cause him harm,” Johnson told the Jamaica Observer yesterday.

He also denied that the same congregant had written a letter of complaint against Gardner to the church board. “No such letter was written to the church,” he emphasised.

Gardner has also been accused by a former minister of the church, Dr Canute Thompson, of not acting on concerns raised by him about sexual misconduct in the church, and specifically in relation to Rev Rupert Clarke, who is now at the centre of a scandal that has hit the church. Clarke was arrested on rape and carnal abuse charges in December last year.

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Ex-pastor, principal of religious institution charged in sex assaults

CANADA
Daily Courier

GUELPH-ERAMOSA TOWNSHIP, Ont. – Police have laid sexual assault charges against a former pastor and the current principal at a religious institution near Guelph, Ont.

Provincial police say they began investing allegations of sexual assault believed to have taken place between 1981 and 1986.

They say the alleged offences took place at the Elora Road Christian Fellowship Church and the Elora Road Christian school, which are both in the same building.

Church founder and former pastor Henry “Henk” Katerberg, 80, has been charged with sexual assault on a child under 16.

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Eddie Long And The Black Church’s Legacy Of Child Sexual Abuse

GEORGIA
Atlanta Daily World

Ahmad Greene-Hayes

On Sunday, January 15, Bishop Eddie Long passed away. Long was the prominent Atlanta pastor of New Birth Missionary Baptist Church, which at its height, boasted a congregation of over 25,000. A man of many controversies, Long had been closely scrutinized by the United States Senate for potentially profiting off of his church’s tax-exempt status.

He also came under fire for his homo-antagonistic sermons and his book, Deliver Me From Adam, in which he cloaks homophobia, misogyny and patriarchy in the lexicon of self-help. Long’s quest to cast out the spirit of homosexuality, however, did not stop there. Some have argued that he fathered and pastored a homophobic theological legacy at New Birth. In 2005, for example, he hosted his infamous “Sexual Orientation and Reorientation Conference” to convert LGBTQ Christians into heterosexuals.

Just five years later, in 2010, Long was accused of sexually abusing four young men—Anthony Flagg, Spencer LeGrande, Jamal Parris and Maurice Robinson, who were teenagers at the time of their accusations. Like most predators, Long allegedly “groomed” these teenage boys into nonconsensual sexual activity. As noted on child rape survivor Oprah Winfrey’s website, grooming includes targeting vulnerable victims, gaining the victim’s trust, filling a need or void, isolating the child, sexualizing the relationship and maintaining control. Long was said to have used his prosperity gospel-accrued wealth to lavish Flagg, LeGrande, Parris and Robinson with private planes, expensive jewelry and luxury hotel rooms. According to the lawsuits brought by the young men, he then exploited his identity as a pastor and spiritual leader to add God’s blessing on his sexually perverse behaviors.

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Ex-pastor, principal of Guelph-area Christian school charged in alleged sex assaults

CANADA
CTV

Police have charged a former pastor and the current principal of the Elora Road Christian Fellowship and School with sexual assault in alleged crimes dating back to the 1980s.

Henk Katerberg, 80, of Guelph-Eramosa Township, used to lead the Elora Road Christian Fellowship Church, and has been charged with sexual assault on a child under 16.

John Dekorte, 66, of Fergus, currently serves as principal of the attached school, and faces two counts of the same charge.

Police say the alleged offences took place between 1981 and 1986 at the church and school, which are located in the same building on Wellington Road 7 near Highway 6.

Katerberg spoke to CTV and said he was innocent. Dekorte’s wife denied the charges on her husband’s behalf.

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Hampton Board slaps Reid, doesn’t support Murray going on leave

JAMAICA
Jamaica Observer

The Hampton School Board has delivered a slap to the face of Education Minister Ruel Reid, stating that it does not support Principal Heather Murray going on leave, as indicated by the minister last week.

The board also made reference to a January 13 letter from Reid, saying that it did not reflect an accurate outline of the key decisions and agreements made in a meeting on January 11 between the minister, the board and Murray.

“At no time was the issue of the Child Care and Protection Act mentioned or raised,” Board Chairman Trevor Blake stated in a January 16 letter to Reid.

“There could never have been any agreement that the action of Mrs Murray was inconsistent with the principle of the Act, and we categorically refute that assertion,” Blake said.

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UPDATE: Music director at a Queens church charged with sexually abusing girl during private lessons

NEW YORK
QNS

By Emily Davenport / edavenport@qns.com / Tuesday, January 17, 2017

The music director of a Jamaica church has been charged with sexually abusing a young girl while giving her private singing and piano lessons at her home.

“Instead of being a role model to all of his students, the defendant is accused of taking advantage of his position as a church choir director to gain access to a young child for his own sexual gratification. These are deeply disturbing allegations that, if proven true, are deserving of severe punishment,” Queens District Attorney Richard A. Brown said in a statement on Tuesday, Jan. 17.

According to police, 69-year-old Rafael Diaz, music director for the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary Parish, was arrested at his Forest Hills home on Saturday, Jan. 14.

Published reports indicated that the victim, who was a parishioner and is now 15, told investigators that, when she was 11 and 12 years old, Diaz would use four fingers to touch her diaphragm and fondle her breast over her clothes while making her sing different notes. Diaz also asked the victim if she had started her menstrual cycle and then allegedly put his hand over her clothing on her private parts.

Police say that the abuse took place over the course of two years. It is alleged that after the victim told her father what occurred, he and Diaz had a controlled telephone conversation in which Diaz allegedly admitted that he touched the daughter and that it happened five or six times. It ended when the piano and singing lessons stopped.The victim’s father reported the abuse to the church on Thursday, Jan. 12, after he was made aware of it by the victim.

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January 17, 2017

THE BURIED ABUSE OF THE GALVESTON-HOUSTON ARCHDIOCESE

(MEXICO)
TARRANT [Texas]

January 17, 2017

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Houston Press

On the phone, the former Houston priest didn’t recognize the name of the 13-year-old boy he molested in 1978.

So much time has passed since that third encounter with the boy, in the Town & Country Village movie theater in Memorial City, where the priest slid his hand into the boy’s jeans and masturbated him. It’s hard to keep track of these things, and besides, the priest says, it’s old news.

Father Walter Dayton Salisbury, now 85, has moved on with his life since pleading no contest and serving three years’ probation. He left Houstonin the early 1980s for Washington, D.C., where he was charged with molesting another boy, then spent some time at a parish outside Mobile, where he was accused again, but not charged. He eventually returned to his home city, Bar Harbor, a quaint little town in coastal Maine, where he found an apartment across the street from a K-8 public school. He became active in the community, joining the Order of the Founders of the Patriots of America, whose website states that membership is open to men of “good moral character and reputation.”

Salisbury was one of more than a dozen priests named in a November 2016 press release by the local chapter of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, as part of the group’s push for the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston to publicly identify, for the first time, all of its priests who’d been accused or convicted of crimes against children.

When the Houston Press reached Salisbury in October for a comment on the group’s efforts, he chuckled. “I’m certainly not going to say anything to vigilantes, no,” he said in a New England accent, referring to the group (known as SNAP).

When the Press mentioned his Houston victim’s name, Salisbury said, “That doesn’t ring a bell at all.”

Told who it was, Salisbury said, “Good Lord, I mean…that’s 30 years ago, or whatever it is.”

Unlike Salisbury, his victim couldn’t so easily forget a name.

“The first time I ever ejaculated was from some dirty old man’s hand,” the victim told the Press in December. (We’re calling the man, who asked not to be named, “Darren.”)

He also never forgot about how, when the movie was over and Salisbury was driving him back home, the priest – who served for decades as the chaplain of Texas Southern University’s Catholic Newman Center – pulled over in an alley, unzipped his pants and put the boy’s hand around his penis.

Funny thing was, Darren – a bit of a rebel, which is why his parents scheduled counseling with a priest in the first place – had a knife in his pocket at the time. He could’ve cut the old man. But, he said, “I was scared to death.” He was a problem child back then – he’d already been arrested for burglary. He knew Salisbury could hold that over his head. “I was in trouble already,” Darren said. “I didn’t want to resist anything, because he had that, like, against me.”

Like most of the known priests who were accused of crimes against children while serving in the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston, Salisbury appears unscathed by past acts. Salisbury’s victim wasn’t as lucky. While he’s relatively happy now, there were hard years – alcohol, divorce. But, unlike with some other victims researched for this story, those hard years didn’t drive him to a premature death.

Unlike other dioceses throughout the country – Boston, Los Angeles, Orange County, among others – Galveston-Houston has escaped scandal. Advocates say this archdiocese has avoided scrutiny largely because of Texas’s rigid statute of limitations, which has stifled the kind of successful civil litigation that has forced other bishops and cardinals into disclosing the records of hundreds of predators.

As Anne Barrett Doyle, co-director of the Massachusetts-based nonprofit Bishop Accountability, puts it, “Texas has one of the most victim-hostile statute[s] of limitations in the country.”

Although the religious order Salisbury worked under – the Josephites – and the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland, Maine, released statements on Salisbury’s crimes in 2004, Houston’s top Catholic clergy have acknowledged the diocese’s predator priests only if forced to through criminal charges, civil lawsuits or media reports.

The furthest nod toward transparency was in 2004, when then-bishop Joseph Fiorenza stated that 22 priests between 1958 and 2004 had been “credibly accused.” Their names, work histories or criminal records (if any) were not released.

But victims’ advocates believe that number is unrealistically low. As Barrett Doyle told the Press, “My educated guess is that an extraordinary amount of information about abuse of children by priests remains buried in that archdiocese.”

For years, the archdiocese has refused to identify its predator priests, and likely never will. But something happened last November to re-energize Houston SNAP members’ push for disclosure: Daniel DiNardo, archbishop of Galveston-Houston and a cardinal, was elected president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.

After SNAP reached out to local media about the push for transparency, the Press looked into some of the names on its list.

With the help of records compiled by Bishop Accountability, the reviewed civil and criminal case files of some of the priests who paid very little for their crimes or escaped punishment entirely. Predators who, thanks to the archdiocese, were able to live in relative peace, while their victims are still suffering.

*****

It took 43 years, but Michael Norris finally got a sense of justice.

Norris, the head of Houston’s SNAP chapter, was able to achieve this in part because, unlike other Houston SNAP members, his abuse occurred in his home state of Kentucky.

It was there that prosecutors charged 74-year-old priest Joseph Hemmerle with molesting Norris at a summer camp in 1973. Testifying on the stand, Norris was able to tell jurors exactly what he had told the Louisville Diocese in 2001, and which was ignored: that Hemmerle, a high school teacher and camp counselor, called Norris into his cabin one night under the pretense of treating the ten-year-old boy for poison ivy, and had Norris strip and stand on a stool. The priest then used his hands and mouth on the boy.

Hemmerle was found guilty in November, with the jury recommending a seven-year sentence. The priest will be formally sentenced in February. He has not been defrocked.

At trial, Hemmerle’s attorney accused Norris of making up a story for attention. But Norris said he felt utterly alone when Hemmerle was charged. “I’ve had more people come to me and tell me, ‘Hey, I believed you all along,'” Norris said. “I didn’t hear that up until he was found guilty.”

Norris knows that the Hemmerle case couldn’t be duplicated in Houston. All he wants the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston to do is identify the credibly accused priests and place them in positions away from children.

“If someone comes forward who was abused back in the ’70s or ’80s, they’re SOL,” Norris said. “There’s not a whole lot of recourse that they can [take]. But ultimately, I can tell you from experience: You’re not going to go public just to go public. You don’t do this to get attention – you’re trying to do the right thing. You’re trying to get the church to do the right thing.”

DiNardo and other officials with the archdiocese declined to comment for this story. But the archdiocese provided a statement:

“The Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston fully cooperates with civil authorities regarding any allegations of clergy sexual abuse with minors. Since the adoption of the Dallas Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People by the U.S. Bishops in 2002, the Archdiocese has provided ongoing child abuse awareness and prevention training to all of its priests, deacons and employees, as well as parents and those volunteers who work with children?The Archdiocese also has an Archdiocesan Review Board, which meets quarterly to review any allegations of sexual abuse of a minor by a member of the clergy. In addition, the Archdiocese has a Victim Assistance Coordinator who provides outreach and facilitates counseling services to those who have been a victim of clergy abuse as a minor.”

The archdiocese’s tendency to protect accused child molesters is rooted in the checkered history of former bishop Joseph Fiorenza, whose participation in the Catholic Church’s scandal began before he moved to Houston.

While serving as the bishop of San Angelo in 1982, Fiorenza cautiously welcomed a known serial child molester into the fold. That priest, David Holley, was one of the Catholic Church scandal’s most notorious criminals, and he was ultimately convicted in 1993 of sexually abusing eight boys in New Mexico, between 1972 and 1974. He was sentenced to 275 years in prison, where he died in 2008. (Holley’s story, and that of his outspoken victim, Phil Saviano, is highlighted in the 2015 film Spotlight).

Letters among bishops regarding Holley’s proclivities, made public years after the fact, show that in 1982, Fiorenza wrote to Worcester, Massachusetts, Bishop Bernard Flanagan that he was “aware of some of [Holley’s] past difficulties, yet I do not know the extent of his problems.”

But, Fiorenza wrote, “With our shortage of priests, I am willing to risk incardinating him.”

Two years later, when Fiorenza was the bishop of Galveston-Houston, he allowed a priest who had abused a 13-year-old girl in Navasota to hold a post in a Galena Park parish. In 1990, the priest, Noe Guzman, was convicted of sexual abuse of a child, and served 90 days in the Grimes County Jail.

According to court records, the incident was investigated by Monsignor Daniel Scheel, who never bothered to learn the girl’s name.

Scheel said in his deposition that his major concern was the embarrassment the church might suffer if word of the sexual assault got out. His solution was to reprimand Guzman and tell him to stay away from the girl.

Guzman was never defrocked. His whereabouts are unknown, and he is one of the priests that Houston SNAP is asking the archdiocese to publicly acknowledge.

Although Fiorenza was deposed in the Guzman case, his deposition is not available in the Harris County District Clerk’s online record system. However, a 1992 Houston Chronicle article about the case states, “Fiorenza, in his deposition, said he had left the matter in Scheel’s hands.”

The Chronicle article also noted Scheel’s weak excuse for how the case was handled. “Things were a lot different then,” Scheel said. “We didn’t know about the tendency of these people to repeat their acts.”

*****

In 2004, as part of a historic, yet hardly transparent, initiative, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops tasked the John Jay College of Criminal Justice with producing a report on abuse in the church, based largely on self-reported numbers. Covering the years 1950-2002, the report indicated that 4,392 priests and deacons had been accused of child sexual abuse, or 2.7 percent of the overall population of Catholic clergy working during that time.

That rate has risen to 5.6 percent today, according to Anne Barrett Doyle of Bishop Accountability, which calculates and reports the numbers annually. The Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston has never amended its figure of 22 priests and 4 deacons – a 1 percent rate.

“That is just insane,” Barrett Doyle said, noting that in the small diocese of Manchester, New Hampshire, “We know of more than 90 accused clergy.”

The Manchester diocese’s abuse and cover-ups were made public by the New Hampshire Attorney General’s Office, which, following media reports in 2002, convened a grand jury and subpoenaed roughly 9,000 pages of documents showing how the diocese regularly covered up allegations of abuse.

In 2003, just before the AG’s Office was about to seek indictments on multiple counts of endangering the welfare of a child, the diocese entered into an agreement with the AG’s Office requiring the diocese to submit to annual audits for five years, as well as other governmental oversight. Through the AG’s oversight, the diocese has identified 98 priests accused of sexual abuse.

But Fiorenza was never pressured into such disclosure, nor was his successor, Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, whom Barrett Doyle calls “one of the less-transparent bishops in the United States.”

For one thing, Barrett Doyle said, DiNardo has not updated Fiorenza’s “absolutely preposterous” 2004 report on credibly accused clergy.

And, she said, in addition to being a low number, it’s useless without knowing all of the priests’ names.

“We don’t even know who they are,” Barrett Doyle said. “This is actually a public safety crisis?We don’t know where those perpetrators are, not to mention the dozens, if not hundreds, of allegations, that the archdiocese has rejected and they aren’t counting as ‘credible.'”

Although the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ policy defines sexual abuse, the archdiocese has historically had a fuzzy way of interpreting that policy. According to the conference’s 2002 policy and the resulting John Jay report, sexual abuse was defined as any instance where an adult used a child for “sexual gratification.” On paper, it’s a tough measure – there doesn’t even need to be physical contact in order for it to be considered abuse.

It’s not known if Father Noe Guzman, who abused the 13-year-old girl in Navasota, is on the list, even though archdiocesan officials went so far as to acknowledge that, at the very least, a 43-year-old man was moments away from penetrating a child.

Similarly, archdiocesan officials acknowledged, as vaguely as possible, that Father John Keller, who is currently the pastor at Prince of Peace Catholic Community near Tomball, inappropriately touched a 16-year-old boy at a parish in Spring.

The accusation surfaced in 2002, when the victim came forward after 20 years and claimed that, while on a trip out of town, Keller gave him wine, invited him into his bed and fondled him. Keller then allegedly wrote a series of love letters to the boy. (Keller did not respond to requests for comment, and the accuser declined to comment for this story.)

In June 2003, the Dallas Morning News obtained a copy of a letter that Fiorenza wrote to the victim earlier that year, in which Fiorenza stated that archdiocesan officials questioned Keller.

The newspaper reported that “Father Keller told the review board he had no sexual intent in ‘holding’ the teen, according to Bishop Fiorenza’sletter to the accuser.”

The bishop said that Keller denied any sexual abuse, but did admit that he “crossed a proper boundary by holding you [the victim] in a manner inappropriate for a priest,” according to the article, which also noted that Fiorenza wrote that Keller would require counseling “to ensure he is not at risk for future inappropriate behavior.”

Keller’s accuser was incredulous.

“He put his hands down my pants,” the man told the Morning News. “How could that not be sexual intent?”

In November, a handful of Houston SNAP members picketed outside Prince of Peace, holding signs saying things like “A Predator Priest Has Been in Your Parish.”

“They called the cops on us and had us leave,” chapter president Michael Norris said. “?We weren’t hurting anyone. All we were doing was trying to make people aware – keep your kids away from these people. Don’t trust them.”

Keller was not the only priest at Prince of Peace ever accused of inappropriate behavior with a child. In 1993, the parents of a young girl, identified only as “Jane Doe,” sued the archdiocese and Father Robert Ramon. The archdiocese did a masterful job of making sure the suit was not only quietly settled in 1995 but virtually wiped from the record: The suit does not turn up in a search of the Harris County District Clerk’s website. But the case’s docket history, which contains no specific information, is available on a different county database.

The Press only learned of its existence through the posting of a case number and brief description on the Bishop Accountability website. According to the site, Ramon was “accused of sexual misconduct with a minor female in 1991. Parish personnel were notified immediately; the diocese investigated and determined there was no evidence. Per the girl’s family’s request, the diocese provided counseling. The family’s contact w/ counselor ceased within few months and family threatened litigation.”

While attorneys on either side of a civil case can ask for certain records to be sealed, the motion to seal cannot itself be sealed. But, according to an attorney for the Harris County District Clerk’s Office, the entire Ramon file was sealed, including the motion, and it can only be unsealed with an order from the judge who presided over the case. The judge has since retired. Ramon died in 2014. The lawyer for the girl’s parents declined to comment.

There’s virtually no way to determine how many other lawsuits have been similarly buried.

*****

A case that wasn’t sealed, involving the late Reverend Dennis Lee Peterson, is perhaps the most disturbing publicly available complaint against the archdiocese.

According to the man known as John Doe II in a 1999 lawsuit, he was first molested by Peterson when he was 14 and Peterson spent the night in his family’s home.

A social worker who operated a group home for troubled male teens before his ordination in 1973, Peterson had an eye for boys who needed special counseling. From 1969 to 1983, he oversaw the Houston Community Youth Center on Irvington Boulevard on the north side of Houston. He would later become a chaplain at the Harris County Juvenile Justice Center. He took boys on camping trips. Wherever there was a troubled boy, Peterson was there.

John Doe II – whom we’ll call Tim – met Peterson in 1972, when Tim’s parents felt the 14-year-old boy was running with the wrong crowd. According to Tim’s psychological evaluations contained in the court records, his parents often invited Peterson over for drinks. He liked Cuba libres. One night, after a few too many, Peterson decided to crash at the house.

Tim had taken the folding couch for the night. But, he told the psychologist, he was awakened by Peterson’s hands on his body. Tim was half in a daze, but he could feel that Peterson had ejaculated on him.

“You are so young – how can you keep it so long this way?” Peterson asked.

In the morning, Peterson was gone.

From that point on, Tim spent an average of two days a week with the priest, who sometimes left a $20 bill after their special sessions. Peterson plied the boy with Valium, marijuana and beer. He made the boy fellate him, and he would reciprocate.

Sometimes, Tim told the psychologist, “he would take his penis and put it against mine and…just go back and forth on himself.”

After these encounters, Tim said, Peterson would “jump in the shower…because he felt dirty after.”

Peterson often apologized to Tim for the size of his penis, which he felt was inadequate, saying, “I know I am older than you, and I am sorry that I am smaller than you?You will make a lot of women happy when you are older.”

Of course, that wasn’t true. Tim grew into a broken, alcoholic, drug-addicted mess who couldn’t truly make anyone happy, most of all himself. His third wife loved him, but she was a caretaker. She spent their few years together talking him down from the ledge.

At first Tim liked the attention from Peterson. But that dissipated. He felt rotten inside, especially when, according to his third wife, he learned that his sister, his younger brother and two of his friends – altar boys – were also being abused by Peterson.

“His two friends managed to get away from Dennis by killing themselves,” she told the Press. “[Tim] attempted to kill himself by shooting himself in the stomach. But he wasn’t able to get away. He didn’t die.”

Tim was afraid to tell his parents, assuming no one would believe him over a priest. The fear only increased after Peterson, who had a close relationship with deputy constables in Pasadena, began wearing guns on his hip and ankle. (Court records show that Peterson’s accusers believed he was a deputy constable, but it’s unclear if he was ever a licensed peace officer.)

Tim temporarily escaped by joining the Navy, but he could never get rid of Peterson, who resumed the abuse when Tim was an adult. A grown man, Tim was powerless over the man who had completely dominated him as a child.

“Even after we were married, Father Dennis – before I ever knew anything about it – would call the house, and [Tim] would just go into a rage,” his widow said. “And I didn’t understand why?One point, I remember him, as a grown man?curling up on the floor and crying.”

Later, when Tim finally told his wife about the abuse, she learned that Peterson had always told Tim that it was his fault, because he tempted the priest.

Sometimes, on especially hard benders, Tim would talk about killing Peterson “so he wouldn’t do this to anyone else,” the widow said.

Tim told the psychologist in November 1999 that, two months earlier, Peterson had called his sister to say he got a penis enlargement. He had no idea why he told his sister, who, along with his younger brother, was a plaintiff in the lawsuit.

They were joined in the suit by a man we’re calling Gary, who came into Peterson’s orbit under especially haunting circumstances.

One of four boys, Gary was the son of strict parents who were active in their Clear Lake church. They were the kind of parents who saw damnation on the horizon when, in 1985, they found 13-year-old Gary in possession of a quarter-ounce bag of pot. They called the police, and sent the boy to another active church member, David Hoop.

Hoop was a close family friend and active in church youth groups. But instead of counseling Gary, Hoop molested him. He gave Gary marijuana, orally copulated him and sucked on his toes. He loved toes.

Years later, Gary would tell his psychologist that Hoop “provided a security blanket – allowed me to escape from reality by giving me access to the drugs.”

His parents also must have felt Gary was getting the guidance he needed, because they soon sent another son to Hoop. But the boy told his parents that Hoop did things to him that he didn’t like. In 1988, Hoop was convicted of indecency with a child and sentenced to five years’ probation and a $500 fine.

Within a year, Hoop left the country and settled in the Bosnian town of Medjugorje, where, in 1981, a group of boys said they saw the apparition of the Virgin Mary appear on a mountaintop. The town became a tourist destination for Christian pilgrims. Hoop found a way to milk these pilgrims for money; he appears in a 1995 Harper’s magazine article about the legend surrounding the apparition. The story mentions Hoop’s gift store, Devotions, at the foot of the mountain, where pilgrims can buy all sorts of chintzy posters, CDs and figurines.

Gary’s parents believed their son would need counseling after what Hoop put him through. A police officer who attended their church recommended Peterson, who had a knack for troubled kids like Gary.

At their first session, when Gary told Peterson about Hoop, the priest brushed his hands on Gary’s crotch and asked, “Was it something like this that happened?”

Gary was both sickened by Peterson and intimidated by the pistol on his hip. He ran away from home and managed to avoid Peterson for several years, sticking mostly to the streets, where he turned tricks and kept himself as high as possible on any substance he could get.

In 1989, at age 17, Gary overdosed on barbiturates and wound up at Ben Taub. Upon his release, he called Peterson, who offered to put him up at his place. That night, Gary told the psychologist in the 1999 lawsuit, Peterson came into the guest bedroom, straddled Gary and made the teen touch his penis.

“I told him I was going crazy and couldn’t handle what was going on,” Gary told the psychologist. “He got scared and went to his room and locked the door.”

Afterward, Gary felt tremendous guilt. A few days later, he went to Peterson at the church for confession. Peterson told the teen that God had forgiven him.

The sexual abuse continued for several more years, even after Gary married for the first time. Like Tim, he couldn’t shake Peterson.

Then, in June 1996, Peterson called Gary in an agitated state.

“The priest was frightened about letters he received from Mr. Hoop,” the psychologist wrote. “Hoop threatened that he was going to expose [Gary] and the priest’s sexual relationship.” Peterson tried to convince Gary to fly to Bosnia and kill Hoop. Gary briefly considered it, but instead got sidetracked with another drug binge. That was only exacerbated when Peterson later called him with news about his penis enlargement.

In 1999, around the time of the civil suit against Peterson, Gary told police about the abuse. According to an affidavit, investigators asked Gary to call Peterson, get him to talk about the abuse, and record the conversation.

“I told Dennis Peterson that I needed to speak with him regarding the sexual acts that he performed on me,” Gary stated in his affidavit. “[Peterson’s] response to me was ‘Why do you want to talk to me about that?’ This conversation was recorded and turned over to the Houstonpolice.”

When Peterson was deposed by Gary’s attorney around this time, the priest refused to discuss Gary. When asked about the date of his penis surgery, Peterson invoked his Fifth Amendment rights.

In October 1999, Peterson was charged with sexually assaulting Gary on two occasions in 1997, when Gary was 25. A grand jury declined to indict.

Because grand jury proceedings are secret, it’s unclear what evidence prosecutors brought forth. Records in the civil case show that Tim testified, but there’s no mention of Gary testifying. It’s unknown if the grand jury heard the tape-recorded telephone call, or if they heard from Gary’s wife, who was listening on another phone at the time of the call.

But the prosecution seems to have missed out on a key component of the case: David Hoop.

Gary’s psychologist’s notes show that Hoop was arrested for child molestation in Bosnia in 1998, and authorities there had contacted the Harris County District Attorney’s Office. They wanted to know if they should extradite. But by that time, according to Harris County District Clerk records, Hoop’s probation had been “unsatisfactorily terminated,” meaning that, even though he had fled the country, Houston authorities no longer had any interest in him.

Additionally, according to the psychologist’s notes, the district attorney asked Gary’s parents if they wanted Hoop extradited.

“They declined, deciding that they preferred that Hoop remain out of the country,” according to the notes.

However, by the time Peterson was charged in October 1999, Hoop was, by at least one account, back in the country.

According to a London-based journalist who interviewed Hoop in late 1998 and early 1999 while on assignment in Medjugorje, Hoop avoided serving any time in Bosnia, and flew to Liverpool shortly after the child-molestation charges. The journalist, who asked not to be named, said Hoop then relocated to Los Gatos, California.

It’s unclear if the prosecutor in Peterson’s case even knew that the priest and Hoop shared a victim, and that Hoop could have corroborated Gary’sallegations. Either way, Peterson walked.

The archdiocese managed to get the civil case dismissed, and in 2000, the 14th Circuit Court of Appeals kicked the case back to the trial court, ordering the parties to enter into mediation. The case was settled for an undisclosed amount.

Gary died in 2003, at age 30. Shortly before he died, still unable to shake the guilt that followed him to his grave, he went to the home of David Hoop’s ex-wife and asked for forgiveness.

That same year, Gary’s widow opened The New York Times and read a story about Robert Scamardo, a Houston attorney who had for years defended the archdiocese and who stuck up for Peterson in a 2000 article in the Houston Chronicle.

Scamardo had decided to come clean about the sexual abuse he said he suffered at the hands of an Austin priest when he was a teen. According to Scamardo, the Times reported, “most victims’ cases were beyond the statute of limitations, so the diocese could offer little to settle a case, perhaps just the cost of a short course of therapy?The settlements always had a confidentiality clause,” which specified “how much the victim would have to pay the church for breaking confidentiality.”

Scamardo made sure that wouldn’t happen to him though, telling the Times that he settled with the Diocese of Austin for $250,000.

Gary’s widow told the Press that she was so bothered by Scamardo’s story that she wrote him a letter. “We didn’t get all of that assistance that he got for him and his family, and I was angry about that.”

Scamardo was unavailable for comment.

According to Tim’s widow, “After the lawyers and all that, [Tim] got somewhere between $20-$30,000, and he literally just gave it away?His mind couldn’t cope with being paid hush money, and he didn’t want anything to do with it.”

He died in 2010 of cirrhosis. He was 42.

Peterson died in 2007. He was 60. It’s unclear if he was one of the “credibly accused” priests on the archdiocese’s list. There is no record of the archdiocese’s reaching out to other potential victims of a man who had nearly unparalleled access to troubled boys for four decades.

Two years before Peterson’s death, he and the archdiocese were sued by a man who said that Peterson had sexually abused him years earlier, when the victim was a teenage runaway stuck in a juvenile detention center.

According to the suit, Peterson picked out the boy as if he were candy on a shelf, and then escorted him to a constable’s station, where he retrieved a pistol and stuck it in his boot. He then allegedly took the boy back to his quarters at St. Michael Catholic Church near the Galleria and raped him over the course of 72 hours. The suit alleged that “parish staff were aware” that the boy was staying in Peterson’s quarters.

It appears that, by 2005, the archdiocese was tired of going to bat for Peterson. The victim quickly nonsuited, which suggests that the suit was settled, but that cannot be confirmed. Windle Turley, the Dallas attorney whose firm represented the victims in both Peterson suits, declined to speak for this story.

Today, David Hoop is living in an assisted-care facility in Omaha run by a company called Ambassador Health. He did not respond to multiple requests for comment. He’s active on social media, tweeting under the name “Dave Spielberg,” and posting photos of shirtless boys on Facebook, as well as videos of teens and adults wiggling their toes.

*****

After Father Walter Dayton Salisbury ejaculated in 13-year-old Darren’s hand in the alley outside the movie theater, he drove the boy home and chatted with his parents.

Darren tried to keep his cool while Salisbury drank hot chocolate in the kitchen, but his mother could sense that something was wrong.

The boy held it together until Salisbury decided he wanted to ride Darren’s bike. That bike was Darren’s pride. No one messed with it. It was one badass bike.

But he was powerless to stop the 47-year-old priest from hopping on the seat and riding it down the block.

“That just pissed me off, man,” Darren told the Press. “He got on my bike, you know?”

After Salisbury left, Darren told his parents what had happened. He had always tried to hide his cigarette smoking from them, but that night, he recalled, “I just lit a cigarette right in front of them, with tears in my eyes.”

Unlike many other victims, Darren was lucky to have parents who believed him. They immediately notified the police.

“I had my folks to back me up, thank goodness,” he said. “How many kids don’t have that?”

Darren’s father took him down to police headquarters for a lie detector. Darren said his father had his back all the way, psyching him up as the detectives hooked him up to the machine. The boy was scared to death. During the questioning, Darren was asked if Salisbury ejaculated. He had to ask what that meant.

He remembered the lead detective as an imposing figure – but he also believed Darren.

“This guy was a great cop,” Darren said. “He said, ‘I’m going to get this guy, man.'”

When Salisbury was charged with indecency with a child in May 1978, no one from the archdiocese, TSU or Salisbury’s religious order, the Josephites, did anything to warn parents or reach out to other possible victims.

Instead, four months after Salisbury’s arrest, he delivered lectures on “Parent-Teenager Communications” and “Coping With Tension” at a church in La Marque, according to a Galveston Daily News article announcing the lectures.

At a court hearing, Darren was too scared to take the stand. He broke down. He was barely able to look at Salisbury, who, he recalled, was sitting still, staring down at his shoes. “I would love to see him in a courtroom now,” Darren said. “I would just let him have it.”

Salisbury pleaded no contest, received probation and was shuttled off to a parish in Washington, D.C.

His past caught up with him in 2010, after he was appointed to a position on the housing authority board in Bar Harbor, Maine. A member of another advocacy group for victims of priests asked then-sheriff Bill Clark to look into Salisbury’s background. Local media reported that Clark wrote the advocate a letter outlining Salisbury’s criminal record, which included convictions in Houston and Washington, D.C.

The Press was unable to obtain a copy of the letter, and it appears that the conviction in Washington, D.C. may have been expunged, because there is no record of it in D.C. Superior Court. Although the Metropolitan Police Department has an offense number related to Salisbury’s arrest report, a department spokesman said that files are destroyed after 12 years.

The media reported that both the Josephites and the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland, Maine, released public statements in 2004 disclosing Salisbury’s criminal record. The Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston has never released a statement, and it’s unclear if Salisbury is on the list of credibly accused priests.

Speaking with the Press in November, Salisbury didn’t understand why he was being asked about his crimes, since they were so long ago. When asked at what point people should stop asking questions, he said, “When the case was over and it was settled.”

Before hanging up, he made it clear that he was sorry for even talking in the first place, saying, “It was a mistake, because I thought you actually had something positive you were after.”

Darren said he can’t blame every bad thing that’s happened in his life on Salisbury. It may not have ruined his life, but it changed it. Salisbury came into his life when he was 13 and trying to forge his own identity. About ten years ago, he talked to a lawyer friend about possibly suing Salisbury, but the lawyer said he wouldn’t have a shot. Too much time had passed. And besides, the old man was probably dead.

But the priest still remains there, in the back of his mind.

“That’s something, just?” Darren said, searching for the words, “?you cannot forget.”

Time Out

Priests with drug or sexual problems get sent away to treatment centers for course corrections.

Since at least 1947, when a religious community called the Servants of the Paraclete opened one of the first treatment centers for priests grappling with pedophilia and substance abuse, dioceses have often warehoused problematic priests.

The “rehab” facility closest to Houston is Splendora’s Shalom Center, whose website states, “We genuinely seek to create a spirit of Gospel compassion, a nonjudgmental atmosphere and a safe environment where healing and growth can happen.”

The Shalom Center is included in a 1995 U.S. Conference of Bishops survey on treatment centers, in which it’s described as dealing mostly with priests suffering from “behaviors related to pornography, sexual exploitation, exhibitionism, voyeurism, and prostitution.” The survey, available on the Bishop Accountability website, notes that initial assessments and referrals are available for priests dealing with “pedophilia and ephebophilia [sexual attraction to adolescents].”

In the survey’s anonymous comments section, where diocesan officials can share their thoughts, one official wrote that Shalom is “sometimes too eager to ‘excuse’ priest offender[s]”

More severe cases, such as that of the Reverend Donald Leroy Stavinoha, are usually sent to facilities in New Mexico and Missouri.

On a May night in 1986, Stavinoha stopped by the home of a parishioner, a single mother whose young son he’d taken a special interest in, according to court records. For two years (beginning when the boy was seven), “Father Don” would stop by the home, which was within walking distance of Immaculate Heart of Mary in the East End, sometimes bringing San Juan candles. Once he performed a blessing of the house.

But on that night, Stavinoha told the nine-year-old boy’s mother that he was taking the boy “to play video games.”

Instead, Stavinoha went to 7-11, where he bought a Slurpee for the boy and a six-pack of beer for himself.

Later that night, while patrolling Glenbrook Park in southeast Houston, police officer Gerardo Gamez spotted what appeared to be an abandoned church van in the parking lot. But when Gamez approached the van and shined his flashlight in the window, he “observed [Stavinoha] holding the young boy’s penis with both hands and sucking on the same with his mouth.”

Gamez would later say that Stavinoha identified himself as a priest right away. The officer didn’t recognize Stavinoha at first, but later, according to the Houston Chronicle, it clicked: Gamez attended the same church; his two boys were in Stavinoha’s catechism class.

After ordering Stavinoha out of the van, Gamez called for backup – not so much as protection for himself but for his suspect.

“I was afraid I’d tear into him, beat him, and I didn’t want to ruin the case,” Gamez told the Chronicle.

Another officer testified that Stavinoha laughed as he was being booked into jail.

“I asked him what he was laughing about,” Alphonso Amato Jr. said, according to the Chronicle. “He told me, ‘They won’t do anything to me. I’m a priest.'”

Stavinoha pleaded guilty to a charge of aggravated sexual assault. Court records show that the boy told investigators that Stavinoha had abused him five or six times. Records also state that Stavinoha was “also a suspect in sexual assaults of other children in the area.”

There is no record of the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston’s reaching out to other potential victims. But Fiorenza had an easy out: Stavinoha was technically on loan from a mission of the Oblates order in San Antonio.

While awaiting a trial for sentencing, Stavinoha was sent to the Paracletes’ pedophile rehab center in Jemez Springs, New Mexico.

At trial, one of the facility’s psychologists testified that Stavinoha was not sexually attracted to children, and that “he would really like to be asexual.”

The psychologist testified that Stavinoha was “a very shy, very timid individual” who lived with a constant fear that he just wasn’t “holy enough.” The priest had such “a sense of inadequacy gnawing in his gut” that he sometimes suffered painful ulcers. Ultimately, the psychologist said, Stavinoha was still fit to be a priest.

In 1988, Stavinoha was sentenced to ten years in prison, but was released after 14 months. He lived for a while at the Oblates mission before he was transferred to another pedophile center located on hundreds of tranquil, woodsy acres outside St. Louis, alternately known as RECON and Wounded Brothers. He died in 2007.

The victim’s mother sued the archdiocese and the Oblates in Bexar County in 1991. The case was settled confidentially.

Stavinoha appealed his sentencing, arguing that prosecutor Jim Buchanan should not have been allowed to repeatedly call Stavinoha a wolf in sheep’s clothing while addressing the jury.

At trial, Stavinoha’s defense attorney, Ed Mallett, had made a similar argument, objecting several times to the prosecutor’s “comparing the defendant with animals.”

After the judge overruled Mallett, Buchanan let his frustration be known, saying, “I object to his objection.”

The appellate court sided with the trial judge, first by reiterating that Stavinoha was caught in the back of a church van with a nine-year-old boy’s penis in his mouth.

“A reasonable inference from the evidence,” the court ruled, “is that [Stavinoha], taking advantage of his church-given stature, befriended the [boy] and his family for the sole purpose of obtaining sexual gratification.”

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Priest Says Church Defamed Him for Objecting to Cover-Up

FLORIDA
Courthouse News Service

IZZY KAPNICK

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (CN) – A priest sued the Diocese of Palm Beach, claiming it defamed him in retaliation for his objections to its attempted cover-up of a foreign clergyman’s pedophilia.

In a lawsuit filed in Palm Beach County, the Rev. John Gallagher claims that the way the Catholic Church treated him “shows without question that it has learned nothing from its history and continues to cover up acts of priest pedophilia.”

Gallagher says the Diocese of Palm Beach went on a campaign to sully his reputation after he publicly objected to its unwillingness to cooperate with police in a pedophilia investigation involving Joseph Palimatton, an assistant priest from India who was serving at Gallagher’s Holy Name of Jesus church in West Palm Beach.

Palimatton arrived at the church from India in December 2014, and within a month, he stood accused of a sex crime: He allegedly showed images of child pornography to a 14-year-old, including “numerous photographs of minor children who were naked and had erect penises.”

Unbeknownst to Father Gallagher, Palimatton had been involved in several sexual abuse events, the lawsuit claims. The Catholic Church in India had transferred him to Gallagher’s church allegedly without disclosing his past abuses.

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NH bill seeks to change sexual assault standard

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Seacoast Online

By Brian Early bearly@seacoastonline.com

CONCORD -The state’s House Committee on Justice and Public Safety will hold a hearing on Tuesday on a bill that would require corroboration to a victim’s testimony in sexual assault cases where the defendant has no prior convictions.

The bill has generated intense interest, especially for advocates of sexual assault victims, and the hearings are expected to be widely attended.

Rep. William Marsh, a Wolfeboro Republican, introduced House Bill 106 that adds 13 words and strikes out four others to the law dealing with sexual assault and related offenses. The proposed law states that “the testimony of the victim (in sexual assault cases) shall be corroborated in prosecutions …; only in cases where the defendant has no prior convictions.” The bill was co-sponsored by two others; however, one has since withdrawn her support.

Marsh said the scales of justice seem to be in favor of the victim. “We’re guilty as soon as we’re accused at this point in time, and that’s a problem,” Marsh said in a call on Monday. One reason for introduction was the 2016 conviction of Concord psychologist Foad Afshar of aggravated felonious sexual assault. A jury found Afshar, whose license had lapsed, guilty of touching the genitals of a 12 year old during an appointment, and he is now serving a 3- to 6-year prison sentence. Afshar is appealing the case.

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Cardinal Pell’s office dismisses attacks as opposition to reform

VATICAN CITY
Headlines from the Catholic World

Vatican City, Jan 17, 2017 / 12:46 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- In reaction to a new book claiming that Pope Francis has in fact done little to combat clerical sex abuse, and that Cardinal George Pell is implicated, the Australian cardinal’s office has dismissed the claims as motivated by opposition to reform.

“These most recent attacks on the Vatican, economic reforms and Cardinal George Pell are not only regurgitating false claims but appear to have a more sinister intent,” read a Jan. 15 statement from the office of Cardinal Pell, prefect of the Secretariat for the Economy.

“Those opposed to the reforms and threatened by the progress in establishing transparency and addressing illegalities and malpractice have long used lies, smears and public attacks as diversionary tactics.”

A new book by Italian journalist Emiliano Fittipaldi called Lussaria, or “Lust”, details claims that under Pope Francis, the Vatican has failed to adequately address sex abuse committed by clerics. The book will be release in Italian on Thursday.

According to the Guardian, “In some of the twenty cases of alleged sexual abuse by priests in Italy in 2016, Fittipaldi writes, priests have been convicted of abuse without the church taking any canonical action against them.”

The Washington Post writes that Fittipaldi “claims to have unearthed documents showing Pell also sought to financially aid priests who had been jailed on pedophilia charges.”

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Vatican orders Knights of Malta to cooperate with papal inquiry

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

By Philip Pullella | VATICAN CITY

The Vatican demanded on Tuesday that the leaders of the Knights of Malta, a worldwide Catholic chivalric and charity group, cooperate with an inquiry into alleged irregularities ordered by Pope Francis.

In the latest salvo of a battle of wills between the heads of two of the world’s oldest institutions, a Vatican statement also rejected what it said was an attempt by the Rome-based Knights to discredit members of a papal commission of inquiry.

Both sides have been locked in a bitter dispute since one of the order’s top knights, Grand Chancellor Albrecht Freiherr von Boeselager, was sacked on Dec. 6 in the chivalric equivalent of a boardroom showdown – ostensibly because he allowed the use of condoms in a medical project for the poor.

The all-male hierarchy of the group, whose top leaders are not clerics but take vows of poverty, chastity and obedience, have defied the pope, refusing to cooperate with the investigation of the sacking or recognise the inquiry’s legitimacy.

“The Holy See counts on the complete cooperation of all in this sensitive stage,” the statement said, adding that it “rejects … any attempt to discredit (commission) members.”

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Editorial: The harmful consequences of a bad bill

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Concord Monitor

Friday, January 13, 2017

In the 1760s, English jurist William Blackstone wrote in the Commentaries on the Laws of England that “it is better that ten guilty persons escape than that one innocent suffer.” The principle, which became known as Blackstone’s formulation, is that government should always err on the side of innocence.

We were reminded of that ratio when reading the text of a perhaps well-intentioned but definitely misguided bill introduced by Rep. William Marsh, a Wolfeboro Republican, and co-sponsored by Reps. Jess Edwards, an Auburn Republican, and Mary Heath, a Manchester Democrat, which would require corroborating evidence in sexual assault cases where the defendant has no prior convictions.

Marsh says the case of psychologist Foad Afshar of Bow, who was sentenced to three to six years in prison for sexually assaulting a young patient in 2015, was the impetus for the bill. Marsh’s daughter was a student of Afshar’s at the New Hampshire Institute of Art, and told her father that she didn’t believe the man she knew was capable of the crime for which he was convicted. That was enough, it seems, for Marsh to file legislation that would weaken the state’s sexual assault laws. It’s not enough for us, and should not be enough for the members of the House Committee on Criminal Justice and Public Safety, which will hold a hearing on the bill Tuesday.

As Amanda Grady Sexton of the N.H. Coalition Against Domestic and Sexual Violence says, the deck is already stacked against victims of sexual assault in the criminal justice system. In fact, she told us, it’s extremely difficult to find someone to prosecute any sexual assault case that isn’t a slam-dunk. HB 106 would codify “the false assumption that sexual assault victims are less credible” than victims of other crimes, she said, and it is a false assumption: The number of false reports in sexual assault cases is in line with other crimes – a rate of 2 to 8 percent, according to the National Sexual Violence Resource Center. Grady Sexton also correctly points out that the bill violates the Equal Protection clause of the 14th Amendment, which says that no state can “deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” HB 106 would hold victims of sexual assault to a different standard than victims of other crimes.

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Criticism of bill that requires corroboration of sexual assault victim testimony

NEW HAMPSHIRE
NH1.com

A bill up for hearing next week would require the testimony of victims in sexual assault cases to be corroborated, but some say this is dangerous, and would undo progress New Hampshire has made on the subject of victim’s rights.

The current law (RSA 632-A:6), states that “the testimony of the victim shall not be required to be corroborated in prosecutions” in sexual assault cases.

But House Bill 106 would adjust that to state: “The testimony of the victim shall be corroborated in prosecutions under this chapter only in cases where the defendant has no prior convictions under this chapter,” reports the Union Leader.

Advocates for the bill say that the new phrasing would help protect citizens from false accusations.

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Proposed N.H. Bill Would Change Sex Assault Burden of Proof

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Valley News

By Jordan Cuddemi
Valley News Staff Writer
Tuesday, January 17, 2017

Lebanon — Advocates for victims of sexual assault are organizing opposition to a bill in the New Hampshire House that would require more than a victim’s testimony as evidence to convict a defendant of a sexual assault.

The House Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee is scheduled to hold a hearing on the bill in Concord this morning. The legislation would increase the burden of proof that is needed to find someone guilty of sexual assault by requiring prosecutors to present corroborating evidence that an attack occurred, according to the language.

“We all view it as a very dangerous bill,” said Peggy O’Neil, the executive director of WISE, the Upper Valley’s support agency for sexual and domestic assault survivors. “This bill raises the burden of proof for a victim of sexual assault to an unrealistic level.”

Although the bill, at this stage, doesn’t define what constitutes corroborating evidence, O’Neil and other advocates said such evidence likely would include DNA testing or an eyewitness account.

DNA evidence is a “very complicated science” that isn’t as straightforward as some television shows portray it, O’Neil said, and sexual assault often happens behind closed doors.

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He said, she said: Raising the bar in rape cases

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Union Leader

EDITORIAL

Sometimes the solution is worse than the problem.

False charges of rape and sexual assault can ruin an innocent person’s life. But such false charges also make it harder for real victims to be believed. Now a handful of lawmakers at the State House want to raise the standard for criminal prosecution.

The House Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee takes up HB 106 this morning. The bill would require an alleged sexual assault victim’s testimony to be corroborated, unless the defendant had a previous conviction for sexual assault.

By their nature, sexual assault cases rely on the testimony of the two people involved. Juries first have to decide if a crime occurred. They must judge the credibility of the accuser and the accused.

Setting a different evidentiary standard based on a defendant’s prior actions is likely unconstitutional. Requiring third-party testimony or physical evidence of rape would make “he said-she said” cases impossible to prosecute.

– See more at: http://www.unionleader.com/editorial/He-said-she-said-Raising-the-bar-in-rape-cases-01172017_#sthash.56T29HKP.dpuf

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Rape, Child Molestation Allegations Would Require Outside Corroboration Under Ridiculous New Hampshire Bill

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Reason

Elizabeth Nolan Brown |Jan. 17, 2017

In New Hampshire, those who commit rape or sexual abuse without witnesses present could be all but guaranteed to get away with it under a new proposal from state Rep. William Marsh (R-District 8). The measure, House Bill 106, stipulates “that a victim’s testimony in a sexual assault case shall require corroboration” when the defendant has no prior sexual-assault convictions. It does not elaborate about what kind of corroboration would be sufficient.

Marsh told the Concord Monitor he drafted the bill, introduced last week, after hearing about the conviction of Concord psychologist Foad Afshar, who was found guilty of sexually assaulting a young client. Marsh’s daughter thinks Afshar is innocent, and Marsh said he “trust(s) my daughter’s judgments of people.”

He just wouldn’t want jurors to trust his apparently impeccably intuitive daughter if she were assaulted and no one else could confirm it…

As Amanda Grady Sexton, Concord city councilor-at-large, points out, Marsh’s bill “would be saying a victim’s sworn testimony isn’t good enough, even if it’s been viewed as credible by 12 sworn jurors.” In other words, it would be creating a higher standard of proof for rape and sexual assault than for any other crimes.

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Critics: Sex assault law changes ‘dangerous’

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Union Leader

By SHAWNE K. WICKHAM
New Hampshire Sunday News

The testimony of victims would have to be corroborated in most sexual assault cases, under a bill coming up for a hearing this week.

Proponents say the measure would better protect those falsely accused of such crimes.

But victim advocates and law enforcement officials say the bill is “dangerous” and would reverse decades of progress that New Hampshire has made on victims’ rights.

Under current law (RSA 632-A:6), “the testimony of the victim shall not be required to be corroborated in prosecutions” in sexual assault cases.

House Bill 106 would change that to read: “The testimony of the victim shall be corroborated in prosecutions under this chapter only in cases where the defendant has no prior convictions under this chapter.”

And that would be the vast majority of such cases, says Amanda Grady Sexton, director of public policy for the New Hampshire Coalition Against Domestic and Sexual Violence. “What this does is it sends a message that victims of sexual assault are not to be believed,” she said.

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The Saga Surrounding a Jamaican Pastor Accused of Sexual Misconduct Continues

JAMAICA
Caribbean 360

KINGSTON, Jamaica, Tuesday January 17, 2017 – There has been some more serious fallout in and outside the Moravian Church in Jamaica which has been shaken by allegations of sexual misconduct within its ranks.

Church president Dr Paul Gardner and his deputy Jermaine Gibson have resigned from the church’s highest body – the Provincial Elders Conference – which has embarked on a mission to get to the bottom of the embarrassing scandal.

According to the Jamaica Observer newspaper, the executive is mounting a probe into the damning allegations after receiving a letter containing charges of sexual abuse.

The church’s troubles erupted after 67-year-old Pastor Rupert Clarke was charged with carnal abuse and rape of a 15-year-old girl on January 3.

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Padova, sesso in canonica: “Oltre a don Contin altri sacerdoti coinvolti nei festini”

ROME
La Repubblica

In Padua, other priests in addition to priest Andrea Contin were involved in sexual misconduct.]

ROMA – Non c’è solo l’ex parroco di San Lazzaro a Padova, don Andrea Contin, del quale si parla anche nell’ultimo libro di Emiliano Fittipaldi, al centro della vicenda che vede il sacerdote indagato per violenza privata e favoreggiamento della prostituzione. Nelle otto pagine della denuncia firmata dall’amante 49enne del religioso, infatti, la donna ha dichiarato che altri preti partecipavano alle orge.

L’inchiesta, partita il 21 dicembre 2016, con la perquisizione nella canonica, si allarga, stando a quanto riporta Il Mattino di Padova e coinvolge altri membri della Chiesa, sempre del Padovano. Per loro, si legge sempre sul sito del quotidiano veneto, non ci sarebbe al momento il rischio di essere iscritti nel registro degli indagati, dato che non risulterebbero pagamenti da parte loro per partecipare a quegli incontri di gruppo.

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Enthüllungsbuch: Italiens Kirche vertuscht Missbrauch

ITALIEN
Katholisch

[A new revelation book accuses the Catholic Church in Italy of systematically covering up sexual abuse by priests. Over the last decade, more than 200 priests have been convicted or charged for sexual delinquency, writes the author Emiliano Fittipaldi in a pre-release of the daily “La Repubblica” (Monday). This scandal, however, is “never exploded with its whole explosive force” unlike in the USA, Ireland, Australia or Belgium.]

Ein neues Enthüllungsbuch wirft der katholischen Kirche in Italien vor, sexuellen Missbrauch durch Priester bis heute systematisch zu vertuschen. In den vergangenen zehn Jahren seien landesweit mehr als 200 Priester wegen Sexualdelikten verurteilt oder angeklagt worden, schreibt der Autor Emiliano Fittipaldi in einer Vorabveröffentlichung der Tageszeitung “La Repubblica” (Montag). Dieser Skandal sei jedoch anders als in den USA, in Irland, Australien oder Belgien “nie mit seiner ganzen Sprengkraft explodiert”.

In Italien gebe es weiterhin ein “System, das die Ungeheuer schützt”, so Fittipaldi. Der italienische Journalist nennt in dem Artikel einige Beispiele. Demnach sollen Priester von Bischöfen weiter als Seelsorger eingesetzt worden sein, obwohl sie wegen sexuellen Missbrauchs vorbestraft waren oder unter Verdacht standen.

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Assignment Record– Rev. Walter (aka Vaclovas aka Wenceslaus) Katarskis

OHIO
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: Katarskis was ordained in his native Lithuania in 1942. He emigrated to the U.S. in 1948 and settled into work as a priest of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati, in Dayton and Vandalia parishes. In 1972 he became the sole priest at Holy Cross in Dayton, the Lithuanian parish where he served for twelve years after his arrival to the U.S. He remained at Holy Cross until his death in 1993.

In 2002 a woman reported to the archdiocese that when she was 10-11 years old in the early 1960s and a student at St. Albert the Great in Dayton, Katarskis sexually abused her. Katarskis was a St. Albert’s assistant 1960-1965. In 2010 the woman spoke publicly of the alleged abuse prior to filing a police report; she said she did not want to sue, but wanted the Church to know about its predator priests, and to encourage other victims to come forward.

Born: June 27, 1916
Ordained: 1942
Died: December 20, 1993

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Joliet priest says diocese failed to follow protocol to protect children

ILLINOIS
Chicago Tribune

Christy Gutowski
Chicago Tribune

Standing before parishioners in his historic Joliet church, the Rev. Peter Jankowski said years of internal conflict had brought him to this difficult moment. In an emotional homily, the parish priest publicly blew the whistle on his diocese for alleged past failures that he said put children at potential risk.

Jankowski delivered the homily three times two Sundays ago, including once in Spanish for his multicultural congregation. Before he left the pulpit, he asked members at St. Patrick’s Catholic Church to pray for him as he embarks on a public crusade — including a direct appeal to Pope Francis.

His homily did not cite any specific examples of abuse. Rather, in church documents later obtained by the Tribune, Jankowski for years has complained that his retired predecessor showed lax enforcement 10 years ago of the U.S. bishops’ 2002 charter regarding child sexual abuse. In a September letter to the pope, Jankowski said that his superiors, including Joliet Bishop R. Daniel Conlon, failed to act upon his repeated complaints over the years to ask the retired priest to stop interfering in his ministry.

Diocese officials noted an independent firm has found the diocese compliant with the charter each year since 2003, when it began annual audits.

The dispute pits a first-time parish priest against a veteran cleric so loved that he has an honorary street designation outside the church. In a larger sense, it underscores the difference between an old-school approach and the modern church’s promise to be more transparent and vigilant.

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Knights of Malta insist ouster over condom scandal was legal

VATICAN CITY
Crux

Nicole Winfield January 17, 2017
ASSOCIATED PRESS

VATICAN CITY – The head of the embattled Knights of Malta is seeking to discredit a Vatican investigation into the removal of a top official over a condom scandal, insisting that he followed the rules in the dismissal.

In the latest development in the showdown between the ancient Catholic lay order and the Holy See, Fra’ Matthew Festing explained and defended his actions in a Jan. 14 letter to the Knights’ membership.

“Suffice it to say, whilst I was trying to enjoy a peaceful Advent and Christmastide, I have barely been able to concentrate on anything else,” he wrote. “It has been extremely tiring and I am sure many of you have had your Christmases disturbed by similar preoccupations.”

Festing said he was only protecting the order’s sovereignty in refusing to cooperate with a commission appointed by Pope Francis to investigate the ouster of Albrecht von Boeselager.

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Press release concerning the Sovereign Military Order of Malta

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Radio

(Vatican Radio) The Holy See Press Office has issued the following Press Release concerning events relating to the Sovereign Military Order of Malta:

PRESS RELEASE

In relation to the events of recent weeks concerning the Sovereign Military Order of Malta, the Holy See wishes to reiterate its support and encouragement for the commendable work that members and volunteers carry out in various parts of the world, in fulfilment of the aims of the Order: tuitio fidei (the defence of the Faith) and obsequium pauperum (service to the poor, the sick and those in greatest need).

For the support and advancement of this generous mission, the Holy See reaffirms its confidence in the five Members of the Group appointed by Pope Francis on 21 December 2016 to inform him about the present crisis of the Central Direction of the Order, and rejects, based on the documentation in its possession, any attempt to discredit these Members of the Group and their work.

The Holy See counts on the complete cooperation of all in this sensitive stage, and awaits the Report of the above-mentioned Group in order to adopt, within its area of competence, the most fitting decisions for the good of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta and of the Church.
Rome, 17 January 2017

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Head of embattled Knights of Malta defends his actions and says ‘extremely tiring’ conflict with Vatican disturbed his Christmas

UNITED KINGDOM
Telegraph

Associated Press
17 JANUARY 2017

The head of the embattled Knights of Malta is seeking to discredit a Vatican investigation into the removal of a top official over a condom scandal, insisting that he followed the rules in the dismissal.

In the latest development in the remarkable showdown between the ancient Catholic lay order and the Holy See, Matthew Festing explained and defended his actions in a January 14 letter to the Knights’ membership.

“Suffice it to say, whilst I was trying to enjoy a peaceful Advent and Christmastide, I have barely been able to concentrate on anything else,” he wrote. “It has been extremely tiring and I am sure many of you have had your Christmases disturbed by similar preoccupations.”

It has been extremely tiring and I am sure many of you have had your Christmases disturbed by similar preoccupations

Cambridge-educated Mr Festing said he was only protecting the order’s sovereignty in refusing to cooperate with a commission appointed by Pope Francis to investigate the ouster of Albrecht von Boeselager.

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Knights of Malta fight civil war over Catholic reforms

ROME
The Times (UK)

Tom Kington, Rome
January 16 2017
The Times

The British grand master of the Knights of Malta, a thousand-year-old Roman Catholic chivalric order, has staged a coup d’état at the organisation and is surrounding himself with a powerful, unelected clique, it has been alleged.

A senior member, who declined to be named, said that Matthew Festing, 67, a former Grenadier Guards officer and Sotheby’s auctioneer, had violated the order’s constitution in an attempt to grab power.

In December Mr Festing suspended Albrecht von Boeselager, the order’s grand chancellor, the equivalent of its foreign minister, accusing the German aristocrat of allowing the distribution of condoms, which is against Catholic teaching, as part of the order’s charity work. Mr von Boeselager said that he had put a stop to the condom handout when he became aware of it. “In what amounts to a coup d’état the grand master has seized control of the government of the order from those elected,” said the member, who is American.

The Order of Malta was founded in the 11th century to care for pilgrims in the Holy Land. Today it manages humanitarian operations and still considers itself a sovereign state, maintaining diplomatic relations with 106 countries from Rome. The order’s members commit to obeying the Pope but when Pope Francis ordered an investigation into Mr von Boeselager’s ousting, Mr Festing denounced the inquiry as an intrusion into the order’s sovereignty. The row has been cast as a clash between the conservative wing of the church and Francis’s brand of liberal Catholicism.

The church’s ambassador to the order, Cardinal Raymond Leo Burke, who is seen as siding with Mr Festing, is a long-time conservative foe of the Pope. Mr Festing warned members not to disagree with the sacking when questioned by Vatican inspectors but the member preferred to speak out. “It was the grand master who chose to involve the Holy See in the matter over a year ago,” the member said. “He cannot simply retreat from the process set down by the Holy Father because it no longer seems to suit his purpose.”

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Vatican fights attempt to discredit Knights of Malta probe

VATICAN CITY
Crux

Inés San Martín January 17, 2017
VATICAN CORRESPONDENT

ROME-Adding another piece to the puzzle in the ongoing saga involving the Sovereign Military Order of Malta, the Vatican issued a statement Tuesday commending the work being done by the members of a committee created by Pope Francis to look into the order, and also not-so-subtly reminded the group that despite its sovereignty, it’s still a Catholic institution.

The statement says the Holy See wishes to “reiterate its support and encouragement” for the work being carried out by the members and volunteers around the world, “in fullfilment of the aims of the Order: tuitio fidei (the defense of the faith) and obsequium pauperum (service to the poor, the sick and those in greatest need).”

The following graph, however, says that for the support of that mission, the Holy See “reaffirms its confidence” in the five-member commission appointed by Pope Francis on Dec. 21 to “inform him about the present crisis” in the orders’ direction.

The feud began on Dec. 8, when the order decided to ouster Albrecht von Boeselager, the group’s chancellor. Since then, many observers have pointed towards a scandal regarding the distribution of condoms in Myanmar as the reason for the move.

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WA election 2017: Pledge to lift limits on child abuse victims seeking damages

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Nicolas Perpitch

The Barnett Government has promised to introduce legislation to scrap the six-year statute of limitations on when victims of child abuse can take civil against their perpetrators or institutions if it is re-elected.

Premier Colin Barnett said the Liberals would also remove limitation periods for serious physical abuse.

The statute of limitations restricts when victims can launch civil action to seek damages to a six-year window — a constraint the Royal Commission into Child Sexual Abuse recommended be lifted.

Labor has also pledged to lift the restriction for child abuse victims if it wins government, potentially assuring the changes will pass through State Parliament regardless of who wins the March state election.

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Tasmania Police considers abuse apology

AUSTRALIA
Great Lakes Advocate

Chris Clarke
@chrisclarkenews

17 Jan 2017

Tasmania Police is weighing up a historic apology to child-sex abuse victims in institutionalised care whose cries for help were initially not believed by officers.

Police forces across the country are considering the apology and Tasmania Police said it could follow suit, after the idea was put forward at a meeting between all commissioners of police in Melbourne in September.

It follows the Royal Commission into Institutionalised Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, during which it was revealed many claims of abuse in orphanages Australia-wide fell on deaf ears – and in some instances children who ran away from their ordeals were even returned to their abusers.

But victims will be made to wait until at least December, as police forces wait to hear what findings the Royal Commission will hand down.

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Police commissioners planning to apologise to victims of institutional child sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Patrick Wright and David Sparkes

Australia’s police commissioners are considering issuing an apology to victims of child sex abuse following the release of a royal commission report later this year.

The matter was considered at a meeting of Australia’s police chiefs in September after a request from the Care Leavers Australasia Network (CLAN), which supports and advocates for people abused as children in orphanages, foster care and other institutions.

Victoria Police chief commissioner Graham Ashton, who chaired the meeting, said while an apology was likely, commissioners would consider the child abuse royal commission’s final report, due to be released in December, before making a decision.

“We did have a chat with the royal commission regarding the timing of their final report,” he told ABC Radio Melbourne.

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Police may apologise to child sex victims

AUSTRALIA
Perth Now

Rachael Burnett, Australian Associated Press
January 16, 2017

Police chiefs will consider a national apology to victims who were ignored by officers and sometimes beaten when they reported institutional child sex abuse.

They will wait until after Australia’s child sexual abuse royal commission hands down a final report before “comprehensively” examining the need for an apology and what it might look like.

Victoria Police chief Graham Ashton says the issue is of serious concern and acknowledged the “long lasting impact of abuse on the most vulnerable in our communities” in a letter to the Care Leavers Australasia Network.

Thousands of adults across Australia have reported suffering psychological, sexual and physical abuse while they were children in care over a period of decades.

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Freedom fighters for victims of child abuse

AUSTRALIA
Lawyers Weekly

17 January 2017

Lisa Flynn

2016 was an important year in our history. It has been one of the most successful in shaping how we respond to reports of child sexual abuse, writes Lisa Flynn.

As we usher in 2017, it is important that we reflect on the lessons we have learnt and resolve to keep doing better to stop child abuse and continue to respond to survivors of abuse positively and compassionately.

We need to do better in our religious institutions.

The inquests into the Catholic and Anglican churches sex abuse claims exposed major failings in how churches in Australia have dealt with children being sexually violated and the lasting and devastating impact this has on victims.

We heard evidence from brave survivors within the various churches, of reports being made of abuse at the time yet no action being taken. What becomes perfectly apparent in these cases is that the church’s priority was to protect the church’s public image rather than to protect the children. This is a stark contrast to the duty of care and service they commit themselves to.

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Pope Francis appoints Cardinal O’Malley to CFD role

AUSTRALIA
Catholic Outlook – Diocese of Parramatta

Pope Francis has appointed the Archbishop of Boston, Cardinal Sean O’Malley, widely seen as a leading reformer in the Catholic hierarchy, as a member of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the powerful Vatican department that deals with clerical sexual abuse cases.

The appointment is being seen by many as a further move by the Pope to ensure bishops are held accountable for their failures to protect minors from clerical sexual abusers.

Francis Sullivan, CEO of the Catholic Church’s Truth Justice and Healing Council, welcomed the news saying the appointment reflects the influential role Cardinal O’Malley is playing in addressing the child sexual abuse crisis in the Church.

“He is certainly among the people in the Catholic world committed to the protection of minors and vulnerable people from sexual abuse,” Mr Sullivan said. “And he has, for many years, been an outspoken campaigner for bishops to be more accountable, particularly in the area of child protection. Having him on one of the Vatican’s most influential and powerful departments sends a clear signal that the protection of children is very much uppermost in the Pope’s mind.”

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Flynn: Cardinal Sean on panel shows papal priorities

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Herald

Ray Flynn

Tuesday, January 17, 2017

Pope Francis’ appointment of Boston Cardinal Sean O’Malley to the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith — which reviews clergy sex abuse cases — underscores the level of trust the pontiff has for our archbishop and sends a clear message about his priorities at a critically important time for the church.

I have no doubt that Cardinal Sean, who was named president of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors in 2014, will use his new leadership role to ensure that any bishops and priests who are found to have violated their sacred trust are removed and dealt with harshly and swiftly.

Richard Gaillardetz, chairman of Boston College’s School of Theology and Ministry, said the appointment “recognizes the extent to which the pope has trust in O’Malley.”

“One of the criticisms of Francis that has the most substance is he has been slow in responding to the clerical sexual abuse crisis,” Gaillardetz said. “Cardinal O’Malley is someone he trusts, who has been in his ear to tell him this is a more important and serious issue than he may have realized.”

By continuing to bring clarity and consistency to Francis’ fight to identify and remove the abusive clergy members who have sullied the reputations of countless good, holy priests around the world, O’Malley will take his expertise onto the global stage and let Catholics know his task is the pope’s highest priority.

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Man loses compensation case over East Yorkshire school abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

A man who claimed he was abused at an East Yorkshire Catholic school has lost a legal action for compensation.

He is one of 249 men suing the Catholic Church over alleged historical sexual abuse at St William’s residential school in Market Weighton.

Only one man out of five initial cases heard at the High Court in Leeds has been awarded compensation.

In December, a judge ruled in favour of one claimant and ordered the church to pay £14,000 in damages.

At the same hearing, His Honour Judge Gosnell dismissed three other claims.

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Children demand urgent attention, says Samuels

JAMAICA
The Gleaner

Women and children will, for the first time, be the focus of the 37th National Leadership Prayer Breakfast, which takes place at The Jamaica Pegasus hotel in St Andrew on Thursday, according to the Reverend Dr Stevenson Samuels, chair of the committee that plans this annual event.

“For the first time this year, we have also felt the need to include prayers for children. We feel that these are vulnerable groups with regards to crime and violence plaguing our society. Children demand urgent attention,” he declared.

Samuels bemoaned that children were abused by adults and also experienced high levels of poverty, neglect by parents, little moral and spiritual training, in addition to insufficient access to other things.

His comments came yesterday at the Church of the Open Bible Church in St Andrew.

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Michael Abrahams | Retraumatising childhood sex abuse survivors

JAMAICA
The Gleaner

The Moravian Church sex scandal has escalated a national conversation on the sexual abuse of children. The story reads like a sordid soap opera, with allegations and revelations being spat out at maddening velocity. Apart from the alleged victims and their families, and the families of the accused, there is an entire subset of our population that is also in pain and being tormented while suffering in silence. It is the women, and men, who are survivors of childhood sexual abuse.

What many of us fail to understand and appreciate is that whenever there is public discourse about the sexual abuse of minors, survivors of this egregious violation experience a nauseating feeling of déjà vu. They are restimulated, as the bombardment via traditional and social media, and workplace and other discussions, stir up unpleasant memories, producing negative emotions and triggering depression relapses. Feelings of sadness, shame, embarrassment, anger and guilt are once again brought to the fore, and these women, and men, are forced to relive and deal with their traumatic histories all over again.

Over the past week, I have had conversations with six women, in different decades of life, who have confessed to me that the present imbroglio has reopened old wounds, with the revelation of each new detail piercing them like daggers thrust into their hearts.

Sonia* is 26 years old and was molested as a child by a family member who was very active in church. She commenced therapy last year to deal with the effects of her trauma and has been doing well, but the present crisis has deeply affected her. She remarked to me that she feels like a “derailed train”. As a matter of fact, during our conversation, she broke down and had to terminate the discussion.

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55 cases of sexual relations with minor for Easter session of St Catherine courts

JAMAICA
Loop

The Easter session of the opening of the St Catherine Circuit court recently had a record of 150 new committed matters; 132 cases carried from the previous session; 16 murders; 66 rapes and 55 sexual relations with a person under the age of 16.

There has been heavy ongoing national spotlight on the sexual abuse of minors by adult males locally, following the arrest and charge of 64-year-old Moravian Church pastor Rupert Clarke for having sex with a 15-year-old girl.

Declaring the Circuit open, Justice Marsha Dunbar-Green reminded both sides of the councils of the Goodyear proceedings that they can approach her to know what the plea would be if their clients who are known to be guilty would receive instead of having a lengthy trial.

Justice Dunbar-Green outlined that it was a pleasure for her to be back in St Catherine after spending much of her maiden years there.

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Queens Music Director Arrested For Alleged Sexual Abuse Of Student

NEW YORK
CBS New York

NEW YORK (CBSNewYork) — The music director for a Queens church has been arrested for the alleged sexual abuse of a juvenile parishioner.

Police say Rafael Diaz of Forest Hills was arrested at his home Saturday. Last Thursday, the alleged victim’s father came to the church and reported that Diaz had sexually abused his daughter during private piano lessons over the course of two years.

According to the Diocese of Brooklyn, the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary parish in Queens was not aware that Diaz was hired by the alleged victim’s parents to give their child private music lessons at their home.

The diocese says they immediately contacted the NYPD and are cooperating with authorities during the investigation.

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Vatican not doing enough to fight sexual abuse in Catholic Church, author alleges

ROME
Christian Daily

Lorraine Caballero 17 January, 2017

The Vatican is not doing enough to stop the sexual abuse happening inside the Catholic Church, according to Italian author Emiliano Fittipaldi.

In an upcoming book titled “Lussuria” (Lust), Fittipaldi cites court documents and interviews with priests and judicial officials to paint a picture of Pope Francis’ first three years of papacy. The author says the pontiff has done “close to nothing” to address the sexual abuse cases that have tainted the Catholic Church’s image, The Guardian details.

“The principle message of the book — the problem — is that the phenomenon of paedophilia is not being fought with sufficient force. Across the world, the church continues to protect the privacy of the paedophiles and also the cardinals [who protect them],” Fittipaldi told the Guardian in an interview. “Francis is not directly defending the paedophiles, but he did close to nothing to contrast the phenomenon of paedophilia.”

In Pope Francis’ letter to the Catholic Bishops released at the beginning of the year, the pontiff reiterated the church’s “zero tolerance” for sexual abuse. He said this in light of the church’s reported cover-up of such incidents, including the enabling and relocation of clergy who molest children, Mediaite reports.

Despite the “zero tolerance” stance on sexual abuse, Fittipaldi says around 1,200 plausible complaints of such incidents from all over the world have been brought to the Vatican in Pope Francis’ first three years. Of the 20 such cases in Italy last year, some of the accused priests have reportedly been convicted of abuse and yet the church has not implemented any disciplinary action against them.

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Bankruptcy status near end for Diocese

CALIFORNIA
Manteca Bulletin

By ROSE ALBANO RISSO Bulletin Correspondent
POSTED January 17, 2017

The Catholic Diocese of Stockton will come out of its bankruptcy status in the next few weeks after the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of California approved the “consensual plan of reorganization” filed three years ago by Bishop Stephen Blaire.

The approved plan provides “$15 million to survivors of sexual abuse as well as non-monetary commitments which are important aspects of any healing process.”

The announcement was made to diocesan parishioners during the Masses on Sunday and the anticipated Masses on Saturday. The full text of the announcement was also included as an insert in the parish bulletins.

In the bilingual (Spanish and English) written statement from the diocese’s communications director, Sister Terry Davis, Bishop Blaire stated, “We wish to thank all of the parties, including the court appointed mediator Judge Gregg W. Zive, Judge Klein, the sexual abuse survivors, the insurers, the creditors’ committee, and their respective counsel, our counsel, and the entire Catholic community, for helping bring this very difficult chapter in the history of the Diocese to an equitable resolution.”

The reorganization plan held a number of key provisions resulting from months of negotiations involving the creditors, insurance carriers, the diocese and other parties, all of which had to vote on the proposed plan. The plan received “nearly unanimous approval,” according to the announcement.

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The Buried Abuse of the Galveston-Houston Archdiocese

TEXAS
Houston Press

How Problematic Priests Are Warehoused

BY CRAIG MALISOW

On the phone, the former Houston priest didn’t recognize the name of the 13-year-old boy he molested in 1978.

So much time has passed since that third encounter with the boy, in the Town & Country Village movie theater in Memorial City, where the priest slid his hand into the boy’s jeans and masturbated him. It’s hard to keep track of these things, and besides, the priest says, it’s old news.

Father Walter Dayton Salisbury, now 85, has moved on with his life since pleading no contest and serving three years’ probation. He left Houston in the early 1980s for Washington, D.C., where he was charged with molesting another boy, then spent some time at a parish outside Mobile, where he was accused again, but not charged. He eventually returned to his home city, Bar Harbor, a quaint little town in coastal Maine, where he found an apartment across the street from a K-8 public school. He became active in the community, joining the Order of the Founders of the Patriots of America, whose website states that membership is open to men of “good moral character and reputation.”

Salisbury was one of more than a dozen priests named in a November 2016 press release by the local chapter of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, as part of the group’s push for the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston to publicly identify, for the first time, all of its priests who’d been accused or convicted of crimes against children.

When the Houston Press reached Salisbury in October for a comment on the group’s efforts, he chuckled. “I’m certainly not going to say anything to vigilantes, no,” he said in a New England accent, referring to the group (known as SNAP).
When the Press mentioned his Houston victim’s name, Salisbury said, “That doesn’t ring a bell at all.”

Told who it was, Salisbury said, “Good Lord, I mean…that’s 30 years ago, or whatever it is.”

Unlike Salisbury, his victim couldn’t so easily forget a name.

“The first time I ever ejaculated was from some dirty old man’s hand,” the victim told the Press in December. (We’re calling the man, who asked not to be named, “Darren.”)

He also never forgot about how, when the movie was over and Salisbury was driving him back home, the priest — who served for decades as the chaplain of Texas Southern University’s Catholic Newman Center — pulled over in an alley, unzipped his pants and put the boy’s hand around his penis. …

As Anne Barrett Doyle, co-director of the Massachusetts-based nonprofit Bishop Accountability, puts it, “Texas has one of the most victim-hostile statute[s] of limitations in the country.”

Although the religious order Salisbury worked under — the Josephites — and the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland, Maine, released statements on Salisbury’s crimes in 2004, Houston’s top Catholic clergy have acknowledged the diocese’s predator priests only if forced to through criminal charges, civil lawsuits or media reports. …

In 2004, as part of a historic, yet hardly transparent, initiative, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops tasked the John Jay College of Criminal Justice with producing a report on abuse in the church, based largely on self-reported numbers. Covering the years 1950-2002, the report indicated that 4,392 priests and deacons had been accused of child sexual abuse, or 2.7 percent of the overall population of Catholic clergy working during that time.

That rate has risen to 5.6 percent today, according to Anne Barrett Doyle of Bishop Accountability, which calculates and reports the numbers annually. The Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston has never amended its figure of 22 priests and 4 deacons — a 1 percent rate.

“That is just insane,” Barrett Doyle said, noting that in the small diocese of Manchester, New Hampshire, “We know of more than 90 accused clergy.”

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Brother of priest avoids jail for abuse of altar boy

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

By Ashleigh McDonald
PUBLISHED
17/01/2017

A priest’s brother, who sexually abused an altar boy while volunteering at the Clonard Novena, has been spared a jail sentence.

Belfast Crown Court heard yesterday that Martin Cassidy is currently taking chemical castration medication at his own request.

He was placed on probation for three years after he admitted abusing the altar boy in 1988.

The 67-year-old from Orchard Mews in Belfast – who hasn’t worked in 40 years and has a criminal record including 13 previous sexual offences – was also made the subject of a five-year Sexual Offenders Prevention Order and will be on the Sexual Offenders Register for the same period.

Passing sentence, Judge Patricia Smyth revealed that Cassidy’s last sexual offending was committed in 1990 and said she felt the public would be best protected by the pensioner participating in the Sex Offenders Treatment Programme as part of his probation.

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Editorial | Moravians Not The Victims

JAMAICA
The Gleaner

It would be a mistake if, in the midst of their crisis, the Moravians of Jamaica were to merely circle their wagons and nurture a grievance of persecution, of which, judging by the remarks of some of their congregants and pastors, there are troubling signs.

In this regard, we repeat our advice to the church to allow the law, unfettered by attempts at stonewalling or cover-up, to take its course in the unfolding allegations of sex abuse against clergy. This approach is likely to lead, in time, to purer healing.

With no more than 20,000 members, the Moravians are not near being a major congregation in Jamaica. But over their more than two and a half centuries in the island, the church’s mission has been substantial. They have contributed greatly to education and social welfare. Now, in the face of a deepening sex scandal, the Moravians face questions about moral authority, which, potentially, could lead to a fracturing of the institution.

Earlier this month, Rupert Clarke, 64, a pastor to a congregation in the parish of Manchester, was arrested for allegedly having sex with a 15-year-old minor in neighbouring St Elizabeth. He is under investigation for a similar, earlier affaire, with an underage girl from the same family.

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January 16, 2017

Queens music teacher arrested for alleged sexual abuse of 12-year-old student

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY
LAURA DIMON
BEN CHAPMAN

A Queens music teacher was arrested for sexually abusing a girl while giving her singing and piano lessons at her home when she was 12 years old, police said Monday.

Rafael Diaz, 69, was arrested Saturday and charged with sex abuse and endangering the welfare of a child. Diaz was music director for the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary Parish, where his victim was a student.

Sources said the girl’s family made arrangements for her to receive private lessons at home, where the alleged abuse occurred.

Diaz was charged with sexual conduct against a child less than 13, sexual abuse in the first degree and acting in a manner injurious to a child under 17.

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Education Ministry To Comment February On Hampton Principal’s Leave Challenge

JAMAICA
The Gleaner

The Education Ministry says it will not comment on the latest development involving Principal of the St Elizabeth-based Hampton School, Heather Murray, until next month.

Murray is challenging the education ministry’s decision to send her on two weeks leave.

It’s the latest in a string of developments after Murray went to the St Elizabeth Parish Court at the bail hearing of Moravian pastor, Rupert Clarke, who is on a sex charge.

She also attempted to block the media from taking his images.

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Cardinal O’Malley joins Vatican office that reviews sex abuse cases

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Herald

Chris Villani Monday, January 16, 2017

Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley’s recent appointment to a Vatican council tasked with prosecuting sex abuse cases may impact the church’s role in preventing and responding to the crisis, local experts say.

Pope Francis named the head of the Boston Archdiocese to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, one of a series of appointments the Vatican announced over the weekend.

“Not only is it an area where the cardinal can be useful, but it recognizes the extend to which the pope has trust in O’Malley,” said Richard Gaillardetz, chair of the School of Theology and Ministry at Boston College.

“One of the criticism of Francis that has the most substance is he has been slow in responding to the clerical sexual abuse crisis,” Gaillardetz said. “Cardinal O’Malley is someone he trusts, who has been in his ear to tell him this is a more important and serious issue than he may have realized.”

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Judges should stay out of residential school claims, Ontario Appeal Court rules

CANADA
The Globe and Mail

COLIN PERKEL
TORONTO — The Canadian Press
Published Monday, Jan. 16, 2017

Judges have no general right to interfere with compensation decisions involving claims by victims of Canada’s notorious Indian residential schools, Ontario’s Court of Appeal said Monday.

In written reasons for an oral decision rendered in December, the Court of Appeal said a Superior Court justice overstepped his powers by awarding money to a rape victim whose claims were rejected under the independent assessment process known as the IAP.

“The IAP represents a comprehensive, tailor-made scheme for the resolution of claims by trained and experienced adjudicators, selected according to specified criteria and working under the direction of the chief adjudicator,” the Appeal Court said.

“Allowing appeals or judicial review would seriously compromise the finality of the IAP and fail to pay appropriate heed to the distinctive nature of the IAP and the expertise of IAP adjudicators.”

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Sister Rose Clarisse Gadoury, 87, of Marlborough

MASSACHUSETTS
Community Advocate

Marlborough – Sister Rose Clarisse (Pauline) Gadoury, 87, a Sister of St. Anne, died Thursday, Jan. 12, 2017 in UMass Marlborough Hospital.

Born in Dudley, she was the tenth surviving child of Emilien and Rosanna (St. Martin) Gadoury. She attended St. Anne School in Webster and the former St. Anne Academy (Marlborough), earned a Bachelor’s degree in Music from Anna Maria College (Paxton), an MA from Duquesne University, and a Doctoral degree in ministry from Boston University, School of Theology, and received an Honorary Doctorate in Education from Anna Maria College. …

She was a member of the Advisory Board for the Vicar for Religious, and the Office of Pastoral Ministries in the Archdiocese of Boston. She served as a member of the Bishop’s Pastoral Care Committee for Sexual Abuse for the Diocese of Worcester.

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Catholic school teacher charged with molesting student

NEW YORK
New York Post

By Tina Moore January 16, 2017

A 69-year-old Catholic school music teacher was arrested for sexually abusing a girl while giving her singing and piano lessons at her Queens home when she was 11 and 12 years old, police sources said.

Rafael Diaz, music director for the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary Parish, was arrested Saturday and charged with sex abuse and endangering the welfare of a child.

The girl, now 15, told investigators Diaz would touch her diaphragm with four fingers and then fondle her breast with his hands over her clothes while making her sing different pitches, the police sources said.

He once asked her if she had started her menstrual cycle and then allegedly put his hand on her private parts over her clothing. The assaults happened four or five times in the girl’s former home between May and June in 2014, the sources said.

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Cardinal Levada on Pope Benedict, the CDF and the Prosecution of Clergy Sexual Abuse

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Register

Joan Frawley Desmond

MENLO PARK, Calif. — Amid calls for the decentralization of the Roman Curia by some Church leaders and theologians, Cardinal William Levada, the prefect emeritus of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF), underscored the CDF’s crucial role as the arbiter of faith and morals for the universal Church.

Cardinal Levada also suggested that the CDF was especially qualified to oversee the prosecution of clergy abuse cases, a responsibility given to the congregation by Pope St. John Paul II in his 2001 document Sacramentorum Sanctitatis Tutela, issued motu proprio (on the pope’s own initiative).

Over the past month, media outlets have reported on proposals within the Vatican to shift the prosecution of abuse cases to another dicastery. These reports have not been publicly confirmed, and Cardinal Levada did not address them directly. Rather, he reflected on the CDF’s unique expertise in dealing with these often-complicated cases over the past 16 years.

Cardinal Levada, 80, the former archbishop of San Francisco who retired as prefect of the CDF in 2012, offered his comments during a wide-ranging Register interview on Jan. 9 at his residence on the grounds of St. Patrick’s Seminary in Menlo Park, California. The conversation touched on his decades of service to the Church as a theologian, bishop and prefect of the CDF, and he also discussed the legacy of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI.

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Police chiefs planning to apologise to child-sex abuse victims

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

January 17, 2017
.
DAN BOX
Crime reporterSydney
@DanBox10

The nation’s police commissioners are set to make a historic apol­ogy to the victims of child-sex abuse in institutional care who were not believed when they reported these crimes or, worse, were returned to their abusers.

The true number of such abuse victims will never be known as records were not kept, have since been lost or were destroyed.

That such an apology is being considered at this level shows both its extent and the damage done are feared to be significant.

More than half a million children are estimated to have spent time in an orphanage, home or foster care over the past century. They represent more than 40 per cent of the 6349 people who have given evidence in private to the child abuse royal commission to date saying they were abused.

In a letter sent last week and seen by The Australian, Victoria Police Chief Commissioner Graham Ashton says the Australian and New Zealand Police Commissioners Forum met recently to discuss a potential apology to those affected. Writing to the Care Leavers Australasia Network, which represents people who were in ­institutional care and has campaigned on the issue for several years, Mr Ashton says the other police commissioners “asked me to convey their sincere empathy about the concerns … raised”.

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Concerned Catholics questions priest’s canon law studies

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Haidee V Eugenio , heugenio@guampdn.com Jan. 16, 2017

A group of Catholics is raising concerns about a recent decision to send a priest to Canada to study canon law. The priest defied an archbishop’s decision to reassign him to Umatac and has been accused of a string of alleged misconduct throughout the years. Canon law governs the Catholic Church.

The Concerned Catholics of Guam Inc. said Father Adrian Cristobal is “one of the most despicable clerics” in the Archdiocese of Agana for his conduct.

A few days before he was to leave Guam, Cristobal said that his being sent to study canon law is “nothing out of the ordinary.” The Concerned Catholics disagrees.

Priest unhappy with parish shift

“Father Adrian Cristobal should be disciplined, not rewarded, for lies he has perpetrated that has harmed the Church on Guam. He is one of the priests at the center of this division within our Church,” Concerned Catholics president David Sablan said in a Jan. 10 letter to the Archdiocesan Presbyteral Council.

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