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  Jesuits Settle Sex-abuse Claim Child Pornographers Use Social Media to Share Pictures, Keep Police at Bay

By Donna Gordon Blankinship
News Tribune
March 26, 2011

http://www.thenewstribune.com/2011/03/26/1600381/jesuits-settle-sex-abuse-claim.html

Clarita Vargas of Tacoma, a Colville Tribe member, speaks during a news conference Friday in Seattle after an order of priests agreed to a settlement of $166.1 million for hundreds of Native Americans and Alaska Natives who were abused at the order’s schools around the Pacific Northwest.

In one of the largest settlements in the Catholic Church’s sweeping sex abuse scandal, an order of priests agreed Friday to pay $166.1 million to hundreds of American Indians and Alaska Natives who were abused at the order’s schools around the Pacific Northwest.

The Jesuit order, called the Oregon Province of the Society of Jesus, has been accused of using its schools in remote villages and on reservations as dumping grounds for problem priests.

Attorneys representing the mostly American Indian and Alaska Native victims said the abuse added to the mistreatment already endured by these children, some of whom were forcibly removed from their homes to attend these schools.

The settlement between the more than 450 victims and the province also calls for a written apology to the victims and disclosure of documents to them, including their medical records.

“It’s a day of reckoning and justice,” said Clarita Vargas, 51, of Tacoma, who says she and her two sisters were abused by the head of St. Mary’s Mission and School, a former Jesuit-run Indian boarding school on the Colville Indian Reservation near Omak in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

The abuse began when they were as young as 6 or 7, she said. “My spirit was wounded, and this makes it feel better.”

St. Mary’s now operates as Paschal Sherman Indian School and is run by the Colville Tribe.

The province ran village and reservation schools in Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana and Alaska. The claims are from victims who were students at schools in all five states.

The Very Rev. Patrick Lee, speaking for the Oregon Province, said the organization would not comment on the settlement announcement because of its ongoing bankruptcy proceedings, “as well as out of respect for the judicial process and all involved.”

He said the province hopes to conclude the bankruptcy process as quickly as possible.

The province previously settled 200 claims. Then it filed for bankruptcy in 2009, claiming the payments depleted its treasury.

An issue that surfaced when the bankruptcy proceedings got under way was the relationship between the province and other Jesuit properties, such as Gonzaga University. Attorneys for the victims initially argued the province was wealthy because it controls and owns Gonzaga, along with Gonzaga Preparatory School, Seattle University and other schools and properties.

Both Gonzaga and the Jesuit order maintain they are separate entities, and victims’ attorneys did not pursue the issue during bankruptcy negotiations. Neither Gonzaga nor the other schools are contributing to the settlement announced Friday.

California attorney John Manly, who represented some of the abuse victims, contends the Jesuits knowingly put molesters in a position to abuse children.

“It wasn’t an accident. The evidence showed they did it on purpose and it was rape,” Manly said.

He added he was certain not all the victims have come forward, and he believes the pattern of abuse among Catholic priests continues.

Both the order and its insurers are paying into the settlement. About $6 million of the settlement is being set aside for future claims.

Attorney Blaine Tamaki said the priest who molested Vargas and about 100 other children has not been charged with a crime because the statute of limitations in Washington state is so restrictive. A bill before the state Legislature would remove that statute of limitations.

The settlement is believed to be the Catholic Church’s third-largest in the sex-abuse cases, behind the Los Angeles Diocese, which agreed to pay $660 million to 508 victims, and the San Diego Diocese, which agreed to pay $198 million to 144 victims, according to the website BishopAccountability.org.

WASHINGTON – The raid started out as routine. Investigators had heard that a convicted sex offender in Seattle was talking to others about sexually abusing a child.

When they raided Brian Rubenaker’s home, they found he was trading in child pornography. But just as disquieting as the pictures of sexual abuse was the computer program that the Rubenaker, 45, was using – it signaled to investigators that they were looking at a brand new front in their battle against illicit images.

Federal investigators said this was the first time they had come across the Google Hello program, a now defunct instant messaging system for photos, in a child pornography case.

Rubenaker’s computer eventually produced hundreds of leads. Last month two men from Virginia became the latest offenders to be sentenced to prison for participating in a sophisticated, members-only ring that illegally shared child pornography.

The years-long investigation into shadowy groups on social networks has revealed that pedophiles are using encryption tools in and other programs to illegally share child pornography.

Would-be members are increasingly being asked to share photographs and videos of children being sexually abused in order to gain entry to members-only groups, investigators say.

Officials at the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency who investigated links radiating from Rubenaker’s computer also said they had come across numerous instances of men sexually abusing their own children to gain “entry tickets” to members-only child-pornography rings.

Rubenaker’s links led investigators to 24 people who traded images and videos with him, according to Brian Bujdoso, a special agent at the agency. One contact, an Ohio man named Michael Janosko, had in turn shared child porn with a third man a 31 year-old father from Calgary, Canada.

When Canadian authorities raided the man’s home, they found that he was sexually abusing his daughter.

“He had started molesting that child from the age of 6 months,” said Bujdoso. “He was making those images so he could gain access to better images of child pornography.”

Bujdoso said Google Hello allowed users to share pictures with others, while simultaneously allowing conversations among members about the photos.

While social networking and photo-sharing programs are widely used to share innocuous photos and videos, Bujdoso said pedophiles had recognized their value – and were taking advantage of privacy and encryption settings to keep investigators at bay.

 
 

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