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.

July 18, 2012

O’Farrell welcomes study on Father F

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

July 19, 2012

Leesha McKenny
Urban Affairs Reporter

THE NSW Premier, Barry O’Farrell, has urged the Catholic Church ”to do what appears to have been lacking in past investigations” and hand its findings into a priest’s alleged sexual abuse of altar boys to police.

Mr O’Farrell welcomed the church’s appointment this week of retired Federal Court judge Antony Whitlam, QC, to investigate its ”processes related to the management” of Father F, who stands accused of repeated abuse stretching back to the 1980s in Moree.

”I would urge the Catholic Church to do what appears to have been lacking in past investigations, which is the link with police,” Mr O’Farrell 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.

Bishop Finn’s trial set

KANSAS CITY (MO)
Catholic Sentinel

Catholic News Service

Jury trial is set for Sept. 24 for Bishop Robert Finn and the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph on misdemeanor charges of failing to report suspected abuse.

The prosecution contends that Bishop Finn and the diocese were legally obligated to report suspected child abuse to state authorities under Missouri law but failed to do so for six months after the discovery of child pornography on a church computer. The charge against Bishop Finn carries a maximum penalty of a $1,000 fine and one year in jail. The diocese faces a fine of up to $5,000.

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.

A disappointing start to the global battle against abuse

VATICAN CITY
Catholic Herald (United Kingdom)

The Vatican gave bishops around the world a year to produce the most basic guidelines on handling abuse allegations and more than half of them failed to submit the text in time

By The Catholic Herald on Wednesday, 18 July 2012

In May 2011 the Vatican Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith wrote to every bishops’ conference in the world asking them to draw up guidelines on tackling clerical abuse. The CDF gave the bishops’ conferences a generous deadline: they had a whole year to draft the document. Some conferences, of course, already had procedures for handling abuse allegations, including our own. But the overwhelming majority did not. Note that the CDF only asked for guidelines, rather than binding norms, and allowed wriggle room by saying that child protection policies could be drafted in “ways appropriate to specific situations in different regions”.

A year has now passed and the results are in. Mgr Charles Scicluna, the CDF’s promoter of justice, told the Italian monthly Jesus that without counting Africa “more than half of the conferences responded” to the May deadline. This is an odd formulation. Why didn’t Mgr Scicluna say simply that more than half of conferences had responded? Surely because, when you include Africa, the CDF had received responses from less than half of the world’s conferences before the deadline. Think about that for a moment: the Vatican gave bishops around the world a year to produce the most rudimentary guidelines on handling abuse allegations and more than half of them still failed to submit the text in time.

Mgr Scicluna promised that conferences that failed to submit guidelines would receive “a letter of reminder”. But it’s unlikely that so mild a sanction will stir those that failed to create guidelines into action. Meanwhile, the CDF will not begin to evaluate guidelines that have been submitted until after the summer. Even then, the process will take at least a year. This is not to criticise Mgr Scicluna, who has done more to uncover and punish clerical abuse than anyone except Pope Benedict. But the Vatican as a whole needs to apply much more pressure to bishops’ conferences that fail to treat the defence of children with the utmost seriousness. As we have said before, the Church should offer children the same level of protection whether they live in New York or Nairobi.

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.

BIGOTRY EXPLAINS FALSE ACCUSATIONS

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Catholic League

Catholic League president Bill Donohue comments as follows:

False accusations against priests are hardly uncommon these days, but when anti-Catholicism accounts for lies against lay Catholics, the problem only worsens. Consider the latest news concerning Tim Udinski.

After Udinski was fired as the lacrosse coach at Lansdale Catholic High School last year, he made several accusations over a seven-month period claiming that the football coach and the new lacrosse coach were sexually abusing students. He also maintained that the principal of the suburban Philadelphia school, Tim Quinn, knew about the offenses.

After detectives spent 184 hours on this case, interviewing 97 people (at a cost of more than $8250), they determined that the charges were bogus. Standing by itself, this wouldn’t be big news, but what makes it so disturbing is Udinski’s motive: he has admitted that he fabricated the whole story, just so he could “get the Church.”

Landsdale Catholic High is in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, and it was to the archdiocese that Udinski sent his anonymous e-mails. Montgomery County District Attorney Risa Vetri Ferman acknowledged that Udinski sought to exploit the high profile that the sexual abuse of minors has been given. Indeed, she questioned, “How do you undo that? How do you unring the bell?”

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.

Vatican passes first test against money laundering, finance crimes

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Service

By Carol Glatz
Catholic News Service

[MONEYVAL’s first evaluation report on the Holy See – Council of Europe]

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — As the Vatican continues working to comply with international standards against money laundering and financing terrorism, it still needs to beef up internal inspection and supervisory powers, said a long-awaited report by European finance experts.

Overall, the Vatican met nine out of 16 “key and core” recommendations, thereby passing its first major test in an effort to become more financially transparent and compliant with international norms.

“The Holy See has come a long way in a very short period of time and many of the building blocks” of a system to combat money laundering and the financing of terrorism “are now formally in place,” said the first report on the Vatican by “Moneyval” — the Council of Europe’s Committee of Experts on the Evaluation of Anti-Money Laundering Measures and the Financing of Terrorism.

However, “further important issues still need addressing” to tighten remaining loopholes, fill in legal gaps and guarantee laws are effectively being carried out, it 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.

Accused priest receiving treatment in Brazil: bishop

CANADA/BRAZIL
Metro

By Staff Torstar News Service

A Brazilian bishop has contacted the Hamilton Diocese to advise that a former St. Mary’s Roman Catholic priest is receiving treatment in his homeland.

Bishop Juarez Sousa, of Oeiras diocese in Brazil, stated in a July 17 letter that Rev. Joseph Gildasio de Sousa Silva — who served for two years at St. Mary’s — returned to Brazil on May 5 and arrived in Oeiras on May 10.

“Father Jose Gildasio will definitely not return to Canada and is removed from priestly duties concerning the Church,” the bishop wrote in the letter, a copy of which was obtained by the Spectator.

Sousa said the priest was initially sent to a help centre where he received therapy called ADI (Direct Approach of the Unconscious) before being sent to a therapeutic community “whose privacy we would like to preserve.”

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.

Metropolitan Jonah Ousted [UPDATED]

UNITED STATES
The American Conservative

By Rod Dreher • July 8, 2012

Something for you Orthodox readers on Sunday morning: It has been confirmed that Metropolitan Jonah of the OCA has resigned under pressure from the Holy Synod.

They finally got him. What they don’t understand is that they probably signed the OCA’s death warrant in so doing — not because Jonah was necessarily an exceptional metropolitan (he had his problems as an administrator, and though a very good man, was temperamentally ill-suited for the job), but because the sleazy, corrupt way the Synod has handled this from the beginning shows them to be a pack of ravening wolves.

Now would be a good time to invoke the old saying about how the Church must be a work of God, because there is no way it could have survived for 2,000 years the fools and knaves who run it.

UPDATE: I’m hearing this afternoon that Jonah made his resignation most likely on Friday evening, but that it is unclear whether or not it has been formally accepted. It is possible that the terms of his exit are being negotiated. Stay tuned; this situation is fluid.

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.

Pa. must eliminate statute of limitations on child sex-abuse cases

PENNSYLVANIA
The Morning Call

It’s a crime that strikes the young and the innocent. It’s a crime that I have prosecuted too often, and not often enough. Childhood sexual abuse is horrifically common, yet many times the crime goes unreported for years – even decades – after the crime is committed. Sometimes it’s never reported at all.

For the past eight months, childhood sexual abuse has made front-page national news on a daily basis because of the tragedy brought to light at our Penn State University.

Thousands of stories have been written and reported about the events in State College, but there are thousands more stories across our commonwealth that walk our streets, pass us by each day.

Stories of the victims, afraid and embarrassed.
Stories of the abusers, walking free, unafraid to harm again.

Stories of communities, unconvinced, unaffected — not taking notice.

If anything positive can be gleaned from the catastrophe in Centre County, it’s that a much brighter light has been shone on this all-too-common, all-too-silent crime.

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.

Taskforce to investigate priest claims

AUSTRALIA
7 News

AAP

July 18, 2012

A police taskforce has been set up to investigate allegations of abuse of altar boys by the former NSW priest known as Father F.

The former religious leader, who lives in Armidale, allegedly abused several boys during the 1980s.

NSW Premier Barry O’Farrell on Wednesday said he had forwarded police a letter he received from independent MP Richard Torbay, whose electorate includes Armidale, after the allegations were aired by the ABC.

“Two days ago I had a letter from the local member for Armidale Richard Torbay raising understandable concerns,” Mr O’Farrell told reporters.

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.

Confessional box no place to catch criminals, says Ted Baillieu

AUSTRALIA
Courier Mail

PREMIER Ted Baillieu has backed the right of priests to keep private what is said in the confessional.

The Herald Sun revealed that a parliamentary committee would consider forcing priests to reveal reports of abuse heard during confession.

Mr Baillieu pointed to an earlier inquiry, headed by Justice Philip Cummins, that came out against the requirement.

He said members of that inquiry “all concluded that the sanctity of the confessional should remain”.

“I think that’s a powerful argument,” Mr Baillieu 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.

New testimony surfaces in sexual abuse case of Chilean priest

CHILE
Santiago Times

Wednesday, 18 July 2012

Written by Maria Giulia Agostini

This weekend, Chile celebrated the “Día de la Virgen del Carmen,” one of the most important holidays of the Roman Catholic calendar, with masses and special services throughout the country. This year’s celebration, however, was marred with another stain on the reputation of the Catholic Church when a man uploaded a YouTube video describing his sexual abuse at the hands of respected Chilean priest Cristián Precht.

The alleged victim, Jorge Cantellano, said he was abused by Precht in 1979, when Cantellano was a 19-year-old student in a church seminary.

“He invited me to sleep in his room, which I found strange because priests had rooms for visitors,” Cantellano says in the video. “We talked about the vocation and a few other things. Once we were done, he took my hand, affectionately placed it on his chest and then lowered it toward his penis.”

Celebrated in the country for his humanitarian contribution during the Pinochet dictatorship, the public was shocked when Precht was linked to sexual abuse for the first time 11 months ago.

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.

Cops take up abuse case after 30 years

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Dan Box
From:The Australian
July 19, 2012

A DEDICATED police strike force is investigating alleged serial child abuse by a former Catholic priest, almost 30 years after church authorities were first warned about his behaviour.

NSW Police Strike Force Glenroe has been gathering evidence from a number of families of alleged victims, though a spokeswoman would confirm only that the unit would “review all relevant material”.

The father of one alleged victim said he spoke to detectives last week, having first told church officials and local police in 1983 that his son had been abused. No action against the priest was taken at the time.

“I said: ‘Look, you might notice an edge in my voice. That’s simply because it’s 29 years too late and there’s a lot of victims since’,” said the man, who asked not to be named.

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

Priest faces seven sex charges from Newfoundland, Nova Scotia parishes

CANADA
Cape Breton Post

CORNER BROOK, N.L. (CP) — Seven more sex-related charges have been filed against a 74-year-old Roman Catholic priest from western Newfoundland.

George Ansel Smith already faces 62 charges against him stemming from the time he served parishes in western Newfoundland.

The most recent charges laid Tuesday include counts of gross indecency, indecent assault and unlawful assault with intent to commit an indictable offence.

All of the charges involve young boys and date back as far as the late 1960s.

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

Child molestation from clergy is not just a Catholic problem?

UNITED STATES
Holiness is the Only Way to Jesus

Elder Henry L. Dillihant III

How well do you really know the people who claim they’re called of God and say that your pastor(s) and ministry leaders. We are well beyond the time of knowing of the drastic situation of child rape/molestation from clergy leaders in the Catholic Church and it is spread beyond this church and Catholicism to be known as a worldwide problem amidst those in religious authority. The time is come to expose his demonic activity for what it is and spread like to the individuals claiming to represent God. We should have been required to do the Department of Justice and FBI fingerprint background checks and live scan fingerprinting of those in leadership positions of any capacity in the church.

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

Weston Priest Named in Sex Abuse Lawsuit

WESTON (MA)
Patch

By Bret Silverberg

A Haitian national is suing a Weston priest who allegedly did nothing to stop him from being sexually abused at a school for disadvantaged youth in Haiti.

The Rev. Paul E. Carrier and others were named in a civil complaint filed Tuesday in Federal Court in Connecticut, which alleges he is responsible for abuse the victim suffered administered by Douglas Perlitz, the former director of Project Pierre Toussaint in Cap-Haitien, Haiti, according to Boston.com.

The suit alleges Carrier, along with Fairfield University and others, had a hand in providing funding for the school in Haiti.

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.

Whaling on Jonah

UNITED STATES
Spiritual Politics

Mark Silk
Jul 18, 2012

For those of you interested in keeping up with the saga of the sacking of Metropolitan Jonah by the Synod of Orthodox Church in America, the latest chapter is a letter from the synod explaining the reasons for its action. While there are general claims of maladministration, the central charge is that Jonah covered up a rape accusation against a priest he brought into the church.

Among the Jonahites, George Michalopulos, who blogs as Monomakhos, isn’t buying. By contrast, Rod Dreher, who left the Catholic church when the scale of bishops’ coverup of clerical sexual abuse became apparent, is prepared to believe the worst. The Philadelphia Inquirer reports that the OCA is cooperating with law enforcement in a criminal investigation.

Of greater significance in the wider scheme of things, the synod is at some pains to deny that culture war politics played any role in its decision.

Some argue that the resignation had to do with moral or political views publicly expressed by Metropolitan Jonah that conflicted with the views of others in the Church, the so-called “culture wars.” Such views have never been a point of contention in Holy Synod or Metropolitan Council meetings. These issues were discussed, and statements and actions of the Holy Synod have demonstrated their unchanging position on traditional Orthodox views of morality. This speculation as to other motives behind the resignation is simply not true; the reasons for the resignation are detailed in this message.

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.

Council of Europe approves Vatican financial system but suggests increased vigilance

VATICAN CITY
Rome Reports

July 18, 2012. (Romereports.com) (-ONLY VIDEO-) The Moneyval committee from the Council of Europe has published their first report of 241 pages on the financial transparency of the Vatican. It suggests improvements in monitoring to ensure greater effectiveness of its financial system.

Of the 45 criterion that were evaluated, 22 of them were approved and the other 23 were said to have areas that needed improvement. Normally the evaluation criterion is based on 49 points, but the report notes that given the characteristics of the Holy See that four did not apply in this case.

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Vatican passes financial transparency test – but with poor grades

VATICAN CITY
The Guardian (United Kingdom)

John Hooper in Rome
guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 18 July 2012

The Vatican has scraped through an independent international test of its financial transparency.

The Council of Europe said it was either “non-compliant” or “partially compliant” in 23 out of a total of 45 areas. But its report showed the Vatican had received “compliant” or “largely compliant” grades on nine of the 16 “key and core” recommendations for combatting money-laundering and terrorist financing.

The report says the Holy See still has to make important reforms before it can reach international standards of financial transparency. The Institute for the Works of Religion (IOR), popularly known as the Vatican bank, was at the centre of an international scandal over alleged money-laundering and shady banking practices in the 1980s and it was not until April 2011 that the Holy See passed a law aimed at improving its financial transparency.

The Council of Europe’s committee of experts, known as Moneyval, said: “The Holy See has come a long way in a very short period … But further important issues still need addressing in order to demonstrate that a fully effective regime has been instituted in practice.”

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.

Vatican bank ‘needs more reform’, report says

VATICAN CITY
BBC News

The Vatican bank needs more reform in order to show it is effective at preventing financial crime, a report by a European banking watchdog has said.

The Vatican has tried to gain entry to a so-called “white list” of countries that are recognised globally as financially transparent.

The report said the Vatican’s measures for tackling money laundering and financing of terrorism were inadequate.

However, the bank had “come a long way” in addressing financial transparency.

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.

Vatican passes key financial transparency test

VATICAN CITY
Philadelphia Inquirer

[MONEYVAL’s first evaluation report on the Holy See – Council of Europe]

The Associated Press

VATICAN CITY – The Vatican has passed a key European financial transparency test, but received poor grades for the effectiveness of its new financial watchdog agency and the ability of its bank to track suspicious transactions.

The Council of Europe report released Wednesday marked a milestone in the Holy See’s efforts to shed its reputation as a shady tax haven long mired in secrecy and scandal.

The report showed the Vatican had received compliant or largely compliant grades on nine of the 16 “key and core” internationally recognized recommendations to fight money laundering and terrorist financing.

But seven other areas were found lacking, particularly concerning the Vatican’s financial oversight agency, created amid much fanfare in 2010 to try to respond to international demands for greater financial transparency.

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Vatican’s financial rules found wanting

VATICAN CITY
Financial Times

By Guy Dinmore and Giulia Segreti in Rome

The Vatican’s efforts to adopt international standards in combating money laundering and terrorist financing have been given a mixed assessment in a landmark European survey of its historically opaque financial system.

Releasing its eagerly anticipated report on Wednesday, the 47-nation Council of Europe said the city state had “come a long way in a very short period of time” in terms of putting in place the “building blocks” of appropriate financial regulations.

But it also said the Vatican had to address important issues to demonstrate that a fully effective regime existed in practice, signalling that it could be a lengthy process before the Vatican meets the standards necessary to be accepted into what is informally known as the “white list” of countries.

The Vatican had requested the first such outside rating as part of Pope Benedict XVI’s push to bring the Holy See into line with international standards. But the process of reforming the Vatican’s traditionally secretive bank has been marred by setbacks and what some observers see as a behind-scenes power struggle that resulted in the abrupt dismissal of its president, Ettore Gotti Tedeschi, in May.

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Transparent faith: Vatican needs reforms to get on white-list

VATICAN CITY
RT

Leading experts on money laundering say the Vatican has to embark on important reforms if it wants to embrace financial transparency.

­A report from Moneyval, the arm of the Council of Europe which evaluates anti-money laundering and the funding of terrorism, shows the Vatican failed seven of its 16 key criteria, and got just a pass on the other nine. Getting a clean bill of health from Moneyval gets a country on the ‘white list’ of financially transparent countries.

The Holy See has been making efforts to shed its reputation as a shady tax haven long mired in secrecy and scandals.

However, the report says it still has to make important reforms in the Vatican’s financial oversight agency before it could reach international standards on combating money laundering and the financing of terrorism.

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.

FACTBOX-New report on Vatican Bank

VATICAN CITY
Chicago Tribune

July 18 (Reuters) – Here is a look at the 70 year-old Vatican Bank and its scandals:

* The bank, known formally as the Institute for the Works of Religion (IOR), was established in 1942 by Pope Pius XII and is used by Vatican agencies, church organisations, bishops and religious orders around the world.

* It is a privately held institution located inside Vatican City run by a professional bank CEO who reports directly to a committee of cardinals, and ultimately to the Pope.

* It offers currency exchange services and interest-bearing accounts and has an investment portfolio.

* It has no branches outside Vatican City and it operates as an offshore institution outside EU rules.

* There are no shareholders and no policy-making functions.

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 berates Vatican bank, urges serious reform

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

[MONEYVAL’s first evaluation report on the Holy See – Council of Europe]

By Philip Pullella

VATICAN CITY | Wed Jul 18, 2012

(Reuters) – A European report on Wednesday identified serious failings in the Vatican’s scandal-plagued bank, sharply criticizing its management and giving it a negative rating in almost half the most important transparency-related assessment criteria.

The report, by Moneyval, a department of the Council of Europe, suggests the Vatican still has a long way to go before it can be included on an international “white list” of countries that abide by global norms on combating money laundering, the financing of terrorism and tax evasion.

It was particularly pointed in its criticism of the management of the Vatican bank, officially known as the Institute for Works of Religion (IOR), and “strongly recommended” it be “independently supervised by a prudential supervisor in the near future”.

“Fit and proper criteria” should be applied to senior management at the IOR, it said.

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Missbrauchsopfer hungert für die Aufhebung der Verjährungsfristen

DEUTSCHLAND
Welt

Scharbeutz (dapd). Durch sein Dachgeschossfenster glitzert die Ostsee. Auf dem Tisch des 63-Jährigen stehen seit knapp sechs Wochen nur Wasser, Tee, Limonensaft und Gemüsewasser. Mit einem Hungerstreik will Norbert Denef, der Sprecher des Opferverbandes netzwerkB, für die Aufhebung der Verjährungsfristen bei sexualisierter Gewalt kämpfen. Wie lange noch, das will der in Scharbeutz (Kreis Ostholstein) lebende Denef von Tag zu Tag entscheiden.

Er lasse sich von niemandem unter Druck setzen. “Ich habe immer gesagt, dass ich mich nicht umbringen will”, sagt Denef. Appelle von Politikern wie Mecklenburg-Vorpommerns Sozialministerin Manuela Schwesig (SPD) oder die Anzeige eines Kieler Grünen-Politikers, um ihn zur Aufgabe zu zwingen, seien deshalb völlig unnötig.

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«Im Kloster lernte ich, auf Gewalt mit Gewalt zu antworten»

SCHWEIZ
Tages Anzeiger

Von Bernhard Odehnal

Ein weiterer ehemaliger Zögling des Kinderheims in Fischingen erzählt von Schlägen und sexuellem Missbrauch durch einen Priester. Das Kloster lehnt eine kollektive Aufarbeitung weiterhin ab.

Walter Nowak will Fischingen nicht mehr besuchen. Nie wieder. Zehn Jahre, von 1962 bis 1972, war der gebürtige Österreicher in der Erziehungsanstalt des Thurgauer Klosters. In einem Bericht im «Tages-Anzeiger» erzählte er von Gewalt und sexuellem Missbrauch durch einen Erzieher (TA vom 26. 6.). Der heutige Klosterdirektor Werner Ibig lud ihn daraufhin zu einem persönlichen Gespräch ein. Der Termin war schon vereinbart, doch vor einigen Tagen sagte Nowak schriftlich ab und schickte Ibig eine ausführliche Begründung: Er vermisse jegliches Schuldbewusstsein, so Nowak sinngemäss: Die Angaben der Opfer würden angezweifelt, der Datenschutz benutzt, um die Täter zu schützen.

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In den Händen des Sadisten

SCHWEIZ
Tages Anzeiger

Von Bernhard Odehnal

Zehn Jahre verbrachte Walter Nowak im Kinderheim des Thurgauer Klosters Fischingen. Er erzählt von Folter und Missbrauch. Obwohl ein Fachgremium seine Schilderungen als glaubwürdig einstufte, verweigert ihm das Kloster eine Entschädigung.

Jetzt, nach 40 Jahren, kommt sogar die Geschichte mit den Kaninchen zurück. In letzter Zeit träumt Walter Nowak wieder von der Panik in den Augen der kleinen Tiere, kurz vor ihrem qualvollen Tod. Anfang der Siebzigerjahre musste sich Nowak mit seinen Mitschülern jeden Montagmorgen im Kloster Fischingen vor dem Terrarium mit Riesenschlangen aufstellen. Dann warf Pater S. ein weisses Kaninchen in den Glasbehälter. Ganz langsam zerdrückten die Reptilien ihre Beute. Die verängstigten Schüler mussten zusehen, niemand durfte sich abwenden. Und als das Tier gefressen wurde, erinnert sich Nowak, «sah ich in den Augen des Priesters Freude und Lust. Wie bei einem Orgasmus.»

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Priester missbraucht in Frankreich jahrzehntelang Kinder

FRANKREICH
Focus

Ein Priester hat in Nordfrankreich jahrzehntelang Jungen missbraucht. Der heute 68 Jahre alte Mann habe die ihm zu Last gelegten Taten gestanden, teilte die französische Justiz am Mittwoch in Lille mit. Gegen ihn sei Haftbefehl ergangen.

Die Aussagen von zwei Betroffenen hatten die Ermittlungen zu dem Missbrauchsskandal Anfang des Jahres ausgelöst. Mittlerweile sind nach Angaben der Staatsanwaltschaft rund zehn Opfer identifiziert. Zu den ersten Übergriffen kam es nach bisherigen Erkenntnissen in den 70er Jahren, der letzte bekannte Fall ereignete sich zu Beginn des vergangenen Jahrzehnts.

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Priester in Frankreich wegen sexuellen Missbrauchs in Haft

FRANKREICH
Zeit (Deutschland)

Paris (AFP) Wegen des Verdachts des sexuellen Missbrauchs von minderjährigen Jungen ist in Nordfrankreich ein Ermittlungsverfahren gegen einen Priester eingeleitet worden. Der 68-Jährige sei vergangene Woche in Untersuchungshaft genommen worden, erfuhr die Nachrichtenagentur AFP am Mittwoch aus Justizkreisen in Lille. Der Priester habe die Taten gestanden, die er in der Gegend von Lille sowie von Dunkerque begangen habe.

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Arrestation d’un prêtre soupçonné de viol dans le Nord

FRANCE
La Croix

Un prêtre de 68 ans, soupçonné d’avoir abusé sexuellement de jeunes garçons dans le Nord, a été mis en examen la semaine dernière pour viols et agressions sexuelles sur mineurs de 15 ans et placé en détention provisoire, a-t-on appris mercredi 18 juillet de source judiciaire.

Lors de sa garde à vue, l’homme a reconnu les faits qui lui sont reprochés, qui se seraient déroulés dans les régions de Lille et de Dunkerque. Les agissements du prêtre faits qui concerneraient une dizaine de victimes identifiées s’étaleraient des années 1970 au début des années 2000. Ils ont été dénoncés par deux victimes en début d’année.

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Bollezeele : le curé écroué pour viols sur mineurs

FRANCE
France 3

Le père Philippe Détré, 68 ans, est curé de Bollezeele, dans les Flandres et de plusieurs villages aux alentours depuis 2005 (Eringhem, Merckeghem, Rubrouck, Buysscheure, Wulverdinghe…). Dimanche dernier, rapporte La Voix du Nord, un autre prêtre est venu célébrer la messe et a annoncé : « J’ai une mauvaise nouvelle. Votre curé est en détention provisoire. Je vous demanderai de ne pas commenter cette information. »

Ce mercredi, Nord-Eclair affirme que “le prêtre a comparu en fin de semaine dernière devant un juge d’instruction lillois qui l’a mis en examen notamment pour viols sur mineurs de moins de quinze ans. Le prêtre a été écroué dans la foulée par le juge des libertés.”

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MONEYVAL REPORT: GIVING CONCRETE FORM TO THE MORAL COMMITMENT OF THE VATICAN AND THE HOLY SEE

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

[MONEYVAL’s first evaluation report on the Holy See – Council of Europe]

Vatican City, (VIS) – Msgr. Ettore Balestrero, under secretary for Relations with State, today presented a briefing to journalists in the Holy See Press Office concerning the publication of the first Mutual Evaluation Report on the Holy See and on Vatican City State (“MONEYVAL Report”) regarding adherence to the 40 + IX FATF recommendations against money laundering and countering the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT). Msgr. Balestrero was head of the Holy See delegation to the plenary session of MONEYVAL held in Strasbourg, France, on 4 July.

Extracts from Msgr. Balestrero’s English-language presentation are given below:

“Vatican City State has a very small territory, with a small population, a very low level of domestic crime and no market economy. It is not a financial centre and its financial activities are meant to support its works of charity and of religion. However the Holy See enjoys a recognised moral voice and in this sense is deeply connected not only with its immediate neighbours, but with all countries of the world. Moreover the Holy See, as primarily responsible for the universal mission of the Church, has a special ability – even duty – to guide and orient Catholic religious organisations throughout the world. While those organisations exist within their own civil jurisdictions and are bound to follow the laws of those jurisdictions on AML/CFT issues, it is important that the Holy See use its moral authority to raise maximum awareness about the far too frequent transnational crime of money laundering and the financing of terrorism”.

Beginning along the path and first accomplishments

“There has always been a clear determination to fight money laundering and terrorist financing, as well as a legal system that already had several of the elements necessary to tackle ML/FT problems.

“At the end of 2010, we passed an AML/CFT law and requested evaluation in February 2011 by MONEYVAL. Our law came into force on 1 April 2011. Our Financial Intelligence Authority was operational by June. In November 2011, we received our first MONEYVAL on-site visit. The team of our evaluators was widely considered to be perhaps the strongest team MONEYVAL had ever assembled. It included the president, the secretary and an administrator of MONEYVAL, the president of the Egmont Group of Financial Intelligence Units, two senior financial experts and a professor of international law”.

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A Beloved Priest Accused, A Parish in Disbelief

NEW JERSEY
Patch

By Daniel Nee

To parishioners at Church of the Visitation in Brick, it came as the shock of a lifetime.

The priest who had encouraged them through times of sadness and fear, who brought food to the local needy and who comforted those who found themselves in periods of grief – had been accused of a crime that is as depressing and disappointing as it is serious and unthinkable.

Fr. Marukudiyil C. Velan, 64, known to parishioners at the Mantoloking Road church as “Father Chris,” was arrested Saturday and charged with two sex crimes, one against a minor.

A garden, named for Father Chris in the back of the church’s yard, was empty Tuesday afternoon, a day after his arrest became publicly known. A few tomatoes looked ripe, presumably with no one there to pick them off the vine.

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Former Coach Arrested For Making False Accusations About Coaches At Lansdale Catholic

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Montgomery County District Attorney

Montgomery County District Attorney Risa Vetri Ferman announces the arrest of Tim Udinski for stalking and harassment charges. The charges stem from the defendant deliberately making false accusations of sexual misconduct against officials associated with Lansdale Catholic High School. Between October 19, 2011 and May 31, 2012, on seven separate occasions, Udinski sent false claims of sexual abuse in anonymous emails to the Archdiocese of Philadelphia. In these emails, he deliberately and falsely claimed that both the Lansdale Catholic football and lacrosse coaches were engaged in sexual solicitation of players on their respective teams. Udinski also accused the Lansdale Catholic Principal of failing to take any action regarding the alleged misconduct.

Tim Udinski was the former head lacrosse coach at Lansdale Catholic High School. During his tenure at the school, Udinski was the target of unfounded accusations. While coaching the 2011 lacrosse season, Lansdale Catholic relieved Udinski of his duties after he engaged in repeated heated arguments with players and staff. Principal Tim Quinn reported that Udinski was extremely upset about his firing.

Subsequent to Udinski’s firing, on October 19, 2011, the Archdiocese of Philadelphia received an anonymous email alleging that the head football coach had sexually solicited a player. The email included an accusation that the Principal, himself a former football player at Lansdale Catholic, had a history of ignoring any complaints about the coach.

On March 12, and March 14, 2012 the Archdiocese received two anonymous emails complaining that Lansdale Catholic’s head lacrosse coach had been involved in a sexual assault while attending Lehigh University. Again on March 15, 2012 the Archdiocese received an anonymous email threatening to inform the media about the allegations involving the lacrosse coach. This email was followed by numerous anonymous emails on March 22, to the Archdiocese and local media outlets concerning wrongdoing at Lansdale Catholic High School.

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Former Lansdale Catholic lacrosse coach charged with making false sex abuse claims

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
The Morning Call

By Pamela Lehman, Of The Morning Call

3:48 p.m. EDT, July 17, 2012
Authorities charged a former Lansdale Catholic High School lacrosse coach with making false accusations of sexual misconduct against school officials.

Tim Udinski was charged Tuesday with stalking and harassment charges. He is free under $25,000 unsecured bail.

While Udinski served as the former head coach, he was fired in October after “repeated heated arguments” with players and staff, according to a news release from Montgomery County Attorney Risa Vetri Ferman.

According to the release:

The firing left Udinski “extremely upset,” accoridng to Principal Tim Quinn.

From October through May, on seven different occasions, authorities said Udinski sent anonymous emails to the Archdiocese of Philadelphia accusing a coach of sexual misconduct and the school’s principal of ignoring the complaints.

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DA: Disgruntled ex-LC coach made false sex abuse claims

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
The Times Herald

Montgomery County District Attorney Risa Vetri Ferman on Tuesday announced the arrest of Tim Udinski, the former head lacrosse coach at Lansdale Catholic High School, for stalking and harassment.

The defendant lodged false accusations of sexual misconduct against officials associated with the school, according to authorities. On seven separate occasions between Oct. 19, 2011 and May 31, 2012, Udinski allegedly sent false claims of sexual abuse in anonymous emails to the Archdiocese of Philadelphia. In these emails, he claimed the current Lansdale Catholic football and lacrosse coaches were engaged in sexual solicitation of players on their respective teams. Udinski also accused the Lansdale Catholic principal of failing to take any action regarding the alleged misconduct, according to reports.

During his tenure at the school, Udinski reportedly was the target of unfounded accusations.

During the 2011 lacrosse season, Lansdale Catholic relieved Udinski of his duties after he reportedly engaged in repeated heated arguments with players and staff. Principal Tim Quinn reported Udinski was extremely upset about his firing.

After Udinski’s firing, on Oct. 19, 2011, the Archdiocese of Philadelphia received an anonymous email alleging that the head football coach had sexually solicited a player. The email included an accusation that the principal, himself a former football player at Lansdale Catholic, had a history of ignoring any complaints about the coach.

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Former High School Coach Charged With Falsely Accusing Other Coaches Of Molestation

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Deadspin

Dom Cosentino

From October 2011 until May of this year, the Archdiocese of Philadelphia received a series anonymous emails from someone who said the longtime football coach at a suburban Catholic high school—a man in his 70s—had solicited sex from a player. Other messages accused the school’s lacrosse coach of sexually assaulting students. There were seven emails in all, and the allegations more or less coincided with news of the ongoing scandal a few hours away at Penn State, not to mention a recent child sex abuse trial that rocked the Philly archdiocese and resulted in the first guilty verdict against a senior official within the U.S. Catholic Church.

But after a lengthy investigation, prosecutors in suburban Montgomery County, Pa., determined the emails about Jim Algeo, the football coach at Lansdale Catholic from 1968 until his retirement after last season, and Nick Pison, its new lacrosse coach, were a hoax. Tim Udinski, 43, was arrested and charged today with stalking and harassment. The reason? He was pissed that Lansdale Catholic had fired him for what the Philadelphia Inquirer described as “heated arguments with players and an assistant.” And what better way to get even than to try to ruin a bunch of people’s lives, right?

Udinski allegedly sent the anonymous emails from a computer at a public library. The Bucks County Courier Times said police did nearly 200 hours of interviews with roughly 100 people and obtained 10 court orders to conduct searches before finally catching on.

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Ex-coach charged with making false abuse claims

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
WTRF

Updated: Jul 18, 2012

NORRISTOWN, Pa. (AP) – Authorities say a suburban Philadelphia high school lacrosse coach who lost his job launched a campaign of false sex-abuse reports that detectives spent more than 180 hours investigating.

Former Lansdale Catholic High School coach Tim Udinski was charged Tuesday with harassment and stalking. Prosecutors in Montgomery County say Udinski took advantage of renewed attention given to sex-abuse complaints to target his successor and another coach at the school.

Investigators say Udinski admitted making the false reports when confronted. He allegedly told police he submitted anonymous reports to the Archdiocese of Philadelphia because he was upset about losing his job.

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Ex-Lansdale Catholic coach charged in school’s sex-abuse hoaxes

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

By John P. Martin
Inquirer Staff Writer

After one season as head lacrosse coach at Lansdale Catholic High School, he was out, ostensibly after conflicts with players and an assistant.

Udinski thought his dismissal was unfair, one the school wouldn’t have considered for counterparts like veteran football coach Jim Algeo. So he launched a scheme to prove the point, authorities say.

Over seven months, Udinski allegedly sent anonymous e-mails to the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, claiming Algeo had solicited sex from a player and accusing the new lacrosse coach of sex assaults.

On Tuesday, Montgomery County prosecutors charged Udinski with harassment and stalking.

District Attorney Risa Vetri Ferman said his offenses were particularly galling because Udinski tried to manipulate a national spotlight on child-sex abuse in a vengeful bid to destroy reputations.

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Coach allegedly made false abuse allegations to Phila. archdiocese

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Catholic News Agency

Philadelphia, Pa., Jul 18, 2012 / 12:10 am (CNA).- A former Lansdale Catholic High School lacrosse coach has been arrested and charged after allegedly making false claims of sexual abuse in anonymous e-mails to the Archdiocese of Philadelphia.

“The cost to the men subjected to the false accusations is impossible to measure,” the Montgomery County District Attorney’s Office said in a July 17 statement, announcing Timothy Udinski’s arrest on charges of harassment and stalking.

On June 21, Udinski told detectives that he sent the archdiocese seven anonymous fabricated reports, targeting officials associated with the Catholic school where he had coached boys’ lacrosse. He said he made the false reports he was “furious” and “mad at the school for the way I was treated.”

According to the Distict Attorney’s office, Udinski himself “was the target of unfounded accusations” of an unspecified nature. He was dismissed from his coaching duties after a series of heated arguments with players and staff.

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Diocese seeking new trial in fraud case

APPLETON (WI)
WHBY

Lawyers for the Catholic Diocese of Green Bay were in Outagamie County court yesterday, seeking a new trial, after the church was ordered to pay $770,000 in a civil case.

Jurors found that church officials committed fraud when they transferred former priest John Feeney several times, and didn’t warn parishioners about child sexual abuse allegations against him.

Feeney molested Troy and Todd Merryfield in the late 1970’s, and they sued the diocese.

An attorney for the church says they deserve a new trial, because a juror made a comment that she was worried that Feeney may have molested one of her relatives. He says that shows bias, and he feels her comment could have poisoned the entire jury.

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More than 20 Haitian nationals sue Weston priest

WESTON (MA)
Boston Globe

By Travis Andersen
| Globe Staff
July 18, 2012

A former student at a school for disadvantaged youth in Haiti has joined 22 other former pupils in filing a lawsuit against a Jesuit priest now living in Weston and others, alleging the defendants did nothing to stop the school’s former director from sexually abusing them over a 10-year period.

In a civil complaint filed Tuesday in federal court in Connecticut, a man living in Haiti who is currently in his early 20s says the Rev. Paul E. Carrier, Fairfield University, and other defendants are liable for the abuse he suffered at the hands of Douglas Perlitz, 42, former director of Project Pierre Toussaint in Cap-Haitien, Haiti.

The Globe does not name alleged victims of sexual abuse unless they are willing to have their names published.

According to the man’s complaint, Carrier, a former Fairfield chaplain, the university, and other defendants ­established the school, provided funding for it, and ignored signs of Perlitz’s actions.

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Orthodox Church in America dismisses archbishop for failing to remove rapist priest

UNITED STATES
Philadelphia Inquirer

[Statement from the Holy Synod]

By David O’Reilly
Inquirer Staff Writer

Citing the sex-abuse scandals in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Philadelphia and at Pennsylvania State University, the Orthodox Church in America has dismissed its presiding archbishop for failing to remove a priest who had raped a woman and been jailed for other violent acts.

The Holy Synod of the church, whose members number about 85,000 in the United States and Canada, announced this week that Metropolitan Jonah, 52, had stepped down Saturday after ignoring the church’s procedures for responding to sexual misconduct.

“Metropolitan Jonah has repeatedly refused to act with prudence, in concert with his fellow bishops, in accordance with the Holy Synod’s policies,” the synod said in a statement.

“In light of the recent widely publicized criminal cases involving sexual abuse at Penn State and in the Philadelphia Archdiocese and the Kansas City Diocese of the Roman Catholic Church, the extent of the risk of liability to which Metropolitan Jonah has exposed the church cannot be overstated,” it said.

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Church argues for new trial or dismissal in priest sex abuse case

APPLETON (WI)
Post-Crescent

[with video]

Written by
Jim Collar
Post-Crescent staff writer

APPLETON — A judge could rule as soon as today on whether to order a retrial in the civil fraud verdict against the Roman Catholic Diocese of Green Bay, which claims a juror was biased against the church.

Outagamie County Judge Nancy Krueger heard a variety of arguments Tuesday from the diocese as it tries to overturn a $700,000 jury award given in May to two childhood victims of clergy sexual abuse. Brothers Todd and Troy Merryfield filed the lawsuit in 2008.

A jury deliberated for about five hours in May before returning a verdict in the Merryfields’ favor. The diocese is asking for the civil fraud case to be dismissed, the jury’s findings to be overturned or a new trial.

Krueger told attorneys she planned to rule on the bias issue in the next two days. She didn’t set a timetable for rulings on the remaining diocesan arguments.

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Churches work to halt child sex abuse

GEORGIA
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

By Shelia M. Poole
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Stung by scandals of child sexual abuse, churches are taking greater steps to become a secure place for youths.

“Churches are supposed to be safe and trustworthy,” said Sally Ulrey, a trainer for Safeguarding God’s Children. “When I train adults, they’re surprised that this is so common. When they were younger, of course it happened, it just wasn’t talked about.

Ulrey, whose training sessions are required for all adults who work with children by the Episcopal Diocese of Atlanta, recently held a session for about a dozen or so members of St. Edward’s Episcopal Church in Lawrenceville that involved videos detailing stories about sexual abuse of youths by pastors and volunteers. They then discussed ways to stop it from happening again — perhaps in their own churches.

Child sexual abuse is hardly a problem solely in churches, but churches are trying to do what they can to halt the problem. In addition to requiring training like that conducted by Ulrey, they are conducting background checks on clergy, staffers and volunteers. Others are adding security cameras, setting child-to-adult ratios, limiting where outside events are held, and making structural modifications such as adding glass in doors so people can see inside. Such actions are often required by insurance companies that can provide up to $1 million in coverage to churches.

“One thing I’ve found so surprising is that some churches don’t have training, they don’t have policies and they don’t have ratios of adults to children,” said Ulrey, who also is a member and staffer at St. Mathews Episcopal Church in Snellville. “It’s sort of a liability waiting to happen, which is really scary to me.”

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French Catholic priest, 68, faces child sex rap

FRANCE
The Standard (Hong Kong)

Authorities in France have charged a 68-year-old Catholic priest with sexually abusing young boys over nearly 30 years in the north of the country, a judicial source said today. The priest has been been placed in provisional detention after admitting to having abused the boys in the regions of Lille and Dunkirk between the 1970s and early 2000s, the source said, AFP reports.

He is facing charges of rape and sexual abuse of minors under the age of 15. About 10 victims have so far been identified. The source said two victims had come forward to accuse the priest at the start of the year.

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Keep confessions confidential: Baillieu

AUSTRALIA
7 News

Victorian Premier Ted Baillieu says there is a powerful case to continue preserving the secrecy of the Catholic confessional.

A parliamentary committee into child sex abuse in the church is asking for submissions on whether rules on mandatory reporting of offences against children should be imposed on the confessional.

It will also consider whether new laws should be introduced that would see bishops face criminal charges for the misconduct of their priests.

Mr Baillieu said there was a strong argument for information divulged to priests during confession to remain secret.

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MONEYVAL’s first evaluation report on the Holy See

VATICAN CITY
Council of Europe

The first mutual evaluation report on the Holy See (including the Vatican City State) is now available for consultation. A French version will be made available shortly.

Links to:
Press release

Executive Summary

Report

Annexes

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Vatican Gets Critique on Finances

VATICAN CITY
The Wall Street Journal

By STACY MEICHTRY

ROME—The Vatican received a mixed report card from a key financial transparency watchdog on Wednesday as the Holy See seeks to lend credibility to its crackdown on potential money-laundering and other financial crimes.

The Vatican is undergoing evaluation by Moneyval, a committee of financial experts backed by the 47-nation Council of Europe, in a bid to persuade foreign lenders and their regulators that the Vatican bank and other Holy See financial institutions are financially transparent and adequately regulated. An Italian investigation into possible money-laundering at the Vatican bank—which the Holy See denies—has prompted some banks that traditionally handled the Vatican’s financial transactions with the outside world to cut ties with the tiny sovereign state.

In a report released Wednesday, Moneyval gave the Vatican passing grades of “compliant” or “largely compliant” on 22 of the 45 guidelines used by the Financial Action Task Force, or FATF, to determine whether countries are at risk of becoming havens for money-laundering and terrorist financing. The report doesn’t reflect a definitive judgment by Moneyval, which will continue to evaluate the Vatican’s finances and the raft of rules the Holy See has adopted in recent years to clean up its financial operations.

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July 17, 2012

Regional gatherings to follow assembly meeting

IRELAND
The Irish Times

PATSY McGARRY

Two regional assemblies have been arranged by the Association of Catholic Priests (ACP) as a follow-on from their Towards an Assembly of the Irish Catholic Church meeting in Dublin last May.

“Towards an Assembly for the West” will take place at Galway’s Clayton Hotel on Saturday, October 6th next, while “Towards an Assembly for the South” is scheduled for the Commons Inn, Mallow Road, Cork city, the following Saturday, October 13th.

Both are being organised on the same lines as the Towards an Assembly meeting which took place at Dublin’s Regency Hotel on May 7th last and was attended by more than 1,000 people, lay and clerical.

According to the ACP website, both new assemblies are being held with the intention of promoting “real dialogue, talking and listening, between those who are committed to the church, and wish to see a movement towards reform and renewal”.

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Rabbis behind bars: What do we do when our Jewish leaders fail us?

ISRAEL
Haaretz

By Dr Samuel Lebens / Jewish World blogger | Jul.18, 2012 |

This week, a rabbi from New York was convicted of money laundering. Rabbi Mordchai Fish was sentenced to nearly four years in prison for laundering close to a million dollars in what he thought were illicit funds through a religious charity. We should be flabbergasted that a teacher and preacher of Judaism should stoop so low. But, of course, we’re not shocked at all. In fact, we’ve seen rabbis who’ve done, or have at least been credibly accused of doing, much worse crimes. In the U.S., rabbis were arrested as part of a major corruption sting surrounding the illegal organ trafficking of a Mr Levy Rosenbaum (himself, not a rabbi). In Australia, a tightly knit Chabad Lubavitch community was rocked by claims of sex abuse by the community’s rabbi, in alleged instances of child abuse at an Orthodox boys school. And in Israel, Rabbi Moti Elon has long been fighting off serious accusations of sexual abuse. While the rabbi, who denies the accusations, has conceded that he might have kissed and hugged two of his students, he rebuffed suggestions that he did so for sexual pleasure, but rather as a way to console and encourage them.

In this latest case concerning Rabbi Fish, one might have some sympathy for the man. He was, after all, caught in a sting operation. He was approached to launder money by a police informant to see how he might respond. He was tempted. Now he’s going to prison. The problem with a sting operation is that you can never know whether the person really would have lead a life of crime had it not been for your entrapment. The Torah commands us not to put a stumbling block before the blind. If you ignore this law, and then blind people stumble, you can hardly blame the blind.

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Catholic priest in Dominican Republic ordered held on accusations he raped 15-year-old girl

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
Montreal Gazette

By The Associated Press
July 17, 2012

SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic – A judge in the Dominican Republic has ruled there is enough evidence for authorities to hold a Roman Catholic priest while they investigate allegations that he raped a 15-year-old girl.

A police statement Tuesday says officers arrested Alberto Zacarias Cordero Liriano after the girl’s mother accused the priest of repeatedly raping the teenager.

Hundreds of parishioners and several priests protested in front of the Justice Department building to show their support for Zacarias.

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Report Card on Vatican Transparency to Be Released

VATICAN CITY
ABC News

By NICOLE WINFIELD Associated Press

VATICAN CITY July 18, 2012 (AP)

The Vatican’s bid to get on the so-called “white list” of financially transparent countries passes a key stage Wednesday with the eagerly awaited release of a report card on its efforts to comply with international norms to fight money laundering and terror financing.

A Council of Europe committee will issue its first evaluation of the Holy See’s compliance with 49 recommendations covering everything from completing customer due diligence checks at its bank to keeping a list of terrorist suspects. Scoring a compliant or largely compliant grade on at least half of the 16 “key and core” recommendations is critical to the next phase of the Vatican’s “white list” bid.

Indications are the Vatican will pass the test, praised for its efforts in some areas but criticized for shortcomings in others. Given that some countries remain noncompliant for years, the Vatican’s first independent, international and public evaluation of its finances may go a long way toward removing its reputation as a shady tax haven long mired in scandal.

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SANDUSKY/PATERNO SCANDAL LIVES IN BRANSON

MISSOURI
Berger’s Beat

July 17, 2012 8:28 am | Author: Jerry Berger
Under the headline “A godlike man named Joe and sex with underage boys- and it’s not Penn State,” blogger, teacher and former journalist Randy Turner questions why no media are noting the stunning similarities between the Sandusky/Paterno scandal and a similar scandal at Kanakuk Camp near Branson. It’s a Christian sports camp run by Joe White, a nationally known Christian motivational speaker who often presents at “Promise Keepers” meetings. “It has all the earmarks of a national scandal,” Turner reports.

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STATEMENT FROM JIMMY M. LAGO…

CHICAGO (IL)
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago

STATEMENT FROM JIMMY M. LAGO, CHANCELLOR ARCHDIOCESE OF CHICAGO
REGARDING REV. GARY M. MILLER, PASTOR OF ST. BERNADETTE PARISH

July 15, 2012

Representatives of the Archdiocese of Chicago have spoken with Monsignor Wayne Prist, at St. Bernadette Parish, Evergreen Park, and Father Roger Corrales-Diaz pastor of St. Leonard Parish, Berwyn, to inform them that the Archdiocese has received an allegation that Father Gary Miller engaged in sexual misconduct with a minor, while assigned to St. Leonard’s Parish, more than 30 years ago. At the request of Francis Cardinal George, OMI, Archbishop of Chicago, Fr. Miller has agreed to voluntarily and temporarily step aside from active ministry. He also agreed to this action so that there would be no question about the protection of children.

This allegation has been reported, by the Archdiocese, to the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services and the Cook County State’s Attorney. The Archdiocese has also begun its review and investigation of this matter in accordance with Archdiocese of Chicago policies and requirements of the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People. No further information is available at this time.

Leadership of the Archdiocese requests that parish members and others understand that this action is not a judgment of guilt, nor is it a removal from ministry. It does not affect Father Miller’s position as pastor. In the meantime, Fr. Miller has agreed to reside in a residence away from the parish until the investigation of this allegation is concluded.

Sexual abuse of children is a grave sin and a crime. The Archdiocese of Chicago reports every allegation to the civil authorities and cooperates with them. The Archdiocese continues to reach out and work for the healing of all those affected by the tragedy of child and adolescent sexual abuse.

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Hynes Credits Task Force For Intimidation Crackdown

NEW YORK
The Jewish Weekly

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Adam Dickter
Assistant Managing Editor

Brooklyn District Attorney Charles J. Hynes is weighing charges in as many as four more cases of possible intimidation of Orthodox sexual abuse victims as a result of a newly formed task force, he told The Jewish Week.

And he reiterated a warning, first made in May, that rabbis who “cross the line” and discourage people from taking complaints to authorities may be charged with obstructing governmental administration.

In a wide-ranging interview, an often testy Hynes — stung by widespread criticism of his handling of Orthodox abuse cases — and his top prosecutor for sex crimes, Rhonnie Jaus, seemed to confirm that all cases involving sex abuse in the Orthodox community are considered part of the Kol Tzedek program regardless of whether they came about through the hotline initiative, which was intended to pierce a wall of silence in close-knit Orthodox communities .

The DA, who was elected in 1989, said he is seeking support from fellow district attorneys for legislation that would require religious leaders to report any knowledge of abuse, while protecting the sanctity of communication between clergy and those who seek their counsel.

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U.S.: Faith in organised religion at an all time low

UNITED STATES
Vatican Insider

Vatican Insider staff
Rome

Faith in organised religion in the U.S. is at its lowest in thirty years, with only 44% of Americans stating they have confidence in the Church. This is according to the findings of a survey carried out by Gallup statistical institute. Catholics showed a sharper decline than Protestants, with their trust rates recorded at 46% to 56% respectively. According to pollsters, the sex scandals involving American television evangelists in recent years are to blame for this drop.

In the 70’s Americans considered organised religion to be the highest institution in existence, outranking the American Supreme Court and the military, the Gallup report stated. It added that in the 80’s, the sex scandals some television evangelists were involved in caused people’s confidence in the Church to plummet to 60%.

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U.S.: Businessman priest suspended

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Vatican Insider

Maria Teresa Pontara Pederiva
Rome

This time it has nothing to do with paedophilia, doctrinal issues or alleged liturgical abuses. Forty seven year old Geraldo Pinero, former pastor of Incarnation of Our Lord Church in Philadelphia’s Olney neighbourhood was removed “unsuitable for ministry,” due to “a substantiated violation of The Standards of Ministerial Behavior and Boundaries.”

Archbishop Charles J. Chaput announced the news Sunday. He did not go into detail about the nature of the “violations” but they appear to be business related. Indeed, Pinero was a local face of an Illinois-based enterprise calling itself Teamwork Revolution Power Systems and the Philadelphia Inquirer revealed that back in November 2010 federal agents had served a search warrant on the Incarnation rectory but no criminal or civil action was taken against the pastor. In a statement, a spokesman of the archdiocese allegedly said that “outside secular employment is not permitted for a priest,” except from teaching in Catholic universities or faith related conferences.

As a result, and following Mgr. Chaput’s announcement last Sunday, Pinero is no longer permitted to exercise his public ministry, wear clerical garb or present himself publicly as a priest.” In autumn 2011, 26 priests were suspended for reasons linked to paedophilia but the Archdiocese is adamant that this particular case has nothing to do with any of these previous cases.

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Green Bay Diocese seeks to overturn $700,000 sex abuse verdict

APPLETON (WI)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

By Annysa Johnson of the Journal Sentinel

July 17, 2012

An Outagamie County Judge could decide as early as Tuesday whether to overturn a $700,000 judgment against the Diocese of Green Bay over its placement of a sexually abusive priest in the 1970s.

Attorneys for the diocese have asked Outagamie Judge Nancy Krueger to dismiss the case, grant a new trial or reduce the judgment, arguing that a juror failed to divulge that she suspected the priest of molesting her own brother, and that the First Amendment bars the courts from meddling in the church’s employment decisions. Krueger heard oral arguments on its motions Tuesday.

The May verdict, in favor of brother Troy and Todd Merryfield, marked the first time a sex abuse victim had successfully sued the Catholic Church in Wisconsin since 1995 when the state Supreme Court barred such cases as an undue intrusion by the courts into the affairs of religious organizations. The court reopened the door in 2007 in cases in which the victims alleged fraud.

The Merryfields’ lawsuit is the first such case to go to trial in the state. They accused diocese of defrauding them by placing the now-defrocked Father Patrick Feeney into their parish without telling members about his sexual abuse history.

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Il prete con il chiodo fisso! (video da ‘Le Iene’)

ITALIA
Stop Censura

Il servizio mandato in onda ieri dalle Iene del prete con il “chiodo fisso” … per chi non ha visto il filmato, avviso che il prete si comporta e dice frasi veramente da voltastomaco, soprattutto con l’ultimo ragazzo del servizio, dove arriva addirittura a spogliarsi davanti l’altare di una chiesa e a chiedere un rapporto orale alla “vittima” … mi chiedo perchè , davanti a “problemi” così evidenti, il Vaticano non fa nulla? perchè questo prete è ancora al suo posto?

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An American Nun Responds To Vatican Criticism

UNITED STATES
NPR

[with audio]

July 17, 2012

In April, the Vatican announced that three American bishops (one archbishop and two bishops) would be sent to oversee the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, a member organization founded in 1956 that represents 80 percent of Catholic sisters in the United States, to get them to conform with the teachings of the Church.

In its assessment of the group, the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith said the leadership conference is undermining Roman Catholic teachings on homosexuality and birth control and promoting “radical feminist themes incompatible with the Catholic faith.” It also reprimanded the nuns for hosting speakers who “often contradict or ignore” church teachings and for making public statements that “disagree with or challenge the bishops, who are the church’s authentic teachers of faith and morals.”

In their own statement, the nuns said the Vatican’s doctrinal assessment of the group was based on “unsubstantiated accusations” and may “compromise” the ability of female nuns to “fulfill their mission.”

“I would say the mandate is more critical of positions we haven’t taken than those we have taken,” says Sister Pat Farrell, the president of the Leadership Conference. “As I read that document, the concern is the issues we tend to be more silent about when the bishops are speaking out very clearly about some things. There are issues about which we think there’s a need for a genuine dialogue, and there doesn’t seem to be a climate of that in the church right now.”

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Navajo clergy abuse survivor speaks out

GALLUP (NM)
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, N.M., July 16, 2012

Second in a two-part series

By Elizabeth Hardin-Burrola
Independent correspondent

GALLUP — The Navajo man known in court documents as “John Doe BF” is finally getting a chance to have some peace in his life.

For about 20 years, he was at war with himself over memories of the sexual abuse he says he was subjected to by former Franciscan priest Charles “Chuck” Cichanowicz. That was a self-destructive war fueled by anger, alcohol, depression, drugs, violence, suicide attempts and self-mutilation, and it was a war marked by a life of survival on the streets and revolving stints in jail cells and detox centers.

For nearly five years, since he filed his clergy sex abuse lawsuit in the Navajo Nation Courts in 2007, he and his attorneys have been waging a legal battle with Cichanowicz, the Diocese of Gallup, the Franciscan Province of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Albuquerque and the Franciscan Province of St. John the Baptist in Cincinnati. It was a battle, he said, that the church’s attorneys fought every step of the way.

But that war is now over. Along with two other Navajo men who filed similar lawsuits against Cichanowicz, “John Doe BF” recently signed a settlement agreement with the four defendants. As part of the agreement, he and the other two plaintiffs are receiving monetary settlements of an undisclosed amount and Cichanowicz’s promise that he will never seek or accept any type of work that involves contact with minors. They did not, however, receive an admission of guilt from Cichanowicz or an apology from church officials.

Buried secret
In a telephone interview Thursday, the man talked about the impact the abuse has had on his life, but he asked that his identity continue to be protected. For the purpose of the interview, he agreed to be called “John Begay,” a pseudonym and not his real name.

Now residing in the Pacific Northwest, Begay said he’s never told his family about the abuse. They don’t know he filed the landmark lawsuit, and when he attended the court hearing before the Navajo Nation Supreme Court, they didn’t know he was back on the reservation.

“It’s something I don’t want them to deal with,” Begay said of the hurt he believes it will cause. “It’s not something I want to burden them with.”

According to Begay, the sexual abuse he suffered as a teenager was a painful secret that he tried to bury and not think about for two decades.

“I didn’t dare tell anybody else,” he said. “I kind of felt like it was my fault.”

Its impact on his life, however, was immediate. Begay said he started drinking heavily, dropped out of high school, began to isolate himself, and vented his anger in frequent fights. He eventually hitchhiked off the reservation and began wandering from town to town.

I just ran as far as I could, for as long as I could,” he said. “It was a very bad time.”

Tale of self-destruction
He was in and out of jail during his 20s, Begay said, and twice he attempted suicide. His arms still bear the scars of where he used to cut himself, a practice that Begay said offered temporary relief from his emotional pain.

During his 30s, his life cycled from jail to detox centers and from long periods of time living on the streets to hard-fought efforts to become sober.

In 2002, news about the Catholic Church’s national sex abuse crisis hit Begay hard.
“It struck me on a very personal level and it got me all angry again,” he said.

But as much as his abuse haunted him, Begay said he never made the connection between the sexual abuse in his teen years and the subsequent way his life had spiraled out of control.

And then one day in 2007, Begay said, he began to understand that connection. He was watching a television news program when a woman was interviewed about her own childhood sexual abuse. Begay said he was stunned by the woman’s tale of self-destruction and saw his own life reflected in her words.

“That’s me, man. I know what she’s talking about,” Begay recalled thinking. “I know what this is all about now.”

Not alone
Begay eventually sought help and contacted Patrick Noaker, an attorney with Jeff Anderson & Associates, a Minnesota law firm known for its work on behalf of clergy abuse victims. Noaker’s added co-counsel William R. Keeler, a Gallup attorney licensed to practice in Navajo courts.
Begay recalled the day Noaker called to tell him Cichanowicz had been located in Lafayette, Ind., working as a mental health counselor with adolescents and adults.

“I couldn’t believe it. I had to ask him again. I knew something was terribly wrong with that … .” Begay said of the news. “It made me want to pursue this even more.”

Begay described his mixed emotions when two other Navajo men came forward with allegations that Cichanowicz had sexually abused them also. On the one hand, he said, he felt validation, yet he also felt sad and angry that there were more victims.

“I was glad that others had the courage to come forward and say, ‘This happened to me,’” Begay said. “It made me feel I wasn’t alone in this.”

Stressful litigation
Begay said the litigation proved to be a stressful ordeal, particularly the initial dismissal by the Shiprock District Court and what he viewed as constant legal haggling by the church’s attorneys.
During oral arguments before the Navajo Nation Supreme Court, Begay said he was angered when one of the church attorneys suggested that Begay was no longer really connected to the Navajo Nation and Navajo culture because he lived in a different region of the country. Begay said he was grateful when Chief Justice Herb Yazzie addressed the non-Indian attorney’s argument and picked it apart.

“I was very, very glad to hear that,” Begay said of Yazzie’s remarks. “That he stood up for me. That he stood up for what was right.”

Although the Navajo Nation Supreme Court ruled in Begay’s favor and remanded the case back to district court, Begay and the other two plaintiffs agreed to mediation this spring, which led to the recent settlement.

Advice to others
Begay said he has come to understand that the abuse wasn’t his fault advice he shares with other abuse survivors. He now encourages victims to tell someone who is trustworthy about the abuse.

“Don’t hide it. Don’t bury it. It’s not your fault,” he said. “There is help out there. They don’t have to feel alone and isolated.”

Begay said he has rediscovered his own Christian faith after years of alternately blaming God and questioning God’s existence. However, he said, his faith is more on a spiritual level, based on a relationship with God, and not just a religion.

In contrast, Begay calls Cichanowicz a con man and a liar who masqueraded as a man of faith in order to have access to children.

“I believe it was an opportunity to role play and do what he wanted to do with kids,” he said.
Begay said he believes the Diocese of Gallup and the Franciscans should come clean about what other clergy abusers have been assigned on the Navajo Nation.

“If they want to continue to be a presence on the reservation and continue to have a relationship with the Navajo Nation,” he said, “yes, I think they should.”

— Reporter Elizabeth Hardin-Burrola can be contacted at (505) 870-0745 or ehardinburrola@yahoo.com.

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Von der Anzeige des Opfers bis zur Entlassung aus dem Klerikerstand

DEUTSCHLAND
MissBiT

17.02.2010
Mitteilung des Opfers an die Deutsche Bischofskonferenz mit Angaben, wann und wo sich die sexuellen Übergriffe ereignet haben und dass der Täter über einen Zeitraum von 10 Jahren eine herausgehobene Position in der katholischen Kirche innehatte. Der Name des Täters wird noch nicht genannt.

05.03.2010
Mail an Bischof Ackermann , in dem der Name des Täters erwähnt wird. Der Eingang des Schreibens wird bestätigt.

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Bistum weist Vorwürfe zurück

DEUTSCHLAND
SR

Das Bistum Trier hat Vorwürfe von Opferverbänden zurückgewiesen, bei Fällen von sexuellem Missbrauch nicht schnell genug zu ermitteln. Am Freitag wurde bekannt, dass Bischof Ackermann erstmals einen Priester wegen sexuellen Missbrauchs entlassen hat.

(14.07.2012) Nachdem der Opferverband MissBit dem Bistum Trier vorgeworfen hatte, Fällen von sexuellem Missbrauch nicht schnell genug nachzugehen, wies Bistumssprecher Kronenburg den Vorwurf zurück. Er sagte, dass jeder Fall einzeln betrachtet werden müsse. Strafmaß und Konsequenzen hingen vom jeweiligen Vergehen ab. Zudem liefen die Entscheidungen über eine zentrale Stelle im Vatikan.

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Blaue Briefe von Papst Benedikt

DEUTSCHLAND
Publik-ForumI

m Juli lässt Papst Benedikt XVI. die Blauen Briefe verschicken. Empfänger sind rund die Hälfte aller 112 nationalen katholischen Bischofskonferenzen rund um den Globus. Bei der harschen Post aus dem Vatikan handelt es sich um ein Mahnschreiben im Kampf gegen den sexuellen
Kindesmissbrauch durch Priester. Denn die Adressaten haben es bisher versäumt, Richtlinien zur Bekämpfung sexueller Gewalt durch Geistliche und Kirchenmitarbeiter zu erarbeiten.

Ein-Jahres-Frist zur Umsetzung der Richtlinien endete im Mai

Die von Rom eingeräumte Ein-Jahres-Frist für die Umsetzung der Richtlinien endete im Mai. Mit dieser für Kirchenverhältnisse ungewöhnlich kurzen Frist will der Papst – so erklärt Vatikan-Sprecher Lombardi SJ, die »Dringlichkeit« unterstreichen, mit der er der »Plage des sexuellen Missbrauchs durch Kleriker« begegnen und der Kirche »die volle Glaubwürdigkeit« zurückgeben will.

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Catholic Priest Arrested In New Jersey For Allegedly Having Inappropriate Sexual Contact With A

NEW JERSEY
CBS Philly

OCEAN COUNTY, NJ (CBS) – The Ocean County Prosecutor confirmed the arrest of a Catholic priest who worked in Brick Township on Tuesday afternoon.

Marukudiyil C. Velan, who goes by “Father Chris,” was arrested on allegations of inappropriate sexual contact with a Brick Township woman and her child. Father Chris, 64, had worked at Visitation Roman Catholic Church in Brick since 2001 as a visiting priest.

On Saturday, July 14th, the Brick Township Police Department interviewed the woman and her children in connection with a complaint about the priest. An investigation determined that the family belonged to the parish and that Father Chris had visited their residence in Brick. While there, the priest allegedly had inappropriate contact with the mother and her child.

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Police response needed: Torbay

AUSTRALIA
The Armidale Express

STEPHEN JEFFERY

18 Jul, 2012

NORTHERN Tablelands MP Richard Torbay has urged Premier Barry O’Farrell to intervene and announce a police investigation into the sex abuse scandal plaguing Armidale’s Catholic diocese.

The Catholic Church’s handling of admissions of sexual abuse by a former priest has come under scrutiny after a recent Four Corners story.

The man, known as Father F, allegedly told church officials in 1992 he had sexually abused young boys in the 1980s, but his admission was not passed on to police.

In a letter obtained by The Express, Mr Torbay asks Mr O’Farrell to “ensure an appropriate police response to this most concerning issue”.

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Companionship, not sex, at heart of celibacy debate

AUSTRALIA
The Standard

CLARE QUIRK

18 Jul, 2012

THE issue of priests and celibacy in the Catholic Church is more about companionship than lust, a Warrnambool audience has heard.

Despite the hierarchy of the church being against Chris McGillion speaking at yesterday’s National Council of Priests’ convention, the journalist and lecturer drew interest from the 180 strong attendees.

At one point a priest addressed the convention, telling how he’d played golf with a group of priests once a week for a long time.

He said they would talk about the news and the footy, but none of them ever said they had had “a shithouse week”.

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Priest says Catholic Church needs to embrace outside world – not fear it

AUSTRALIA
The Standard

CLARE QUIRK

18 Jul, 2012

A CONTROVERSIAL priest says the Catholic Church lost the contraception fight a long time ago and needed to be open to change.

Father Timothy Radcliffe addressed the National Council of Priests of Australia in Warrnambool yesterday and told the convention the church had a tendency to be too defensive when faced with modern times.

Father Radcliffe said secular people were prevented from accepting the good things the church had to offer if it in return can’t accept good things from the secular world — including the equality of all people, the value of due process, respect for gay people and the contribution of women.

He said priests had been associated with an “image of false impurity” as a result of sex abuse scandals.

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Catholic Diocese of Green Bay appeals Merryfield civil verdict Tuesday

APPLETON (WI)
WTAQ

APPLETON, WI (WTAQ) – The Green Bay Catholic Diocese is in Outagamie County court Tuesday appealing a civil fraud case brought by two brothers who were molested by a former priest.

In May, a jury awarded Todd and Troy Merryfield $700,000. The Merryfields were molested by former priest John Feeney in Freedom in 1978. Feeney was convicted criminally in 2004.

FOX 11 reports the Diocese filed over 100 pages of motions with Judge Nancy Krueger. Among them are motions to dismiss the verdict and a motion for a new trial based on alleged bias of a jury member.

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More charges filed against Catholic priest

CANADA
The Western Star

Seven more sex-related charges have been filed against George Ansel Smith, who already has dozens of charges against him stemming from the time he served parishes in western Newfoundland.

CORNER BROOK A Roman Catholic priest who already has a date set in the Supreme Court of Newfoundland and Labrador for more than 60 sex-related offences had seven more charges filed against him Tuesday.

George Ansel Smith, 74, was not in provincial court in Corner Brook for his first appearance on the latest charges.

His lawyer, Tom Williams, waived his client’s right to a preliminary inquiry and elected to have his client tried by judge alone in the higher court.

The seven new charges will be called again when Smith is arraigned on the other charges in Supreme Court in Corner Brook in September.

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Church argues for new trial or dismissal in priest sex abuse case

APPLETON (WI)
Post-Crescent

Written by
Jim Collar
Post-Crescent staff writer

APPLETON — A judge could rule as soon as Wednesday whether to order a retrial in the civil fraud verdict against the Roman Catholic Diocese of Green Bay, which claims a juror was biased against the church.

Outagamie County Judge Nancy Krueger today heard a variety of arguments from the diocese as it seeks relief from a $700,000 jury award given in May to two childhood victims of clergy sexual abuse. Brothers Todd and Troy Merryfield filed the lawsuit in 2008. The diocese is asking for the case to be dismissed, the jury’s findings to be overturned or a new trial.

The brothers claimed the diocese knew the Rev. John Feeney has a history of sexual misconduct when it installed him as a priest at Freedom’s St. Nicholas Church and falsely portrayed him as safe even though church officials knew he was a danger to children.

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Retired judge Whitlam heads inquiry into church handling of ‘Father F’

AUSTRALIA
Champion-Post

LEESHA MCKENNY

18 Jul, 2012

THE Catholic Church has appointed a retired Federal Court judge to head an inquiry into its handling of a NSW priest who admitted sexually abusing boys as young as 10.

Antony Whitlam, QC, a former federal politician and the son of the former prime minister Gough Whitlam, was appointed to lead the independent inquiry jointly commissioned by the Bishop of Armidale, Michael Kennedy, and the Bishop of Parramatta, Anthony Fisher.

A statement from the two clergymen did not outline the terms of reference for the inquiry other than to say that it would look at ”the processes related to the management of ‘Father F”’, who has been the subject of media reports in relation to allegations of abuse of children.

”Further details of the inquiry process will be developed in consultation with Mr Whitlam, QC,” the statement said.

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Charges Dismissed Against Diocesan Priest

NORTH CAROLINA
Roman Catholic Diocese of Raleigh

On Friday, July 13, 2012, the Diocese of Raleigh was informed that charges of second degree sexual offense and misdemeanor sexual battery against Father Edgar Sepulveda were dismissed by the Brunswick County District Attorney’s office.

In September 2009, the Diocese of Raleigh had followed its established procedures and those of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People and informed the North Carolina Conference of District Attorneys of allegations it had received concerning Father Sepulveda. In addition, following diocesan procedures, the Diocese placed Father Sepulveda on administrative leave and began the process of investigation into the allegations.

Once the Diocese was informed by the civil authorities that they were investigating the allegations, the Diocesan investigation was suspended at the request of these civil authorities, as they considered whether to file and proceed with criminal charges. During this time, Father Sepulveda continued on administrative leave, not publicly celebrating the sacraments or publicly presenting himself as a priest.

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Criminal charges dropped against priest accused of sex crimes

NORTH CAROLINA
WECT

By: Debra Worley

BRUNSWICK COUNTY, NC (WECT) – Charges have been dismissed against a priest who was accused of sex crimes with a minor.

According to the Diocese of Raleigh, the Brunswick County District Attorney’s Office dropped charges of second degree sexual offense and misdemeanor sexual battery against Father Edgar Sepulveda.

The Diocese of Raleigh received allegations concerning Sepulveda in 2009. At the time, a spokesperson for the Brunswick County Sheriff’s Department says Father Sepulveda was visiting church members in this area, when he was accused of committing the crimes against a juvenile male.

Sepulveda was a priest at St. Theresa del Nino Jesus in Beulaville. He was put on administrative leave when the investigation began.

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MPs push for cops to probe sex abuse priest

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Dan Box
From:The Australian
July 18, 2012

SENIOR NSW politicians including Premier Barry O’Farrell have called for police to investigate a former priest at the centre of the latest sex abuse scandal to engulf the Catholic Church.

Richard Torbay, the independent member for the Northern Tablelands, which includes the Diocese of Armidale, wrote to Mr O’Farrell on Monday to express “grave concerns” about the church’s inquiry into the abuse.

The former priest, who lives in Armidale and is known as Father F for legal reasons, allegedly abused several altar boys during the 1980s, despite church authorities being warned about him at the time.

The bishops of Armidale and Parramatta yesterday said they had commissioned former Federal Court judge Tony Whitlam QC to conduct an “independent inquiry” into alleged abuse by Father F in both dioceses.

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Charges dismissed against priest accused of sexual assault

NORTH CAROLINA
StarNews

Tuesday, July 17, 2012 at 10:28 by F. T. Norton

Charges of sexual battery against former Duplin County priest Father Edgar Sepulveda have been dismissed by the Brunswick County District Attorney’s Office, according to a press release from the Catholic Diocese of Raleigh.

Sepulveda, 49, was arrested Jan. 8, 2010, on charges of second-degree sexual offense and sexual battery, after the diocese reported allegations of sexual misconduct had been made against him.

In a release Monday, the Catholic Diocese of Raleigh said Sepulveda was then placed on administrative leave.

The release states that once the criminal investigation began, the diocese suspended its own investigation at the behest of law enforcement.

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Diocese’s Merryfield appeal under way

APPLETON (WI)
Fox 11

Published : Tuesday, 17 Jul 2012

Chad Doran, FOX 11 News

APPLETON – The Catholic Diocese of Green Bay is appealing a $700,000 verdict awarded to two brothers who were molested by a former priest.

In May, a jury in Outagamie County made the award to Todd and Troy Merryfield. The brothers were molested by former priest John Feeney in 1978. Feeney was convicted in 2004.

The Diocese filed over 100 pages of motions with Judge Nancy Krueger. Among them are motions to dismiss the verdict and a motion for a new trial based on alleged bias of a jury member.

Attorneys for the diocese are arguing that a juror alerted the court after the trial was over about comments another juror made that could have been perceived as bias against the Diocese.

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Priests could be ordered to report confessions of sex abuse to police

AUSTRALIA
Perth Now

HUNDREDS of years of Catholic tradition in the confessional could be overturned by Victoria’s inquiry into child sex abuse.

Priests would be ordered to reveal crimes told to them in private confessions under one proposal before the inquiry.

But priests say they will resist being forced to reveal secrets of the confessional.

A parliamentary committee also will look at radical new laws that would see bishops face criminal charges for the misconduct of their priests.

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Sex crime charges against priest dropped

NORTH CAROLINA
WWAY

BRUNSWICK COUNTY, NC (WWAY) — The Catholic Diocese of Raleigh says prosecutors in Brunswick County have dropped criminal charges against a Duplin County priest.

Fr. Edgar Sepulveda was charged in early 2010 with second-degree sexual offense and sexual battery with a 17-year-old boy.

The Diocese says it found out Friday that the Brunswick County District Attorney’s Office has dismissed the charges that stem from an incident in 2009. The Diocese placed Sepulveda on administrative leave after learning of the allegations against him. The Diocese says he is still on administrative leave.

At the time of his arrest, deputies said the priest was ministering for a youth group in Brunswick County, but had no place to stay. One of the youth group member’s parents offered their home, and that’s where deputies said the incident happened.

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Psychologist: Bishops’ lashing out at sisters is a distraction

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Jul. 17, 2012
By Kathy Galleher

Viewpoint

Since the Vatican’s public release April 18 of the results of the doctrinal assessment of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, many American Catholics have been confused and angry. These women, who work tirelessly with the poor and marginalized, whom many of us see as embodying Christ’s love, are being accused of doing grave harm to the church. In conversation after conversation, I have heard, “Why so much anger directed at women religious?”, “What is this about?” and “It just seems … abusive.” As I pondered this last observation, I recognized a familiar dynamic.

For nearly eight years I worked as a psychologist at a treatment center for priests and religious. During that time I worked with a number of men who had committed sexual abuse. An essential part of the therapeutic work was for these men to understand the deep pain they had caused, to accept responsibility for it, and to move forward with a commitment not to let it happen again, which included accepting restrictions and consequences. Often the largest obstacle to healing was the first task: accepting and understanding the amount of pain they had caused.

When we harm someone, healing requires that we recognize the extent of the injury we caused. Only when we are able to see this clearly and take responsibility for it can we respond with appropriate guilt. Appropriate guilt focuses us on how to repair the injury (if that is possible) and what actions we must take to prevent it from occurring again. If we cannot recognize the pain and take responsibility for it, we get stuck and assume an aggressively defensive stance, lashing out and blaming others as a way to deflect attention from our actions, actions we find too painful to look at honestly.

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Faith and the law thrown into question

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Editorial

AS reported in today’s Herald Sun, the sanctity of the confessional is being thrown open to question by Victoria’s parliamentary inquiry into child sex abuse.

The possibility that priests may be forced to disclose such crimes will be seen by the Catholic Church as a betrayal of a sacred trust between priest and confessor.

Others will see it as a serious community responsibility.

Potential witnesses to the inquiry have been told to consider whether such admissions be subject to mandatory reporting by priests.

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OH – No charges vs. Catholic priest-victims seek more action

OHIO
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by David Clohessy on July 16, 2012

It’s heartbreaking every time Catholic officials who commit and conceal child sex crimes exploit legal technicalities and escape consequences for their wrongdoing. We feel terribly sad for this brave victim who deserves but apparently will not get his/her day in court.

At the same time, however, we are grateful that Fr. Brosmer has been exposed. We hope parents will keep their kids away from him.

Now the burden falls on Columbus’ Catholic bishop. He must use his vast resources to aggressively seek out anyone else who may have seen, suspected or suffered clergy sex crimes and cover ups. He must do everything he can to bring forward others who might be able to prosecute this child molesting cleric. He must personally visit each church where Fr. Brosmer worked, urging those with information or suspicions to contact law enforcement.

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MT – Priest accused of molesting in MT – Victims respond

MONTANA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by David Clohessy on July 16, 2012

A Catholic priest in Wisconsin has been suspended because of allegations that he molested a child in Montana. All child sex crimes are heinous and devastating. They’re even worse, however when committed by spiritual figures on innocent, vulnerable and isolated children in already-oppressed minority groups.

We applaud the brave individual who reported Fr. Druggan’s abuse. We hope this move will lead to greater healing for this courageous victim. We know that it has already made kids safer.

Montana’s Catholic bishops have a duty to aggressively seek out others who may have been hurt by Fr. Druggan. They should use their vast resources to beg anyone who may have seen, suspected or suffered clergy sex crimes to step forward. They should visit every church facility where Fr. Druggan worked, urging victims, witnesses or whistleblowers to speak up.

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SILVA CASE: ‘Out of sight, out of mind’

CANADA
Hamilton Spectator

A Canadian legal expert says members of the public looking for answers from the Ministry of Attorney General on the Rev. Jose Silva case will have a wait on their hands.

“Out of sight, out of mind. They (the ministry) will not look at it. Especially if the accused is out of the country. They can’t win on this,” said Alan Young, an associate professor with Osgoode Hall Law School at York University.

“It’s better to let it disappear than to try and justify it from a press statement,” Young added.

He was commenting on the attorney general’s admission last week that the Hamilton Crown’s Office made a deal with a defence lawyer to permit Silva to leave Canada for his native Brazil rather than face prosecution on a sexual assault case.

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Enquiries concerning recent events

UNITED STATES
Orthodox Church in America

SYOSSET, NY [OCA]
With the resignation of Metropolitan Jonah as Primate of the Orthodox Church in America, the Chancery of the Orthodox Church in America continues to receive requests from the faithful and from the media for additional information.

“The facts of the Metropolitan’s decision are contained in his statement, which has been posted on the OCA web site,” said Archpriest Eric G. Tosi, Secretary. “At this time of transition, all of the Chancery’s efforts are directed at moving forward in faith and good order, ensuring that the Church’s mission of proclaiming the Good News of Jesus Christ is strengthened.”

As events may require, further information will be posted on the OCA web site, which according to Father Eric “should be seen as the official source of information about the Church.

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Statement from the Holy Synod Regarding the Resignation of Metropolitan Jonah

UNITED STATES
Orthodox Church in America

SYOSSET, NY [OCA]
On July 16, 2012, the Holy Synod of Bishops of the Orthodox Church in America issued the following statement in regard to the resignation of Metropolitan Jonah. The complete text can be found in PDF format here.

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American Orthodox Church leader quits

UNITED STATES
Keene Sentinel

[Statement from the Holy Synod]hol

Posted: Saturday, July 14, 2012

By Manya Brachear Chicago Tribune

CHICAGO — The Chicago native elected to the helm of the Orthodox Church in America resigned last weekend, saying in a letter that he has “neither the personality nor the temperament” to lead the church.

Metropolitan Jonah submitted his resignation during a conference call last Saturday with other bishops of the church. In his letter of resignation, he said he was leaving the post in response to the unanimous request of the bishops.

“I had come to the realization long ago that I have neither the personality nor the temperament for the position of primate, a position I never sought nor desired,” he wrote.

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N.J. priest charged with sexual contact against woman, her child

NEW JERSEY
NJ.com

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

By The Associated Press

BRICK — Authorities have accused an Ocean County priest of charges of sexual contact with a woman and her child.

The Rev. Marukudiyil Velan has been a priest at the Church of the Visitation in Brick since 2001. He’s known in the parish as “Father Chris” and a garden at the church is named after him.

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Catholic Church appoints judge to lead abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
ABC – 7.30

Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Broadcast: 17/07/2012

Reporter: Leigh Sales

An independent inquiry in to sex abuse in two New South Wales dioceses was announced by the Catholic Church today, and Father Frank Brennan joins us to discuss how the Church handles these processes.

Transcript
LEIGH SALES, PRESENTER: The Catholic Church has announced that the former Federal Court judge Anthony Whitlam QC will head an independent inquiry into the case of the defrocked priest known as Father F. As you may recall from stories on this program, Father F is accuse of abusing altar boys in the 1980s, some of whom later committed suicide. The Church has given conflicting accounts of what he later admitted to the Catholic hierarchy and why none of them went to the police.

In a moment we’ll hear from the man Paul Keating once labelled “the meddling priest”, Jesuit and human rights lawyer Father Frank Brennan for his views on how the case has been handled so far. But first, here’s a reminder of some of the victims’ stories.

VICTIM’S RELATIVE: I mean, when Damian admitted to a psychiatrist that he’d been sexually abused by a priest, it was their obligation to go to the police.

VICTIM’S RELATIVE II: I think it’s quite disgusting how they close it all – yeah, they hide it! You know, they close ranks, they pass the buck, most definitely. You know, if one can’t help the victim it’s palmed off to someone else. – never to the police though. The police never seem to be the ones that get told.

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No charges filed against former priest

ZANESVILLE (OH)
Zanesville Times Recorder

Written by
Kathy Thompson
Staff Writer

ZANESVILLE — Zanesville Police Chief Eric Lambes said his office will not be investigating decades-old abuse allegations against a former priest.

Lambes said the right decision was made when police told a representative of the Catholic Diocese of Columbus an abuse accusation against the priest happened too long ago.

Father Thomas Brosmer was placed on administrative leave Thursday by the diocese after an accusation of sexual abuse of an 11-year-old boy in 1968 surfaced. The abuse is alleged to have taken place at St. Nicholas Parish in Zanesville. Brosmer was at the church from 1969 to 1973 as an assistant pastor and a teacher. Brosmer most recently was at St. Cecilia Church in Columbus from 2004 until his administrative leave.

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Stockende Aufarbeitung: Die katholische Kirche und der Missbrauchsskandal

DEUTSCHLAND
netzwerkB

Norbert Denef ist Sprecher der Organisation netzwerkB, die sich für die Rechte der Opfer einsetzt. Mit dem HUNGERSTREIK will Norbert Denef, der in Scharbeutz an der Ostsee lebt, vor allem erreichen, dass die strafrechtliche Verjährung aufgehoben wird.

Auch Prof. Dr. Christian Pfeiffer, Leiter des Kriminologischen Forschungsinstituts Niedersachsen, plädiert für eine Aufhebung der Verjährungsfrist, weil die Betroffenen den Missbrauch oft jahrzehntelang verdrängen: “Das kann man diesen Menschen nicht vorwerfen, dass die Kraft dazu, sich zu entscheiden, hier in jungen Jahren nicht da ist. Dass oft Anstöße von außen, die zufällig kommen, eine Rolle spielen. Der Rechtsstaat bricht nicht zusammen, wenn wir aus guten Gründen hier eine Sonderregelung schaffen und Herrn Denefs Wunsch entsprechen.”

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Ocean County priest arrested on charges of sexual misconduct with female, child

NEW JERSEY
Daily Record

Written by
Anthony Panissidi
@APPanissidi

BRICK — A longtime township priest, who has a garden named in his honor outside his parish, was arrested on charges of sexual misconduct with a mother and her child, authorities said.

Marukudiyil Velan, 64, known to his parishioners as “Father Chris,’’ was arrested Saturday after he allegedly assaulted the mother and her child at their home Friday, Ocean County Prosecutor Marlene Lynch Ford said.

An investigation by the Prosecutor’s Office concluded Velan befriended the unnamed victims before the incident. He was arrested after township police and members of the Prosecutor’s Office interviewed the victims Saturday in connection with their complaint about Velan, Ford said. The priest was charged with one count of criminal sexual contact with the female, one count of criminal sexual contact with the child and one count of endangering the welfare of a child.

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NSW dioceses launch inquiry into Father F

AUSTRALIA
ABC – PM

[with audio]

MARK COLVIN: There’s to be an independent inquiry into the Catholic Church’s handling of allegations of sexual abuse by the priest known as “Father F.”

The church itself has launched the inquiry which will be led by the former Federal Court judge Antony Whitlam QC.

Samantha Donovan reports.

SAMANTHA DONOVAN: The ABC’s Four Corners program recently broadcast allegations that a priest known as “Father F” abused several altar boys in New South Wales in the 1980s.

The program alleged that Father F admitted he’d molested the boys to three priests at a 1992 meeting in Sydney.

But the matter was never reported the matter to police.

Today the Bishop of Armidale Michael Kennedy and the Bishop of Parramatta, Anthony Fisher, announced an independent inquiry into what they call “the processes related to the management” of Father F.

The inquiry will be led by the former Federal Court judge Antony Whitlam QC.

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Ex-judge to lead church inquiry into ‘Father F’

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

July 17, 2012

Leesha McKenny
Urban Affairs Reporter

The Catholic Church has appointed a former Federal Court judge to head an inquiry into its handling of a NSW priest who admitted to sexually abusing boys as young as 10.

Antony Whitlam, QC, the son of former prime minister Gough Whitlam, and a former federal Labor politician, was appointed to lead the independent inquiry jointly commissioned by Bishop of Armidale, Michael Kennedy, and the Bishop of Parramatta, Anthony Fisher.

A joint statement from the two senior clergymen did not outline the terms of reference of the inquiry, other than that it would look at “the processes related to the management of ‘Father F’ who has been the subject of media reports in relation to allegations of abuse of children”.

“Further details of the inquiry process will be developed in consultation with Mr Whitlam QC,” it said.

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Former Montana priest put on administrative leave for allegations of child sex abuse 25 years ago

WISCONSIN/MONTANA
WTVQ

Posted: Jul 16, 2012

A Catholic priest accused of sexual misconduct with a Montana child more than 25 years ago is now placed on administrative leave from his position in Wisconsin.

The Fond du Lac Reporter newspaper reports Father Dennis Druggan, president and rector at St. Lawrence Seminary High School was placed on administrative leave Friday.

More than ten alleged victims have filed a complaint against the Roman Catholic Great Falls – Billings Diocese. The suit alleges several priests and nuns molested children at St. Labre Mission School in Ashland as well as several other schools and institutions across eastern Montana.

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Bishops announce inquiry into ‘Father F’

AUSTRALIA
SBS

A former judge will lead an inquiry commissioned by two NSW Catholic dioceses into the management of an ex-priest at the centre of sexual abuse claims.

A former Federal Court judge will head an inquiry into how the Catholic Church handled allegations that a former NSW priest sexually abused children.

Antony Whitlam QC will examine claims a priest, known only as “Father F”, admitted to three senior priests in Sydney in 1992 that he sexually abused young altar boys, but was not sacked by the Church until 2005.

The inquiry, jointly commissioned by Armidale Bishop Michael Kennedy and Parramatta Bishop Anthony Fisher, follows an ABC report earlier this month that revealed the allegations.

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Brick Priest Arrested On Criminal Sexual Contact Charges

NEW JERSEY
New Jersey 101.5

By: Rosetta Key

A Brick Township Priest is arrested for allegedly having criminal sexual contact with a mother and her minor daughter from his parish. 64-year-old Marukudiyil Velan, also known as ‘Father Chris’, who’s assigned to the Church of the Visitation in Brick, was arrested Saturday July 14th. Ocean County Prosecutor Marlene Lynch Ford says the alleged abuse took place on Friday July 13th while Velan was visiting the family’s home.

Velan is charged with one count of Criminal Sexual Contact and one Count of Endangering the Welfare of a Child. Bail is set at $75,000 with no 10 percent option. He’s also prohibited from having any contact with anyone under the age of 18 years, was required to surrender his passport and the provisions of “Nicole’s Law” were implemented. He’s presently housed in the Ocean County Jail in default of bail.

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July 16, 2012

A godlike man named Joe…

MISSOURI
The Turner Report

A godlike man named Joe and sex with underage boys- and it’s not Penn State

It has all of the earmarks of a national scandal.

A godlike figure, Joe, in charge of the fate of hundreds of young people. In the late ‘90s, one of his trusted assistants is charged with inappropriate activities with underage obys. The assistant is allowed to keep his job and continues his illegal, predatory activities.

When the assistant is finally brought to justice, a decade after the warning signals were sounded, the people at the institution gather around the godlike figure and mercilessly hammer at anyone who suggests that Joe might have anything to do with the evil that occurred on his watch.

I am not writing about Penn State, but the Christian sports camp Kanakuk, with its main location in Branson, Missouri. I was not describing the evils of Jerry Sandusky, but those of former Kanakuk camp director Pete Newman, and the godlike figure is not the late Joe Paterno, but the very much still in control Joe White, a nationally known motivational speaker connected with Promise Keepers.

The Kanakuk scandals began with Newman’s 2009 arrest on multiple charges involving sex with teenage boys over a 10-year period.

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NJ- Priest Arrested in Alleged Sex Abuse, SNAP Responds

NEW JERSEY
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by David Clohessy on July 16, 2012

We are very grateful to this brave family for reporting Fr. Chris’ crimes. This takes real courage. They should be commended for acting responsibly and promptly.

We hope every single person who may have seen, suspected, or suffered crimes or wrongdoing by this priest will speak up. It’s crucial that they protect others by contacting police right away.

Often, accused predator priests from elsewhere flee the US at the first chance. We hope law enforcement and Catholic Church officials make sure this doesn’t happen here.

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