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.

November 5, 2012

Catholic Diocese of Thunder Bay named in lawsuit

CANADA
The News Watch

By tbnewswatch.com THUNDER BAY — The Roman Catholic Diocese of Thunder Bay is among those named in a lawsuit alleging sexual assault.

It was filed by six males members of the Lac La Croix First Nation. According to the Toronto Star, the plaintiffs allege they were sexually assaulted by a Roman Catholic priest who served on the reserve in the 1960s.

The priest has since died.

In the suit, the men are seeking damages from the Diocese of Thunder Bay, the federal government and a Catholic order based in Manitoba.

None of the allegations have been proven in court and no court date has been set.

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.

RI judge hears Legion of Christ documents case

PROVIDENCE (RI)
Boston Globe

By DAVID KLEPPER
Associated Press / November 5, 2012

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) — A Rhode Island judge heard arguments Monday in a legal tug-of-war over sealed documents relating to the Legion of Christ, a disgraced Roman Catholic religious order.

The Associated Press, The New York Times, The Providence Journal and the National Catholic Reporter want Superior Court Judge Michael Silverstein to unseal documents from a lawsuit contesting the will of an elderly widow who left the Legion $60 million. The Legion argues that the information could taint prospective jurors and wants it to remain hidden from public view.

The Vatican took over the Legion in 2010 after determining that its late founder, the Rev. Marcial Maciel, had sexually molested seminarians and fathered three children by two women.

The widow, Gabrielle Mee, died in 2008. Her niece Mary Lou Dauray had sought to challenge the will, saying her aunt had been defrauded by the order into leaving it her fortune. Silverstein last month threw out the challenge because he determined the niece lacked standing. Her attorney plans to appeal.

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.

Can We Believe the Archdiocese?

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Catholics4Change

submitted By Sister Maureen Turlish

On October 15, the Archdiocese of Philadelphia announced its decision to restore Rev. Joseph DiGregorio to ministry, a priest credibly accused of the sexual exploitation of a minor.

It did so while releasing as little information as possible.

The Archdiocese’s poor record of accountability and transparency began to become known as early as 2002 when then-Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua was quoted on CNN as saying, “We all are agreed that no priest guilty of even one act of sexual abuse of a minor will function in any ecclesial ministry or any capacity in our diocese.”

Later, the 2005 and 2011 grand-jury reports highlighted in graphic detail the lack of accountability and transparency shown by Cardinals Krol, Bevilacqua and Rigali.

Is there really a reason why faith should be put in this latest decision by Archbishop Charles Chaput to return DiGregorio to ministry without more information being released to the public? Chaput admitted in his statement that DiGregorio was found to have violated the church’s behavioral standards for priests.

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.

Six men suing the Catholic church for alleged sexual abuse

CANADA
Sun News

JAMES TURNER | QMI AGENCY

WINNIPEG — A group of men from a northwestern Ontario First Nations community are suing a Winnipeg-based Roman Catholic order and others to seek redress for alleged sexual abuse they suffered at the hands of their community priest as young boys.

The six men from the Lac La Croix First Nation near Fort Francis seek unspecified financial damages from the federal government, a Catholic diocese in Thunder Bay and the order of Les Oblats de Marie Immaculee du Manitoba, along with a priest who lived and worked on the reserve in the 1960s.

The men range in age from 55 to 61.

In separate statements of claim, each alleges his life has been deeply and negatively affected by the aftershocks of sexual assaults he was subjected to — abuse the men say they felt powerless to speak out about given the priest’s position of power in their small community.

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.

Fr. Stephen Rossetti And St. Lukes Pedophile-Paradise

UNITED STATES
Joey Piscitelli

Posted on November 5, 2012 by Joey Piscitelli

The recent articles by Fr. Stephen Rossetti PhD, such as “A New Phase of Child Protection”, printed in the Washington Post on October 26th – are a lamentable diversion. They are masking the historic truth about the systematic shielding of clergy pedophiles.

Rev. Rossetti, now a “clinical professor” at the Catholic University of America, in Washington, D.C, had the insolence to state: “the steps taken in the last 30 years to prevent the devastating trauma of child sex abuse are making a difference”.

Rossetti of all people, should know better than to boast about clergy child abuse prevention. He was CEO at ground zero; the notorious St. Lukes Institute in Maryland – the Catholic treatment center victims have dubbed “Pedophile-Paradise”.

Ever since the clergy abuse scandal exploded years ago, countless observers have asked this question:

“Why weren’t pedophile priests prosecuted and convicted?”

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.

Nun faces grand larceny charge tied to casino gambling

NEW YORK
Buffalo News

BY: Dan Herbeck

A nun with a casino gambling problem will be charged today with stealing more than $100,000 from two churches where she worked in Orleans County, The Buffalo News learned late Sunday.

The felony grand larceny charge will be filed against Sister Mary Anne Rapp, who in recent years has been assigned to St. Mary Catholic Church in Holley and its sister church, St. Mark, in nearby Kendall.

Sister Mary Anne is scheduled to answer the charges in Kendall Town Court this evening, Orleans County District Attorney Joseph V. Cardone confirmed Sunday night.

“This is a situation that was brought to our attention by the Catholic Diocese of Buffalo and has been under investigation for months by the [Orleans County] Sheriff’s Office,” Cardone said. “It’s not a situation where the sister has been living an extravagant life. I think there are indications that she has a gambling problem.”

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.

Sister Mary Anne Rapp, New York Nun, Accused Of Stealing $100,000

NEW YORK
Huffington Post

HOLLEY, N.Y. — Authorities say a nun faces grand larceny charges after more than $100,000 was stolen from two western New York churches where she worked.

The newspaper reports that the money was stolen from Catholic churches in Holley and Kendall, rural parishes between Buffalo and Rochester.

No other details have been released.

The nun’s attorney, James Harrington, told the newspaper he couldn’t comment on the case.

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.

“I Had Been Sexually Abused at Residential School”

CANADA
Huffington Post

Wayne K, Spear

In many respects, my friend and colleague Garnet Angeconeb is representative of the countless Aboriginal children beaten and raped in Canada’s Indian residential schools. For years he told no one, including his wife. Angry, pain-filled and confused, he drank heavily to dull his feelings. The turning-point in his life arrived during a business trip to Ottawa, on October 31, 1990:

That morning, I got up, showered, dressed, and headed downstairs to meet a colleague for breakfast. “Hey, look at this front-page article on the residential school issue,” he said as he sipped his coffee. I had my own copy of the Globe and Mail tucked under my arm. There, on the front page, was an article about how the then-Grand Chief of the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs, Phil Fontaine, had publicly disclosed that he had been physically and sexually abused while attending an Indian Lake residential school. As I read the article, I began to feel an indescribable pain crawling all over my body. Through this haze of pain, I struggled to admit to my colleague that I, too, like many former students, had experienced sexual and physical abuse while at residential school. I was also enraged by the psychological and spiritual scars inflicted on me and the other students. My colleague and I grew almost completely silent. The silence continued as we ate our breakfast. After a while, my colleague quietly asked, “So you were abused in residential school?” Not knowing what exactly to say, I responded, “Yes, I was abused — sexually.” I told him that a man at the school named Hands, who eventually became an Anglican priest, had abused me and many others at Pelican during the 1960s. I felt a wave of rage overtake me. I had a huge lump in my throat as I struggled to hold back the pain I had buried for so many years. Then, as if a floodgate had been thrown open, I cried uncontrollably. It was the first time I had ever told anyone that as a little boy I had been sexually abused at residential school. For the next year I tried to figure out how to deal with that admission. I had to tell my family (I have been married since 1978 and had never spoken of the abuse to my wife). It took a lot of soul-searching — I had so many doubts.

As Angeconeb recalls years later, Leonard Hands made a deliberate point of refusing to apologize to him either during the January 5, 1996 Kenora District Court sentencing or in the years leading up to his death in 2000: “he specifically stated he was not apologizing to me. He wasn’t allowed to use my name but said he was specifically excluding “G.A.” from his apology. He claimed he had already done so during our meeting in 1992, and that I had refused his apology. It angered me but I realized he was a man going down and that it was his only way of lashing out and trying to regain some control.” No longer among the living, Hands would be the object of posthumous forgiveness. In this way, Angeconeb would begin to let go of the rage and confusion, taking a huge step forward in his personal healing and spiritual growth.

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.

Lawyer: Vatican expert had little motive to steal

VATICAN CITY
U-T San Diego

VATICAN CITY — The lawyer for a Vatican computer whiz insists his client had little motive to risk his 20 years on the job to help the pope’s former butler steal confidential documents.

Claudio Sciarpelletti is accused of aiding Paolo Gabriele in the theft of papal correspondence and other documents from Pope Benedict XVI’s apartment. His attorney Gianluca Benedetti, says the two weren’t great friends and that Sciarpelletti would be unlikely to help a person he had no special relationship with.

Gabriele, who is serving the 18-month-sentence, had been scheduled to testify about their relationship Monday, but neither he nor other witnesses, including a Swiss Guard commander, took the stand. The hearing was adjourned to Saturday to give the defense more time to prepare.

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 Kamukwamba accused of procuring abortions for girls impregnated by his nephew priest

ZAMBIA
Zambian Watchdog

ANGLICAN Diocese of Central Zambia priests have complained that their Bishop Derrick Kamukwamba has been facilitating abortion for girls who are impregnated by his nephew who is training as a priest.

The sources said Bishop Kamukwamba’s nephew Stubbs has been living a sinful life and that his uncle has been in support of what he has been doing.

“What that boy has been doing is bad and we are not happy as priests in this diocese. Before he went for priesthood, he impregnated two girls and they have children for him, as a diocese we objected to this, but since his uncle is the bishop, he went to the seminary. Before he was ordained as deacon, the church refused and the church council at the Cathedral of the Holy Nativity refused to attend his ordination service as a way of rejecting him, because that boy drinks and he is ever found in bars, all this was brought to the attention of the Bishop but he went to on and ordain his nephew,” they complained.

The priests said Stubbs impregnated one of the girls from the youth fellowship and the Bishop facilitated for an abortion.

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.

Local Orthodox bishop apologizes for misconduct

UNITED STATES
Chicago Tribune

[Letters regarding Bishop Matthias now posted on Midwest web site – Orthodox Church in America]

By Manya Brachear
Tribune reporter

The local bishop of the Orthodox Church in America accused in August of “inappropriate” behavior with a woman has been found guilty of sexual misconduct by church investigators, but will remain at the helm of the Midwest Diocese.

Bishop Matthias (born David Lawrence Moriak) will stay on administrative leave until he meets the “rehabilitative measures” required by the church’s Holy Synod. Those measures include directly asking forgiveness from the woman who submitted a complaint, participating in a residential therapeutic program designed for clergy, and undergoing a mentorship with a peer bishop who will then recommend whether Bishop Matthias can return to his post.

“I am deeply sorry that I have offended, confused, and caused hurt to this young woman,” Bishop Matthias said in a letter read to parishioners during worship services on Sunday. “I will communicate my apology directly and personally to her.”

According to a statement issued by the Holy Synod, Bishop Matthias allegedly sent inappropriate text and e-mail messages to a female parishioner in the diocese. She filed a formal complaint in August, the statement 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.

Expelled rabbi’s role in High Holy Day service condemned

NEW YORK
Buffalo News

BY: Jay Tokasz

A local organization of rabbis has issued a statement condemning a former colleague’s participation in High Holy Day services at Hillel of Buffalo, on the University at Buffalo North Campus in Amherst.

The statement by the Buffalo Board of Rabbis, sent at the end of October to the leaders of various Jewish organizations in Western New York, expressed “deep dismay and disappointment” that Rabbi A. Charles Shalman was invited to participate in a leadership role during Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur services.

Shalman was expelled in 2008 from the Rabbinical Assembly over ethics violations related to an inappropriate relationship with a member of the Amherst synagogue where he served as rabbi, as well as previous allegations of misconduct dating from 1999.

“Clergy abuse is extremely serious, and is not ‘just an affair’ or ‘an imperfection.’ It is imperative that members of the clergy who have violated that trust be prevented from functioning in any way that might be perceived as being in the role of a rabbi,” the statement reads.

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

Pope butler’s ‘helper’ Claudio Sciarpelletti on trial

VATICAN CITY
BBC News

A computer technician has gone on trial in the Vatican City charged with aiding and abetting the Pope’s former butler in stealing papal documents.

Claudio Sciarpelletti is accused of helping Paolo Gabriele leak the confidential documents while working in the Vatican’s Secretariat of State.

Gabriele was given an 18-month prison sentence by the same court last month.

He admitted passing documents to a journalist, but said he did it out of love for the church and the Pope.

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

Pope’s ex butler refused to have computer checked, court told

VATICAN CITY
euronews

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) – A Vatican court on Monday heard how Pope Benedict’s former butler, who has been jailed for stealing papal documents, refused to allow technicians to check his computer for six years before his arrest.

The detail emerged at the first hearing of the trial of Claudio Sciarpelletti, a computer expert who is charged with aiding and abetting former butler Paolo Gabriele.

Lawyers told the court Gabriele refused to have his computer maintained or updated by technicians.

Gabriele was convicted of aggravated theft at a separate trial last month and sentenced to 18 months in jail for stealing sensitive papal documents and leaking them to the media. He kept some confidential information on his computer.

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 trial in Vatican scandal offers insider look

VATICAN CITY
USA Today

VATICAN CITY (AP) — The trial this week of a Vatican computer whiz over his alleged role in an embarrassing scandal of filched confidential papal documents is offering a chance for an insider glimpse at the Holy See’s security workings.

Among those expected to testify in the trial, which begins on Monday in a Vatican City tribunal, are the pope’s top bodyguard, a commander of the legendary Swiss Guards and a Vatican security official connected to an Italian company with expertise in detecting eavesdropping devices.

Also on the witness list is Paolo Gabriele, Benedict’s former butler who is serving an 18-month prison sentence at the Vatican. It will be Gabriele’s first opportunity for public comment since the Holy See tribunal convicted him last month of stealing the pontiff’s private letters and leaking them to an Italian journalist in one of the worst breaches of Vatican security in recent memory.

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.

If Only The New York Times Could Rise Above Principle

UNITED STATES
Seeking Alpha

David Warsh

Scandal over the tendency of organizations to shield sexual predators sometimes concealed in their ranks, the public investigation of which began with the Catholic Church, spread to Penn State University college football, and the Boy Scouts, recently has stained the British Broadcasting Co. The story of the late Jimmy Saville, a one-time coal-miner turned British celebrity whose television presence over fifty years loosely resembled that of American Bandstand host Dick Clark (with more than a touch of W.C Fields thrown in), would be just another strange tale of Old England, except for one thing.

The New York Times Company (NYT), which, through its Boston Globe subsidiary, started the media’s sustained attention to the issue ten years ago with a painstaking investigation of the Boston Roman Catholic archdiocese, recently hired the BBC’s Mark Thompson to be its chief executive officer. Now it turns out that a program that would have documented both Saville’s history of preying on adolescent girls and his systematic enabling over the years by the authorities (including the BBC), was quietly scrubbed during the period that Thompson served as the BBC’s director general. The New York Times own public editor has urged the paper not to “pull its punches” in considering whether Thompson is the right person for the job, “given this turn of events.”

It was at a juncture something like this one that a famous old attorney, now long retired from the courtroom, listened in a private conference room as his colleagues waxed furious at demands that the other side had made during a negotiation: Outrageous! Preposterous! Unconscionable! After a long and thoughtful pause, the counselor intoned, “Friends, it is time to rise above principle.” The deal was done and everyone went back to work.

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.

THE SAD STORY OF THE VICAR OF STIFFKEY

UNITED KINGDOM
Express

Monday November 5,2012

By James Parry

IN A corner of a country churchyard in north Norfolk lies the grave of Harold Francis Davidson, the last resting place of a man who 80 years ago was at the heart of a case that scandalised the Church of England and caused a press furore. Davidson was a church rector who strayed beyond his brief and was sensationally defrocked in 1932 after a trial that gripped the nation. The potent mix of sex, skulduggery and abuse of authority proved toxic and still resonates today.

Davidson came from a long line of clergymen but his early interests were rather more theatrical. He revelled in amateur dramatics at school and toured for several months in 1895 with a group of likeminded friends, performing as entertainers. But in the autumn of 1903 the young Davidson turned his back on the stage and was ordained as a priest.

Three years later he was posted as rector to the parish of Stiffkey St John and Stiffkey St Mary & Morston, located on a remote stretch of the Norfolk coastline. In the Edwardian era that part of the country was far from being the fashionable rural playground for the chattering classes that it is today. Local society was still deeply feudal with a small-minded establishment holding sway and with firm views on what was and was not appropriate behaviour.

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.

Catholic Church Confirms Child Abuse in Iceland

ICELAND
Iceland Review

The investigative commission of the Catholic Church in Iceland presented its report on Friday, confirming that Rev. Ágúst Georg, principal of the church-run elementary school Landakotsskóli, and one of its teachers, Margrét Müller, abused their pupils.

The commission questioned 30 of the school’s former pupils and people who had joined the Catholic Church’s summer camps as children. Eight of them stated they had been sexually abused and 27 that they had been subject to or witnessed mental abuse, ruv.is reports.

Hjördís Hákonardóttir, who chairs the commission, said the report is a serious blow to the reputation of the Catholic Church in Iceland.

It reveals that Joannes Gijsen, who served as Bishop of the Catholic Church in Iceland 1996-2007, destroyed a letter from a man who described how he was abused by Rev. Georg, ruv.is reports.

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.

Abuse inquiry effectiveness queried

AUSTRALIA
The Age

[Submissions – Parliament of Victoria]

November 6, 2012

Jane Lee

MOST of the evidence given to a state inquiry into child abuse has not been published more than a month after the deadline for submissions closed.

The committee of family and community development released 47 submissions on its website on October 10, ahead of its first hearing. They included statements from the Catholic Church and other religious groups, and a withering attack by Victoria Police on the church’s hindrance of its sexual abuse investigations since the 1950s.

But no further submissions have been published since, adding to scepticism over the inquiry’s effectiveness. Many critics are calling its six-member committee – which is due to report to Parliament in April – under-resourced and over-worked.

The committee has received hundreds of additional submissions since the inquiry into the handling of child abuse by religious and non-government organisations was called in April. That followed years of campaigning by victims, advocates and media.

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.

November 4, 2012

Letters regarding Bishop Matthias now posted on Midwest web site

UNITED STATES
Orthodox Church in America

CHICAGO, IL [MW Diocese Communications]

On Saturday, November 3, 2012, Archpriest John Zdinak, Chancellor and Temporary Administrator of the Diocese of the Midwest of the Orthodox Church in America, forwarded two letters—one from the Holy Synod of Bishops, a second from His Grace, Bishop Matthias—to members of the Diocesan Council and all rectors and priests-in-charge, who were asked to read or post them in all parishes following the Divine Liturgy on Sunday, November 4.

The text of the letter of the Holy Synod may be accessed here. The text of the letter of Bishop Matthias may be accessed here.

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.

Missbrauchsopfer verklagt Freistaat

DEUTSCHLAND
Merkur

München – Prügel, Zwangsarbeit und sexueller Missbrauch – eine heute 72-Jährige aus dem Kreis Starnberg ist als Heimkind schwer misshandelt worden. Wegen ihres Traumas fordert sie jetzt Schadensersatz. Und zwar vom Freistaat Bayern.

Die schlimmen Dinge, die Eva R. (Name geändert) widerfahren sind, liegen Jahrzehnte zurück. Sie sollen zwischen 1946 und 1956 in bayerischen Kinderheimen passiert sein. Doch im Jahr 2008, als die Missbrauchsdebatte entbrannte, kam alles wieder hoch. So sehr, dass Eva R. eine „Retraumatisierung“ erlitten hat.

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

“Die katholische Kirche ist wie ein riesiger Tanker”

DEUTSCHLAND
domradio

Bei einer internationalen Konferenz hat die katholische Kirche in Freising eine Zwischenbilanz in ihrem Kampf gegen sexuellen Missbrauch gezogen. Der Jesuit Hans Zollner zu ersten Erfolgen und anstehenden Aufgaben.

KNA: Pater Zollner, wie weit ist die katholische Kirche inzwischen vorangekommen bei der Eindämmung von sexuellem Missbrauch?

Zollner: Die Situation ist je nach Kontinent und Land anders. Weltweit haben inzwischen fast 80 Prozent der nationalen Bischofskonferenzen eigene Richtlinien zum Umgang mit diesem Problem erlassen, das ist sehr beachtlich. Einige Nachzügler gibt es in Osteuropa und auch in Afrika ist die Resonanz noch nicht zufriedenstellend.

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.

Ohio priest starts prison sentence for tax fraud

OHIO
Coshocton Tribune

AKRON — A northeast Ohio Catholic priest who embezzled money from an alcohol and drug rehabilitation center he founded began serving his six-month prison sentence this week in a tax fraud case.

The Rev. Samuel Ciccolini started serving time at a minimum-security federal facility in Morgantown, W.Va., the Akron Beacon Journal reported.

The 70-year-old Ciccolini, known as “Father Sam,” has been prohibited from saying Mass or hearing confessions. Bishop Richard Lennon and his advisers in the Catholic Diocese of Cleveland won’t determine Ciccolini’s status with the diocese until he’s out of prison, diocese spokesman Robert Tayek said.

The priest was a beloved figure in the Akron area, and the community was shocked by his 2010 arrest and the discovery that he’d amassed millions of dollars, the newspaper 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.

Bishops give priests’ plea for renewal kiss of death

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Sunday November 04 2012

The supine acceptance of Vatican authority is driving clergy out of office, writes Colum Kenny

THE Irish Bishops Conference has refused to meet the Association of Catholic Priests. The hierarchy will not dignify them with a high-level meeting.

‘Cardinal snubs plea by liberal priests for meeting,’ shouted one headline. But the Association of Catholic Priests is no fringe group of lax priests. It represents more than 1,000 members. The laity may be surprised to learn that there are still that many priests in Ireland.

The behaviour of the Irish hierarchy since Vatican II has driven committed priests and nuns out of office. And it has driven many other Catholics to despair. Its recent censoring of outspoken priests to placate the Vatican now means that even a priest as mainstream as Fr Brian D’Arcy has to submit his newspaper columns for approval in advance of publication.

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

Pope butler ‘accomplice’ goes on trial

VATICAN CITY
NDTV (India)

Vatican City: A Vatican computer technician will go on trial on Monday on charges of helping the pope’s former butler steal papers, in a case that could expose other whistle-blowers within the secretive Holy See.

Claudio Sciarpelletti’s trial follows the conviction of ex-butler Paolo Gabriele, who was sentenced to 18 months in jail last month after he admitted leaking papers alleging corruption and Machiavellian politics in the Vatican.

The 48-year-old technician was arrested on May 25 as the investigation into the leaks unfolded but was released the following day.

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.

Monica Yant Kinney: New sex-abuse charges put institutional leaders on notice

PENNSYLVANIA
Philadelphia Inquirer

Monica Yant Kinney, Inquirer Columnist

Posted: Sunday, November 4, 2012

After the mixed-message end to the criminal trial of the Rev. James J. Brennan and Msgr. William J. Lynn, I speculated that even one conviction would rock both the Archdiocese of Philadelphia and the state legal system.

Brennan had been accused of attempted rape and Lynn faced conspiracy charges, but after 13 days of deliberation, a conflicted jury declared a mistrial for Brennan and found Lynn – at the time the nation’s highest-ranking church official ensnared in the sex-abuse scandal – guilty of just one crime: endangering the welfare of a child.

Surely that single verdict, on that felonious charge, would embolden other prosecutors to hold other powerful decision-makers accountable. Even in cases where they were not charged with touching anyone. Even when the official had never met the victim.

Thursday, state Attorney General Linda Kelly charged former Pennsylvania State University president Graham B. Spanier with putting the school’s image before children’s safety.

Once among the country’s most revered college administrators, Spanier stands accused of lying to a grand jury for saying he never discussed reporting Jerry Sandusky to authorities and did not know about early allegations against the aggressive coach-turned-youth mentor.

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.

Healing the Wounds of Abuse

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Register

by FATHER C. JOHN MCCLOSKEY
11/03/2012

MY PEACE I GIVE YOU
Healing Sexual Wounds With the Help of the Saints
By Dawn Eden
Ave Maria Press, 2012
256 pages, $16.95
To order: avemariapress.com
(800) 282-1865, ext. 1

How do you describe Dawn Eden? Former rock-music writer, chastity expert, theologian, blogger? Or simply a great Jewish-Catholic convert woman writer? Well, I will focus on the last.

Readers are aware of the painful cases of sexual abuse of children and adolescents by homosexual and pedophile priests and religious in the United States and in many countries in Europe as well. It appears that at last the worst is behind us, and the Church is taking proper measures to assure that candidates for the priesthood and religious life are carefully selected for their capacity to live the virtue of chastity. This is not simply a Catholic problem, but a societal one, since ours is a sex-soaked society. In fact, the incidence of child sex abuse is higher proportionally for public-school teachers and Protestant ministers than it is for Catholic priests.

All this makes the need for Eden’s new book, My Peace I Give You: Healing Sexual Wounds With the Help of the Saints, urgent because, as its subtitle suggests, it is about healing sexual wounds.

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.

In scouts’ sex-abuse scandal, dark secrets for a model citizen

GEORGIA
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

By Alan Judd
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

ATHENS —

Who could have been a more upstanding citizen than Ernest Boland?

Businessman. Rotarian. Adviser to local government officials. Full colonel in the Army Reserve. And, for 25 years, the leader of three separate Boy Scout troops.

“He helped a lot of boys start on the right path in life,” an admirer wrote in nominating Boland as Athens’ citizen of the century.

But behind the façade of uniforms and civic engagement, Boland seemed to harbor dark secrets. Across Athens, scouts and other boys quietly unburdened their shame: Boland, they told their parents, was not the trusted mentor they perceived him as, but a child molester, one who forced them to repeatedly perform sex acts with him.

These secrets finally were revealed last month through the release of long-confidential files that detailed accusations of sexual abuse by scoutmasters nationwide. Boland’s file claims he molested a dozen or more scouts and other boys between the 1950s and the 1970s. Even when some of the boys told, the file shows, prominent adults in Athens kept the matter quiet, tacitly giving Boland the chance to continue abusing boys under his authority.

The way scout officials, leaders of his church and others handled the allegations against Boland reflects the ethos of an earlier era, before such iconic institutions as the Roman Catholic Church and Penn State’s football program were forced to deal with scandals involving the sexual abuse of children. Laws did not mandate reporting suspicions of abuse to authorities, as they do now, and a common approach was to deal with child molesters, especially those who enjoyed a degree of prominence in their communities, behind the scenes.

“In those days, this was a no-no in terms of publicizing it,” said the Rev. James Griffith, who as Boland’s pastor in the mid-1970s heard reports of his sexual transgressions. “It was suspected, but there was not much done about it.”

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Victims first? State’s sordid history of abuse cases shows it’s time to change the laws

PENNSYLVANIA
The Patriot-News

By Patriot-News Editorial Board

The latest charges against former Penn State President Graham Spanier, Athletic Director on leave Tim Curley and former Vice President Gary Schultz are yet another reminder that the university’s former administrators placed PSU’s image above the lives and well-being of young boys.

Child sexual abuse cases are incredibly difficult. Often the victims are afraid to come forward and plagued with guilt and emotional (if not physical) trauma.

On top of that factor is the “conspiracy of silence” of powerful institutions trying to cover up these horrific crimes. Pennsylvania has example after example: Penn State/Jerry Sandusky, Philadelphia priest abuse cases, and now the Boy Scouts of America’s “immoral” files that document decades of abuse.

How many more tragedies must come to light before Pennsylvania’s leaders put victims’ needs first? Obtaining justice for these children is further complicated by the statute of limitations. Child sex abuse cases have to be brought forward before the victim is 50 for criminal charges and before the victim turns 30 for civil charges.

However, when many of these high-profile molestations and rapes took place, the statute of limitations was much shorter, meaning men and women finally ready to come forward today can’t do so. The 2003 Philadelphia grand jury report on the Catholic Church scandal identified 63 priests who sexually abused children.

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November 3, 2012

Gerald T. Slevin: Is Pope Leading a New “Children’s Crusade” to Help Romney Win?

UNITED STATES
Bilgrimage

Another outstanding piece this morning by Jerry Slevin. In this essay, Jerry sketches the historical and political background to the intervention of the Vatican and the U.S. Catholic hierarchy in the 2012 elections, noting the connection of papal politics (and the politicking of the USCCB) to the sex abuse scandal in the Catholic church. Jerry’s essay follows:

Of the many stories generated by the medieval wars, or Crusades, against Islamic rulers that were frequently supported actively by various popes, few are more fascinating than the ones about the so-called 13th Century “Children’s Crusade.” The stories, which relate to the exploits of a large numbers of itinerants, including many docile and idealistic youth, suggest a uniquely organized effort to rescue the Holy Land. As with most wars, including the Crusades, what seems fairly clear is that children were frequently disproportionately among the casualties, directly or indirectly, including these youthful Crusaders. Then as now, the welfare of children seemed to be a low priority for a generally celibate clerical caste, notwithstanding Jesus’ clear Gospel mandate to protect children.

As the U.S. elections soon arrive, the pope is desperately leading another crusade that disproportionately negatively affects children. The pope is flexing his U.S. election year muscles to rally and bring out conservative Catholic voters in critical swing districts by opposing contraception health insurance, as well as the other “hot” wedge issue, gay marriage, that the pope claims, without real evidence and without addressing contrary evidence, hurts families, including children.

The pope’s longstanding worldwide effort against government support of effective and voluntary birth control family planning for the poor, in particular, has contributed clearly and unnecessarily to hundreds of millions of “unplanned” children worldwide, including many in the U.S., who are often consigned to lives of miserable poverty.

What is the pope’s goal with this heartless anti-contraception crusade? Firstly, the pope’s power is apparently thought to be directly related to his efforts to maximize the size of the Catholic population worldwide, especially when compared to the higher birth rates in many non-Catholic countries in Asia, Africa and the Middle East, as well as the increasing Islamic populations in Western countries. Reproducing more Catholics seems to be a clear papal objective, especially since in many countries, including in the West, the pope is also facing currently a growing Catholic exodus over major papal failures, including the pope’s inability and/or unwillingness to adopt effective measures to curtail the worldwide epidemic of priest sexual abuse of innocent children. …

The challenge apparently for the pope was to find a novel way to use these weapons against Obama, who had recently been showing signs of getting increasingly aggressive against the U.S. bishops for their ongoing cover-up of priest sexual predators. The new papal attack was launched against Obama’s proposed rules requiring making available free contraceptive insurance for all employees of Church-controlled institutions, such as universities, but not for direct employees of the Church.

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Archdiocese of KCK sends abuse case to Vatican

KANSAS CITY (MO)
KMBZ

The archdiocese of Kansas City, Kan. has sent a case of an alleged “predator priest” to the Vatican. Father John Wisner was removed from his ministerial duties last spring after a decades old sexual misconduct accusation from a man in his forties.

Since then, two other men have come forward with similar allegations.

What happens next?

“They will either advise the archbishop on how to proceed, which would probably mean removing him permanently from ministry or they could take the case upon themselves, which means they could continue the investigation,” said church spokesperson Rose Hammes.

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Tweede luik Vatileaks proces maandag van start

ROME
RKNieuws

ROME (RKnieuws.net) – Maandag moet computerspecialist Claudio Sciarpelletti zich voor de rechtbank verantwoorden in het kader van de Vatileaks affaire. Hij wordt beschuldigd van mogelijke medeplichtigheid bij de diefstal van vertrouwelijke documenten uit de pauselijke vertrekken.

Sciarpelletti kreeg gedaan dat zijn proces gescheiden wordt gevoerd van dat van Paolo Gabriele, de ex-majordomus (butler) van de paus, die onlangs tot 18 maanden celstraf werd veroordeeld.
Kerk & leven, één van de grootste weekbladen in Vlaanderen, pakt deze week uit met een gestoffeerd dossier over Vatileaks. Daaruit blijkt dat Vatileaks een schandaal is dat vooral toont hoe het erin het Vaticaan aan toe gaat en dat is niet altijd even fraai. ‘Ook in het Vaticaan waren schandalen nooit weg. Het Vaticaan is een oord van jaloezie en intriges en met Vatileaks krijgt de Kerk opnieuw een flinke deuk”, aldus Kerk & leven.

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Late BBC host now believed to have been Britain’s most prolific serial sexual offender

UNITED KINGDOM
The Globe and Mail (Canada)

CAROLINE BYRNE

LONDON — Special to The Globe and Mail
Sir James Savile, knighted by Queen and Pope, bought a brand new Rolls-Royce every year so he’d have a getaway car in case a scandal erupted and he needed to flee.

By 1991 – a year after Pope John Paul II made him Knight Commander of St. Gregory the Great in honour of his charity work – Mr. Savile had bought and sold 17 new Rolls-Royces, telling a BBC psychiatrist it would be easier to sell a new car if he had to move abroad quickly with little money.

“I could then go and be very unhappy in the south of France, covered in shame and sunshine and mad birds with bikinis on,” Sir James told Anthony Clare, a psychiatrist who interviewed the BBC Top of the Pops TV presenter in 1991 for a radio show at the peak of his celebrity and – it would now appears, his sexual crimes.

Jimmy Savile, the youngest of seven children and a star who made children’s wishes come true in the BBC TV show Jim’ll Fix It, described himself that day as a child-hater with no emotions. He said he had no attachments, had never been in love, would never marry and had never spent more than one or two nights in one location, preferring to carry an overnight bag throughout his life. He mused about how he was drawn to mortuaries and enjoyed spending five days alone with his mother’s corpse because he finally had her to himself.

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Church of the End Times founder held without bail

UXBRIDGE (MA)
Telegram & Gazette

By Susan Spencer TELEGRAM & GAZETTE STAFF

UXBRIDGE — A Church of the End Times founder was back in court yesterday facing two charges of violating a restraining order issued last month.

Dennis H. Stanley, 36, was held without bail at the Worcester County Jail after his arraignment and will return for a pretrial conference Nov. 6.

According to court documents, a warrant was entered by the court on Oct. 23 after Beth Ellen Stanley, from whom Mr. Stanley is separated, filed complaints that he violated the yearlong restraining order awarded Oct. 5. The order requires Mr. Stanley to stay at least 100 yards away from Mrs. Stanley’s home at 41 Murphy’s Way.

Mrs. Stanley alleged that Mr. Stanley has visited or attempted to visit his brother, David H. Stanley’s home at 51 Murphy’s Way, next door to Mrs. Stanley. The houses are less than 100 yards apart.

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Boy Scouts Host Conference on Protecting Youth from Sexual Predators

UNITED STATES
Youth Today

November 02, 2012 by Maggie Lee

Organizations that serve youth must overlap their defenses against sexual predators, say experts at a youth protection conference organized by the Boy Scouts of America (BSA).

“The first problem we have in the country is that most people most of the time won’t report abuse, no matter how clear the evidence is … even when they walk in on a child being sexually abused,” declared Victor Vieth, executive director of the National Child Protection Training Center at Minnesota’s Winona State University.

“It’s not a close question,” he said, referring to decades of research. “People tell researchers, ‘I don’t report because I’m not quite sure.’”

In 2012 alone, personnel in the Roman Catholic Church, the BSA and Penn State University, to name a few big organizations, have all been accused or convicted of complicity in ignoring child sexual abuse, in some cases, for decades.

That’s part of what’s fueled new public attention to child sex abuse in places where kids go to worship, learn and play.

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Protecting children from sexual abuse starts with institutional responsibility

UNITED STATES
The Kansas City Star

Things are never looking good for an organization when a court orders it to release internal documents known as its “perversion files.”

That’s what the Boy Scouts of America was compelled to do in October in the aftermath of a judgment that awarded $19.9 million in damages to a plaintiff who was sexually molested by a Portland, Ore., scout leader in the 1980s.

The perversion or “ineligible volunteer” files point to a conundrum facing organizations that bring young people into close contact with adult leaders. As the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) put it, “The same dynamics that create a nurturing environment, and may ultimately protect against child sexual abuse, can also open the doors to sexually abusive behaviors.”

Any organization, whether a church or civic group or business, has an obligation to protect the public from staff members who may have malign intent, but it must also protect the rights of those same staff members to privacy and the presumption of innocence until proof of guilt.

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Man, 81, sent to prison for sex abuse of boy

NEW ZEALAND
Stuff

Nelson Mail

TRACY NEAL

A frail, elderly Nelson man who used his position in a church to befriend a young boy and his family has gone to prison for 18 months for serious sexual offences committed against the teenager.

When he appeared in the Nelson District Court in May, Hugh Nielsen, 81, admitted a representative charge of indecent assault involving a boy aged 12-16 between September 2004 and May 2005, and another of unlawful sexual connection with a young person aged under 16.

He pleaded guilty to the charges after the first day of a trial, and was remanded on bail for sentencing yesterday.

Nielsen was also instructed to pay $15,000 in emotional harm reparation which he had earlier offered the victim and his family.

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School stuck in middle of Kaitaia’s sex abuse cases

NEW ZEALAND
New Zealand Herald

By Yvonne Tahana

Teachers are walking a tightrope at Kaitaia College as they try to look after students without identifying victims of sexual abuse, principal William Tailby says.

The Far North town has been rocked by three cases this year. All involved men in positions of trust and standing in the community.

In the latest case, Daniel Luke Taylor, 37, who was the vice-president of the Kaitaia Business Association, faces 17 charges, mostly against juvenile boys.

Eric Clifford Reid, 63, a pastor at Kaitaia Family Church, pleaded guilty to 25 charges of making intimate visual recordings and 24 charges of possessing intimate visual recordings related to a woman and a teenage girl.

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Seminar in East Liberty to help clergy deal with sexual abuse

PENNSYLVAINIA
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

November 3, 2012

By Ann Rodgers / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Although clergy are required to report any suspicion that a child in their congregation’s care has been physically or sexually abused, many either don’t know what to do or are afraid to make the report, say organizers of a workshop for clergywomen on child protection.

Although some denominations — notably the Catholic Church since it adopted its child protection charter in 2002 — provide extensive education to clergy and parishioners about child abuse prevention and reporting, in many traditions it’s rarely addressed.

“Some clergy are getting a lot of information and others are getting none. We are trying to bring the two together to expand their knowledge and share their insights,” said Rochelle Sufrin, an organizer.

The workshop, slated for 8:45 a.m. to 3:45 p.m. Monday at Pittsburgh Theological Seminary in East Liberty, is a follow-up to Pittsburgh’s first Interfaith Clergy Workshop for Women in May. That session was on working with adults who were victims of domestic violence. The 34 participants said they wanted more information on what to do if they suspected a child was being abused or neglected.

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Kansas archdiocese forwards name of accused priest to Vatican

KANSAS CITY (MO)
The Kansas City Star

By JUDY L. THOMAS
The Kansas City Star

Catholic officials in the Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas are asking the Vatican to look into a case involving multiple allegations against one of its priests.

The archdiocese on Friday said it sent to the Vatican the results of an investigation it conducted into sexual abuse claims by three men against the Rev. John Wisner.

“The Vatican will look at the report that the archbishop has filed and they will either say to him, ‘Here’s how we think you should proceed,’ or they will say, ‘We’re going to take the case into our own hands and do further investigation,’ ” said Rose Hammes, spokeswoman for the archdiocese.

Archbishop Joseph Naumann removed Wisner from active ministry in May after receiving a complaint from a 45-year-old man who alleged Wisner had inappropriately touched him in 1982 on a youth outing when he was 15. The archdiocese received two more allegations after that from men in their 40s, Hammes said.

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Las Vegas Court Orders Catholic Diocese in Wisconsin to Pay Abuse Victim

LAS VEGAS (NV)
KOLO

LAS VEGAS, Nev. — A court in Las Vegas ordered the Catholic Diocese in Green Bay, Wisconsin to pay a sex abuse victim a half-million dollars.

The court found the church neglected to protect the boy from known sex offender and former priest John Patrick Feeney.

The lawsuit involved one person, known in the Nevada legal system as John Doe 119. The plaintiff’s lawyer says John Patrick Feeney abused the teenage boy soon after leaving Green Bay.

“[Feeney] then ended up landing in Las Vegas, at St. Francis de Sales, where this kid and his family were parishioners,” says the plaintiff’s attorney, Jeff Anderson. “And Feeney laid his hands on this kid in a way that no priest ever should.

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SNAP backs negligence finding in Feeney civil lawsuit

WISCONSIN
Post-Crescent-

A national organization that supports victims of clergy abuse has praised a verdict that ordered the Catholic Diocese of Green Bay to pay $500,000 in a civil lawsuit involving a priest accused of molesting a 13-year-old boy.

A Las Vegas jury ruled Thursday the diocese was negligent in transferring John Patrick Feeney to a Nevada parish where he allegedly molested the boy.

“The brave victim in this case, John Doe 119, is to be commended for holding the Green Bay Diocese accountable for concealing and facilitating decades of child sex crimes. Children in Nevada and Wisconsin are safer today because of his courage,” a group called SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, said in a statement released after the verdict.

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November 2, 2012

Argentina: Confirman expulsión del estado clerical de exsacerdote “sanador” y acusado de abusos

SAN LUIS (ARGENTINA)
ACI Prensa [Lima, Peru]

November 2, 2012

Read original article

La Santa Sede confirmó en segunda instancia y con carácter definitivo la expulsión del estado clerical del ahora exsacerdote Miguel Ángel Santurio en Argentina, acusado de trata de personas, abusos sexuales, y dedicado a celebrar ritos de “sanación”. 

Según informó este jueves 1 de noviembre el Obispado de San Luis, con esta decisión Miguel Ángel Santurio no se encuentra en comunión con la Iglesia Católica Apostólica Romana, presidida por Su Santidad Benedicto XVI y representada en la diócesis de San Luis por Monseñor Pedro Daniel Martínez”. 

El comunicado precisa que el ahora exsacerdote “no posee ningún oficio o encargo pastoral de parte de la misma; ni tiene licencias o autorización para realizar ningún tipo de acto religioso o sacramental, a saber: celebrar bautismos y confirmaciones, oír confesiones, celebrar la Santa Misa, ni concelebrar; asistir a la celebración de matrimonios; administrar la unción de los enfermos, administrar sacramentales (bendiciones, exorcismos)”.

El comunicado de la diócesis precisa además que “la llamada Vicaría de los Sagrados Corazones de Jesús y María Santísima que el señor Miguel Ángel Santurio gestiona, con sede en la calle Constitución 284 esquina 25 de Mayo y también en la calle 9 de Julio 415 esquina Ituzaingó, tal como consta en los folletos distribuidos por las calles de San Luis capital, tampoco es un organismo pastoral de la diócesis de San Luis y por tanto, tampoco pertenece a la Iglesia Católica Apostólica Romana“. 

El proceso penal canónico contra Santurio empezó en 2009 ante el Tribunal Eclesiástico Nacional y pasó al Vaticano tras la apelación al fallo de primera instancia con fecha 26 de mayo de 2011, que ahora ha sido confirmado.

En forma paralela, Santurio fue sobreseído en una causa de abuso deshonesto y reducción a la servidumbre en perjuicio de tres jóvenes tras una denuncia de la ONG Alto a la Trata ante la justicia federal de Misiones, adonde se trasladó tras disentir con las indicaciones pastorales del entonces Obispo de San Luis, Mons. Jorge Luis Lona.

El juez José Luis Rey desestimó aquella causa porque ninguna de las supuestas víctimas denunció al sacerdote por abuso sexual, un delito de instancia privada en el cual la Justicia no puede actuar de oficio.

Santurio, de origen uruguayo y conocido en la comunidad como un “cura sanador”, intentó fundar una congregación religiosa de mujeres. Era conocido por organizar celebraciones o ritos de “sanación”, acompañado por pastores que según él, rezaban por sus intenciones, lo que le valió amonestaciones por parte de la autoridad eclesiástica.

En abril de 2009 el Obispado de Puerto Iguazú, con Mons. Marcelo Martorell a la cabeza, decidió expulsar al sacerdote de esa jurisdicción ante una serie de actuaciones de Santuario “reñidas con la moral y con el orden jurídico”.

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Lawsuit filed against priest convicted in child pornography case

MISSOURI
The Kansas City Star

By JUDY L. THOMAS
The Kansas City Star

Another sexual abuse lawsuit has been filed against a Kansas City priest who is awaiting sentencing on a federal child pornography conviction.

The civil lawsuit, filed Friday in Jackson County Circuit Court, alleges that the Rev. Shawn Ratigan engaged a girl in sexually explicit conduct from 2009 to 2011 when she was 10 to 12 years old.

The suit was filed on behalf of the girl — identified as Jane Doe 96 — by her parents. It seeks unspecified damages and is the fifth lawsuit to be filed against Ratigan involving child pornography allegations.

Like the others, the lawsuit also names Bishop Robert Finn and the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph as defendants, saying that Catholic officials had been warned about Ratigan’s troubling behavior and knew of disturbing images on his laptop computer but failed to take immediate action.

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AG’s Office Investigating Child Sex Abuse Case

PENNSYLVANIA
We Are Central PA

By: Danielle Krout

Updated: November 2, 2012

EBENSBURG, CAMBRIA COUNTY— The State Attorney General’s Office is now handling another alleged child sex abuse case in the region.

WTAJ News learned Friday that the Cambria County District Attorney’s office turned over the alleged child sex abuse investigation involving Father George Koharchik.

In August allegations surfaced accusing the Priest of sexual misconduct involving minors more than 30 years ago. Koharchik was put on leave from the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese. He served as a Priest at Saint Catherine of Siena Parish in Mount Union, but the alleged assaults took place in Cambria County.

“We have been in conversation with the Attorney Generals Office,” said Assistant District Attorney Elizabeth Bolton Penna. “They made the decision they’re going to take over the case.”

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Catholic priest charged with murder

CROATIA
IOL

November 2 2012
By SAPA

Zagreb –

Croatian prosecutors on Friday charged a Catholic priest with murder for beating to death a village official in the Dubrovnik region after a row over a cemetery.

Father Ivan Sinanovic stands accused of repeatedly hitting on the head the local official who, under the influence of alcohol, last May had forced open the parish house in the tiny village of Banici and attacked him, the prosecution said.

According to local media reports, the priest and official Marko Kraljevic had been fighting over the size of the local cemetery. Sinanovic had started enlarging it without consulting the village authorities.

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Rebekah Gay homicide: John White says he watched necrophilia porn before attack

MICHIGAN
MLive

By Mark Tower | mtower@mlive.com
on November 02, 2012

MOUNT PLEASANT, MI — John Douglas White, 55, told police he watched necrophilia pornography before beating his 24-year-old neighbor over the head with a mallet, strangling her with a zip tie and undressing her body.

White also admitted to thinking about killing Rebekah Gay for about two weeks before walking into her mobile home about 2 a.m. on Oct. 31, according to the affidavit filed in Isabella County Trial Court by County Sheriff’s Detective Sgt. David Patterson.

White told the detective that he had viewed online pornography that shows killings and sex with corpses, the affadavit reports.

“He stated he has been having bad thoughts for about two weeks about killing Rebekah Gay and then having sex with her dead body,” Patterson wrote in the affidavit summarizing White’s statement.

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Pastor, 55, ‘strangled neighbor…

MICHIGAN
Daily Mail (United Kingdom)

Pastor, 55, ‘strangled neighbor, 24, after fantasizing about having sex with her dead body then helped her son, 3, get ready for Halloween’

By Rachel Quigley

A 55-year-old church pastor is accused of beating and strangling his pretty 24-year-old neighbor to fulfill a twisted sexual fantasy before hiding her body and helping her three-year-old son get ready for Halloween.

John D. White was arraigned on Thursday in Michigan on first-degree murder charges and jailed without bond.

He told investigators he repeatedly struck pretty blonde Rebekah Gay’s head with a mallet then strangled her with a zip tie at her Mount Pleasant trailer.

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Pastor charged in killing of fiancee’s daughter

MICHIGAN
Sacramento Bee

The Associated Press

Published: Friday, Nov. 2, 2012

BROOMFIELD TOWNSHIP, Mich. — A central Michigan pastor accused of beating and strangling a neighbor to fulfill a sexual fantasy was engaged to the victim’s mother and had asked church members to pray for the young woman before police found her body, a friend said Friday.

Ex-convict John D. White told investigators that after killing 24-year-old Rebekah Gay in her trailer in rural Isabella County early Wednesday, he hid her body in nearby woods then returned to the trailer to dress her 3-year-old son in a Halloween costume, ready for the boy’s father to pick him up.

White told investigators he repeatedly struck Gay’s head with a mallet then strangled her with a zip tie, according to the Isabella County sheriff’s office. He said he stripped her but does not remember if he carried out his fantasy of having sex with Gay’s dead body.

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Hint for Boy Scout Officials: When Attempting Damage Control, Excluding the Press and Public from a ‘Safety’ Conference Doesn’t Help

UNITED STATES
Kosnoff Fasy

Posted on November 2, 2012

By TIM KOSNOFF

As this is written a gathering is underway in Atlanta, where the Boy Scouts of America is convening other youth-oriented groups at a symposium concerning child sex-abuse prevention

I wish the event signaled enlightenment on the part of the host organization. Alas, the one-day gathering is, in effect, being held in the dark. BSA officials have made it a closed-door event, meaning members of the press won’t be directly privy to what is — and isn’t — discussed by participants.

BSA is still in denial and is trying to deceive the public once again. The secret symposium, then, would seem to be a (the reader will pardon the expression) perversion of the spirit of openness that is supposed to be prevailing at an organization excoriated near and far by the millions who have read the sordid details of the BSA’s so-called “perversion files.” The organization’s leaders, of course, characterize the Atlanta gathering as a chance to bring together interested parties such as YMCA and Big Brothers Big Sisters officials to address the pressing need for oversight where children’s safety and well-being are concerned. Would it have occurred to BSA leaders that, in the wake of the tsunami of the bad publicity with which the organization has been deluged, we all have become interested parties?

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Youth pastor at Yuma church arrested

YUMA (AZ)
Yuma Sun

JAMES GILBERT – @YSJAMESGILBERT

A youth pastor at Valley Baptist Church in Yuma has been arrested on two counts of furnishing harmful material to a minor.

According to the Yuma County Sheriff’s Office, a woman contacted their office over the weekend to report that her daughter had received “items of a sexual nature” from the church’s youth pastor, 43-year-old Robert Warren.

Detectives from the sheriff’s office interviewed the victim and were able to determine that Warren had made contact with the victim and informed her that he had obtained the items in question and had dropped them off at her house.

The sheriff’s office did not explain what the “items of a sexual nature” were, nor was the age of the victim given.

On Wednesday deputies went to Warren’s residence and he was taken into custody. During questioning he admitted to buying the items and delivering them to the victim’s residence.

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Youth pastor arrested for giving sex items to girl

YUMA (AZ)
San Francisco Chronicle

YUMA, Ariz. (AP) — Sheriff’s deputies in Yuma say they’ve arrested a youth pastor after he allegedly gave sex-related items to a girl.

The Yuma Sun reports (http://bit.ly/Rvpr9e ) the sheriff’s office says the girl’s mother told them 43-year-old Robert Warren had given the items to the girl.

Detectives interviewed the girl and she reportedly told them Warren told her he had obtained the items and had dropped them off at her house. The sheriff’s office didn’t identify the items.

Deputies went to Warren’s home Wednesday and arrested him on two counts of providing harmful material to a minor. He reportedly admitted buying the items and delivering them to the victim’s home.

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Arizona church ‘standing behind’ youth pastor who gave ‘sex toys’ to 14-year-old girl

ARIZONA
The Raw Story

By Stephen C. Webster
Friday, November 2, 2012

The pastor of a church in Yuma, Arizona said it is “standing behind” a youth pastor who was arrested this week for allegedly providing “sex toys” to a 14-year-old girl.

Police told a reporter with CBS News affiliate KSWT Desert News Now that 43-yer-old Robert Warren, who’s worked at Valley Baptist Church for more than 20 years, was reported by the mother of a 14-year-old girl who claims she received items of a sexual nature from the man.

The Yuma County Sheriff’s Office says that Warren admitted it when confronted with the allegation. They did not describe exactly what type of sex toy was provided.

Pastor Glenn Conell reportedly told Desert News that he feels this incident was out of character for the longtime youth pastor, adding that the church is “standing behind” him, but will consider taking “appropriate” action pending the outcome of an investigation.

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NV – “Las Vegas bishop must act now,” victims group says

NEVADA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by David Clohessy on November 02, 2012

A Las Vegas jury has awarded $500,000 to a man who was sexually abused as a boy by Fr. James Patrick Feeney.

Now that it’s been proven that Feeney molested at least one Nevada boy, it’s crucial that Las Vegas’ Catholic bishop reach out to others he Feeney have hurt. It’s irresponsible for the church hierarchy to be passive and silent here. They have ample resources. They should use those resources to find, in Jesus’ words, the lost and wounded sheep.

Nevada Catholic officials voluntarily let Feeney work in churches in the state. They are responsible, in part, for the harm he did in Nevada. These church officials have a moral duty to aggressively try to find – and help – anyone else who was assaulted by Feeney. They also have an obligation to prod witnesses and whistelblowers to speak up too, so that police and prosecutors might pursue more criinal charges against Feeney.

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Professioneel werken in jeugdzorg w

NEDERLAND
Rijksoverheid

Nieuwsbericht | 02-11-2012

De ministerraad heeft op voorstel van staatssecretaris Veldhuijzen van Zanten van Volksgezondheid, Welzijn en Sport en staatssecretaris Teeven van Veiligheid en Justitie ingestemd met het wetsvoorstel professionalisering jeugdzorg.

Het wetsvoorstel verplicht jeugdzorgwerkers en gedragswetenschappers om zich te registreren bij een wettelijk register. Ook verbinden zij zich aan een beroepscode. Als sluitstuk van de professionalisering van de jeugdzorg komt er tuchtrechtspraak in de jeugdzorg. Met deze wettelijke instrumenten worden jeugdzorgwerkers beter toegerust en wordt de kwaliteit van de beroepsuitoefening in de gehele jeugdzorg op een hoger, professioneler plan getild.

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Archdiocese rolls out new policy for protection of children

PENNSYLVANIA
Daily Times

By PATTI MENGERS
pmengers@delcotimes.com

Philadelphia Archbishop Charles Chaput this week announced the Archdiocese of Philadelphia’s latest polices for the protection of children, 20 months after a grand jury investigation blasted archdiocesan officials for their handling of clerical sex abuse cases.

“While recently codified these same policies have actually guided our practices for more than a year. They’ll be reviewed on a regular basis and updated as circumstances require,” said Chaput in a prepared statement released Wednesday.

Among the key changes are a separate archdiocesan office of investigations to ensure immediate referral of any complaints to law enforcement officials, codification of steps for thorough screening of priests seeking to minister in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia and referral of all complaints against clergy that involve minors to the Archdiocesan Review Board that provides recommendations of suitability for ministry to Chaput after assessing abuse allegatons.

Archdiocesan Review Board Vice Chairman Arnold Gordon, a former Philadelphia Assistant District Attorney, said, “The revised polices and procedures constitute significant evidence of the commitment of the Philadelphia archdiocese to a zero tolerance policy toward sexual abuse of minors.”

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Three Catholic clergy in spotlight in sex cover-up investigation

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By JOANNE McCARTHY
Nov. 3, 2012

Minister for Police and the Hunter Mike Gallacher has provided the first formal confirmation that police have investigated three senior Catholic clergy for concealing the child sex crimes of a Hunter priest.

Newcastle Police Strike Force Lantle’s investigations into the church’s handling of priest Denis McAlinden ‘‘have been exhaustive’’, Mr Gallacher said in a letter to Greens MP David Shoebridge in late October.

‘‘As you may be aware, the NSW Police Force has been actively investigating allegations that sexual assaults committed by a former Catholic priest, in the Hunter Region, were concealed by three senior members of the Catholic church,’’ he said.

‘‘I am advised that Strike Force Lantle is preparing a brief of evidence to submit to the NSW Director of Public Prosecutions for his review and consideration as to whether charges should be laid.

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Vatican to begin trial of computer tech accused of helping papal butler

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Service

By Cindy Wooden
Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — A second criminal trial opens Nov. 5 in the little courtroom on the ground floor of the Vatican’s tribunal building, located just behind the apse of St. Peter’s Basilica.

Claudio Sciarpelletti, a computer technician in the Vatican Secretariat of State, is to be tried on charges of aiding and abetting Paolo Gabriele, the papal butler, who was convicted of aggravated theft for stealing or photocopying private Vatican correspondence — including letters to and from the pope.

The Vatican court’s indictment of Sciarpelletti was released Aug. 13 along with the indictment of Gabriele.

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Green Bay Catholic diocese ordered to pay $500,000 in civil suit

WISCONSIN/NEVADA
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

By Gitte Laasby and Annysa Johnson of the Journal Sentinel

Nov. 2, 2012

The Catholic Diocese of Green Bay has been ordered to pay $500,000 to a Nevada man who was molested in 1984 by a priest it sent there, who had previously molested two Wisconsin brothers.

A Las Vegas jury ruled Thursday for the man, identified as John Doe 119, who was molested by the now defrocked Father John Patrick Feeney. He had sought $5.2 million in damages.

An Outagamie County, Wis., jury in May ordered the diocese to pay $700,000 to brothers Troy and Todd Merryfield, who were abused by Feeney in the 1970s. But the judge threw out that verdict after learning that a juror failed to disclose that she suspected Feeney of inappropriate contact with her own brother and was friends with a member of the plaintiffs’ extended family. That case is scheduled for retrial in May.

Feeney was convicted in Wisconsin in 2004 and sentenced to 15 years in prison but was released in 2011. He was defrocked in 2005.

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Nev. jury: Wis. diocese to pay $500K in abuse case

WISCONSIN/NEVADA
Wisconsin State Journal

A Las Vegas jury has awarded $500,000 to a man who claimed he was sexually abused as a boy by a former Wisconsin priest working in Nevada at the time.

The man alleged that when he was about 13, the Rev. John Patrick Feeney fondled him in 1984. At the time, Feeney was a pastor at a Las Vegas church.

The civil lawsuit named the Catholic Diocese of Green Bay as a defendant. The plaintiff alleged that officials there let Feeney transfer to Nevada without revealing a history of sexual abuse allegations against him.

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Green Bay diocese ordered to pay $500,000 in Las Vegas abuse case

NEVADA/WISCONSIN
Fox 11

LAS VEGAS (AP) – A Las Vegas jury has awarded $500,000 to a man who claimed he was sexually abused as a boy by a former Wisconsin priest working in Nevada at the time.

The man alleged that when he was about 13, the Rev. John Patrick Feeney fondled him in 1984. At the time, Feeney was a pastor at a Las Vegas church.

The civil lawsuit named the Catholic Diocese of Green Bay as a defendant. The plaintiff alleged that officials there let Feeney transfer to Nevada without revealing a history of sexual abuse allegations against him.

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O’Dea parents seek answers after principal resigns amid allegations

SEATTLE (WA)
KOMO

[with video]

By Jamie Lynn
Published: Nov 1, 2012

SEATTLE — Parents of O’Dea High School students want to know how a man accused of sex abuse became their children’s principal.

There are many questions surrounding the timeline, from when the sex abuse claim was filed against principal Karl Walczak, to when the principal was removed and what information parents were given throughout the process.

Students and parents were caught off-guard when they were told Walczak had resigned from his post as principal amid accusations of sexual abuse.

“I never felt threatened in his presence, not once,” said former student Sascha Stipe.

But the alleged victim claims Walczak sexually abused him at Brother Rice High School in Chicago where Walczak taught in the 70s.

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Priest charged with embezzling from Adams County church

PENNSYLVANIA
York Dispatch

Pennsylvania State Police have arrested a priest who lives in New Freedom on embezzlement charges from Adams County, Adams County District Attorney Shawn Wagner has announced.

The Rev. Caesar Belchez, 52, of 315 N. Constitution Ave., is charged with embezzling a total of $384,750.76 from St. Joseph the Worker Catholic Church in Bonneauville between 2006 and 2011, according to Wagner.

Belchez could not be reached for comment.

Wagner said Belchez has been charged with theft by unlawful taking or disposition, theft by failure to make required disposition of funds received and access device fraud, which are all third-degree felonies.

Belchez is accused of embezzling $311,983.95 in money and using – without authorization – $72,766.81 from the parish’s credit cards, which the parish used for the purchase of goods and services, according Wagner.

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Former Bonneauville priest released on unsecured bail

PENNSYLVANIA
The Evenig Sun

A preliminary arraignment was held Thursday for the priest accused of stealing more than $380,000 from his former church, St. Joseph the Worker Parish in Bonneauville.

Caesar A. Belchez, 52, was released on $50,000 unsecured bail. He faces third-degree felony charges of theft by unlawful taking, theft by failure to make required disposition of funds received, and access device fraud.

Belchez was assigned by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Harrisburg to the Bonneauville church from 2006 to 2011. During that time, police say he stole $384,750.76 from the church in cash, checks and credit cards issued to the parish.

His alleged activities were discovered by the priest who replaced him when Belchez moved to St. Joseph’s Parish in Dallastown as part of a regular change of assignments, according to the Diocese.

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Priest accused of stealing nearly $400K from parish

PENNSYLVANIA
WGAL

[with video]

BONNEAUVILLE, Pa. —

A suspended priest was formally charged on Thursday with taking thousands of dollars from his Adams County church.

The Rev. Caesar Belchez, the former pastor at St. Joseph the Worker parish in Bonneville, is accused of embezzling nearly $400,000 dollars over five years.

Court documents show the priest has confessed.

Belchez, who has most recently worked as a pastor in Dallastown, could face up to 21 years in prison.

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Mit E-Learning gegen Kindesmissbrauch

DEUTSCHLAND
Muenchner Kirchenradio

Die ka­tho­li­sche Kir­che in Deutsch­land hat wei­te­re Ak­ti­vi­tä­ten zur Prä­ven­ti­on se­xu­el­len Kin­des­miss­brauchs vor­ge­stellt. Bei einer Pres­se­kon­fe­renz am Mon­tag wurde in Mün­chen die erste Ler­nein­heit eines E-Learning-Pro­gramms prä­sen­tiert, das kirch­li­chen Mit­ar­bei­tern welt­weit Wis­sen zur Prä­ven­ti­on ver­mit­teln und sie für den Um­gang mit Fäl­len se­xu­el­len Kin­der­miss­brauchs qua­li­fi­zie­ren soll. Das Zen­trum für Kin­der­schutz Mün­chen der rö­mi­schen Päpst­li­chen Uni­ver­si­tät Gre­go­ria­na hat das E-Learning-Pro­gramm ent­wi­ckelt. In Frei­sing ver­an­stal­tet es der­zeit seine Jah­res­ta­gung.

„Der On­line­kurs ver­mit­telt hand­lungs- und pra­xis­ori­en­tier­te Kom­pe­ten­zen so­wohl für die Prä­ven­ti­ons­ar­beit als auch für kon­kre­te In­ter­ven­ti­ons­maß­nah­men“, sagte Hu­bert Lieb­hardt, Di­rek­tor des Zen­trums für Kin­der­schutz, bei der Pres­se­kon­fe­renz. Die Kir­che könne „in vie­len Län­dern die­ser Welt eine wich­ti­ge Rolle als Schutz­raum für Kin­der mit qua­li­fi­zier­ten Erst­an­sprech­per­so­nen ein­neh­men“. Er­gän­zend zu dem E-Learning-Pro­gramm, das die Erz­diö­ze­se Mün­chen und Frei­sing zur Hälf­te fi­nan­ziert, ab­sol­vie­ren pas­to­ra­le Mit­ar­bei­ter des Erz­bis­tums in ihrer Aus- und Wei­ter­bil­dung eine Viel­zahl von Schu­lun­gen zur Prä­ven­ti­on se­xu­el­len Miss­brauchs, teil­wei­se ver­pflich­tend. Auch im Fort­bil­dungs­pro­gramm für Pries­ter, das mo­men­tan neu kon­zi­piert wird, soll die Prä­ven­ti­on se­xu­el­len Miss­brauchs eine wich­ti­ge Rolle spie­len.

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Fischinger Heimkinder: Engelberg öffnet Archiv

SCHWEIZ
Tagblatt

FISCHINGEN. Das Kloster Fischingen kann bei der Aufarbeitung seiner Heimgeschichte auf die Innerschweiz zählen. Sowohl das Kloster Engelberg als auch die Menzinger Schwestern bieten der Fachgruppe ihre Hilfe an. Der Verein St.Iddazell will demnächst informieren.

Inge Staub
Immer neue Zöglinge melden sich, welche die Erziehungsmethoden im Kinderheim des Klosters Fischingen anprangern. Berichtet wird von Schlägen, Misshandlungen und sexuellem Missbrauch. Der Verein St.Iddazell, der das Kinderheim von 1879 bis Mitte der 1970er-Jahre geführt hat, hat vor einiger Zeit beschlossen, eine Fachgruppe einzusetzen, um die Geschichte des Kinderheimes aufzuarbeiten.

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Pfarrer sammelte Kinderpornos

DEUTSCHLAND
Augsburger Allgemeine

Von Peter Richter

Ein 60-jähriger katholischer Pfarrer aus dem Raum Augsburg hat Kinderpornos gesammelt und ist deswegen vom Amtsgericht zu einer Freiheitsstrafe von sieben Monaten auf Bewährung verurteilt worden. Wie Amtsrichter Michael Nißl auf Anfrage bestätigte, ist das Urteil bereits rechtskräftig. Der Priester hat den Strafbefehl akzeptiert und sich so eine öffentliche Gerichtsverhandlung erspart.

Es war das bischöfliche Ordinariat selbst, das im vorigen August den Fall bei der Augsburger Staatsanwaltschaft angezeigt hatte. Auf Anfrage unserer Zeitung nahm gestern Otto Kocherscheidt namens der Diözese zu dem Vorgang Stellung. Der ehemalige Richter ist vom Bistum beauftragt, sich möglicher Missbrauchsfälle anzunehmen.

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Katholische Kirche zieht Zwischenbilanz im Kampf gegen Missbrauch

DEUTSCHLAND
kathweb

München (KAP) Mit einem internationalen Kongress zieht die katholische Kirche ab diesem Montag in Bayern eine Zwischenbilanz zu ihrem Kampf gegen sexuellen Missbrauch. “Wir sind auf dem richtigen Weg”, sagte der designierte maltesische Weihbischof Charles J. Scicluna vor Beginn der Tagung in Freising bei einer Pressekonferenz in München. 70 Prozent aller 113 nationalen katholischen Bischofskonferenzen hätten inzwischen eigene Richtlinien erlassen. Das sei eine “sehr gute Marke”.

In Nord- und Südamerika hätten inzwischen alle Bischofskonferenzen die Maßgabe der Römischen Glaubenskongregation erfüllt, erläuterte deren langjähriger “Oberstaatsanwalt”. Scicluna war Anfang Oktober vom Papst zum Weihbischof in seiner Heimat Malta ernannt worden. In Afrika fehlten jedoch noch mehr als die Hälfte. Dies erfülle ihn mit einer gewissen Sorge. Im europäischen Raum stünden 7 von 33 Konferenzen in der Bringschuld, und zwar Bulgarien, Kroatien, Lettland, Rumänien, die Türkei, Ungarn sowie Weißrussland.

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„Geschockt und sprachlos“

DEUTSCHLAND
Augsburger Allgemeine

Von Angela Effenberger

Burgau Im Fall des evangelischen Pfarrers aus Burgau, der am Montag vom Dienst suspendiert worden ist (wir berichteten), ermittelt die Staatsanwaltschaft in Memmingen nun wegen des Verdachts auf sexuellen Missbrauch von Schutzbefohlenen. Dies teilte die Oberstaatsanwältin und stellvertretende Behördenleiterin Renate Thanner auf Nachfrage unserer Zeitung mit.

Wie berichtet soll der evangelische Pfarrer vor einigen Jahren sexuelle Kontakte zu einer Minderjährigen gehabt haben. Die Staatsanwältin geht davon aus, dass das Mädchen zur Tatzeit zwischen 14 und 17 Jahre alt gewesen ist. Jetzt müsse geklärt werden, was an den Vorwürfen dran ist und in welchem Verhältnis der Pfarrer zu der Jugendlichen stand, das heißt, ob ein Betreuungs- und Seelsorgerverhältnis gegeben war, sagte Thanner. Wie die Evangelische-Lutherische Kirche in Bayern mitteilte, habe der Pfarrer die Jugendliche aus der Kirchengemeinde, in der er seit 2003 tätig ist, gekannt.

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Sexueller Umgang mit Minderjähriger: Pfarrer aus Burgau unter Verdacht

DEUTSCHLAND
Sudwest Presse

Der Mann steht unter Verdacht, vor einigen Jahren sexuellen Umgang zu einer minderjährigen Jugendlichen aus der Kirchengemeinde gehabt zu haben, teilte Johannes Minkus mit, der Pressesprecher der Landeskirche. Weitere Vorwürfe etwa mit anderen Opfern stünden nicht im Raum.

Der Burgauer Pfarrer gehört zum Dekanatsbezirk Neu-Ulm. Das Mädchen soll zum Zeitpunkt der Übergriffe 15 Jahre oder älter gewesen. Es wurde Strafanzeige erstattet und ein Disziplinarverfahren eingeleitet. Bis zum Abschluss der Ermittlungen darf der Pfarrer seinen Dienst nicht mehr ausüben.

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Aloisiuskolleg will Aufklärung

DEUTSCHLAND
domradio

Das jesuitische Aloisiuskolleg in Bonn forciert selbst noch einmal die Aufklärung über sexuellen Missbrauch an Schutzbefohlenen durch ehemalige Patres oder Laienmitarbeiter. “Es ist noch immer so, dass einige der Übergriffe nicht hinreichend aufgeklärt oder gar sanktioniert sind”, erklärte Rektor Pater Johannes Siebner am Mittwoch dem epd. Es stünden noch Schritte der Aufklärung und der Anerkennung aus, “die der Orden und die Kollegsgemeinschaft noch zu gehen haben”.

In den kommenden Wochen erwarte man die Fertigstellung und die Veröffentlichung eines weiteren Untersuchungsberichtes, mit dem der Bonner Psychologieprofessor Arnfried Bintig beauftragt wurde. “Alle noch so guten Präventionskonzepte taugen nicht, wenn nicht die Aufklärung und die Anerkennung des Gewesenen und noch immer Wirkmächtigen wesentlicher Bestandteil unseres Tuns ist”, sagte Pater Siebner, der 2011 neu ans Kolleg kam.

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Turbulent priests

IRELAND
Irish Times

THE ASSOCIATION of Catholic Priests has responded with disappointment to the dismissal of its call for public dialogue with the Irish bishops on changes necessary to reinvigorate the church and to address the steep decline in vocations to the priesthood. A rejection of such engagement might have been expected, however, in view of a recent Vatican report that urged greater discipline and orthodoxy within the Irish church. Founded two years ago and with a membership now exceeding 1,000, the Association of Catholic Priests (ACP) has challenged established conventions and offered trenchant support for wide-ranging church reforms based on the letter and spirit of the second Vatican Council.

Responding to these developments, a meeting of bishops declined to meet the leadership of ACP and suggested that future engagement on such issues should take place at local level, using established structures, such as the Council of Priests. Individual councils are composed of both elected members and those nominated by bishops. They are purely consultative in nature. Meetings are called by members of the hierarchy who set the agenda, preside over discussions and decide on statements they consider appropriate.

A very different approach was envisaged by the ACP leadership. They spoke of the need for openness and transparency in formal meetings where church attendances and a decline in vocations would be discussed. There was, they said, a need to inform Rome about the realities of the present situation and to address a disconnect between people and priests, priests and bishops and between the bishops and Rome. In particular, they were concerned about what would happen when more priests retired. Would the Irish church become “a Eucharist-free zone” and face effective collapse?

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Diocese of Green Bay found guilty in child sex assault case

WISCONSIN/NEVADA
SNAP Wisconsin

Statement by Peter Isely, SNAP Midwest Director
CONTACT: 414.429.7259 or 414.336.8575

For the first time today, the Diocese of Green Bay has been held accountable in a civil court of law for their decades long practice of concealing and transferring priest child sex offenders.

In a verdict today by a Las Vegas jury, the diocese was found guilty of negligence in transferring notorious child sex predator John Patrick Feeney to a Nevada parish where he sexually assaulted the plaintiff when he was 13 years old. The jury ordered the diocese to provide $500,000 in
damages to the victim/survivor in the case.

The Green Bay diocese goes on trial in May in Wisconsin for Feeney’s crimes while Feeney was still a priest of the diocese and before his transfer to Las Vegas.

The Diocese of Green Bay has a long standing practice of attempting to evade responsibility for the crimes of their sex offending clerics. Fr. Feeney is just one of 51 clerics that Green Bay church officials have received reports of sexual assault or misconduct on over the past few decades. The diocese has refused repeated pleas from victims and their families to publically identify the names
and locations of their sex offending clergy leaving additional children at risk.

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Assignment Record – Bishop Joseph Vincent Sullivan

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org – Assignment Record

Summary of Case: Joseph Vincent Sullivan was ordained a priest of the Kansas City, MO diocese in 1946. He was elevated to auxiliary bishop in 1967, then went on to become Bishop of Baton Rouge in 1974, where he served until his death in Sept. 1982. Sullivan was accused in three separate lawsuits in 2004, 2005 and 2007 of the sexual abuse of three different minors. The abuse is said to have occurred from 1969 through 1982. Two of Sullivans accusers said he sexually abused them on trips to Hawaii, where Sullivan owned a condo with other Kansas City priests. At least one of the accusers was a minor seminary student. All three suits resulted in settlements.

Ordained: 1946
Ordained Bishop: April 3, 1967
Appointed Bishop of Baton Rouge: Aug. 8, 1974

Died: Sept. 4, 1982

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Jesuit + Rage = Abuse

UNITED STATES
What They Knew

The Society of Jesus is really angry. So angry they abuse children according to the Catholic News Service -Anger management vital for clergy and religious, Jesuit journal says.

We realize this is another shift from the Jesuits’ previous excuse “it was stress“. In the real world, both these theories are akin to asking “why” a hurricane struck rather than saving lives and cleaning up the mess it left first.

“Anger awareness and management are vital for priests and members of religious orders because they are called to be people of dialogue, fraternity, service, peace and justice, and to treat others with charity…”

Jesuits that lack “an adequate integration of aggression, they can become hostile, rigid and obstinate and risk exploding the often delicate and complex balance present in the communities” according to Jesuit Father Giovanni Cucci SJ, a professor of psychology and philosophy at Rome’s Pontifical Gregorian University, in an article in La Civilta Cattolica which was cleared for publication by the Vatican.

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Widow sues Church over abuse suicide

NETHERLANDS
IOL

November 1 2012
By SAPA

The Hague –

A Dutch widow is suing the Roman Catholic Church for R1.1 million over her husband’s suicide two decades ago as the result of years of sexual abuse in his youth, local media said Thursday.

The unnamed woman from the eastern city of Enschede “claims 100 000 euros ($129 000) from the Roman Catholic Church which she holds responsible,” local station RTV Oost said on its website.

“According to the woman her husband was abused for years by religious fathers in a mission house in (the southern province of) Brabant without it ever being discovered.” The abuse allegedly took place in the late 1930s.

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Church Compounded Sexual Abuse, Girl Says

CHICAGO (IL)
Courthouse News Service

By JACK BOUBOUSHIAN

CHICAGO (CN) – After a Methodist church elder sexually abused a girl, other church leaders called her a “home wrecker” who was “worse than a prostitute because at least prostitutes get paid,” the girl claims in court.

Jane Doe and her mother sued East Side United Methodist Church; her alleged abuser Salvador Alvarez; church leaders and/or employees Zaki Zaki, Ayla Zaki, Richard Martinez and Sandi Martinez; The Zone Youth and Community Center, G2G Church, and the Northern Illinois Conference of the United Methodist Church, in Cook County Court.

Doe joined the East Side Methodist Church and its youth program in 2010. The youth program was run by Salvador Alvarez, a “designated religious leader/elder and authority figure,” according to the complaint.

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O’Dea: Gag order prevented disclosure of sex abuse claim against principal

SEATTLE (WA)
KING 5

[with video]

by CHRIS DANIELS / KING 5 News

The Archdiocese of Seattle and O’Dea High School officials said Thursday that a court gag order prevented them from informing students and parents that Principal Karl Walzcak was recalled after allegations of sexual abuse surfaced.

But critics charged that the school was covering up the reason for Walczak’s sudden departure in August. At the time, the school said Walczak was being recalled by the Christian Brothers Order to help with a bankruptcy proceeding.

“If you cover it up, you get fired. If you cover it up, you get prosecuted. If you molest children, it all comes out in light and you go to prison. what the Catholic Church has done and continues to do is lie and cover it up,” said Scott Abraham, a member of SNAP who was protesting across the street from O’Dea on Thursday.

But the Archdiocese insists the gag order was real.

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Sisters among 6 who testify Ormond pastor groped them

FLORIDA
News-Journal

By Mark I. Johnson
STAFF WRITER

ORLANDO – Prosecutors rested Thursday afternoon in the child-sex trafficking and molestation case in federal court against a self-proclaimed Ormond Beach evangelist.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Karen Gable wrapped up her prosecution of Luis E. Morales and Rebeca Rivera with the testimony of two adult sisters who claimed as children they had been molested during an overnight stay at the Morales home in 1998.

The women, who The News-Journal is not identifying because of their claims of sexual abuse, said Morales “pinched” their chests and buttocks during games of hide-and-go-seek and crawled under the bed covers with them, groping them under their clothing.

The sisters said their mother was friends with Morales — also known as “Tito” — and his wife, Linda. But they were afraid to tell their mother about the abuse, which included Morales trying to get them to kiss him on the mouth.

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Green Bay Diocese ordered pay $500,000 after being found guilty in civil lawsuit

LAS VEGAS (NV)
Green Bay Press-Gazette

The Green Bay Catholic Diocese has been found guilty in a civil lawsuit involving a pedophile priest, according to a report from WGBA-TV in Green Bay.

A Las Vegas jury concluded Thursday the diocese was negligent in transferring John Patrick Feeney to a Nevada parish where he allegedly molested a 13-year-old boy.

The Green Bay Diocese will have to pay a $500,000 in damages.

The Diocese will also stand trial next May in Wisconsin, involving the sexual abuse Todd and Troy Merryfield.

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Activists accuse Seattle Archdiocese of a cover-up after principal resigned amid sex abuse accusation

SEATTLE (WA)
Q13 Fox

[with video]

John Hopperstad
Q13 FOX News reporter
5:14 p.m. PDT, November 1, 2012

SEATTLE—
The principal of Seattle’s O’Dea High School has resigned his position amid allegations that he sexually abused a child in the early 1970s in Illinois, the Archdiocese of Seattle reported.

Karl Walczak is accused of sexually abusing a minor when he worked as a teacher in a diocese in Chicago the early 1970s. According to a statement released by the Archdiocese of Seattle, Walczak denies the allegations, but resigned his position.

Vice Principal Jim Walker was named acting principal.

A letter released by the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) claimed O’Dea officials and Seattle Archdiocese knew about the sex abuse allegations for more than two months, but decided to keep the issue quiet.

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November 1, 2012

University withdraws theologian’s invitation after pressure from financial contributors

SAN DIEGO (CA)
National Catholic Reporter

by Joshua J. McElwee | Nov. 1, 2012

The University of San Diego has canceled a visiting fellowship for a British theologian less than two weeks before her scheduled arrival at the university because of pressure from financial contributors, according to a letter from the university’s president.

Tina Beattie, a professor of Catholic studies at London’s private University of Roehampton known for her work in contemporary ethical issues and Catholic understandings of feminism, received notice of the cancellation Oct. 27. She was scheduled to take residence at the university on Tuesday.

Beattie — who also serves on the board of directors of the British Catholic weekly The Tablet and is a theological adviser to the Catholic Agency For Overseas Development, the Catholic aid agency for England and Wales — announced the withdrawal of the invitation in an email to friends and other theologians Thursday.

Beattie said in an interview with NCR that cancellation of her fellowship was “symptomatic of something very new and very worrying.”

“It’s unheard of, certainly in Britain, for a theologian in my position to feel threatened by this kind of action,” Beattie said. “It’s not about me; it’s about some change in the culture of the Catholic church that we should be very, very concerned about.”

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Indictment: Lake Wales youth minister made child porn

FLORIDA
Tampa Bay Online

A Lake Wales youth minister and registered sex offender facing multiple counts of having sex with children has been indicted on charges of producing child pornography.

A federal grand jury charged Arnold Maurice Mathis, 41, with two counts of producing and attempting to produce of child pornography, U.S. Attorney Robert E. O’Neill said.

If convicted, Mathis faces a mandatory minimum of 35 years and up to 50 years in federal prison on each count.

According to the indictment, between May and November 2011, Mathis persuaded and attempted to persuade two minors to engage in sexually explicit conduct for the purpose of producing visual depictions of the conduct.

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Former associate pastor, Arnold Mathis, has been indicted on federal child porn charges

FLORIDA
10 News

Written by
Kristin Weber

Lake Wales, Florida — A federal grand jury has indicted a former associate youth minister on charges of producing and attempting to produce child porn.

Arnold Mathis was arrested in December 2011 after a man told Polk County Sheriff’s detectives Mathis sexually battered him numerous times when he was 14 or 15 years old, while Mathis was a minister at a Winter Haven church. The victim came forward when he was 21 years old.

Mathis, a registered sex offender, is currently being prosecuted on five counts of Sexual Battery by a Person of Authority on a Child over 12 and under 18 by the Polk County State Attorney’s Office.

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RUSSELL SIMMONS IN TOWN, HIGH ON WESTMINSTER COLLEGE, OBAMA LEADS IN OHIO POLL

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Berger’s Beat

”. . On the Catholic Moral Theologians blog, a St. Louis University theologian defends SNAP, cites the recent conviction of KC Bishop (and St. Louis native) Robert Finn, and acknowledges that her views on the Catholic hierarchy’s response to abuse cases has evolved. Prof. Julie Rubio admits that she “used to have reservations about SNAP’s push for criminal punishment. But for many years now, SNAP’s David Clohessy has been speaking in my sexual ethics class. Over the years, as I listened to the stories of so many others who tried without successs to work for justice through criminal church channels, I became convinced that more had to be done (including) pushing for legal sanctions. . .

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Clergy Sex Abuse Article Published in Illinois Bar Journal

ILLINOIS
Chicago Injury Lawyer Blog

Posted On: November 1, 2012 by Christopher T. Hurley

An article entitled, Child Sexual Abuse by Clergy: Statute of Limitations and Repose Challenges, written by Christopher T. Hurley and Mark R. McKenna, was recently published in the November 2012 issue of the Illinois Bar Journal. The article discusses a recent Illinois Appellate Court decision in a clergy sex abuse case and its implications for attorneys of child sex abuse victims.

In Wisniewski v. Diocese of Belleville, the Illinois Appellate Court held that a Catholic Diocese’s fraudulent concealment of abuse by its priest tolled the statutes of limitation and repose. In other words, a now middle-aged victim of child sex abuse could still bring his claim against the diocese, even though a great deal of time had passed since the abuse, because the diocese prevented the man from discovering the abuse.

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Former Honolulu High School PRINCIPAL Accused of Sex Abuse in Legal Claim

HAWAII
Damon Tucker: Hawaii News and Information

Posted on October 31, 2012 by Damon

At least five other school employees have been accused, Seattle school officials quietly removed cleric in August, Religious order filed bankruptcy after more than 200 victims came forward, Now, more than 400 say they were abused by Christian Brothers, At least 12 came from Damien Memorial School.

A man who says he was sexually abused by the former principal of a Honolulu high school has filed a sex abuse and cover-up claim in the New York courts. Click here.

The suit charges that the victim, known as John Doe, was sexually abused by Damien Memorial School former principal Br. Karl Walczak in 1971 at Brother Rice High School in Chicago. At the time, Walczak was a teacher at the school. Click here.

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Woman testifies Ormond pastor groped her

FLORIDA
News-Journal

By Mark I. Johnson
STAFF WRITER

Published: Thursday, November 1, 2012

ORLANDO – A day after the child accusers of an Ormond Beach pastor testified behind closed doors, a similar tale of sexual abuse came to light in a federal courtroom by a woman who said she was a victim when she was young.

A 22-year-old Connecticut woman testified in open court Thursday morning that self-proclaimed evangelist Luis E. Morales inappropriately touched her during an overnight stay at his home when she was 8 years old.

Morales, 58, is on trial on five federal charges of child sex trafficking and transporting children across state lines for the purpose of sexual activity and molesting them in November 2009 and December 2010.

The woman, who The News-Journal is not naming because of her claim she was a victim of sexual abuse, refused to look at Morales during her testimony, although she did identify him as the same man who “pinched her chest and buttocks” during games of hide and seek.

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Men describe priest’s alleged abuse

MISSOURI
Columbia Daily Tribune

By Brennan David

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Three men recounted memories yesterday in Cooper County Circuit Court of childhood sexual assault they say was inflicted by former Boonville priest Gerald Howard.

Charged with three counts of forcible sodomy, three counts of attempted forcible sodomy and two counts of kidnapping, the former Saints Peter and Paul Catholic Church priest argued that his case should be dismissed because the statute of limitations has expired. Howard was indicted in April 2010 for the alleged crimes between March 1984 and September 1987 and was arrested soon after at his Bloomfield, N.J., apartment.

Circuit Judge Robert Koffman listened to oral arguments for four hours and will rule later. The prosecution and defense also may file written briefs for Koffman’s consideration.

“I would say, ‘No, I don’t want to do this,’ and then he would talk me into it,” a 41-year-old man said of sexual assaults he said he endured between August 1986 and September 1987. The names of the three men were not disclosed in court. At the time of the alleged assaults, the boys were in their early to mid-teens.

Howard, formerly known as Carmine Sita, once served as a priest in New Jersey. After molestation accusations, he completed a treatment program specifically for priests with sexual abuse issues. He changed his name and was reassigned by then-Bishop Michael McAuliffe as an associate pastor at the Boonville church. McAuliffe died in 2006.

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O’Dea principal accused of sexual abuse

SEATTLE (WA)
My Northest

BY Stephanie Klein on November 1, 2012

O’Dea High School’s principal has resigned after accusations of sexual abuse.

Brother Karl Walczak is accused of sexual abuse of a minor in another diocese in the 1970s.

Advocate group, Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests (SNAP), says O’Dea and the Archdiocese are trying to cover up the alleged abuse.

John Shuster, Seattle co-director of SNAP, explains that Brother Walczak, although he answers to Archbishop Sartain, is not a priest of the Archdiocese. He belongs to a religious order.

“We don’t have a very high estimation of Archbishop Sartain’s judgment and actions in these types of situations,” Shuster tells KIRO Radio’s Ross and Burbank Show.

“One of the reasons we’re so concerned about this is because when men cross a line and attack kids and don’t stop, there are usually more victims out there.”

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Pedophile priest James Blume will remain in prison

WISCONSIN
SNAP Wisconsin

Statement by John Pilmaier, SNAP Wisconsin Director
CONTACT: 414.336.8575

The Wisconsin Court of Appeals has upheld the 20 year prison sentence that was imposed upon former Catholic priest James Blume. Blume who pled guilty in 2010 to two counts of child sexual assault had asked the court to reconsider his sentence due to his deteriorating health. The state appeals court concluded that “there has been no miscarriage of justice in this case”.

Blume is one of over twenty Catholic clergy who have been prosecuted in recent years utilizing Wisconsin’s “fleeing sex offender law” which allows for the prosecution of child predators who commit child sexual assault and then flee the state. Once the perpetrator crosses state lines the remaining criminal statute “tolls” or “freezes” which may allow for prosecution even in cases where the crimes were committed decades ago.

Despite his criminal conviction for child sexual assault Blume is not listed on the Archdiocese of Milwaukee’s official list of priest sex offenders. As a former religious order priest Blume, who taught religious education at St. Luke’s parish in Brookfield, is one of an unknown number of clerics whose crimes continue to be concealed by the archdiocese.

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SEX ABUSE VICTIMS AND SUPPORTERS BLAST CATHOLIC CHURCH COVER-UP AT O’DEA HIGH SCHOOL

SEATTLE (WA)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

WHO: Clergy Sex abuse victims and supporters from the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

WHAT: Archbishop Sartain and Christian Brothers covered-up accusation against O’Dea Principle Brother Karl Walczak, C. F. C.

WHEN: 11 AM, Thursday, November 1, 2012

WHERE: O’Dea Catholic High School, 802 Terry Avenue (at Columbia) in Seattle

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Former priest’s 20 year sentence upheld

WISCONSIN
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

By Bruce Vielmetti of the Journal Sentinel

Nov. 1, 2012

A former Catholic priest who sexually assaulting two teenage boys in Elm Grove in the late 1970s and early 1980s will have finish his 20-year prison term, an appeals court ruled Wednesday.

James R. Blume, 66, argued on appeal that his 2010 sentence should be reduced because his failing health should be considered a new factor, the original sentence was unduly harsh or in the interest of justice.

The state Court of Appeals noted that Blume’s health issues were known to the judge at sentencing and don’t amount to a new factor.

Nor did the judges believe 20 years was unduly harsh or that justice demands a new term.

“Because the trial court properly exercised its sentencing discretion and due to our conclusion that no new factors exist, there has been no miscarriage of justice in this case.”

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Association of Catholic Priests saddened by bishops’ ‘snub’

IRELAND
BBC News

A group representing hundreds of Irish priests has said it is disappointed that the Irish Catholic Church’s Bishops Conference will not meet them.

The Association of Catholic Priests (ACP) has claimed the conference refused to hold face-to-face talks to discuss the future of the Church.

The ACP represents more than 850 priests on the island of Ireland.

Recently, it has been criticised by the Vatican for expressing views that contradict the Church’s teaching.

Fr Tony Flannery, a spokesman for the ACP, said the response they had received to their request for a meeting was a “fairly definitive statement” on the hierarchy’s feelings about the group.

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O’Dea High School principal resigns amid sex abuse allegations

SEATTLE (WA)
KOMO

By KOMO Staff
Published: Oct 31, 2012

SEATTLE — A local high school principal resigned Wednesday afternoon amid allegations of sexual abuse.

Officials from the Archdiocese of Seattle announced that Brother Karl Walczak had resigned his post as principal of O’Dea High School after accusations of sexual abuse came to light.

The allegations date back to the 1970s, when Walczak was a teacher at Brother Rice High School in Chicago.

Michael Reck is an attorney for the alleged victim and said Walczak sexually abused his client multiple times on Brother Rice school grounds.

Reck said his client is “extraordinarily concerned” that Walczak has abused other children.

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Seattle high school principal resigns, families claim ‘cover up’

SEATTLE (WA)
My Northwest

October 31, 2012

The principal of O’Dea High School in Seattle has resigned amid accusations of sexual abuse. An advocate’s group says the school and the Archdiocese are trying to cover up the alleged abuse.

Brother Karl Walczak is accused of sexual abuse of a minor dating back to the 1970s, when he was a teacher at Brother Rice High School in Chicago.

Walczak denies the allegations.

“The O’Dea School Board learned today that Brother Walczak has been accused of sexual abuse of a minor,” board chair Zachary Lell says. “Although Brother Walczak denies the allegations, he has resigned his position as Principal of O’Dea High School.”

Members of SNAP – the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests – are angry that parents weren’t notified of the allegations sooner.

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O’DEA HIGH SCHOOL PRINCIPAL RESIGNS

SEATTLE (WA)
Sky Valley Chronicle

November 01, 2012

(SEATTLE, WA) — A principal of a well known Catholic high school that was founded in 1923 in Seattle has stepped down following allegations he sexually abused a boy many years ago in a different city.

The Archdiocese of Seattle announced that Brother Karl Walczak resigned his job as principal of O’Dea High School on Wednesday, after accusations of sexual abuse in the 1970’s were published.

O’Dea, which has an enrollment of 450 young men according to the school’s website is located on First Hill in the city which overlooks downtown Seattle.

The allegations against Walczak go back to the 1970s, when Walczak was a teacher at Brother Rice High School in Chicago.

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Attendees describe value of child sexual abuse conference

PENNSYLVANIA
Centre Daily Times

By Carly Schaller — For the CDT

Even the high winds and torrential rains of Hurricane Sandy couldn’t keep people from attending the Child Sexual Abuse Conference held Monday and Tuesday at The Penn Stater Conference Center Hotel.

Of the 500 people scheduled to attend, 420 made the journey despite the inclement weather. About 20 percent of attendees were from the Penn State community, but the remaining 80 percent came from all over the country — as far west as California and as far south as Florida.

The majority of attendees can agree that the trip was well worth it.

Faith Ingraham, of Corning, N.Y., works with her church’s ministry to help raise awareness on child sexual abuse. She has been to similar events in the past, but said this one was unique in the fact that the issue is so relevant to the area.

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