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.

May 13, 2013

Monk charged with trying to abduct girl has bail raised

WISCONSIN/ILLINOIS
Fox 6

MILWAUKEE/ANTIOCH (WITI) — A Wisconsin monk charged with trying to abduct a 14-year-old girl in Antioch, Illinois almost got out of jail, before his bond was raised.

57-year-old Thomas Chmura paid his bail on Thursday, May 9th, but then, a judge tripled it and ordered him back into custody.

Prosecutors say the reason for that is because there is a children’s facility where Chmura works at Saint Benedict’s Abbey in Kenosha County.

Police Chmura on April 26th after seeing him stop his car in the middle of traffic to talk to three women on the sidewalk.

Police say Chmura was driving next to the girl the night before, when he asked her to get into his car. After his arrest, officers say Chmura admitted he approached the girl for purposes of sexual gratification.

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.

Nutley parish, protesters face off over pastor

NEW JERSEY
The Record

SUNDAY, MAY 12, 2013

BY DENISA R. SUPERVILLE AND JEFF GREEN
STAFF WRITERS
THE RECORD

NUTLEY — Tempers flared between parishioners and protesters Sunday at an Essex County church that allowed an embattled Catholic priest |to participate in youth ministry activities although he was banned from working with children.

The pastor of Holy Family Church in Nutley rebuffed victims’ advocates who stood outside the church, demanding that he resign over a heated controversy surrounding the Rev. Michael Fugee.

“I have no plans to resign,” Monsignor Paul Bochicchio said while greeting parishioners leaving the 10 a.m. Mass. “I have done nothing wrong.”

Bochicchio said last week that Fugee had given talks to the parish’s youth and had accompanied them on trips to Canada, an apparent violation of a 2007 agreement among Fugee, the Archdiocese of Newark and the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office. Bo­chicchio has said that Fugee was supervised at all times, and that his involvement with Holy Family did not violate the agreement.

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.

POLICE ‘NOT CONCERNED’ ABOUT CLERGY’S REPUTATION

AUSTRALIA
7 News

By Dan Cox, ABC
Updated May 13, 2013

A senior New South Wales policeman has denied being concerned about the reputation of senior Catholic clergy in the Hunter Valley when deciding not to investigate some child sexual abuse allegations.

Detective Inspector Dave Waddell has given evidence at the Special Commission of Inquiry.

He was the crime manager at the Lake Macquarie Local Area Command near Newcastle when Detective Chief Inspector Peter Fox claims he was told to stop investigating child sexual abuse by two priests in the area.

Detective Inspector Waddell said the claims were important and serious but not urgent.

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.

Catholics urged to spread the word on Facebook

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

Gerry Braiden
Senior reporter

Monday 13 May 2013

CATHOLICS have been hurt and embarrassed by the “shameful revelations” surrounding the church’s leading figure in Scotland, according to the head of the faith’s biggest congregation in the country.

In a message to parishes read at churches yesterday, Archbishop of Glasgow Philip Tartaglia said the fall-out from the Cardinal Keith O’Brien scandal had highlighted how stretched the Church has been in dealing with the crisis.

He urged Catholics to embrace Facebook and Twitter, as well as more traditional platforms, adding that the Church had to “take up the challenge to be present, to be coherent and to be convincing in the media”.

Archbishop Tartaglia’s letter was sent out as part of Communications Sunday.

It comes on the back of almost three months of revelations surrounding Cardinal O’Brien, who has faced allegations of sex abuse against trainee priests and admitted having had same-sex relations going back decades despite preaching against gay marriage.

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.

Fox lied to colleagues

AUSTRALIA
ABC – Lateline

Detective Peter Fox told the Newcastle inquiry into sexual abuse in the Catholic Church that he had lied to colleagues because he thought they lacked integrity, commitment and professionalism.

Transcript

EMMA ALBERICI, PRESENTER: The New South Wales policeman at the centre of a special commission into the handling of sexual abuse cases in the Catholic Church has admitted he deliberately ignored directions from his superior to cease contact with the media. Detective Chief Inspector Peter Fox faced intense scrutiny on day two of the inquiry in Newcastle. Peter Fox said he lied to colleagues because he thought they were not police with integrity, commitment or professionalism. In one email read to the inquiry, he described his superiors as pricks who should shove it. As Suzie Smith reports, there was a total breakdown of trust between DCI Fox and some of his superiors.

SUZIE SMITH, REPORTER: Day two and new insights into the relationship between Peter Fox and his police bosses. Again, in sharp focus a critical meeting in early December 2010 at the Waratah police station in Newcastle. DCI Fox told the inquiry he intentionally disobeyed an order from the Newcastle commander Max Mitchell to bring all his investigation documents. Those documents included an explosive witness statement which he didn’t hand over because he told the inquiry he didn’t trust Commander Mitchell or his fellow officers. “So you lied to the police at the meeting?” she said.

PETER FOX (ACTOR’S VOICE): Oh absolutely yes, I deliberately kept them myself, but I realised there was other knowledge by police that I had them.

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.

Newark Archbishop Is Criticized for His Handling of an Abuse Case

NEW JERSEY
The New York Times

By RUSS BUETTNER
Published: May 12, 2013

COLTS NECK, N.J. — With 10 children knelt around the altar for their first communion and the pews at St. Mary’s Church packed with families gathered for Mother’s Day, there was little sign on Sunday of the turmoil that has struck the parish, and threatens the Archdiocese of Newark.

Just two weeks earlier, the parishioners learned that a priest working with their church’s youth groups had been barred from being around children unsupervised — a restriction that he accepted to avoid retrial on a sexual abuse charge.

“I think everyone was just shocked; there’s no other way to put it,” said Darren Barreiro, a father of three girls, as he left Mass on Sunday.

The priest, Michael Fugee, was convicted in 2003 of criminal sexual conduct stemming from allegations that he had groped a boy’s crotch during several wrestling horseplay encounters when he was associate pastor at St. Elizabeth Church in Wyckoff, N.J.

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.

Overworked detectives passed on child sex abuse allegations

AUSTRALIA
Maitland Mercury

By ELLE WATSON May 13, 2013

The detective tasked with overseeing an investigation into an alleged Catholic Church child abuse cover up has told a Commission of Inquiry he referred the matters to a larger command because his officers could not take on the work load.

Detective Inspector David Waddell was the crime manager of Lake Macquarie Local Area Command in 2010 when documents alleging concealment of sexual abuse by Maitland-Newcastle clergy were forwarded on by Newcastle Herald journalist Joanne McCarthy.

Inspector Waddell this morning told the inquiry his command had just finished a similar investigation and detectives had initiated industrial actions because of heavy workloads.

“I just didn’t think we would be able to commit the resources to complete this investigation,” Inspector Waddell said this morning.

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.

Sex abuse whistleblower’s misleading tweet

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

May 13, 2013
Paul Maguire
AAP

The senior detective who triggered an inquiry into the handling of allegations of child sex abuse by Hunter Valley priests faces a possible contempt charge.

Detective Chief Inspector Peter Fox has until May 24 to explain a social media message he sent from the courtroom during the special commission of inquiry on Monday.

The commission, which began in Newcastle six days ago, is focusing on how police and church officials handled child sex allegations, particularly those involving serial sex offender Father Denis McAlinden and convicted pedophile Father James Fletcher, who are both dead.

It is also looking into how Insp Fox was stopped from investigating such matters and his allegations of church officials covering up crimes.

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.

Maine Voices: New pope must stand up for sexual abuse victims, survivors

MAINE
Portland Press Herald

By PAUL KENDRICK

FREEPORT – A Jesuit is pope.

I am Jesuit-educated.

I am a graduate of Cheverus High School (1968) and Fairfield University (1972).

Yet I do not find myself swept up in the excitement that Jesuit priests and Jesuit alumni are expressing, now that “one of our own” is the first ever Jesuit to be elected pope.

The word “Jesuit” is often synonymous with social justice and a deep concern for the poor and vulnerable. My Jesuit teachers taught me that the “service of my faith must include the promotion of justice.”

In a 2000 speech at Santa Clara University, the Rev. Peter-Hans Kolvenbach, then head of the Jesuit Order, urged students to “let the gritty reality of this world into their lives, so they can learn to feel it, think about it critically, respond to its suffering, and engage it constructively.”

The Rev. Kolvenbach noted that “solidarity with our less fortunate brothers and sisters … is learned through ‘contact’ rather than through ‘concepts.’ When the heart is touched by direct experience, the mind may be challenged to change. Personal involvement with innocent suffering, with the degradation and injustice others suffer is the catalyst for solidarity, which then gives rise to intellectual inquiry, reflection and action.”

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.

QLD PRIEST SEX CASE DELAYED FOR TWO MONTHS

AUSTRALIA
7 News

Tony Bartlett, AAP
May 13, 2013

The case against a retired Catholic priest, charged with 58 counts of abusing children in Queensland, has been adjourned for two months.

The priest, who cannot be named, is too ill to appear in court.

The 77-year-old, whose address is given as Logan, south of Brisbane, is accused of indecently dealing with children in the Brisbane, Logan and Gold Coast areas between 1977 and 1988.

He is charged with 57 counts of indecent treatment of children and one of common assault.

He was not required to appear when his case was mentioned in the Beenleigh Magistrates Court on Monday.

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.

May 12, 2013

BBC NI’s Catholic Church exposé beats Jimmy Savile documentary to BAFTA

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

BY CLAIRE CROMIE – 12 MAY 2013

BBC Northern Ireland has won a BAFTA for its powerful film investigating sex abuse priests in Ireland – beating ITV’s controversial Jimmy Savile documentary.

The Shame of the Catholic Church – part of BBC Two’s This World strand – won the Current Affairs category at the prestigious annual TV awards ceremony.

Directed by Alison Millar, the documentary saw Darragh MacIntyre reveal new evidence about the role of the leader of the Catholic Church in Ireland, in the failure to protect children from child abuse.

MacIntyre tracked down the children and revealed Cardinal Sean Brady, the Primate of All Ireland, had the names and addresses of children who were being abused or were at risk of being abused by Ireland’s most notorious paedophile Fr Brendan Smyth, but failed to ensure that they were protected.

The documentary beat the controversial ITV Exposure programme The Other Side of Jimmy Savile, Panorama’s Britain’s Hidden Housing Crisis and Al Jazeera’s What killed Arafat? to the BAFTA award.

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

Priest child-sex case delayed due to ‘continuing health’ reasons

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

ROSANNE BARRETT From: The Australian May 13, 2013

A RETIRED priest facing 57 child-sex charges did not appear in a southeast Queensland court this morning amid “continuing health” reasons, a committal court has heard.

The case of the former southeast Queensland Catholic priest, 77, was adjourned to July 8 in the Beenleigh Magistrates Court this morning.

His barrister Barry Ryan requested the two-month adjournment citing “continuing health” reasons.

“I ask an adjournment for some months to allow my client’s health to improve,” he said.

Mr Ryan handed a medical certificate to Magistrate Joan White but it was not read out in the court.

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.

Alleged pedophile priest too sick for court

AUSTRALIA
Brisbane Times

May 13, 2013

Tony Bartlett

The case against a retired Catholic priest, charged with 58 counts of abusing children in Queensland, has been adjourned for two months.

The priest, who cannot be named, is too ill to appear in court.

The 77-year-old, whose address is given as Logan, south of Brisbane, is accused of indecently dealing with children in the Brisbane, Logan and Gold Coast areas between 1977 and 1988.

He is charged with 57 counts of indecent treatment of children and one of common assault.

He was not required to appear when his case was mentioned in the Beenleigh Magistrates Court on Monday.

Barrister Barry Ryan, representing the priest, told the court his client was ill and unable to attend the hearing.

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.

Retired Catholic priest on 50 child sex abuse charges misses court appearance

AUSTRALIA
NEWS.com.au

ROSE BRENNAN
The Courier-Mail
May 13, 2013

A RETIRED Catholic priest facing more than 50 counts of child sex abuse was too ill to appear in court this morning.

The 77-year-old Father faces 57 counts of indecent dealing with a child and one count of common assault.

The abuse is alleged to have taken place from 1977 to 1988 in south-east Queensland schools the parishioner presided over.

His is accused of abusing girls and boys under the ages of 14 and 16.
He did not appear in the Beenleigh Magistrates Court this morning in front of Magistrate Joan White.

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.

Senior policeman to front abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

A New South Wales inquiry will this morning hear from the senior policeman who allegedly told whistleblower Peter Fox to stop investigating child sexual abuse by Catholic clergy in the Hunter Valley.

It is the second week of the Special Commissions public hearings and Detective Inspector Dave Waddell is today scheduled to give evidence.

He is currently the crime manager of the Tuggerah Lakes Area Command on the New South Wales central coast.

The inquiry is looking at how the NSW Police and the Maitland-Newcastle Catholic Diocese handled allegations of child sexual abuse by two priests.

Whistleblower, Detective Chief Inspector Peter Fox spent last week giving evidence.

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.

TheExcommunicationFactor

IRELAND
Irish Independent

JOHN MEAGHER – 11 MAY 2013

The notion of excommunication holds a special place in the imagination of Irish people. It used to be threatened to those Catholics who considered studying at Trinity College Dublin and to anyone who engaged in paramilitary activity.

This week, it has returned to the public consciousness after Cardinal Seán Brady refused to rule out the possibility that TDs voting in favour of abortion legislation would be excommunicated from the Catholic Church.

“That is down the line at the moment, as far as we are concerned,” Brady told media at an anti-abortion vigil held at Knock, Co Mayo, last week. …

Brady – who has been heavily criticised for his failure to take leadership in the clerical abuse scandals – was dismissed as out-of-touch by some, especially those who questioned why the cardinal hadn’t broached the topic of excommunication when it came to paedophile priests.

“There’s a lot of misinformation out there about excommunication,” says Michael Kelly, editor of The Irish Catholic. “It’s almost never imposed – especially in an Irish context. It’s much more about people choosing to excommunicate themselves or automatically applied when a law is contravened rather than following a specific inquiry.

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.

Police investigate former Parramatta priest for alleged assaults on alter boys

AUSTRALIA
Parramatta Sun

A former Catholic priest has been charged with 89 child sex and assault offences on three girls aged between five and 18.

The man who worked in the Armidale and Parramatta Diocese was arrested in October and charged with 25 child sex offences.

At Armidale Local Court on Wednesday, he was charged with an additional 64 child assault offences.

Police were investigating the former priest, who cannot be identified for legal reasons, for alleged assaults on altar boys while a priest at Parramatta and Armidale churches in the 70s and 80s.

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.

Wash Your Dirty Hands!

UNITED STATES
Voice from the Desert

By Vinnie Nauheimer

Suppose Cardinal Dolan’s recent folksy metaphor about washing hands bespeaks the incredible hypocrisy that is endemic among the hierarchy of the Roman Catholic Church? Washing hands used as a metaphor has two meanings. The first is to clean yourself up and the second is to remove yourself from a situation vis a vis Pontius Pilate. Consider Dolan’s decision in Milwaukee to pay sexually abusing priests to leave the priesthood. Instead of doing the right thing, he emulated Pilate and washed his hands of the guilty priests. Thinking like that is intrinsically disordered! It is a more or less a strong tendency geared toward an intrinsic moral evil; and thus the inclination itself must be seen as an objective disorder. Can turning sexually abusing priests loose on the public be anything but?

During the past eleven years, we have all witnessed hundreds of documented cases of bishops and cardinals shuffling sexually abusing priests between parishes, dioceses, and even countries. The end result in each case was the destruction of more young lives. Who is the bigger villain, the predator who follows his perverse inclinations or the hierarchy, who controlling the chains of the predators, allow them free reign to rape and plunder the most vulnerable of the church’s members? Yet no one in the hierarchy has ever publicly admonished these offending priests either by forbidding them access to the church, decrying the desecration of the act of consecration, or even for setting and serving Christ’s table with scent of children fresh on their hands. Grievous omissions like this bespeak an intrinsically disordered hierarchy and sense of outrage! It denotes a strong tendency ordered toward an intrinsic moral evil; and thus the inclination itself must be seen as an objective disorder. Can turning sexually abusing priests loose to prey on unsuspecting families of good Catholics be anything but?

Recently, protesters were turned away from St. Patrick’s Cathedral for attempting to enter the cathedral with hands soiled by mere ashes. Since when are physically dirty hands a sufficient reason for keeping Catholics out of their church? Can anyone ever recall a priest being turned away from a church for having dirty hands because he used to debauch young children? Priests have been turned away from churches for protesting sexual abuse, but never for committing it. Has Dolan ever publicly told a pedophile priest to wash his hands before saying mass? Has he ever told a sexually abusing priest to wash his hands before consecrating a host? Where was his outcry against the heinous sacrilegious crime of violating altar servers in the sacristy prior to saying mass? Refusing to publicly ask sexually abusing priests to wash their hands prior to saying Mass is intrinsically disordered, but not as disordered as refusing to bar them from entering a church.

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Texas family’s lawsuit against Kanakuk settled

TEXAS
The Turner Report

A settlement was reached late last month in the civil suit filed by a Texas couple, whose child was molested by former Kanakuk Kamp director Pete Newman.

Documents filed April 24 and April 29 in U. S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, do not reveal details of the settlement, but note that it was reached following one day of an “alternative dispute resolution” held in Dallas.

Those attending the meeting, according to the document, were CEO Joe White, Don Frank, Virginia Frys, Larry Graaovot, and Dan Daws of Kanakuk Ministries, and Marilyn Gannon of Ace North America Insurance, all representing the defendants, and the couple and Pete Newman’s teenage victim, along with attorneys for both sides.

The final resolution of the case must be filed by May 29, again not likely to contain any details, or the case will be dismissed, according to court documents.

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Missbrauch: Anglikanischer Bischof für Ermittlung gegen Vorgänger

GROSSBRITANNIEN
kathweb

London, 12.05.2013 (KAP) Der anglikanische Erzbischof von York, John Sentamu, will ein unabhängiges Gremium die Missbrauchsvorwürfe gegen einen verstorbenen Priester untersuchen lassen. In dem Fall wird auch sein Amtsvorgänger Erzbischof David Hope (73) beschuldigt, die Aufsichtspflicht verletzt und den Vorgang nicht den staatlichen Behörden gemeldet zu haben. Das berichtete der britische Sender BBC am Wochenende laut deutscher Katholischer Nachrichtenagentur KNA. Der Erzbischof von York ist traditionell die “Nummer zwei” der anglikanischen Hierarchie hinter dem Primas-Erzbischof von Canterbury.

Bei dem 2007 verstorbenen Priester handelt es sich laut BBC um Robert Waddington, von 1984 bis 1990 Dekan der Kathedrale von Manchester. Gegen ihn sei mehrfach wegen sexuellen Missbrauchs Minderjähriger kirchenintern ermittelt worden. Nach Veröffentlichungen der Londoner Tageszeitung “The Times”, so der BBC-Bericht weiter, habe Hope die Angelegenheit zwar 1999 und 2003 untersucht, aber sie weder dem Missbrauchsbeauftragten der anglikanischen Kirche noch der Polizei gemeldet.

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Church founder going back to court

UXBRIDGE (MA)
Telegram & Gazette

By Susan Spencer TELEGRAM & GAZETTE STAFF
susan.spencer@telegram.com

UXBRIDGE — The co-founder and pastor of the unconventional Church of the End Times will be returning to court soon on new charges.

David H. Stanley, 41, 51 Murphy’s Way, was issued a summons from Uxbridge District Court Friday for reckless operation of a motor vehicle, stemming from charges that he nearly struck an 87-year-old gas station employee with his Driveways Corp. pickup truck. Mr. Stanley is scheduled to be arraigned May 17.

According to the complaint filed by Sutton Police Patrolman Bryan T. Lefebvre, Mr. Stanley allegedly became impatient while waiting to fill his vehicle with gas at the XtraMart on Route 146 north in Sutton, around 8:30 a.m. April 26. A gas station employee, Elliott Hairyes, was assisting another customer at the pump when Mr. Stanley allegedly drove toward him, causing Mr. Hairyes to dash out of the way to avoid being hit.

The report continued that after nearly striking Mr. Hairyes, Mr. Stanley got out of his truck and told Mr. Hairyes that he should have moved out of the way. Mr. Hairyes responded that had he not moved out of the way, he would have been struck by the truck.

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.

SERRANO: Church protected abuser

NEW JERSEY
Asbury Park Press

Written by
Mark V. Serrano

An old proverb says that while success has many fathers, failure is an orphan. This comes to mind when considering the now infamous case of the Rev. Michael Fugee.

Fugee is the admitted sex offender whom Newark Archbishop John J. Myers allowed to serve in ministry around children in direct defiance of a 2007 memorandum of understanding between the Bergen County prosecutor and the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Newark.

So let’s consider the many fathers of this failure, lest it be orphaned, and then let’s address the steps necessary to avoid such a preventable crisis again.

For starters, it should be no surprise that Fugee exploited the opportunity he saw in the deal with the prosecutor. He confessed to being “sexually excited” when he “groped” the genitals of a teenage boy twice, for which he was found guilty before the ruling was vacated on a technicality.

You have to wonder how many sex offenders get to sign a memo with a prosecutor promising they will stay away from kids. We know Fugee can’t control himself, so someone in a position of authority — notably Archbishop Myers — had to stop him and did not.

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A force in society, politics and entertainment

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Los Angeles Times

[photos of old newspaper clippings]

Msgr. Benjamin Hawkes held the purse strings of an institution with status and influence difficult to imagine today. Politicians and Hollywood stars lined up to have their pictures taken with Cardinal Francis McIntyre. The press chronicled his every public appearance. When McIntyre got a new dog — a Kerry terrier Hawkes bought for him — the Times published a story. When he traveled to Rome — with Hawkes at his side — reporters followed him to the boarding gate.
Read the full report: An L.A. church leader’s posthumous fall from grace

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.

Inquiry into CofE cleric abuse claim set up

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

Archbishop of York John Sentamu is setting up an independent inquiry into allegations of sexual abuse made against a Church of England cleric.

A former Archbishop of York has denied being negligent by failing to notify police when made aware of the claims.

Dr Sentamu’s office said the probe would look “specifically into the issues surrounding the reports” and the findings would be made public.

It said child abuse allegations were treated “with the utmost seriousness”.

The accusations, which were brought to light by the Times newspaper earlier this week, concern alleged abuse against a schoolboy in Australia in the 1960s and a Manchester Cathedral choirboy in the 1980s.

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Church of England faces allegations of child sexual abuse, yet denies any wrong doing

UNITED KINGDOM
God Discussion

The Catholic Church is not the only church to face child sexual abuse scandals. In the wake of child sexual abuse scandals within the Catholic Church, the Church of England began facing new allegations of failing to protect children after accusations that the former Archbishop of York failed to report child sexual abuse to senior clergy.

Lord Hope of Thornes, the former archbishop, said he stripped the Very Rev Robert Waddington, a former dean of Manchester cathedral who was once in charge of church schools, of his right to conduct church services after allegations of child abuse against him. But Hope said he did not report the matter to the police or other child protection agencies because he deemed Waddington did not pose a further risk to children.

The Times and the Australian newspapers discovered these allegations of child sexual abuse, which date back to 1999 and 2003, after an investigation. The joint investigation of the two newspapers discovered files that showed Hope was aware of the allegations in during those years and made no reports, covering up the incidents.

The Office of the Archbishop of York confirmed it was aware of legal action by an alleged victim. Dean died in 2007. The controversy comes after a report published earlier this month, ordered by former Archbishop of Canterbury Dr Rowan Williams, warned the church risked a ticking “time bomb” if it failed to take urgent action to prevent further incidents of child abuse.

These allegations and cover-ups, which Hope denies, now places responsibility of dealing with the history of child sexual abuse on the newly ordain Archbishop Justin Welby, as well as same-sex marriages and ordaining women.

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.

Cleric’s case a puzzle, concern

NEW HAMPSHIRE
New Hampshire Union Leader

By KATHRYN MARCHOCKI
New Hampshire Union Leader

MANCHESTER – The Rev. Monsignor Edward J. Arsenault was the public face of the Catholic Diocese of Manchester during the height of the clergy sexual abuse crisis more than a decade ago.

Arguably the most high-profile cleric in New Hampshire from 2002 through 2007, Arsenault handled the media, oversaw the diocese’s administration and finances, and was the architect of its child protection and ministerial conduct policies.

So it was with more than a little irony that Catholics learned last week Arsenault, 51, is the target of a criminal investigation of possible inappropriate financial transactions involving diocesan funds and an internal review of a possible inappropriate adult relationship.

“That is why it is so surprising and so unbelievable that somebody who knows the rules, somebody who wrote the rules, is accused of violating them,” said Donna Sytek, former House speaker, who serves on the New Hampshire Catholic Charities board of directors.

“I was astonished because (it involves) somebody who had been so involved in the process of setting out expectations for good conduct,” added Sytek, who in 2002 served with Arsenault on a diocesan task force to craft a sexual misconduct policy. …

But Bernie McDaid of Peabody, Mass., who was sexually abused as a child by the late Rev. Joseph Birmingham at St. James Parish in Salem, Mass., recounted his two meetings with Arsenault in 2002 when he and other victims came to New Hampshire demanding Bishop John B. McCormack’s resignation.

“I think he was very cold, aloof, distant, guarded, looking for a political position – he couldn’t wait for McCormack to go out,” said McDaid, who is founder of Survivors Voice, a Europe-based group representing clergy sexual abuse victims.

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

A church leader’s posthumous fall from grace

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Los Angeles Times

[A force in society, politics and entertainment]

Starting in the 1950s, Msgr. Benjamin Hawkes got L.A. churches built, hobnobbed with the rich and helped the poor. Ten years after his death, he was accused of sexual abuse.

BY HARRIET RYAN
May 12, 2013

By the time the letter arrived, the grass on Benjamin Hawkes’ grave had grown thick. Historians had chronicled how he transformed the Los Angeles archdiocese into a billion-dollar institution. His portrait had been etched into a metal plaque and bolted to the wall of a sprawling church on Wilshire Boulevard.

The archbishop, Roger Mahony, who had presided at the dedication of that plaque, had become a cardinal with thinning hair and deep wrinkles.

The letter came to rest on his desk.

“It’s my turn to stand up and set the record straight,” the shaky cursive read. “Msgr. Hawkes was not a great priest, he was a sick man who used his status to abuse many.”

In the postwar boom that created modern Southern California, Msgr. Benjamin Hawkes was a power broker. The second-in-command to two cardinals, he ran the Los Angeles church for three decades, a span during which it grew into the largest, most diverse and by some counts wealthiest archdiocese in the nation.

His knack for money and real estate gave him influence from Rome to Hollywood. He socialized with real estate titans, advised Vatican officials and even taught actor Robert DeNiro how to play a priest for a film role inspired by Hawkes’ life.

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May 11, 2013

Police call on abuse victims to report all historic cases

AUSTRALIA
The Examiner

By ALEX DRUCE May 12, 2013

TASMANIA Police has revealed that almost a quarter of sexual assaults reported since July 2012 were committed more than a year before the alleged victims spoke up, with some cases dating back to the 1970s.

Acting deputy commissioner Donna Adams said the 2011-12 reporting period showed a similar gap between the alleged assault and the time it was reported, with some cases dating back to the 1950s.

Ms Adams acknowledged the complex nature of “cold case” investigations, but urged victims of historical child sexual abuse to continue to report incidents.

“Such investigations are often difficult and complex due to the passage of time,” Ms Adams said.

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O’Brien told to return red hat

SCOTLAND
The Times

Jason Allardyce Published: 12 May 2013

CARDINAL Keith O’Brien is coming under pressure to return his red hat to the Vatican and resign from the College of Cardinals.

According to some senior Catholics, O’Brien’s retention of the title and his determination to stay in Scotland after admitting to sexually inappropriate behaviour with priests is damaging the church.

Michael Kelly, a former Celtic director and lord provost of Glasgow, said O’Brien had let down his parishioners and that, by remaining as a cardinal and retiring in Scotland, he was making it difficult for the church to move on.

Confirming his intention to retire quietly in Dunbar, East Lothian, O’Brien, who resigned as archbishop of St Andrews and Edinburgh earlier this year, said that he had received support from people who accepted he was sorry for the offence he had caused.

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Church to set up inquiry into claims of abuse by former dean of Manchester

UNITED KINGDOM
The Observer

Jamie Doward
The Observer, Saturday 11 May 2013

The Archbishop of York, Dr John Sentamu, is to set up an independent inquiry to investigate allegations of child abuse by a senior cleric. The late Robert Waddington, who was Dean of Manchester Cathedral between 1984 and 1990, is alleged to have abused several boys in the UK and abroad.

It has been reported that in 1999 the then Archbishop of York, David (now Lord) Hope, was told that Waddington had abused a pupil while he was the headteacher at a school in Queensland, Australia. And in 2003, a former choirboy at Manchester Cathedral claimed he had been abused by Waddington in the 1980s.

A statement from the Office of the Archbishop of York said: “When any church-related abuse comes to light the church’s first concern must be for the victim, offering support and apologising for the abuse, acknowledging that the effects can be lifelong. on Saturday afternoon

“When the inquiry makes its report the Archbishop will make its findings public.”

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Appreciation for those who stood up to Catholic Church hierarchy: Editorial

NEW JERSEY
The Star-Ledger

By Star-Ledger Editorial Board
on May 11, 2013

Criticizing the Catholic Church is not easy for a politician. The church is naturally organized, politically engaged, and many of its followers are fiercely loyal. The easy path is to be quiet, to keep a safe distance.

So take a moment to appreciate the courage shown by those few politicians who have called for the resignation of Newark Archbishop John Myers over his failure to abide by a legally binding agreement to keep a sexually abusive priest away from children.

Myers has still not said a word. He sent his spokesman out to indignantly deny the agreement was broken, and then sent him back a few days later to admit that it was indeed broken. The archbishop’s personal silence, in the face of a storm of protest, testifies to his inability to justify his failure to protect children under his care.

Among those who called for Myers’ resignation is Sen. Barbara Buono (D-Middlesex), the likely Democratic candidate for governor. Gov. Chris Christie has so far punted, saying he wanted to speak with the archbishop first. Nearly two weeks have passed since the news broke, and still no word from the governor’s office on his conversastion with Myers.

Our outspoken governor, in other words, is taking shelter in the safe haven of silence.

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Gallup Diocese named in another clergy abuse lawsuit

ARIZONA
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, NM, May 11, 2013

By Elizabeth Hardin-Burrola
Independent correspondent

FLAGSTAFF — Another Arizona man has filed a clergy abuse lawsuit in Coconino County Superior Court against the Diocese of Gallup alleging he was sexually abused by two priests at Winslow’s Madre de Dios Catholic Church in the 1970s.

The priests named in the lawsuit are the Rev. Clement A. Hageman, who died in Winslow in 1975, and the Rev. Raul N. Sanchez, who replaced Hageman in Winslow. Sanchez, a former Air Force chaplain who retired as a lieutenant colonel, is believed to be living in Mexico.

Phoenix attorney Robert E. Pastor filed the lawsuit in April on behalf of the plaintiff, identified in court documents as John V.F. Doe, a resident of Maricopa County, Ariz. In September 2012, Pastor filed a similar lawsuit naming both Hageman and Sanchez on behalf of another plaintiff, John G.H. Doe, of Navajo County.

In 2010, Pastor filed his first clergy abuse lawsuit against the Gallup Diocese alleging sexual abuse by Hageman in the 1950s in Holbrook, Ariz. That case, filed on behalf of a Phoenix man, is now slated for trial in Flagstaff in February 2014, according to Pastor.

Altar boy victims

The last two lawsuits claim the alleged victims were sexually abused by both Hageman and Sanchez when they were altar boys in Winslow. Pastor’s legal argument in all three cases is that diocesan officials should be prevented from “alleging the statute of limitations as a defense because they fraudulently concealed” the clergy sex abuse from the public for decades.

As part of Hageman’s alleged sexual abuse grooming process, the most recent lawsuit alleges, “John V.F. Doe was invited to Father Hageman’s living quarters where he was allowed to drink wine and eat the host.”

Hageman’s replacement, Sanchez, is alleged to have taken John V.F. Doe, a boy under the age of 15, on trips as part of his grooming tactics. “Father Sanchez took Plaintiff and other altar boys on special trips including camping, fishing, swimming at lakes in northern Arizona and to Phoenix, Arizona,” the complaint states.

The John V.F. Doe lawsuit also includes a new allegation about Hageman: that between Hageman’s church assignments in Holbrook and Kingman, where sex abuse accusations prompted his removal, the priest worked briefly with Catholic missions that served Yaqui Indians.

In an email Friday, Pastor said he was shocked to learn Hageman had been sent to a primarily Native American congregation. “It is yet another example of the Bishop of Gallup allowing pedophile priests to work with communities that historically have not had a voice in our community,” Pastor said. “This fact, coupled with all of the other priests who were assigned to poor, rural parishes in Northern Arizona confirms that the Bishop of Gallup was using those poor, rural parishes as a dumpster for his garbage.”

Bishop Bernard T. Espelage was the Gallup bishop in the 1950s when Hageman worked at the Holbrook, Kingman and Yaqui parishes. Bishop Jerome J. Hastrich assigned Hageman and Sanchez to Winslow in the 1970s.

Current Bishop James S. Wall and his chancellor, the Rev. Kevin Finnegan, were sent a list of emailed questions about Pastor’s lawsuits. They declined to respond to the media request.

Sanchez’s record

According to the Official Catholic Directory, after a brief period in Winslow, Sanchez was sent to live and study at Casa Santa Maria Via Dell’Umilta in Rome in the late 1970s. By 1980, Sanchez returned to Gallup as a canon lawyer and served as the chancellor and taught local seminary students. In 1987, the directory shows Sanchez as joining the Air Force as a chaplain. After retiring from the military, Sanchez did not return to the Gallup Diocese and is now listed in diocese directories as absent.

Pastor said an attorney for the diocese did give him a handwritten note with an address for Sanchez. “The city and state is illegible,” Pastor said, “but we were able to identify that he was last known to be living in Mexico.”

Since Sanchez is still alive and Arizona law enforcement officials have criminally prosecuted a number of alleged clergy sex offenders, Pastor was asked if his clients have filed police reports.

“My clients who were sexually abused by Fr. Sanchez have not reported the acts of sexual abuse to police,” Pastor said. “They are considering that option if we can find Fr. Sanchez. I find it hard to believe that the Diocese of Gallup does not know where one of its priests is living. I suspect the Diocese of Gallup is deliberately ignoring his whereabouts and making no attempt to locate him because of the possible criminal and civil liability.”

Pastor said he is waiting to receive a copy of Sanchez’s personnel file from the Gallup Diocese, which he said diocesan officials have promised to produce.

Regarding his first clergy abuse lawsuit filed in 2010, Pastor said he has had unproductive settlement discussions with the diocese.

“Although the parties have discussed settlement,” he said, “the Bishop of Gallup is either ignorant of the harm that victims of abuse suffer when a priest sexually abuses them or he refuses to accept the damage his priests have caused to so many Catholic children including the Plaintiff.”

Pastor said he is preparing to take that first case to trial. “The victim in this case hopes the Diocese of Gallup will comply with court orders allowing victims to conduct discovery regarding the secrets of clergy sexual abuse that the Diocese of Gallup has been desperately trying to hide,” he said. “He also hopes that the Bishop of Gallup will one day soon sit for a deposition to answer the many questions that surround the Diocese of Gallup and the unusually high number of pedophile priests who were dumped into the small rural towns of Northern Arizona.”

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Archbishop Launches Inquiry Over Abuse Claims

UNITED KINGDOM
Sky News

The Archbishop of York, John Sentamu, has said he is setting up an independent inquiry into allegations of abuse by Robert Waddington, a former Dean of Manchester Cathedral.

The Very Reverend Robert Waddington died from cancer in 2007 and is alleged to have groomed and abused a chorister in Manchester in the 1980s.

He is also said to have targeted a pupil at a boarding school in Queensland, Australia, when he was headmaster there in the 1960s.

A statement from the Office of Archbishop of York said: “When any church related abuse comes to light the Church’s first concern must be for the victim offering support and apologising for the abuse, acknowledging that the effects can be lifelong.

“When the Inquiry makes its report the Archbishop will make its findings public.

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Robert Waddington – Independent Inquiry To Be Established

UNITED KINGDOM
The Archbishop of York

Saturday 11th May 2013

A statement from the Office of the Archbishop of York regarding allegations relating to the late Robert Waddington follows…

‘The Archbishop of York is in the process of setting up an Independent Inquiry specifically into the issues surrounding the reports relating to alleged child abuse by the late Robert Waddington. When any church related abuse comes to light the Church’s first concern must be for the victim offering support and apologising for the abuse, acknowledging that the effects can be lifelong. When the Inquiry makes its report the Archbishop will make its findings public. The Church of England continues to review its Child Protection and Safeguarding policies regularly to ensure that the Church is a safe place for all. Child abuse is a heinous and personally damaging crime, it is therefore incumbent on the Church to treat such matters with the utmost seriousness.’

Notes to Editors:

1. The Terms of Reference and membership of the independent inquiry will be announced in due course.

2. The Archbishop of York is not available for further comment on this matter at the current time.

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Inquiry to investigate abuse claims

UNITED KINGDOM
Belfast Telegraph

11 MAY 2013

The Archbishop of York has said the Church of England treats child abuse allegations “with the utmost seriousness” as he confirmed he is setting up an independent inquiry into claims against a former cathedral dean.

Dr John Sentamu’s statement comes after his predecessor, Lord Hope of Thornes, denied suggestions he covered up allegations against Robert Waddington, a former Dean of Manchester Cathedral, who died from cancer five years ago.

The Times newspaper claimed Lord Hope, who was Archbishop of York between 1995 and 2005, was twice informed about allegations against Mr Waddington, who is said to have abused a chorister in Manchester in the 1980s and a schoolboy in Australia.

The paper said the former Archbishop spoke to Mr Waddington and banned him from taking services, but did not report him to the police.

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Archbishop of York sets up inquiry into abuse claims

UNITED KINGDOM
The Times

Last updated at 7:37PM, May 11 2013

Sadie Gray

The Archbishop of York is setting up an independent inquiry into allegations that a senior Church of England clergyman abused choirboys and school pupils.

Dr John Sentamu said that child abuse was “a heinous and personally damaging crime” as he announced the investigation into Robert Waddington, a former Dean of Manchester Cathedral who died from cancer five years ago.

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Archbishop of York launches independent probe…

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

Archbishop of York launches independent probe into child abuse claims against a senior cleric as church is rocked by scandal

By ROSIE TAYLOR and STEVE DOUGHTY

The Archbishop of York has ordered an independent inquiry into claims against a former cathedral dean.

Dr John Sentamu said the Church of England treats child abuse allegations ‘with the utmost seriousness’.

His statement comes after his predecessor, Lord Hope of Thornes, denied suggestions he covered up allegations against Robert Waddington, a former Dean of Manchester Cathedral, who died from cancer five years ago.

Lord Hope, who was Archbishop of York between 1995 and 2005, was twice informed about allegations against Mr Waddington, who is said to have abused chorister Eli Ward in Manchester in the 1980s and a school boy in Australia.

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Archbishop of York to launch inquiry into Church sex abuse claims

UNITED KINGDOM
Telegraph

The Archbishop of York is to set up an independent inquiry into allegations that a senior Church of England clergyman abused choirboys and school pupils.

By Josie Ensor
7:13PM BST 11 May 2013

The Very Rev Robert Waddington, a former dean of Manchester Cathedral, who died in 2007, is said to have groomed and sexually assaulted a number of young choristers in the 1980s.

It is alleged that David Hope, the former Archbishop of York, failed to report the abuse claims to police or child protection authorities after he was made aware of them in 1999 and 2003.

The Office of the Archbishop of York today said it was taking the allegations of abuse with the “utmost seriousness” and would launch an investigation into Dean Waddington and the Church.
Following the accusations, Lord Hope, who was then the second most senior bishop in the Church, revoked Waddington’s right to conduct church services and also ordered internal investigations into the alleged abuse.

However, concerns over Waddington’s state of health meant the Archbishop failed to report the case to the authorities. He now admits there “ought to have been” a report.

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Abuse report finds few allegations against clergy in 2012

UNITED STATES
Catholic World Report

May 11, 2013

Washington D.C., May 11, 2013 / 01:04 pm (CNA).- The latest report on child protection in the U.S. Catholic Church found a total of 11 credible allegations of abuse of minors by diocesan clergy in 2012, with a 20 percent decrease in the numbers of new credible abuse allegations about incidents in the past 60 years.

Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York, the U.S. bishops’ conference president, said in reaction to the report that Catholic bishops renew their “steadfast resolution” not to lessen their commitment to protect children and young people.

“We seek with equal determination to promote healing and reconciliation for those harmed in the past, and to assure that our audits continue to be credible and maintain accountability in our shared promise to protect and our pledge to heal,” Cardinal Dolan said May 10, the U.S. bishops’ conference reports.

The 2012 report on the implementation of the U.S. bishops’ Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People was authored for the National Review Board and for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops by the bishops’ Secretariat of Child and Youth Protection.

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Legion priest leaves priesthood to care for son

VATICAN CITY
Miami Herald

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
VATICAN CITY — A prominent American priest of the Legion of Christ religious order has decided to leave the priesthood after admitting he fathered a child years ago.

The Legion said Saturday the Rev. Thomas Williams, a moral theologian, author, lecturer and television personality, had asked Pope Francis to be relieved of his celibacy and other priestly obligations. A friend, the Rev. John Connor, wrote in a Legion blog that Williams wanted to care for his son and the mother.

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Suit against ex-Boonville priest settled

MISSOURI
Columbia Daily Tribune

By BRENNAN DAVID
Saturday, May 11, 2013

The Archdiocese of Newark has paid $650,000 to settle molestation claims brought by five men against a former priest who also served in Boonville.

Gerald Howard, who was known as Carmine Sita while a priest in New Jersey in the late 1970s and early ’80s, was accused in a lawsuit of molesting the young men in the rectory of a Jersey City Catholic church, said Greg Gianforcaro, the victims’ attorney. The settlement was reached in mediation with the archdiocese.

“The abuse was bad,” Gianforcaro said. “These guys were sexually abused, and it was terrible.”

In 1982, Howard pleaded guilty to sexually assaulting a boy in New Jersey, Gianforcaro said. That victim was not one of the five listed in the lawsuit, and he has since died of a drug overdose, he said.

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Poor practices by social workers ‘leaving children at serious risk’

IRELAND
Irish Independent

EILISH O’REGAN HEALTH CORRESPONDENT – 11 MAY 2013

CHILDREN have been left at serious risk of harm due to failures by social services in the south-east to properly investigate possible cases of abuse and neglect.

A damning inspectors’ report into HSE child-protection services in Carlow and Kilkenny uncovered a catalogue of poor practices that put children in danger.

While overall the services provided to children were safe, around 40pc of the staff were not vetted by gardai, the report by the Health Information and Quality Authority (HIQA) revealed.

The findings showed:

• Gardai were not always notified of suspected physical, sexual abuse or neglect of a child. Some “informal” contacts with gardai about suspicions were made but they were not always recorded.

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Justice system ‘unsuited’ to dealing with child abuse, conference told

IRELAND
Irish Times

Fiona Gartland

The adversarial nature of the criminal justice process is unsuited to dealing with sensitive issues like child sexual abuse, a conference on childcare was told today.

In a paper presented at the Voice of the Child conference in Dublin, consultant psychologist Dr Rosaleen McElvaney said responses to children who report sexual abuse need to take account of sexual abuse as a crime but they also need to take a broader perspective than a forensic one.

They should take account of children’s needs for therapeutic intervention and protection when required, she said.

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C of E accused of cover-up over child abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
Church Times

by Madeleine Davies
Posted: 10 May 2013

A FORMER Archbishop of York, Lord Hope of Thornes, failed to report allegations of child abuse to the police or independent child protection agencies, an investigation has suggested.

A joint investigation by The Times and The Australian newspaper in Sydney reports that Lord Hope was told of accusations against the Very Revd Robert Waddington (right), a former Dean of Manchester Cathedral, in 1999 and in 2003. He removed the Dean’s permission to officiate in 2005 but did not report the allegations to the police or child protection authorities. Dean Waddington, who was Dean of Manchester from 1984 to his retirement in 1993, died in 2007.

Allegations of abuse were first made in England in 2003 by the family of a former chorister at Manchester Cathedral, Eli Ward. The Right Revd Nigel McCulloch, who was Bishop of Manchester from 2002 until his retirement this year, was made aware of the allegations by the diocesan child protection adviser, but a diocesan child protection report claimed that “little could be done” unless the victim himself came forward.

On Friday, Bishop McCulloch said he had been “shocked and saddened” to learn of the allegations. He had asked his chaplain to contact the child protection officer for the diocese “in order that the correct procedures following such allegations could be properly followed”.

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Schweiz: Priester ihrer Ämter enthoben…

SCHWEIZ
Gayosterreich

Schweiz: Priester ihrer Ämter enthoben – Nach kreuz.net geht’s nun gloria.tv an den Kragen

Chur/Vaduz: Zwei der Betreiber der NS-freundlichen und homophoben Webseite ‘gloria.tv’, die katholischen Priester Reto Nay und Markus Doppelbauer, wurden von ihren Erzbischöfen ihrer kirchlichen Ämter enthoben. Auslöser der ‘Hetzjagd’ sollen laut Nay zwei homosexuelle Aktivisten aus Deutschland, ein Ex-Katholik und ein Priester, sein.

“Amtsenthebung: Der Bischof von Chur, Msgr. Vitus Huonder, hat mit Datum vom 15. März 2013 den Pfarradministrator von Tujetsch (Sedrun), sur Dr. Reto Nay, des Amtes enthoben.
Chur, 15. März 2013
Bischöfliche Kanzlei Chur”

Diese Meldung auf der Webseite des Bistums Chur sorgt für Aufregung, ist doch Reto Nay – gemeinsam mit Markus Doppelbauer, einem Diözesanpriester aus Vaduz, und der Theologin Eva Doppelbauer aus St. Pölten – einer der Betreiber der Webseite ‘gloria.tv’. Ähnlich wie die homophobe Hassseite ‘kreuz.net’ versteht sich das Portal als ‘private Initiative, die nicht direkt mit der kirchlichen Hierarchie verbunden ist’ und die ‘Wahrung, Förderung und Ausbreitung der katholischen Kirche und des katholischen Glaubens’ zum Ziel hat. Darunter verstanden die Betreiber offenbar auch Hetze gegen Homosexuelle – derzeit vor allem auf der englischsprachigen Version der Webseite, weil bekanntlich die konservative Regierung dort die Ehe auch für gleichgeschlechtliche Paare öffnen will (wir berichteten mehrmals) – oder die Verharmlosung des Nationalsozialismuses.

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Kirche weist Vorwürfe zurück

SCHWEIZ
Kirchenblatt

10. Mai 2013 – Unzufrieden mit der Antwort der Kirchen auf den Missbrauch von “Verding- und Heimkindern” ist der Verein “Netzwerk Verdingt”. Vereinspräsident Walter Zwahlen (Bild) wirft den Kirchen wie auch anderen Akteuren vor, sie hätten sich nicht entschuldigt. Der Verein will zudem Schadenersatz für die Betroffenen. Wolfgang Bürgstein, der im Namen der Bischöfe am “runden Tisch” mit dem Verein sitzt, weist die in den Medien gegen die katholische Kirche erhobenen Vorwürfe zurück.

Es stimme ganz einfach nicht, dass sich nur Bundesrätin Simonetta Sommaruga am “Gedenkanlass für Opfer von fürsorgerischen Zwangsmassnahmen” Mitte April in Bern entschuldigt habe, erklärte Bürgstein, Generalsekretär der Nationalkommission Justitia et Pax, gegenüber Kipa. Der Präsident der Schweizer Bischofskonferenz (SBK), Markus Büchel, habe bei dem Anlass klar betont, dass die “begangenen Ungerechtigkeiten und Vergehen, ja sogar Verbrechen” schwer auf den Kirchen lasten. Im Namen der drei Landeskirchen bat er die Betroffenen um Vergebung. Den Menschen, die ihre seelischen und körperlichen Wunden bis heute schmerzlich empfinden, gelte der “Respekt und unsere mitfühlende Solidarität”. Die Kirchen würden aus den Fehlern der Vergangenheit lernen.

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Missbrauch: „Vom Kläger über Jahre hinweg erlittenes Leid“

OSTERREICH
Die Presse

MANFRED SEEH (Die Presse)
Ein ehemaliger Schüler des Stiftsgymnasiums Kremsmünster zieht gegen das Stift und einen Ex-Internatsleiter vor ein Zivilgericht. Als Beweismittel dient auch ein „Presse“-Interview.

Kremsmünster/Steyr. „Der Kläger wurde als Schüler des Konviktsgymnasiums und des angeschlossenen Internats in Kremsmünster jahrelang systematisch und wiederholt körperlich misshandelt und seelisch gequält.“ So beginnt eine Zivilklage, die nun das Landesgericht Steyr, Oberösterreich, abzuhandeln hat. Der Kläger tritt unter dem Pseudonym Roland H. auf. Er ist 45 Jahre alt. Und sieht sich als Opfer eines – wie er der „Presse“ sagt – „menschenverachtenden“ Systems. Des „Systems Kremsmünster“.

Wie kam es zur Klage? Schließlich hat das Stift vor dem Hintergrund diverser, großteils Jahrzehnte zurückliegender Missbrauchs- und Misshandlungsfälle Aufarbeitung betrieben. Es hat vor allem mit der von der Kirche eingesetzten Klasnic-Kommission kooperiert. Nach Angaben des Abtes Ambros Ebhart wurden 38 Fälle gemeldet, davon 29 wegen sexuellen Missbrauchs von Schülern. Mehr als 700.000 Euro seien von der Klasnic-Kommission allein an Opfer aus Kremsmünster ausbezahlt worden.

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Die große Krise der katholischen Kirche in Belgien – In entchristlichtem Land lebt es sich gefährlic

BELGIEN
Katholisches

[Summary: (Brussels) The Belgian church is facing financial collapse. The annual accounts of the dioceses have large losses in a country that was particularly affected by the pedophile abuse scandal]

(Brüssel) Die belgische Kirche steht vor dem finanziellen Zusammenbruch. Die Jahresbilanzen der Diözesen weisen große Verluste auf in einem Land, das besonders vom pädophilen Mißbrauchsskandal betroffen war. Die Kirche des ethnisch zwischen Flamen und Wallonen geteilten Landes, das bis vor einem halben Jahrhundert eine blühende katholische Landschaft war, durchlebt eine schwere Krise. Die Priesterseminare sind weitgehend leer, die Zahl praktizierender Katholiken ist auf einen treuen Kern zusammengeschrumpft. Die Bischöfe genießen nur mehr einen Hauch des Ansehens und des Gewichts im öffentlichen Leben, die sie einmal hatten. Progressive Bischöfe wie Leo Kardinal Suenens, Erzbischof von Mecheln-Brüssel und die von ihm zu Bischöfen beförderten Gleichgesinnten brachten die Säkularisierung des Landes und die Entfremdung der Gläubigen von der Kirche voran.

Auf Kardinal Suenens liberale Kirche folgt entchristlichte Gesellschaft

Seit dem Zweiten Vatikanischen Konzil, bei dem Kardinal Suenens als Teil der Rheinischen Allianz zu den großen „Machern“ gehörte, propagierten in Belgien selbst führende Kirchenvertreter wie der dominikanische Theologe Edward Schillebeeckx eine „in der Moderne aufgehende“ Kirche. Pädophile Kinderschänder, wie der frühere Bischof Roger Joseph Vangheluwe von Brügge, der noch nach seiner Bischofsweihe Neffen schändete, erledigten den Rest. Symptomatischen Höhepunkt fand die Entwicklung im Juni 2010 mit einer skandalösen Schändung des Grabes von Kardinal Suenens in der St. Rumold-Kathedrale von Mecheln als übler Dan-Brown-Kopie durch eine Sondereinheit der belgischen Polizei auf der Suche nach belastendem Material im Zusammenhang mit dem Pädophilieskandal. Gefunden wurde nichts. Was die zuständige belgische Gerichtsbarkeit nicht daran hinderte, die Schändung der Totenruhe nachträglich für rechtens zu erklären.

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Über 50 Jahre Vertuschungsgeschichte

DEUTSCHLAND
Regensburg-Digital

Die Diözese Regensburg ist meilenweit von einer transparenten Aufklärung sexueller Missbrauchsfälle entfernt. Beispielhaft zeigt das die über 50 Jahre andauernde Vertuschungsgeschichte des ehemaligen Domspatzen-Direktors Georg Friedrich Zimmermann.

Mitte April 2013 hat sich der neue Regensburger Bischof Rudolf Voderholzer erstmals zu den Missbrauchsfällen in katholischen Einrichtungen seiner Diözese geäußert. Auf die Frage, ob er nach der Durchsicht der entsprechenden Akten weiteren Handlungsbedarf sehe, antwortete er gefällig, aber unkonkret. Es beschäme ihn, mache ihn betroffen, „was alles ans Tageslicht gekommen ist.“ Alles müsse aufgeklärt werden.

Doch wer ist Adressat dieses Appells? Sein eigenes Ordinariat, das sich bislang weniger an der Aufklärung denn an der Verschleierung der Zusammenhänge beteiligte? Sein Vorgänger Gerhard Ludwig Müller, der zwischenzeitlich zum Präfekten der Glaubenskongregation aufgestiegen ist und daher seine eigene Unzulänglichkeit als vormaliger Regensburger Bischof aufklären müsste? Oder die Zunft der Journalisten, die Bischof Müller 2010 pauschal in die Nazi-Ecke neben Joseph Goebbels rücken wollte?

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Dickert von Reaktion aus Mainz enttäuscht

DEUTSCHLAND
Lauterbacher Anzeiger

Briefwechsel zu Missbrauchsfällen und Rolle der Kirche – Gespräch in Mainz ohne Pfarrer lehnt Rathauschef ab

(cke). Die Einstellung der Missbrauchsstudie durch die Katholische Kirche und die noch immer ausstehende Entschuldigung von Kirchenverantwortlichen aus dem Bistum Mainz gegenüber den Opfern, die vom ehemaligen Grebenhainer Pfarrer Wolfgang Grabosch sexuell missbraucht worden waren, hatten Grebenhains Bürgermeister Manfred Dickert im Februar veranlasst, einen Brief an den Mainzer Bischof, Kardinal Karl Lehmann, zu schreiben. Der Rathauschef, in dessen Gemeinde sich ein Teil der widerwärtigen Taten ereignet hatten, hatte in seinem Schreiben eine klare Entschuldigung der Kirche und einen ehrlichen Umgang mit den Missbrauchsfällen gefordert (der LA berichtete).

Im März bekam Dickert Antwort aus Mainz. Nicht von Kardinal Lehmann selber, sondern vom Justiziar des Bistums, Professor Michael Ling. Insgesamt enttäuscht war der Rathauschef von dessen für ihn unbefriedigenden Stellungnahme. Dennoch war er bereit, das von Ling in dem Brief gemachte Gesprächsangebot anzunehmen. Das teilte Dickert dem Justiziar in einem weiteren Schreiben im April mit, verbunden mit der Bitte, dass auch der Grebenhainer Pfarrer Helmut Grittner und ein Vertreter des LA an der Unterredung in Mainz teilnehmen sollten. Das wiederum lehnte Ling ab und teilte das Manfred Dickert in der vergangenen Woche erneut schriftlich mit.

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Catholic clergy abuse audit includes 1 Rapid City case

SOUTH DAKOTA
Rapid City Journal

[the report]

Mary Garrigan Journal

Of the 471 allegations of sexual abuse that were made against Catholic clergy in 2012, one originated in the Diocese of Rapid City, according to a diocesan spokesman.

The annual compliance audit report by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishop was released this week, and it found the fewest allegations of clergy sexual abuse reported since the USCCB began doing the audits in 2004.

Like the majority of the 2012 allegations, the Rapid City case dates from decades ago, and the priest involved is deceased. No details were provided about the local priest or church in the report.

Nationwide, the majority of the 2012 cases date from the 1970s, but the Rapid City allegation was from the 1950s. Eleven of last year’s allegations against diocesan priests involved children who were under the age of 18 in 2012.

There were 397 allegations made against 313 diocesan priests and deacons in 2012 and another 74 against religious order priests who are not employed by a diocese. Of the diocesan allegations, about 84 percent of the victims were male. Half were between 10 and 14 when the abuse began. An estimated 17 percent were between 15 and 17, and 19 percent were under age 10.

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Police won’t pursue charges against priest after 2nd investigation

WISCONSIN
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

By Ashley Luthern of the Journal Sentinel May 10, 2013

Wauwatosa police have completed a second investigation into a local priest and decided not to pursue charges after a forensic interview was performed with a child.

The mother of the child contacted police when her daughter told her that Father Robert Marsicek kissed the child’s lips and rubbed her back and buttocks, according to a police report obtained Thursday by the Journal Sentinel.

Marsicek has already been removed from his posts at two parishes and two schools after he was accused of inappropriate contact with children.

According to police, the girl’s statement changed during a forensic interview, and the interviewer thought the girl had been coached or overly questioned by her mother about her interactions with the priest.

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Priest in £145k parish fraud apologises for his actions

NORTHERN IRELAND
The Irish News

A CATHOLIC priest who admitted embezzling £145,000 of parish funds to give to a woman apologised for his actions yesterday as he avoided going to prison.

However, as Fr Conleth Byrne – who was given a two-year suspended sentence – left Downpatrick Crown Court he still gave no explanation for stealing the money from his former Co Down parish.

Judge David Smyth said while Byrne maintained he took the money for charitable purposes “given the size of these I have approached this with some scepticism”.

Byrne pleaded guilty last month to defrauding Loughinisland parish over a 19-month period between 2008 and 2009.

The court had heard that Byrne, who was parish priest at the time, gave the money to Marie Hanna who came to the village’s parochial house claiming to be in “dire need” of financial help after being released from prison.

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Catholic Shuffle

UNITED STATES
The American Conservative

By ROD DREHER • May 11, 2013

I have several links that Catholic readers have sent me in recent days. I’m going to be traveling on Saturday, and won’t be able to post. Maybe this’ll hold you. Here we go…

1. Phil Lawler wants to know why Msgr. Stephen Rossetti, despite a catastrophic record of failure in advising Catholic bishops on how to handle pederast priests, remains one of the bishops’ top advisers on the issue. Excerpt:

“Just as the banishment of lepers was fueled by medieval myths, the hysteria surrounding child sexual abusers is exacerbated by myths about those who suffer from sexual deviancies. Child molesters incarnate our deepest childhood fears… Our myths about child molesters come more from the projections of what lies within our own inner psyches than from the truth about who these men are.”

Does that quotation suggest that the author is motivated primarily by a desire to protect children from sexual abuse? Would it surprise you to learn that the author was–and to this day remains–one of the most influential voices advising Catholic Church leaders on the handling of sex-abuse cases?

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Residential schools account sorrowful, triumphal

CANADA
Winnipeg Free Press

Reviewed by: Michael Dudley

WHEN the First National Conference on Residential Schools convened in 1991 in Vancouver, the opening address was delivered by the Chief of Xat’Sull (Soda Creek) First Nation, Bev Sellars. She described how she and the other children at the residential school at Williams Lake, B.C. were treated “like dirt” by the white priests and nuns, ridiculed, and programmed “like robots” to believe that they belonged “to a weak, defective race.”

For Sellars, this wasn’t an education; it was instead, “training for self-destruction.”

A lawyer who at one time worked with the B.C. Treaty Commission, Sellars here recounts in this frank, angry and defiant memoir the full story of her own dehumanizing programming at the school in the 1960s, and how she narrowly avoided self-destruction herself.

While the tragic history of Canada’s arrogantly racist experiment in cultural genocide has been documented in such major works as J.R. Miller’s Shingwauk’s Vision (1996) and A National Crime by John Milloy (1999), Sellars’ book joins a smaller but growing body of residential school autobiographies such as Basil Johnston’s Indian School Days (1988) and Theodore Fontaine’s Broken Circle (2011).

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Church officials believed claims were true

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

AMANDA GEARING AND MICHAEL MCKENNA From: The Australian May 11, 2013

FORMER Anglican church officials have admitted they believed a former school headmaster had abused children at a north Queensland boarding school, despite telling a victim during mediation over a compensation payout that his allegations were not proven.

For more than six years, Anglican officials dismissed the allegations of Queensland pensioner Bim Atkinson that he had been sexually abused between 1964 and 1968 by the Reverend Robert Waddington, the former headmaster of St Baranabas boarding school in Ravenshoe, on the Atherton Tablelands.

In documents and letters obtained by The Weekend Australian, senior church officials in England and Australia told Mr Atkinson, now 59, that Waddington had denied the allegations and his claims were “not proven”, despite an internal investigation.

Mr Atkinson made his first complaint in 1999 — when Waddington was living in retirement in York — but dropped the case after being told the former school principal was near death after surgery for throat cancer. Waddington did not die until 2007.

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Accused headmaster turned me into pedophile, says convicted cleric Peter Gilbert

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

MICHAEL MCKENNA AND AMANDA GEARING From: The Australian May 11, 2013

A CLERGYMAN who allegedly raped boys at a north Queensland boarding school in the 1960s has claimed he was ordered to take female hormones by his headmaster, who encouraged the “romantic love” of children among staff.

Former Anglican brother Peter Gilbert – sentenced to seven years’ jail in 2006 for the rape and indecent assault of children in the 1980s in South Australia – has blamed St Barnabas headmaster the late Robert Waddington for turning him into a pedophile.

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Church ‘abuse victim’ wants apology

UNITED KINGDOM
ITV

[with video]

An alleged abuse victim of the former Dean of Manchester Cathedral says he wants an apology from the Church of England over an alleged ‘cover-up’.

Eli Ward told ITV News he was “groomed” by the Very Rev Robert Waddington, who died in 2007.

The former Archbishop of York, Lord Hope of Thornes, has denied covering up allegations that Waddington sexually abused choirboys.

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Church abuse suspect ‘investigated three times’

UNITED KINGDOM
The Times

Sean O’Neill Crime Editor
Published at 12:01AM, May 11 2013

A senior Anglican clergyman suspected of serial child abuse was “very calculating”, a former Church of England child protection officer said yesterday.

The Rev Ray Morris said he interviewed the Very Rev Robert Waddington, former Dean of Manchester Cathedral and once the head of education for the Church, in 2004 about allegations that he abused schoolboys when a headmaster in Australia. This means the Church investigated Waddington, who died at 79 in 2007, three times without referring him to the police.

Lord Hope of Thornes, who was Archbishop of York from 1995 to 2005, examined allegations against him in 1999 …

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Statement from Lord Hope on ‘abuse cover up’

UNITED KINGDOM
ITV

Statement from Lord Hope issued through Bradford Diocese where he is assistant bishop:

Throughout my time as bishop and archbishop I always adhered to the statutory practices of the Church of England concerning safeguarding.

I strenuously deny (and am obviously disappointed at) the suggestion that myself or my team at the time would have acted negligently in this or any other safeguarding matter.

Under the Church of England’s 1999 Policy on Child Protection which was in effect at the time (but which has subsequently been reviewed) Paragraph 31 states:

There is no automatic legal obligation on the Church to refer allegations by adults to the police or social services. However it is essential to consider whether children may still be at risk from the abuser or alleged abuser and, if so, to ensure that appropriate steps are taken to safeguard them, and these will involve reporting the matter to the social services or the police.”

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Pervert priest Father John McCullagh takes his abuse secrets to the grave

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

BY DONNA DEENEY – 11 MAY 2013

A pervert priest exposed as a serial paedophile by the Belfast Telegraph has taken his secrets to the grave, never having faced justice.

Fr John McCullagh (80) was found dead in the Maghera retirement home he fled to after it was revealed he had sexually abused a girl in Londonderry for seven years from when she was just eight-years-old. The priest never revealed the full extent of his depravity against young girls, with many more victims thought to have remained silent.

It was not until her 18th birthday in 1989 that his victim finally broke down and confided in her parents about the years of abuse she had been subjected to.

She said McCullagh would take her for drives in his car and that “there is not a road in either Co Derry or Donegal that I wasn’t abused on”.

Other victims did come forward in the wake of the Belfast Telegraph expose, but McCullagh never faced justice in court.

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Whistleblower cop has no regrets

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

Posted Sat May 11, 2013

The policeman who blew the whistle on an alleged cover-up of child sexual abuse in the Hunter Valley’s Catholic Church says he is mentally exhausted after five days in the witness box.

Detective Chief Inspector Peter Fox says he was directed to stop investigating allegations of child sexual abuse by two Maitland-Newcastle Catholic priests.

His claims sparked a New South Wales Special Commission, with the public hearings getting underway this week.

Peter Fox finished giving evidence late yesterday and says the inquiry is taking its toll.

“I feel very drained,” he said.

“I think I’d be lying if I said that I felt any other way.

“It’s been a difficult process – five days in the witness box answering questions is mentally exhausting.

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“It’s about justice for the victims”

AUSTRALIA
Dubbo Photo News

Troy Grant – former police officer and now Member for Dubbo – has long campaigned for justice for the victims of sexual abuse at the hands of the Catholic clergy. As a young rookie detective when he spearheaded an investigation into allegations of sexual abuse of children by Catholic priests in the Hunter region of NSW. This week, Troy Grant gave evidence at the Special Commission of Inquiry, established by the NSW State Government to investigate allegations of police and clerical interference into the investigation of child sex abuse in the Catholic Church. He spoke with JEN COWLEY following his appearance before the enquiry.

The Commission of Inquiry before which you appeared this week is different from the Royal Commission set down to open later in the year, isn’t it?

Yes. This is the Special Commission of Inquiry established by Premier O’Farrell after Detective Chief Inspector (Peter) Fox made specific and serious allegations about potential (police) interference in investigations he was undertaking in the Hunter region involving two Catholic priests accused of being paedophiles. Those investigations related to Father Denis McAlinden and Father James Fletcher.

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Former church youth volunteer makes tearful apology to parents of boys he abused

CANADA
Calgary Herald

BY DARYL SLADE, CALGARY HERALD MAY 10, 2013

An emotional former church youth volunteer fought back tears Friday as he apologized to the parents of a half-dozen boys he sexually abused and used to make child pornography over a five-year period.

“I’d like to apologize to the court and I’d like to apologize to the parents. I’m very sorry for my actions,” a sobbing Roderick Kyle Janssen, 36, told provincial court Judge Catherine Skene at the conclusion of his sentencing hearing in provincial court.

“I realize it hurt you guys. I just apologize for everything. I want to do everything I can to ensure this will never happen again. I will take all the programs I can. I don’t want this to happen again.”

Earlier, Janssen’s lawyer, Kim Ross, argued for a total sentence of eight to 10 years for the six counts of either sexual assault or sexual interference on the six boys, as well as making child pornography of some of them and distributing many of the 78,841 images and 3,374 videos in his collection.

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Sexual Assault, a concern in the U.S. that is not taken seriously

UNITED STATES
Pravda

By: Rasul Gudarzi

U.S. , A country that claims to defend human rights and even criticizes others in this regard, not only has failed to control violence, but it has spread and deepened, both in society and in the U.S. Army, which contradicts international principles and rules.

The first article of the declaration on ending violence against women defines the following:

“For the purposes of this Declaration, the term ‘violence against women’ means any act of violence based on gender, or is likely to result in harm, physical, sexual or suffering to women, including threats of such acts, coercion or arbitrary deprivation of liberty, whether occurring in public or in private life.”

The issue of sexual assault in the U.S. keeps repeating. A new report has revealed an increase of about 35% of sexual assault cases in the military. The U.S. Defense Department reported that last year there were 26,000 cases of sexual crimes in the United States Armed Forces. Report data accounts for almost 70 attacks a day, and also notes that one in five female soldiers in the U.S. has been the victim of unwanted sexual contact by their colleagues. …

The acts and perverse behavior are being developed in a remarkable way in the U.S., among them we can mention the sex scandals in Catholic churches in the country and the legalization of gay marriage in several states. The root of the scandals that emerged in the Catholic Church is in the prohibition of marriage of priests, which has involved even the bishops themselves in various child abuse scandals and pedophilia.

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Sexual abuse cases against diocese hit new obstacle

NORTH CAROLINA
WSOC

By Allison Latos
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Sexual abuse cases against the Charlotte Diocese could face months of delays, leaving the accusers waiting longer for their day in court.

Seth Langson represents four people who claim priests in the Charlotte Diocese abused them.

According to Langson, the abuse occurred more than 30 years ago.

“Victims of sex abuse often take decades to come forward,” he said. “There is a lot of shame.”

It’s been nearly three years since Langson filed the lawsuits.

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THE INQUIRY: Child sex abuse and the Maitland-Newcastle Catholic diocese

AUSTRALIA
The Singleton Argus

The Special Commission of Inquiry into matters relating to the police investigation of certain child sexual abuse allegations in the Catholic Diocese of Maitland-Newcastle started on May 6.

The Premier announced the NSW Government proposed to establish a Special Commission of Inquiry into matters raised by Detective Chief Inspector Peter Fox in an ABC Lateline interview regarding the handling of certain child sexual abuse allegations.

Public hearings, held in the Newcastle Supreme Court, will continue until May 17. The inquiry will then sit from June 24 until July 12.

For our coverage of the first week’s sitting, courtesy of reporter Elle Watson, check out the following:

Top sex crime cop gives evidence: The commander of the state’s Police Sex Crimes Squad has given evidence to the Commission of Inquiry this morning.

Police: Fox was a troublemaker: The NSW Police Force has painted whistleblower Peter Fox as a troublemaker who passed on confidential documents to journalists to undermine the sex abuse investigation he was excluded from in 2010 in the hope he could write a book about it.

Conduct of officers ‘corrupt’: Former police office Troy Grant has denied claims that he warned Peter Fox about the “Catholic Mafia” – senior police who deliberately ­hindered investigations into ­paedophile priests.

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Sweeney blasts Newark archbishop over handling of priest sex abuse accusations

NEW JERSEY
The Record

BY JEFF GREEN
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

Saying New Jersey’s top Roman Catholic cleric should feel more “public pressure and public embarrassment” for protecting a priest charged with molesting a boy in 2001, state Senate President Stephen Sweeney on Friday discussed his reasons for joining politicians statewide to call on Newark Archbishop John J. Myers to resign.

Declaring “I’m a Catholic,” Sweeney this week said he came to believe that the archbishop must go as more details emerged about the Rev. Michael Fugee, a onetime assistant pastor at a Wyckoff parish, and how the archbishop returned him to ministry even after he was accused of groping a 13-year-old boy.

In a meeting with The Record’s editorial board Friday, Sweeney said he supports legislation to expand New Jersey’s statute of limitations on civil suits against sexual offenders and touted his role in enacting a law that monitors sex offenders with ankle bracelet tracking devices.

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May 10, 2013

Haunted for decades by ‘sex abuse’ nightmare at school for deaf

NE YORK
New York Post

By JULIA MARSH
Last Updated: 7:38 AM, May 6, 2013

EXCLUSIVE

It was a pedophile’s paradise.

That’s how Marlene Hodge, now 52, remembers the girls dorm at a New York boarding school for deaf children, where she and nearly a dozen former students allege a staffer molested his charges at night for almost 20 years.

“I would pretend to be asleep hoping he would eventually go away,” Hodge told The Post, saying the alleged assaults by dorm dad Joe Casucci at the New York School for the Deaf in White Plains have been seared into her memory. …

Hodge said she was encouraged to come forward after a group of Wisconsin men sued the Catholic Church for sex abuse they suffered at the hands of a priest in the ’50s.

She believes the New York School for the Deaf was aware of the abuse for “a long time” because she says her classmates reported it to staff. She said she regrets not telling anyone at the time, including her own mother, who was the PTA president.

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Rabinowitz: The Trials of Father MacRae

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Wall Street Journal

By DOROTHY RABINOWITZ

Last Christmas Eve, his 18th behind bars, Catholic priest Gordon MacRae offered Mass in his cell at the New Hampshire state penitentiary. A quarter-ounce of unfermented wine and the host had been provided for the occasion, celebrated with the priest’s cellmate in attendance. Sentenced to 33½-67 years following his 1994 conviction for sexual assault against a teenage male, Father MacRae has just turned 60.

The path that led inexorably to that conviction would have been familiar to witnesses of the manufactured sex-abuse prosecutions that swept the nation in the 1980s and early 1990s and left an extraordinary number of ruined lives in its wake. Here once more, in the MacRae case, was a set of charges built by a determined sex-abuse investigator and an atmosphere in which accusation was, in effect, all the proof required to bring a guilty verdict. But now there was another factor: huge financial payouts for victims’ claims.

That a great many of the accusations against the priests were amply documented, that they involved the crimes of true predators all too often hidden or ignored, no one can doubt.

Neither should anyone doubt the ripe opportunities there were for fraudulent abuse claims filed in the hope of a large payoff. Busy civil attorneys—working on behalf of clients suddenly alive to the possibilities of a molestation claim, or open to suggestions that they remembered having been molested—could and did reap handsome rewards for themselves and their clients. The Diocese of Manchester, where Father MacRae had served, had by 2004 paid out $22,210,400 in settlements to those who had accused its priests of abuse.

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Moves to get cardinal to leave UK

SCOTLAND
Scottish Catholic Observer

Suggestions made that it may be best if Cardinal O’Brien retires outside the country

Cardinal Keith O’Brien has been advised to leave the UK after stepping down from public life and in light of his recent admissions over his conduct that have caused great difficulty for the Church.

Last week the retired Archbishop of St Andrews and Edinburgh began moving into the Church-owned home in East Lothian that he had been planning to retire to for a number of years prior to his recent statement that his behaviour had fallen short of what was required of his office.

Sources close to the developments told the SCO that—in spite of recently getting approval from the Apostolic Nuncio, Archbishop Antonio Mennini, to retire as planned to Our Lady of the Waves parish in Dunbar—there had been a late push for the cardinal to leave the UK ‘for the good of the Church.’

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This week on “As the LCWR Turns”

UNITED STATES
Catholic World Report

May 10, 2013
By Catherine Harmon

This week saw several moments of high drama in the on-going (soap opera-like?) controversy involving the Vatican and the Leadership Conference of Women Religious. To recap:

On Sunday, Cardinal João Braz de Aviz, prefect of the Congregation for Religious, told a group women religious leaders that last year’s doctrinal assessment of the LCWR was conducted by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith without consultation or input from the Congregation for Religious. According to the National Catholic Reporter, Cardinal Braz de Aviz said that the CDF assessment caused him “so much pain.” The assessment, which found “serious doctrinal problems” in LCWR materials and programs and which put Archbishop J. Peter Sartain in charge of revising and reviewing the group’s statutes and publications, was reaffirmed in its findings by Pope Francis, according to a statement released last month by the CDF.

From the NCR article:

[Cardinal Braz de Aviz] said that his office — which is tasked with overseeing the work an estimated 1.5 million sisters, brothers, and priests around the world in religious orders — first learned of the move against the U.S. sisters’ group in a meeting with the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith after the formal report on the matter had been completed.

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Annual audit shows number of abuse allegations in church dropped in 2012

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Catholic News Service | May. 10, 2013

WASHINGTON The annual audit of diocesan compliance with the U.S. Catholic church’s “Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People” found a drop in the number of allegations, number of victims and number of offenders reported in 2012.

Georgetown University-based Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate, which gathered data for the report, found “the fewest allegations and victims reported since the data collection for the annual reports began in 2004.”

Most allegations reported last year were from the 1970s and 1980s with many of the alleged offenders already deceased or removed from active ministry.

StoneBridge Business Partners, which conducts the audits, said law enforcement found six credible cases among 34 allegations of abuse of minors in 2012. The credibility of 15 of the allegations was still under investigation. Law enforcement officials found 12 allegations to be unfounded or unable to be proven, and one was a boundary violation.

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NJ- SNAP: “Church notices re Newark perp aren’t enough”

POSTED BY BARBARA BLAINE ON MAY 10, 2013
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

When will Catholic officials stop trying to play ‘gatekeeper’ and ‘screen’ child sex abuse reports? Why don’t they just tell people ‘if you see, suspect or suffer clergy child sex crimes, call law enforcement directly?’

The answer is clear: they want victims and witnesses to come to church officials first, giving them the chance to destroy evidence, fabricate alibis, intimidate victims, threaten witnesses, discredit whistleblowers, and start their extensive and expensive damage control and public relations maneuvers.

Some may feel comfort in the short, vague announcement on the Trenton diocesan website about Fr. Fugee. We don’t. It’s more about looking good than doing good.

These two bishops should name the parishes Fr. Fugee was in. They should personally visit those parishes. They should beg church members and staff “Please, ask everyone you know, ‘Did Fr. Fugee hurt you?’” They should instruct them to seek out former church members and staff who may have quit or moved or stopped coming because Fr. Fugee hurt one of them.

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Newark archdiocese pays $650K to settle priest sex abuse claims

NEW JERSEY
Digital Journal

By Brett Wilkins
May 10, 2013

Newark – The Catholic Archdiocese of Newark, New Jersey has paid $650,000 to settle sex abuse claims against a pedophile priest who allegedly sexually assaulted numerous children in the 1970s and ’80s.

The Newark Star-Ledger reports that the settlement was paid to five men who claim to have been sexually abused by Rev. Carmen Sita, who pleaded guilty in 1982 to sexually assaulting a boy at St. Aloysius Church in Jersey City. Sita was sentenced to five months’ probation, after which time he changed his name to Gerald Howard and was transferred by the archdiocese to a parish in the Diocese of Jefferson City, Missouri.

Peter Gerety, the archbishop of Newark at the time who has been implicated in at least one other clergy sex abuse cover-up, never informed the public about Sita’s name change. While in Missouri, the transferred priest would allegedly go on to sexually abuse at least three more children. He was arrested in 2010 and charged with three counts of forcible sodomy, three counts of attempted forcible sodomy and two counts of kidnapping.

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UPDATE: Charleston Pastor Confesses to Sexually Abusing Young Girl

WEST VIRGINIA
WSAZ

[with video]

UPDATE @ 4/29/13

KANAWHA COUNTY, W.Va. (WSAZ) — A congregation is in shock after their pastor was arrested and charged with three counts of sexual abuse by a parent, guardian or custodian.

“[The church] is in limbo, don’t know what we’re going to do,” said a member of the United Gospel Mission who asked not to be identified because of the nature of the crimes.

Deputies from the Kanawha County Sheriff’s Office tell WSAZ.com that Johnnie Franklin Winnell of Gypsum Lane in Elkview confessed Friday to abusing the young girl. Capt. Sean Crosier said the abuse happened during several years.

Neighbor Patricia Strickland says she’d never imagine the man she’s lived beside for 20 years could do such things. She said her young granddaughter even plays at Winnell’s house and, while she trusts him, she feared the worst when she heard the news.

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Nave’s church addresses child porn arrest concerns

FLORIDA
ABC 7

[with video]

By George Solis, Reporter

SANIBEL ISLAND, FL –
Community Concerns of the recent arrest of Charles Nave, who was charged with child porn, were addressed during a service at his church on Sunday.

Nave’s mother is an Associate Pastor at Sanibel Community Church, and his wife and kids are members.

To the surprise of some, both attended services Sunday morning where the issue was brought up.

Behind the sacred walls, the pastor delivered his sermon.

“If we hide stuff it will always take us further than we intended it to go and will cost us more than we thought it would,” said Pastor Daryl Donovan.

Pastor Donovan delivered that message to address obvious questions about the arrest of Charles Nave — known to many as ‘Chad.’

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Church Youth Group Leader Charged With Child Porn Possession

CONNECTICUT
NBC Connecticut

By Liz Dahlem and LeAnne Gendreau | Thursday, May 9, 2013

Bristol Police have arrested a youth group leader from a Plainville church man after finding more than 500 images and 13 videos of child pornography on his computer.

Jonathan Spann, 28, of Bristol, appeared in court on Thursday to face an illegal possession of child pornography charge and has been ordered to have no contact with anyone under the age of 16. He is also prohibited from using a computer.

Police started investigating in February 2012 after a special agent from the Department of Homeland Security and Immigrations and Customs Enforcement in Hartford called local police about a local IP address accessing a child pornography Web site, according to an arrest warrant application.

When police seized Spann’s computer, they recovered around 3,000 images of child porn from “unallocated space” on hard drives, indicating that the files had been deleted, according to police.

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Plainville minister in court for child porn

CONNECTICUT
WTNH

Published : Thursday, 09 May 2013

Jamie Muro

BRISTOL, Conn. (WTNH)– A youth minister from Plainville faced child porn charges in Bristol, Thursday night.

The arrest warrant for Jonathan Spann details a man initially in denial about his alleged activities, then later admitting to investigators that he’s been downloading child pornography for almost seven years.

In February of 2012, Bristol Police received a call from a special agent from the Department of Homeland Security. A lead was developed from a website called “Liberal Morality” that was a child pornography website.

An IP address would, eventually, lead them to the home of a married Bristol couple, Jonathan Spann and his wife Christina Dube.

The arrest warrant states that in his first interview with police, Spann only admitted to accessing adult pornography. But when police first accessed his hard drives, they discovered many images of child pornography in “free space.”

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Catholic archbishop defends letting confessed pedophile priest near kids (Contribution)

NEW JERSEY
Clerical Whispers

The Catholic archbishop of Newark, John Myers, on finding out that a confessed pedophile priest in his diocese was still palling around with kids, first denied the charge, then defended the fraternization.

And we wonder why children continue to be raped by Catholic leaders.

Because Catholic archbishops don’t care about the rape of children nearly as much as they care about bashing loving gay adults in immigration reform, or bashing women.

Rev. Michael Fugee confessed to fondling the genitals of a 13 (or 14, depending on the account) year old boy.

He was convicted of criminal sexual contact, but an appeals court through out the verdict based on the jury incorrectly hearing a part of the priest’s confession – but the overall confession remains in tact. He did it.

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STATEMENT OF THE PATERSON DIOCESE SEEKING INFORMATION ON FATHER MICHAEL FUGEE

NEW JERSEY
Roman Catholic Diocese of Paterson

Without any foreknowledge or approval of the Paterson Diocese, Fr. Michael Fugee, a priest of the Newark Archdiocese, engaged in ministry with youth in the Diocese of Paterson. This happened, as far as we now know, on one occasion several years ago at a retreat house in the diocese while with a group from a parish of the Trenton Diocese. He was under a restriction not to do so without proper supervision from the Archdiocese of Newark and legal authorities. The first awareness that diocesan leadership had concerning these activities of Fathr Fugee wthin the diocese came from the most recent media accounts.

If anyone has any information about inappropriate behavior on the part of Father Fugee, please notify your County Prosecutor’s Office. Please also inform the diocese by contacting Monsignor James T. Mahoney, Vicar General and Moderator of the Curia (973-777-8818, ext. 205) or Sister Mary Edward Spohrer, S.C.C., Chancellor (973-777-8818, ext. 248).

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Paterson Diocese asks for reports on embattled priest’s behavior

NEW JERSEY
The Record

FRIDAY MAY 10, 2013
BY JEFF GREEN
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

At a time when the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Newark is the focus of intense scrutiny over its handling of a priest accused of molesting a child, the diocese representing parishes in Passaic and Morris counties is asking for information about “inappropriate behavior” by the cleric, who was barred for life from working around children.

The Diocese of Paterson, in an unusual move, prominently posted on its website a message asking members of the public to report any information about the priest’s attendance at youth retreats — in apparent defiance of a legal ban on such action — within its three-county territory.

Bergen County prosecutors are investigating the Rev. Michael Fugee, who allegedly molested a Wyckoff teenager more than a decade ago, for possibly violating an agreement he signed with the archdiocese promising never to minister to children.

But it recently was revealed that Fugee joined several youth group excursions, including one to a retreat house at Lake Hopatcong in Morris County, within the Paterson Diocese. The diocese said in a statement, placed at the top of its website, that officials only know of that one event, which was in 2010, but they are encouraging anyone with information about “inappropriate behavior” on Fugee’s part to inform diocesan staff.

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Reported Cases of Catholic Priest Abuse Lowest in 8 years, Audit Shows

UNITED STATES
Christian Post

By Michael Gryboski , Christian Post Reporter
May 10, 2013

Reported cases of priest abuse from last year have been the lowest since 2004, according to an annual compliance audit of Roman Catholic Church dioceses in the United States.

In 2012, there were six credible cases of abuse found of 34 claims, with 15 of those allegations still under investigation, reported the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate (CARA).
The audit itself was performed by StoneBridge Business Partners, a multinational organization founded in 1994, on behalf of CARA.

The audit further found that nearly all of the dioceses who took part in the audit were found in compliance.

Sister Mary Ann Walsh of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops told The Christian Post that the findings “offer hope and inspire confidence in the church’s programs of Safe Environment.”

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DATA PROVE NO SEX ABUSE CRISIS

UNITED STATES
Catholic League

Bill Donohue comments on the 2012 Annual Report by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops on the subject of sexual abuse:

The survey, done by an institute at Georgetown University, shows how utterly absurd it is to maintain that the Catholic Church continues to have a problem with priestly sexual abuse. Of the nearly 40,000 priests in the U.S., there were 34 allegations made by minors last year (32 priests, two deacons): six were deemed credible by law enforcement; 12 were either unfounded or unable to be proven; one was a “boundary violation”; and 15 are still being probed. Moreover, in every case brought to the attention of the bishops or heads of religious orders, the civil authorities were notified.

Not counting those of unknown status, in 88 percent of the total number of cases (independent of when they allegedly occurred), the accused priest is either deceased, has been dismissed from ministry, or has been laicized.

Most of the allegations reported to church officials today have nothing to do with current cases: two-thirds date back to the 1960s, 1970s and the first half of the 1980s. As usual, the problem is not pedophilia: 19 percent of the allegations involving those who work in dioceses or eparchies, and 7 percent of religious order priests and deacons, involve pedophilia. In other words, the problem remains what it has always been—an issue involving homosexual priests (85 percent of the victims were male).

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AN IMPORTANT MESSAGE FROM THE DIOCESE OF TRENTON

NEW JERSEY
Roman Catholic Diocese of Trenton

We have recently confirmed that a serious breach of compliance with our child protection policies has taken place in one of our parishes. As a result, Father Michael Fugee, a priest of the Archdiocese of Newark, who would not have been given clearance to minister in this diocese if procedures had been followed, was present among some of our youth during several parish events.

It is important to remind everyone throughout Burlington, Mercer, Monmouth and Ocean Counties of the Diocese’s policies and processes that have been in place to keep children and youth safe in our parishes, schools and other agencies. To review these policies, visit http://www.dioceseoftrenton.org/protection

We again urge anyone who has been sexually abused as a minor by a member of the clergy or another representative of the Catholic Church, or anyone who knows of someone who was, to report that abuse through the diocesan Abuse Hotline.

To report sexual abuse of minors call our hotline 1-888-296-2965
or contact us at abuseline@dioceseoftrenton.org

Please note: All allegations are reported by the Diocese to the appropriate law enforcement agencies.

For more information about Father Michael Fugee’s ministry
in St. Mary Parish, Colts Neck, click HERE.

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Another diocese issues statement about former Wyckoff priest

NEW JERSEY`
The Record

FRIDAY MAY 10, 2013
BY JEFF GREEN
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Trenton posted a forceful message on its website this morning about a priest who attended youth ministry events in its parishes without permission, following the example of the Paterson Diocese, which took similar action earlier this week.

The message, which fills most of the Trenton diocese website – www.dioceseoftrenton.org — discusses the Rev. Michael Fugee’s “serious breach of compliance with our child protection policies” by his involvement with a Colts Neck parish youth group. The statement encourages victims of sexual abuse by clergy, or people who know victims within the diocese’s four-county territory, to report any allegations to the abuse hotline.

Fugee, who allegedly molested a Wyckoff boy more than a decade ago, recently was revealed to have attended numerous youth retreats in apparent violation of an agreement he signed with prosecutors not to minister to children. Bergen County prosecutors immediately opened an investigation when alerted about the activities in late April.

On Wednesday, the Diocese of Paterson posted a statement on its website calling on anyone with information about “inappropriate behavior” on Fugee’s part to inform diocesan staff. A spokesman for Bishop Arthur J. Serratelli said the diocese also sent the message to all 110 parishes in Passaic, Morris and Sussex counties and plans to publish it in the next edition of The Beacon, the diocesan newspaper. So far, officials have not heard any complaints.

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Second retired Honolulu priest sued for abuse: Bishop does … NOTHING

HAWAII
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on May 10, 2013

From yesterday’s Honolulu Star Advertiser:

Catholic Church, priest named in lawsuit alleging molestation

A New Jersey man filed a lawsuit Wednesday alleging that he was sexually molested when he attended St. Anthony’s parish and school in Kailua from 1978 to 1981 when he was about 10 to 13 years old.

The suit filed by the man under the fictitious name of John Roe No. 11 is against the Roman Catholic Church in Hawaii and the Rev. Anthony Bolger, one of the priests at the school during that period.

The lawsuit also alleges that the man was sexually molested by the late Rev. Joseph Ferrario, a priest at St. Anthony’s at the time who later was installed as bishop of Honolulu.

Patrick Downes, spokesman for the Roman Catholic Church here, said the Diocese of Honolulu has no comment at this time. Bolger could not be reached for comment.

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CA- LA archbishop reneges on Mahony ‘discipline’

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

POSTED BY JOELLE CASTEIX ON MAY 10, 2013

LA’s archbishop claimed disgraced predecessor wouldn’t engage in “public ministry.” Now, he’s apparently – and quietly – reversed himself, further betraying thousands of abuse victims and hundreds of thousands of parishioners.

Today’s LA Times reports that Archbishop José Horacio Gomez is violating his pledge to forbid Cardinal Roger Mahony from performing confirmations. And Gomez is giving no explanations.

In the midst of a scandal, under the glare of klieg lights and the outrage of parishioners, bishops will promise anything and everything to everybody. Later, when public attention wanes, they’ll go straight – but quietly – back to “business as usual.” This is the sad, simple truth that most of us foolishly and repeatedly ignore and that enables bishops to keep right on endangering the flock, concealing the truth, and recycling the molesters.

This is the “same old, same old.” Bishops say they’ll oust credibly accused clerics at the first allegation, and they don’t. They say they’ll be “transparent” about clergy sex abuse cases, and they aren’t. They say they’ll monitor predator priests, and they don’t. They’ll pledge to treat victims with compassion, then they don’t.

Why can bishops get by with this? Because they’re monarchs. Because their flocks tolerate it. Because the public has a short attention span. Because we want to believe the best about others. Because we let ourselves be convinced that deliberate cover ups are actually just “mistakes” and that bishops are “learning” and “reforming” when they’re not.

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Society of Jesus Names New President of Jesuit Conference

UNITED STATES
Jesuit.org

Fr. Timothy P. Kesicki, S.J., to Head U.S. Office for Society of Jesus, Largest Order of Priests and Brothers in Roman Catholic Church

(WASHINGTON, D.C., May 10, 2013)—The Society of Jesus in the United States announces that Father Timothy P. Kesicki, S.J., has been named the next president of the Jesuit Conference. Fr. Kesicki, who was appointed by Father Adolfo Nicolás, S.J., Superior General of the Society of Jesus, will assume his new position August 1, 2014. Headquartered in Washington, D.C., the Jesuit Conference is the liaison office that coordinates the national work of the Society of Jesus, the largest order of priests and brothers in the Roman Catholic Church.

Fr. Kesicki, currently serving as the provincial of the Chicago-Detroit Province of the Society of Jesus, says, “This assignment comes at a very exciting time for the Church and the Society of Jesus here in the U.S. and around the world. Clearly, the election of Pope Francis, the first Jesuit pope in history, has highlighted the Jesuit vocation. Going back to St. Ignatius himself, we Jesuits have always put ourselves in service of the Church to minister where the needs are the greatest. I look forward to helping the Society continue its mission with a renewed zeal, strategic use of our resources, and commitment to serving in Christ’s name here and around the world.”

Fr. Kesicki first met the Jesuits when he was an undergraduate at John Carroll University in Ohio, where he studied political science. During his Jesuit formation he studied at Loyola University Chicago and the Jesuit School of Theology of Santa Clara University in Berkeley, Ca. After being ordained in 1994, his first mission was with Jesuit Refugee Service in Adjumani, Uganda.

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IL- SNAP blasts newly-promoted Jesuit priest

ILLINOIS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

POSTED BY BARBARA DORRIS ON MAY 10, 2013

A Chicago Jesuit, Fr. Timothy P. Kesicki, has been tapped to head the Jesuit Conference. That’s a mistake. http://www.jesuit.org/blog/

In recent years in clergy sex abuse and cover up cases, Kesicki has done, at best, an inadequate job. At worst, he has done a reckless, callous, and deceitful job.

We’re saddened to see yet another complicit Catholic cleric being promoted. Once again, a clear signal is sent to Catholic employees: “Your clerical career will never suffer no matter how egregiously you ignore, conceal and enable child sex crimes.”

Recent troubling Jesuit cases in which Kesicki has been involved include:

[Chicago Tribune]

–the 2011 revelations of abuse reports against Fr. Robert A. Wild, Marquette University President and former head (for six years) of the Chicago Jesuit Province

–the 2010 ouster of admitted abuser Fr. Larry Reuter, an ex-president of Loyola Academy

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Mahony unbound.

LOS ANGELES (CA)
dotCommonweal

May 10, 2013
Posted by Grant Gallicho

Remember how in January, after nearly a decade of legal filibustering, the Archdiocese of Los Angeles finally made public the priest-personnel files it agreed to release as part of a 2007 settlement with abuse victims, except the files were heavily redacted, and remember how those files contained damning memos detailing the lengths to which archdiocesan officials — including Cardinal Roger Mahony — went to shield abuser-priests from civil authorities, and how soon after those memos made news, Archbishop Jose Gomez garnered praise for announcing that Mahony would “no longer have any administrative or public duties,” and how several media outlets reported that Mahony had been “barred from public ministry,” except he really hadn’t, and then he took to his blog to dress down Gomez for “not once over these past years…[raising] any questions about our policies, practices, or procedures in dealing with the problem of clergy sexual misconduct involving minors,” yet, as Mahony’s then-spokesman explained, he had “cleared his calendar of confirmation appointments this year”? Well, he’s doing them again.

The Los Angeles Times reports:

Since Easter, he has officiated at eight services, including one last week in which he anointed more than 120 youths at a Wilmington parish.

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The long road toward removing priest …

ST. LOUIS (MO)
St. Louis Post-Dispatch

By Tim Townsend ttownsend@post-dispatch.com 314-340-82210

The St. Louis Archdiocese doesn’t exactly alert the press when it has what Archbishop Robert Carlson called sad news about clergy sexual abuse.

On May 1, the archdiocese quietly posted a statement from Carlson on its website saying he had permanently removed the Rev. Leroy Valentine, 71, from ministry. An internal, lay investigatory board had determined that “incidents” taking place “in the 1970s” which had been “only recently brought to our attention” were credible, Carlson said.

The archdiocese also published an article in its weekly newspaper, the St. Louis Review, about Valentine’s removal saying the “allegation of abuse occurred in the 1970s.”

A closer look at Valentine’s story reflects a 30-year journey that neatly embodies the Roman Catholic church’s struggle to deal with its sexual abuse troubles over that time.

It’s a sad story – Carlson is right – about a priest who has been repeatedly accused of abuse, and yet neither the law nor the church can prove it. So the archdiocese, despite proclaiming again and again through the years that no allegation against Valentine has been found credible, says he’s “been monitored and supervised continuously since 1999.” He is not guilty. He is not innocent.

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Annual Compliance Audit Shows Decline In Abuse Allegations, Victims, Offenders

UNITED STATES
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops

May 9, 2013

Safe environment programs reach 99 percent of targeted audience
Diocese of Lincoln, five Eastern Rite eparchies still non-compliant
Auditors recommend expansion of audits into parishes

WASHINGTON—The annual audit of diocesan compliance with the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People found a drop in the number of allegations, number of victims and number of offenders reported in 2012.

The Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate (CARA), which gathered data for the report, found “the fewest allegations and victims reported since the data collection for the annual reports began in 2004.”

Most allegations reported last year were from the seventies and eighties with many of the alleged offenders already deceased or removed from ministry in the priesthood.

StoneBridge Business Partners, which conducts the audits, said law enforcement found six credible cases among 34 allegations of abuse of minors in 2012 itself. Credibility of 15 of the allegations was still under investigation. Law enforcement found 12 allegations to be unfounded or unable to be proven, and one a boundary violation.

Almost all dioceses were found compliant with the audit. Three were found non-compliant with one article of the Charter. The Diocese of Lake Charles, Louisiana, was faulted because its review board had not met in several years. (The diocese had no allegations during that time). The Diocese of Tulsa, Oklahoma, was faulted because auditors could not determine if parishes provided safe environment training to religious education students and volunteer teachers. The Diocese of Baker, Oregon, was faulted because students did not receive safe environment training while a new program was being developed. The diocese has since begun training.

The report can be found at http://www.usccb.org/issues-and-action/child-and-youth-protection/upload/annual-report-on-the-implementation-of-the-charter-for-the-protection-of-children-and-young-people-2012.pdf

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ANGLICAN FORMER ARCHBISHOP DENIES ABUSE COVER-UP

UNITED KINGDOM/AUSTRALIA
7 News

AFP
May 10, 2013

LONDON (AFP) – A former Church of England archbishop has denied claims that he covered up allegations of child abuse against a senior clergyman, which were revealed in Friday’s Times newspaper.

David Hope, who served as Archbishop of York between 1995 and 2005, said he “strongly resisted” accusations that he withheld from police claims made by choirboys and school pupils against Robert Waddington, a former Dean of Manchester Cathedral, in order to protect the church.

According to the joint report carried out by the London Times and The Australian newspaper, Hope was told of the claims in 1999 and again in 2003.

Waddington, who died in 2007, was stripped of his right to conduct church services but the claims were not passed on to police or child protection agencies, the Times reported.

“I didn’t report to the police,” Hope told the Times. “With hindsight, probably there ought to have been (a report). He (Waddington) was in such a fragile and frail state.

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Priest resigns from clergy treatment center amid allegations

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Catholic Tide

This entry was posted by Colin Real on May 9, 2013

Baltimore, Md., May 9, 2013 / 12:01 am (CNA).- Amid allegations of financial indiscretion and an “inappropriate adult relationship,” Monsignor Edward J. Arsenault has resigned as head of a Maryland treatment center for Catholic priests and religious.

“This is very difficult news, and we are keeping this situation in prayer,” Sheila Harron, Ph.D., chief operation officer and interim CEO of the St. Luke Institute, said May 6.

“We are committed to continuing to move forward, to providing high quality care for priests and religious, and to supporting a culture of healthy ministry in the Church.”

The New Hampshire attorney general is investigating Msgr. Arsenault after the Diocese of Manchester discovered evidence of improper transactions of diocese funds. The diocese reported the discovery to authorities out of concern illegal acts may have been committed. The diocese discovered the evidence while reviewing a claim that he had an inappropriate relationship with an adult.

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Fr Conleth Byrne gets suspended sentence for £145,000 fraud

NORTHERN IRELAND
BBC News

A Catholic priest who admitted giving £145,000 of church money to a woman has been given a two-year sentence suspended for three years.

Fr Conleth Byrne, 78, took the money from church funds in the parish of Loughinisland, County Down.

The money was taken over a 19-month period between 2008 and 2009.

The priest, who is now retired, pleaded guilty last month to fraud by abuse of position just before his trial was due to begin.

About £45,000 has been repaid and a judge has ordered Fr Byrne to repay the outstanding £100,000.

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Police probed clergy cover-ups

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

DAN BOX From: The Australian May 11, 2013

THE Archbishop of Adelaide, Philip Wilson, is one of several senior Catholic clerics investigated by NSW police for allegedly concealing the pedophile crimes of a priest, according to documents tendered to a state inquiry.

Internal police documents, tendered to the NSW special commission of inquiry into child abuse, said Strike Force Lantle was formed in 2010 to investigate allegations that clergy concealed the crimes of serial pedophile priest Denis McAlinden.

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Any plans to exile O’Brien will be challenged, says ally

SCOTLAND
The Tablet

10 May 2013

A lifelong friend of Cardinal Keith O’Brien says that he will challenge any attempt to force the prelate out of Scotland.

Fr John Creanor, parish priest of Our Lady of the Waves, Dunbar, the parish where Cardinal O’Brien is currently living, was responding to rumours that the church hierarchy intended to block the cardinal’s plan to retire to a church-owned house in the East Lothian town.

He told The Tablet: “I’m prepared, if the rumour is more than just a rumour, to instruct my legal team to challenge the Vatican directly. I’m 72 years old. I have nothing to lose. But I do not accept that the Vatican has the power to exile a retired priest, effectively banish him from the country, or deny him access to a house of which I am the landowner.”

He said a petition in the parish had been started urging the cardinal to stay. The cardinal’s resignation of Archbishop of St Andrews and Edinburgh was accepted in February following allegations of sexual impropriety.

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Does Cardinal O’Brien deserve banishment or pardon? He at least owes us an explanation

SCOTLAND
The Tablet (UK)

Elena Curti, Deputy Editor
10 May 2013

The return of Cardinal Keith Patrick O’Brien to Scotland has for many Catholics rubbed salt into the wound, two months after his admission of sexual misdemeanours and abrupt departure from office weeks before reaching the official retirement age of 75.

According to this narrative, the cardinal heaped scandal on the Scottish Church and the best thing he could do now is to disappear without trace. After all the hurt and embarrassment he has caused, it is easy to understand why some might resent the cardinal continuing with his plans to retire quietly to a church-owned house in the East Lothian seaside town of Dunbar.

It has been reported that the Vatican itself has told the cardinal to leave Scotland and that ‘church leaders’ want him to stay out of public life. However, Bishop Stephen Robson, an auxiliary of St Andrews and Edinburgh, has told The Tablet that the Church has a duty of care to Cardinal O’Brien and that he will be treated in the same way as all other retired priests.

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