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 26, 2013

Cardinal George Pell to appear before child sex abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

[with video]

AAP MAY 26, 2013

THE world will be watching when Australia’s most senior Catholic faces Victoria’s child sex abuse inquiry tomorrow, a victim’s advocate says.

Co-founder of the Care Leavers Australia Network (CLAN) Leonie Sheedy says she wants to see Cardinal George Pell face up to crimes committed against children by members of the Catholic church.

CLAN will protest outside parliament before Cardinal Pell appears as the final witness at the inquiry, she says. The protest will include a poster depicting him with pedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale labelled “mates”.

It’s pressure like this that victims’ father Anthony Foster hopes will open cracks in Cardinal Pell’s armour.

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.

‘Mortal Sins: Sex, Crime and the Era of Catholic Scandal’: Read it and weep

UNITED STATES
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

“MORTAL SINS: SEX, CRIME AND THE ERA OF CATHOLIC SCANDAL”
By Michael D’Antonio
St. Martin’s Press ($26.99).

By Nicholas P. Cafardi

Every time I think that the American Catholic bishops have the clergy child sexual abuse crisis behind them and that they are committed to the changes they made in Dallas in 2002, when they adopted a Charter and Norms assuring no priest with a credible allegation of child sexual abuse would remain in active ministry, reality sets in.

Just this past month it came to light that John Myers, the archbishop of Newark, maintained in active ministry a priest who had confessed to two instances of sexual misconduct with a young boy. Lest we forget, the bishop of Kansas City, Mo., Robert Finn, is himself a convicted criminal, having pleaded guilty last year to the charge of failure to report suspected child abuse by one of his priests. Yet he continues to serve as a diocesan bishop in our church.
.
Reading Michael D’Antonio’s “Mortal Sins: Sex, Crime and the Era of Catholic Scandal” in this context is a chilling experience. Mr. D’Antonio’s book is a reasonably complete history of clergy child sexual abuse in the Catholic Church in the United States, starting from 1984, when the first case of a serial child molester priest, Gilbert Gauthe of the diocese of Lafayette, La., came to light. There are some side trips into the clergy child sexual abuse crisis in Ireland, which in many ways, parallels the American crisis, but Mr. D’Antonio’s story is primarily about American monsters.

Mr. D’Antonio, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, tells his story mainly through courtroom battles. He writes of plaintiffs’ lawyers who sued dioceses for keeping men in ministry, priests whom the bishops knew to be active child sexual abusers, who then went on to use their Roman collars to gain the trust of yet more 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.

May 25, 2013

Newark archdiocese official resigns following priest’s arrest

NEW JERSEY
Chicago Tribune

David Jones
Reuters
3:13 p.m. CDT, May 25, 2013

NEWARK, New Jersey (Reuters) – A leading official from the Catholic archdiocese of Newark has resigned his post as vicar general following the arrest of a priest accused of violating a deal that barred him from interacting with children, the archdiocese said on Saturday.

Monsignor John E. Doran, the No. 2 official within the archdiocese, has stepped down due to “operational failures” and will no longer hold a leadership position, according to letter to parishioners by Archbishop John J. Myers.

The resignation came after Bergen County, New Jersey, prosecutors arrested Father Michael Fugee on Monday on accusations of violating a 2007 judicial order to avoid working with children after he confessed years before to groping a teenage boy, according to court documents.

“The seriousness of the situation with Father Fugee necessitated a thoughtful and effective response,” Meyers wrote in the letter posted on the archdiocese website.

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.

Media Statement from Rev. Kevin Annett…

ITALY
Voice from the Desert

SAVONA, ITALY—The following is a summary of what Kevin Annett presented before the Italian media in Savona, Italy today May 23, 2013.

“Hello. My name is Kevin Annett, and I am the acting Field Secretary of the International Tribunal into Crimes of Church and State, the ITCCS, which represents over fifty organizations of survivors of church torture in nine countries, including Italy.

It is an honor to be present here today with Francesco Zanardi and the organization Rette L’abuse, at their invitation, and to join with them in an historica compaign to stop forver the religious torture of children.

For years now, Francesco has been conducting a heroic fight here in Italy for the same things that our Tribunal is campaigning for, by exposing child torture within the Roman Catholic church and bringing those responsible to justice. I look forward to working with Francesco and many others in Italy in the months ahead.

I have been authorized by the ITCCS Central Office to issue the following public statement:

1. As a Citizens’ Tribunal of Conscience with standing under international law, we call upon Italian President Giorgio Napolitano to seek the immediate extradition from the Vatican and the arrest of former Pope Benedict, Joseph Ratzinger, on the grounds that Ratzinger is a fugitive from justice and a wanted criminal duly convicted of crimes against humanity on February 25, 2013 by an international common law court of justice.

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

New Jersey Catholic church official resigns in sex abuse case

NEW JERSEY
Christian Science Monitor

NEWARK, N.J.
The second-highest official in the Catholic Archdiocese of Newark is stepping down in the wake of a sex scandal involving a former priest accused of violating an agreement with law enforcement barring him from working with children.

Roman Catholic church officials say Monsignor John Doran resigned Friday as vicar general and will no longer hold a leadership position with the archdiocese. Doran signed the agreement the former priest had reached with prosecutors in 2007.

The move is among several changes the archdiocese says it’s implementing to protect children. The changes are noted in a letter from Archbishop John Myers, which will be read in Catholic parishes across the archdiocese this weekend.

Myers wrote that an outside review found “operational failures” in the handling of the Rev. Michael Fugee, who resigned this month. But he didn’t place the blame for lax oversight on Doran, who had been vicar general for six years.

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.

Robert Hoatson blasts Archbishop after Rev. Michael Fugee’s arrest

NEW JERSEY
The Star-Ledger

Tuesday, May 21, 2013
By John O’Boyle / The Star-Ledger

Robert Hoatson blasts Archbishop Myers after Rev. Michael Fugee’s arrest on charges of violating a court-sanctioned agreement that bars him from working with children. Hoatson, a former priest, is president of Road to Recover.

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.

Another Newark Archdiocese Official Resigns Over Pedophile Priest Case

NEW JERSEY
CBS New York

NEWARK, N.J. (CBSNewYork/AP) — The second highest official in the Archdiocese of Newark has resigned from his post, in the wake of a scandal involving a priest who had contact with minors allegedly in violation of an agreement with prosecutors.

Monsignor John Doran resigned as vicar general — a move that takes effect immediately — and he will no longer hold a leadership position with the Archdiocese.

Doran could not be reached for comment Saturday.

Newark Archbishop John Myers wrote in an op-ed piece for the Star Ledger that an outside law firm found the strong protocols presently in place were not always observed, and thus, Doran – the man tasked with monitoring the Rev. Michael Fugee – had to resign.

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 Monsignor Loses Job for Improperly Monitoring Priest Near Children

NEW JERSEY
The New York Times

By MARC SANTORA
Published: May 25, 2013

[Archbishop Myers letter to parishioners]

One of the top officials in the Archdiocese of Newark has been forced out for failing to properly monitor the activities of a priest who had been forbidden from having contact with children, the archdiocese announced on Saturday.

The dismissal of Msgr. John E. Doran, who reported to Archbishop John J. Myers, is the latest fallout from a sexual abuse scandal that stretches back more than a decade.

In 2003, the Rev. Michael Fugee was convicted on charges that he groped a young boy. Although the verdict was later overturned over a judicial error, Father Fugee confessed to the authorities that he improperly touched the boy and agreed to undergo counseling. As part of an agreement with the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office, he also pledged never to minister to young children for the rest of his life.

Monsignor Doran was responsible for supervising Father Fugee, according to court documents.

However, an investigation by The Star Ledger that was published in April found that Father Fugee had been openly working with children again, hearing their confessions, attending youth retreats and even posting photos of himself with boys on his Facebook page.

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

The remnants of the Magdalene Laundries

IRELAND
Sunday World

According to Dublin City Council the last Magdalene Laundry to close will soon become housing.

The building on Sean McDermott street in Dublin city is derelict but will be renovated and converted into housing.

The laundry was the last one in the country to close in 1996.

The malpractice that went on behind the closed doors of the Magdalene Laundries has been brought to light in recent years following a number of reports and investigations.

Thousands of women have come forward over the years and made complaints about the treatment of women in the Laundries.

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.

Second person charged in church fraud

CANADA
CBC News

Police have charged a second person with defrauding an Anglican church in Conception Bay South.

The 51-year-old woman stands accused of fraud, uttering forged documents, forgery, and possession of property obtained by crime.

CBC News reported earlier this week that the priest at St. John the Evangelist Church in Topsail is facing similar fraud charges. John Dinn, 54, has been on leave since the RNC began investigating financial irregularities in January.

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

Accused Troy Priest Edward Belczak Fights For Access To Frozen Assets

MICHIGAN
Deadline Detroit

May 25th, 2013

Suspended suburban priest Edward Belczak isn’t waiting quietly while authorities investigate Detroit Archdiocese embezzlement claims against him.

Edward Belczak was suspended in February as pastor of St. Thomas More Catholic Church in Troy.
The former pastor of St, Thomas More Catholic Church is suing Troy in an attempt to have his bank safe deposit box and Merrill Lynch brokerage account unfrozen, Dave Phillips reports in The Oakland Press.

Attorneys for Belczak, 67, filed the suit this week in Oakland County Circuit Court. . . .Belczak’s assets have been frozen since Feb. 5, when a search warrant was obtained by the Troy Police Department. . . .

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.

Suffolk DA didn’t investigate priest

MASSACHUSETTS
Cape Cod Times

May 25, 2013
Roman Catholic priest Joseph F. Byrne, who was reinstated to the status of “senior priest” Thursday because the Archdiocese of Boston found no evidence to substantiate an accusation he sexually abused a child in the 1970s, was not investigated by the Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office after the allegation was forwarded to the office when the complaint was made in May 2012.

“We reviewed the case and concluded the statute of limitations bars any prosecution of the case,” said Jake Wark, spokesman for the Suffolk DA’s office. Wark said he could not comment on “the state of the evidence.”

The office could not be reached for comment on Thursday when Byrne’s reinstatement was announced.

Byrne was pastor at St. Matthew’s in Dorchester from 1969 to 1975, which is in Suffolk County.

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, woman charged with open lewdness

PENNSYLVANIA
Daily Review

BY ROBERT L. BAKER (TIMES-SHAMROCK WRITER) Published: May 25, 2013

Charges were filed Friday afternoon against a Tunkhannock priest and female acquaintance who were allegedly involved in a lewd act May 17 in a public park in Wyalusing.

Rev. Daniel Joseph Doherty, 49, and Joanne Mirabelli, 47, both of Tunkhannock, were each charged by Laceyville police with a misdemeanor count of open lewdness, and summary counts of under the influence of an intoxicating beverage, participating in any obscene or indecent act and being in the park after it was closed.

Laceyville Chief Scott Parry said the charges were filed in the court of Magisterial District Judge Fred Wheaton.

According to police criminal complaints, Laceyville patrolmen Matthew Chamberlain and Patrick Butkiewicz said they saw a 2011 Jeep Liberty and a 2011 Subaru parked in the Wyalusing Borough Park around 10 p.m. on Friday, May 17.

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.

Open lewdness charges filed against local priest, woman

PENNSYLVANIA
Times-Tribune

BY ROBERT L. BAKER (STAFF WRITER) Published: May 25, 2013

The police’s discovery of a local priest and a Tunkhannock woman naked in the back seat of a Jeep at the Wyalusing Borough Park led to criminal charges this week.

More details emerged Friday about the incident on May 17 involving the Rev. Daniel Joseph Doherty, 49, who has been working as an assistant pastor in Tunkhannock and Lake Winola. On Thursday, the Diocese of Scranton announced that the Most Rev. Joseph C. Bambera, bishop of Scranton, removed the Rev. Doherty’s ability to exercise ministry pending the results of the investigation.

The Rev. Doherty and Joanne Mirabelli, 47, both of Tunkhannock, are each facing a misdemeanor count of open lewdness, and summary counts of being under the influence of an intoxicating beverage, participating in an obscene or indecent act and being in the park after it was closed.

Laceyville Patrolmen Matthew Chamberlain and Patrick Butkiewicz said they saw a 2011 Jeep Liberty and a 2011 Subaru parked in the Wyalusing Borough Park about 10 p.m.

They approached the vehicles to perform a welfare check, and as they drove up closer to the Jeep, Officer Chamberlain said he observed an unclothed female’s back with her hair covering her face. Officer Butkiewicz activated the spotlight on the patrol car, and according to the complaint, “a male’s head appeared from below the level of the window.”

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.

Archbishop John J. Myers addresses Fugee scandal, demotes his second-in-command

NEW JERSEY
The Star-Ledger

By Mark Mueller/The Star-Ledger
on May 24, 2013

A top official in the Archdiocese of Newark — second only to Archbishop John J. Myers — has been sacked from his leadership position for mishandling the supervision of a priest who violated a lifetime ban on ministry to children.

Myers, speaking out for the first time on the scandal that has imperiled his future in Newark, described the removal of Monsignor John E. Doran as one step in a series of reforms meant to “strengthen internal protocols” and “ensure we are doing everything we can to safeguard the children of our community.”

Myers made the announcement in an opinion piece scheduled to run in Saturday’s Star-Ledger. An abbreviated version of the letter is to be read aloud at parishes in the archdiocese Saturday and Sunday.

Doran, who served as vicar general and moderator of the curia, is among the highest-ranking Roman Catholic officials in the country to be demoted over the handling of a priest accused of sexual abuse, observers say.

“This is a very significant decision,” said the Rev. Thomas Reese, a senior analyst with the National Catholic Reporter and a former editor of America, a Catholic magazine. “Short of being a bishop, vicar general and moderator of the curia is as high as you can get.”

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.

Myers: Newark Archdiocese is doing all we can to safeguard kids

NEW JERSEY
The Star-Ledger

By Star-Ledger Guest Columnist
on May 24, 2013

By John J. Myers

When I first learned several weeks ago that Father Michael Fugee may have violated a lifetime ban on ministry to minors, I immediately ordered an outside law firm to conduct a full and thorough investigation of the matter. I told the firm I wanted to know what happened and why. I said I not only wanted to know if there was any wrongdoing, but that if there was wrongdoing and it rose to the point that authorities should be notified, I wanted them notified as well.

The investigation uncovered certain operational vulnerabilities in our own systems. We found that the strong protocols presently in place were not always observed.

The seriousness of the situation with Father Fugee required a thoughtful and effective response. Appointing a new vicar general will be just one step in a comprehensive plan to review and, where necessary, strengthen our internal protocols and ensure we are doing everything we can to safeguard the children of our community.

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

Archbishop’s letter to parishioners

NEWARK (NJ)
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Newark

May 26, 2013

My Dear Sisters and Brothers in Christ,

When I first learned several weeks ago that Father Michael Fugee may have violated a lifetime ban on ministry to minors, I immediately ordered an outside law firm to conduct a full and thorough investigation ofthe matter and to cooperate with the Bergen County Prosecutor in all areas. I told the firm that I wanted to know what happened and why.

The investigation found that the strong protocols we presently have in place were not always observed.

The seriousness of the situation with Father Fugee necessitated a thoughtful and effective response. Appointing a new Vicar General will be just one step in a comprehensive plan to review, and, where necessary, strengthen our internal protocols and ensure we are doing everything we can to safeguard the children of our community.

So, effective immediately, the Vicar General, Monsignor John E. Doran, has resigned his post and will no longer hold a leadership position with the Archdiocese. As a result of operational failures, both Monsignor Doran and I felt that the Archdiocese would be best served by his stepping down as Vicar General. This action clears the way for making more effective changes in our monitoring function. I am transferring that function to the Office of the Judicial Vicar of the Archdiocese.

We want our procedures to be among the strictest in the Catholic Church. This has been one of my priorities since becoming your Archbishop in 2001 and that will not change. In fact, the Archdiocese has an exemplary record of addressing allegations against our clergy. We, along with all dioceses in the state ofNew Jersey, report all allegations of misconduct to the appropriate prosecutors’ office. I have personally removed 19 priests for substantiated allegations. I want to assure you that our strict
oversight of, and adherence to, The Dallas Charter will continue.

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.

Doing All We Can To Safeguard Children

NEWARK (NJ)
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Newark

Op‐Ed, Newark Star Ledger 5‐26‐13

By The Most Reverend John J. Myers
Archbishop of Newark

When I first learned several weeks ago that Fr. Michael Fugee may have violated a lifetime ban on ministry to minors, I immediately ordered an outside law firm to conduct a full and thorough investigation of the matter. I told the firm I wanted to know what happened and why. I said I not only wanted to know if there was any wrongdoing, but that if there was wrongdoing and it rose to the point that authorities should be notified, I wanted them notified as well.

The investigation uncovered certain operational vulnerabilities in our own systems.

We found that the strong protocols presently in place were not always observed. The seriousness of the situation with Fr. Fugee required a thoughtful and effective response. Appointing a new Vicar General will be just one step in a comprehensive plan to review, and where necessary, strengthen our internal protocols and ensure we are doing everything we can to safeguard the children of our community.

So, effective immediately, the Vicar General, Msgr. John E. Doran, has resigned his post and will no longer hold a leadership position with the Archdiocese. As a result of operational failures, both Msgr. Doran and I felt that the Archdiocese would be best served by his stepping down as Vicar General. This action clears the way for making more effective changes in our monitoring function. I am transferring that function to the Office of the Judicial Vicar of the Archdiocese.

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.

Archdiocese Official Resigns in Wake of Fugee Scandal

NEW JERSEY
Patch

By Devin McGinley May 24, 2013

An official overseeing former Wyckoff pastor Michael Fugee will step down following allegations that the priest broke an agreement not to work with children after being accused of sexual misconduct, northjersey.com reported.

Archbishop John Meyers told parishioners in a letter Friday that John E. Doran will step down as vicar general of the archdiocese, as part of a broader effort to protect children.

“Both Monsignor Doran and I felt that the archdiocese would be best served by his stepping down,” wrote Meyers, according to the Record.

Doran had signed on to an agreement between Fugee and prosecutors in 2007 that the accused pastor would cease work with children, after a conviction on charges of sexual misconduct for allegedly groping a Wyckoff teenager was overtuned due to judicial error.

Controversy flared up following reports earlier this month that Fugee had continued to hear confessions from minors and accompany youth retreats, and prominent politicians have called for resignations at the archdiocese.

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.

Top Archdiocese official steps down after ex-Colts Neck priest arrest

NEW JERSEY
Asbury Park Press

Written by
| By Stephanie Loder
@Loder1

The Archdiocese of Newark has removed a top official from its organization amid a scandal involving an ex-Colts Neck priest banned from ministering to children, according to a statement released by church officials.

The top official, Vicar General, Monsignor John E. Doran — second in command in the Archdiocese — has resigned his post at the request of Archbishop John J. Myers and will no longer hold a leadership position, according to the statement on the Archdiocese website.

The announcement about Doran follows the arrest Monday of the Rev. Michael Fugee, who until weeks ago was a priest serving parishioners and young adults at St. Mary’s in Colts Neck. Fugee is charged with contempt of a judicial order.

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.

Poll: Should Newark Archbishop Myers resign in the wake of the Fugee scandal?

NEW JERSEY
The Jersey Journal

By Ron Zeitlinger/The Jersey Journal
on May 25, 2013

The archbishop of the Archdiocese of Newark has resisted calls for his resignation.

Instead, at churches across Hudson, Bergen and Essex counties this weekend, priests will read a letter from John J. Myers announcing the someone else in the archdiocese, Vicar General John Doran, is taking the blame — and taking it alone.

Fugee was charged last week with violating a lifetime ban on ministry to children by working with a Monmouth County youth group.

A jury convicted him in 2003 of aggravated criminal sexual contact, but three years later the verdict was overturned in appellate court. In that decision, the panel said that the trial judge should not have allowed jurors to hear the part of Fugee’s confession in which he questioned his sexual identity.

Fugee, 52, signed the agreement in July 2007 to avoid retrial on the groping charges. The archdiocese also signed onto the agreement, pledging to supervise the priest. Doran’s signature is on the document.

With the news of Doran’s demotion from a leadership position online, there is a new outcry for Myers to step forward and resign as well, with his critics saying that ultimately, this is his mess.

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.

More Reaction to Mt. Cashel Settlement

CANADA
VOCM

Friday , May 24 2013

St. Johns’ lawyer Bob Buckingham says he doesn’t expect the compensation owed to the victims of the Mount Cashel sex abuse scandal to be distributed until some time next year. Buckingham was weighing in on a mediation settlement reached this week for survivors of abuse at the hands of the Irish Christian Brothers. Buckingham says the claims should have been settled years ago, and the process should not have taken so long to settle. He says the resistance of the Christian Brothers, the Roman Catholic Church, and responsible governments to settle the matter delayed the process to get survivors of abuse the justice and compensation they were due.

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.

Mount Cashel abuse settlement sets stage for more suits

CANADA
CBC

[with Mount Cashel timeline]

Lawyers for scores of victims of abuse at the notorious Mount Cashel Orphanage in St. John’s say Thursday’s settlement with the Christian Brothers of Ireland does not end their clients’ legal battles, but at least marks a major milestone in a years-long campaign for justice.

The Christian Brothers of Ireland settled with 422 people across North America who claimed abuse at the hands of the lay Roman Catholic order, including 160 from Newfoundland and Labrador.

The vast majority of those 160 men had been residents at Mount Cashel, a prominent institution that ran for more than a century in the east end of St. John’s before a sexual abuse scandal erupted in 1989, triggering a harrowing public inquiry and a series of criminal convictions.

The settlement is worth more than $16.5 million, which will be put into a trust.

“This is not nearly enough money to fully satisfy 400 claims,” said Geoff Budden, who represented about 90 clients, most of whom were residents of Mount Cashel.

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.

Religious orders differ from dioceses on abuse procedures — and pay the price

By Manya A. Brachear, Chicago Tribune reporter
2:27 a.m. CDT, May 25, 2013
UNITED STATES
Chicago Tribune

Even after settling a multimillion-dollar lawsuit last week that accused nearly a dozen men of abuse at Brother Rice, St. Laurence and Leo high schools, the Irish Christian Brothers wouldn’t say whether allegations of sexual misconduct against those clergy were substantiated.

And although the leader of Chicago’s Jesuits apologized last week for his order’s failure to stop Donald McGuire, a priest they knew was abusing children for 40 years, the order doesn’t publish a list of other members with allegations of abuse against them.

The Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People, passed by the nation’s Roman Catholic bishops in 2002, doesn’t require that level of transparency. Those dioceses that do publicize names of credibly accused clergy aren’t bound to do so, experts say.

But religious orders like the Irish Christian Brothers and Jesuits have been far less forthcoming than many dioceses.

Yet, as lawsuits and cases continue to surface 11 years after bishops adopted that charter, some orders are starting to weigh the pros and cons of naming those they have established as sexual offenders. Among the lessons learned from last week’s settlements totaling $36 million was the danger of keeping secrets.

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.

Tommy Campion and Phillip Aspinall – the road to redemption

AUSTRALIA
Perth Now

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH MAY 24, 2013

IN AN INCREDIBLE SPECIAL REPORT, ABUSE SURVIVOR TOMMY CAMPION REVEALS HIS STRUGGLE FOR ACKNOWLEDGEMENT FOR THE ANGLICAN CHURCH, WHILE THE CHURCH’S HEAD PHILLIP ASPINALL REVEALS HIS EFFORTS TO REPAIR THE DAMAGE HIS CHURCH HAS CAUSED.

By Tommy Campion

DEAR members of the royal commission,

I would think seriously about donating a kidney if I am given the opportunity to stand before the Royal Commission into Child Sexual Abuse. And after eight years of battling the Anglican Church for answers, something exciting has happened concerning the sexual and physical abuse of more than 200 children.

Yes, to hell with the kidney, it means nothing compared to the horrific and violent abuse children suffered at the hands of Anglican clergy and staff over the five decades the Church of England North Coast Children’s Home was functioning.

I was raised in that Anglican home for 14 years, 10 of which were brutal. I was sexually violated and physically abused. To this day I bear the scars on my back from a flogging.

The scars in my mind are deeper.

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.

Lawyers to Pursue Further Sex Abuse Compensation

CANADA
VOCM

St. John’s lawyer Bob Buckingham says they will continue to pursue compensation for victims of the Mount Cashel Orphanage sex abuse scandal through the provincial government and the Roman Catholic Church. A mediation settlement was reached this week for some 400 survivors of sexual abuse at the hands of the Irish Christian Brothers in North America. The settlement affects some 160 men in this province. Buckingham says while it’s too late for victims to make a claim against the Irish Christian Brothers, claims can still be pursued against the provincial government and the Roman Catholic Church itself for failing to act on complaints of abuse.

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

ROC pastor facing sexual abuse charges held in Texas jail

TEXAS
WTVR

[with video]

May 25, 2013, by Nick Dutton

TARRANT COUNTY, Texas (WTVR) — A Richmond pastor accused of sexually abusing two girls is being held in a Texas jail cell.

Geronimo Aguilar’s latest mugshot was taken Friday night in Tarrant County.

Aguilar, also known as Pastor G, boarded a flight at RIC Friday morning to face charges in Fort Worth with a Texas extradition team at his side.

The 43-year-old had been jailed for three days in Richmond after waiving extradition earlier this week.
He will now face a judge in Texas where bond has already been set at $200,000.

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

Newark vicar general quits in wake of mismanaged abuse case

NEW JERSEY
National Catholic Reporter

Brian Roewe Dennis Coday | May. 24, 2013

The vicar general of the Newark, N.J., archdiocese is resigning effective immediately “as a result of operational failures” stemming from the case of a Newark priest who was ministering to youth in violation of a court agreement banning him from such ministry, a letter signed by the Newark archbishop says.

The letter obtained by NCR Friday evening is signed by Archbishop John J. Myers of Newark. It says that when Myers “learned several weeks ago that Father Michael Fugee may have violated a lifetime ban on ministry to minors, I [Myers] immediately ordered an outside law firm to conduct a full and thorough investigation of the matter and to cooperate with the Bergen County Prosecutor in all areas.”

“The investigation found that the strong protocols we presently have in place [to handle accusations of sexual abuse of minors by clergy] were not always observed,” the letter reads.

Fugee was arrested May 20 for violating a court agreement not to minister to children. In July 2007, Fugee, his lawyer, the Bergen County prosecutor and the Newark vicar general, Msgr. John Doran, signed a memorandum of understanding that restricted the priest from “any unsupervised contact with or to supervise or minister to any child/minor under the age of 18 or work in any position in which children are involved.”

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High-ranking Newark Archdiocese official resigns amid priest sex abuse scandal

NEW JERSEY
The Record

BY ABBOTT KOLOFF
STAFF WRITER

The second-highest official in the Newark Archdiocese has resigned in the wake of a scandal involving a former Wyckoff associate pastor who allegedly violated an agreement with law enforcement barring him from working with children, church officials confirmed Friday.

Monsignor John E. Doran will step down immediately as vicar general of the archdiocese as part of larger changes being implemented to protect children, Archbishop John J. Myers said in a letter that will be read in parishes across the archdiocese this weekend. In the letter, which church officials provided to The Record on Friday, Myers wrote that the move was being made “as a result of operational failures.”

Doran, who has been vicar general for six years, signed an agreement in 2007 with the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office that barred the Rev. Michael Fugee, a former associate pastor at the Church of St. Elizabeth of Hungary in Wyckoff who had initially been found guilty of groping an adolescent boy, from working with children for as long as he remained a priest.

Myers has faced heavy criticism over his handling of the case, with victims’ advocates and some politicians calling for him to resign. On Friday, a national victims’ advocacy group characterized Doran’s resignation as a face-saving move by Myers.

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Former Bergen Catholic students who claim sex abuse file for shares of settlement

NEW JERSEY
The Record

SATURDAY MAY 25, 2013
BY STEPHANIE AKIN AND ABBOTT KOLOFF
STAFF WRITERS
THE RECORD

At least 13 people who say they were sexually abused while attending Bergen Catholic High School years ago have filed claims in federal court to be part of a $16.5 million settlement agreement reached with the order that runs the school, an attorney said Friday.

The Christian Brothers of Ireland, an order that runs schools across North America, including Bergen Catholic, agreed to the settlement as part of a Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization in federal court. Officials with the order said they filed for bankruptcy two years ago because they were operating at a significant loss due to the legal costs related to the settlements of abuse cases. The settlement was made public on Thursday.

In response to the settlement, several people who said they have been abused by Catholic priests gathered outside a house in Elizabeth belonging to the brotherhood Friday morning. Among them was a Ramsey resident who said she was abused by a priest from the Christian Brothers order who taught at the high school she attended in New York state decades ago. The woman, who asked that her name not be published, is one of more than 400 people who have filed to be eligible to receive money from the settlement.

A federal judge in White Plains, N.Y., ordered that money be set aside in a trust for abuse victims, including those who never before made a claim.

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May 24, 2013

HOLMBERG: Can the Richmond Outreach Center soldier on without its leader?

VIRGINIA
WTVR

[with video]

May 24, 2013, by Raymond Hawkes and Mark Holmberg

RICHMOND, Va (WTVR)- The Richmond Outreach Center has an amazing rags to riches story. But what will happen to it now that its charismatic founder is facing child sex charges and has stepped down until they’re resolved?

According to its non-profit, tax-exempt income report, the Richmond Outreach Center is a $17 million dollar independent church organization that brings in some $3 million a year.

But it started here on a wing and prayer 12 years ago when Pastor Geronimo Aguilar, his wife Samantha and a core group of fellow believers in inner city ministry came from California and opened up an outreach center a Midlothian Turnpike warehouse across the street from a strip club.

The energetic Pastor G, then 31, quickly built up a following based on a rock-and-roll, rough-and-ready, reach-the-unreachable ministry very similar to that of his LA based father, Phil, a former Hells Angels and drug dealer whose style has stirred up controversy.

The effectiveness, the tangible power of Pastor G’s ministry led to explosive growth, first to as vast site on Warwick Road – now the ROC’s youth ministry headquarters and site of its Spanish-speaking church body – then to it’s current multimillion dollar facility on Midlothian Turnpike, a rehabbed former flea market.

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ROC pastor released for transfer to Texas

RICHMOND (VA)
Richmond Times-Dispatch

BY LOUIS LLOVIO
Richmond Times-Dispatch

RICHMOND — Geronimo Aguilar, senior pastor at the Richmond Outreach Center, was released from a Richmond jail this morning for his scheduled transfer to Texas to face sexual assault charges.

“We do not discus prisoner movement before the fact for what I hope you will understand are obvious security concerns,” Terry Grisham, executive administrator for the Tarrant County Sheriff’s Office, said in an email.

Aguilar waived extradition after a series of hearings in Richmond Wednesday and was scheduled to be picked up by Texas authorities within about 48 hours.

He was released from the Richmond jail this morning at 8:33, according to the jail.

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The ROC’s Pastor G now in custody of Texas authorities

VIRGINIA
NBC 12

By Ray Daudani

RICHMOND, VA (WWBT) –
Texas authorities took over custody from of Geronimo Aguilar from the Richmond Sheriff’s Office Friday morning. He is now headed to Texas to face charges.

Geronimo Aguilar, also known as Pastor G, temporarily stepped down from his positions as President of the Board and Pastor at the Richmond Outreach Center Thursday due to child sexual abuse charges.

The move was announced in a statement from the ROC’s Board of Directors on the church’s website Thursday afternoon. The board voted to give Aguilar a paid leave of absence, according to the statement. The ROC’s Executive Team will make day-to-day operational decisions and an outside, interim pastor will fill Aguilar’s role.

Some Richmond faith leaders called for Aguilar to step down after prosecutors in Texas charged Aguilar with seven felony counts in two child sex abuse cases. The cases involve claims by two women dating back to 1996. Four of the counts of aggravated sexual abuse of a child under 14, are first degree felonies that could carry life in prison.

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Evangelical leaders stand by pastor accused of abuse cover-up

UNITED STATES
Washington Post

By Sarah Pulliam Bailey| Religion News Service, Updated: Friday, May 24

Several leading evangelical pastors and authors have come to the defense of a pastor accused in a lawsuit for covering up sexual abuse of children.

C. J. Mahaney was named as a defendant in a lawsuit, which charged that he and other leaders of Sovereign Grace Ministries permitted the abuse of children to occur in churches that formed part of the group. Sovereign Grace, an association of 80 Reformed evangelical churches, is based in Louisville, Ky.

Maryland Judge Sharon V. Burrell dismissed the lawsuit ruling that nine of 11 plaintiffs waited too long to sue under the statute of limitations. Their attorney plans to appeal the judge’s decision.

After the dismissal, leading evangelicals are stepping up to defend Mahaney.

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Baptist Sex Abuse

UNITED STATES
Thinking Out Loud

Okay, so it turns out there’s a blog called Stop Baptist Predators.

Okay, so it turns out there’s a blog called Stop Baptist Predators and it’s been around since late 2006.

Okay so it turns out there’s a blog called Stop Baptist Predators and each blog post deals with a new case of abuse or a new article in the media on the topic, and in the years 2007 to 2010, they published 122, 109, 109 and 113 posts respectively. Things slowed down in 2011 and 2012, but then again, I would get weary of dealing with this topic every 2-3 days for four years.

And I had to quote this comment from April 18, directed to Ed Stetzer:

Since LifeWay provides research and data on so many other topics relevant to Baptist life, I often wondered why you yourself weren’t keeping track of Baptist clergy sex abuse cases. I imagine that most parents would find it “enlightening” to learn how widespread the problem really is – and how easy it is for clergy predators to simply church-hop their way to new prey.

It’s a shame that someone has had to devote nearly seven years to documenting this type of thing online.

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Archdiocese of Newark Vicar General resigning in wake of Rev. Michael Fugee scandal

NEW JERSEY
The Jersey Journal

By Ron Zeitlinger/The Jersey Journal
on May 24, 2013

An Archdiocese of Newark official who was born and raised in Jersey City is resigning in the wake of the Rev. Michael Fugee scandal.

In a letter that will be read to all parishioners during this weekend’s Masses, Archbishop John J. Myers said that Monsignor John E. Doran, who once served at St. Nicholas in the Heights, is stepping down as Vicar General, effective immediately.

Fugee was charged last week with violating a lifetime ban on ministry to children by working with a Monmouth County youth group. The Star-Ledger has reported that Fugee has gone on numerous retreats with children over the years since the agreement, an that the interactions were never hidden from the Archdiocese.

A jury convicted him in 2003 of aggravated criminal sexual contact, but three years later the verdict was overturned in appellate court. In that decision, the panel said that the trial judge should not have allowed jurors to hear the part of Fugee’s confession in which he questioned his sexual identity.

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Vatican punishes French priest for being a Freemason

FRANCE
BBC News

A Roman Catholic parish priest at an elite French ski resort has been stripped of his Church functions for refusing to renounce Freemasonry.

Father Pascal Vesin was ordered by his bishop to cease his work in the Alpine resort of Megeve, the parish said.

Bishop Yves Boivineau had warned Fr Vesin about his “active membership” of the Grand Orient de France lodge.

Freemasonry has been condemned as anti-Christian and anti-clerical by various popes through history.

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Diocese Suspends Priest Following Wyalusing Incident

PENNSYLVANIA
Rocket-Courier

By David Keeler

Officials at the Diocese of Scranton have announced they’ve suspended Father Daniel J. Doherty, in the wake of an alleged May 17 incident at the Wyalusing Borough Park, which was reported in the May 23 issue of the Rocket-Courier.

In a statement issued by the Diocese on May 23, Diocesan officials stated they learned through local media that on Friday, May 17, 2013, Father Daniel J. Doherty, whom they confirmed is a priest of the Diocese of Scranton and a member of the Society of the Priests of Saint Sulpice, who has been serving as Assistant Pastor at Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary Parish, Tunkhannock, and Saint Mary of the Lake, Lake Winola, was allegedly involved in an incident at the Wyalusing Borough Park.

“The accusation is that Father Doherty and an adult female were engaged in behavior that resulted in them being charged with open lewdness and for violating local ordinances that prohibit, among other things, consuming alcohol on the borough park property,” the Diocesan officials stated. “The Diocese of Scranton will cooperate fully as this matter is properly handled by law enforcement.”

In response to this situation, the Diocese stated that the Most Reverend Joseph C. Bambera, D.D., J.C.L., Bishop of Scranton, has removed Father Doherty’s faculties and has prohibited him from exercising public ministry pending a legal disposition. In reaction to this matter, Bishop Bambera expressed anger with the apparent inappropriate, immoral and seemingly illegal behavior.

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Priests, nuns form group to keep church honest on sex abuse issues

NEW YORK
National Catholic Reporter

Ben Feuerherd | May. 24, 2013

NEW YORK A group calling itself “Catholic Whistleblowers” celebrated its launch at a Manhattan news conference May 22.

The group’s message:

*Catholics who blow the whistle on the sexual abuse of minors in the church deserve a network they can turn to for support;
*A decade after the church issued “zero tolerance guidelines” for abuse, it is still mishandling these cases;
*The bishops who mishandle these cases must be held accountable.

Founding member Dominican Sr. Sally Butler of Brooklyn, N.Y., said the creation of a nationwide “whistleblower protection program” is necessary. “Clearly, the women and men who work for the church now fear reprisals for speaking out,” she said.

Attorney Marci A. Hamilton, the Paul R. Verkuil Chair in Public Law at Cardozo Law School in Manhattan, said that she and her team of five law students have promised to defend any whistleblowers who come forward.

Hamilton, a children’s rights activist, said she sees the current sexual abuse crisis as a civil rights issue for children. “This boils down to the pursuit of truth,” she said

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We Hope Church Officials Warn Parents

ILLINOIS/WISCONSIN
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

POSTED BY DAVID CLOHESSY ON MAY 24, 2013

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 566 9790, SNAPclohessy@aol.com)

A Wisconsin Catholic monk, recently arrested twice and accused of trying to assault Chicago area girls, is now out of jail and living with family in Lansing IL. He’s Brother Thomas Chmura.

[Chicago Tribune]

This Catholic cleric is dangerous. He belongs in a remote, secure treatment center run by secular professionals, not Catholic amateurs. For the safety of kids, we implore his Wisconsin supervisors to put him far away from those he’s hurt. And we hope that church officials will, at least in the short term, warn parents about exactly where he is so they can protect their kids.

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He kissed the secret of his childhood sexual abuse goodbye

MARYLAND
Pilgrim’s Road Trip

May 24, 2013 By Michelle Van Loon

Earlier this week, Pastor Josh Harris, pastor of Covenant Life Church in Gaithersburg, MD, confessed that he’d been a victim of sexual abuse when he was a child. The timing and context for this confession has something to tell us about the long-lasting effects of abuse in a victim’s life.

Harris’ church was “mother ship” of the network of 80 or so churches churches of Sovereign Grace Ministries, though the congregation left the SGM family a few months ago. SGM was recently the focus of a lawsuit alleging sexual impropriety and a system of coverup lasting many years by some of its key leaders. The lawsuit was dismissed because of a technicality, though the plaintiffs’ lawyers plan to proceed with a civil suit.

Though I’ve never met Harris in person, I’ve followed him since he was a kid via the ministry of his parents, who were popular convention speakers and writers in the home school movement during the 1990′s. When young adult Josh became a mainstream voice for the movement’s emphasis on Biblical courtship with his popular book, I Kissed Dating Goodbye, many homeschoolers viewed the moment as an affirmation that training a child up in the way he or she should go would net (guarantee, even!) a next generation of a family that would be willing to do hard things in life, and take strong moral stands in a decaying society. The Harris family were exemplars for many of this of this implied guarantee.

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French priest sacked at Vatican’s request: diocese

FRANCE
Business Recorder

Posted by Muhammad Iqbal

GRENOBLE: A Catholic priest at the posh French ski station of Megeve has been stripped of his functions at the request of the Vatican for being a member of a Masonic lodge, his parish said Friday.

Father Pascal Vesin of the Sainte-Anne d’Arly-Montjoie parish was ordered by the bishop of Annecy, Yves Boivineau, to halt his functions due to his “active membership” of the Grand Orient de France, a large Masonic organisation.

A statement from the parish said the move had been “made at Rome’s request.”

It said the bishop had asked Vesin earlier to forsake Freemasonry, which he had refused to do.

In March, the Holy See’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith asked for priest’s departure. Three members of the diocese of Annecy then met him but Vesin said he would not quit his membership of the Lodge.

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Some State Lawmakers Push To End Statute Of Limitations For Rape Cases

OHIO
10 TV

[with video]

By Jim Heath
COLUMBUS, Ohio – State Sen. Capri Cafaro says the advances in DNA technology is just one reason why Ohio’s limitation on rape prosecutions should be eliminated.

“It’s long overdue,” said Cafaro, a Democrat from Hubbard. “It takes time to build up that courage, and they should not be violated twice when they come forward and learn that just because they showed up 21 years later, all of a sudden, justice walks away from them.”

Right now in Ohio, there is a 20-year statute of limitation to prosecute a rape case.

It’s the same limitation as cases involving kidnapping, robbery and burglary. There is no time limit to prosecute a murder charge.

“You never know when a victim will want to come forward, so we should give them every opportunity throughout their lifetime, whether or not they want to come forward,” said state Sen. Nina Turner, a Democrat from Cleveland.

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OHIO SENATORS WANT TO REPEAL STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS ON RAPE, SEXUAL BATTERY

OHIO
Hudson Hub-Times

by MARC KOVAC | CAPITAL BUREAU CHIEF Published: May 23, 2013

Columbus — Two state senators want to do away with the statute of limitations on rape and sexual battery, meaning perpetrators could face charges for crimes committed decades prior.

Sens. Capri Cafaro (D-Hubbard) and Nina Turner (D-Cleveland) offered SB 83 to repeal the current 20-year window for prosecution.

“It is important that we in the general assembly realize the incredible amount of courage that coming forward takes and allow victims the ability to tell their story when they are ready and they feel safe, no matter how long that takes,” Turner told the chamber’s criminal justice committee.

The legislation had its first hearing May 22.

The proposed law changes come on the heels of a couple of cases of victims alleging sexual crimes but unable to pursue criminal charges because they were committed too long ago.

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Senators: Remove 20-year limit on prosecuting rape

OHIO
Seattle PI

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — A bill being proposed by two Ohio lawmakers would remove the 20-year statute of limitations for prosecuting rape and sexual battery cases.

Attorney General Mike DeWine’s office said he supports the measure, which would allow cases to be filed against defendants 20 years or more after the alleged crime.

But John Murphy of the Ohio Prosecuting Attorneys Association tells The Columbus Dispatch (http://bit.ly/14xykEl ) that he’s not in favor of pursuing rape cases that old unless there is DNA evidence involved.

He said prosecutors are concerned that unless there is DNA evidence, rape cases could come down to verbal allegations based on faulty memory instead of evidence.

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Rape Statute of Limitations Could Be Extended

OHIO
WBEX

Ohio currently has a 20 year statute of limitations on rape, but two state lawmakers want to see that change. If approved, Senate Bill 83 would see Ohio join 28 other states where people can be charged with rape no matter how long ago the crime happened.

Senator Capri Cafaro cites the case of several men in Warren that have come forward with claims their high school baseball coach sexually abused them, but no charges can be filed.

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West Warwick priest charged with DUI

RHODE ISLAND
WPRI

WEST WARWICK, R.I. (WPRI) — A West Warwick priest was charged with DUI and several traffic violations after he was stopped by police.

According to the Warwick Beacon police log, around 11:25 p.m. on April 14, an officer spotted a car take the Centerville Road exit from 95 at approximately 85 miles an hour and swerve from lane to lane before coming to a stop. According to the officer, the driver appeared to be intoxicated and smelled strongly of alcohol.

The driver of the car, Michael A. Colello, was then given a field sobriety test which he failed. Colello was then taken to police headquarters where he refused a breath test.

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Priest Facing Open Lewdness Charges

PENNSYLVANIA
WNEP

by Julie Melf

WYALUSING — Leaders with the Diocese of Scranton have suspended a priest from public ministry after he was charged with open lewdness.

According to the diocese, Father Daniel Doherty, was taken into custody last Friday. He served as an assistant pastor at Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary parish in Tunkhannock and at Saint Mary of the Lake in Lake Winola.

A statement released by the Diocese of Scranton says Father Doherty engaged in lewd behavior with an adult woman at Wyalusing Borough Park in Bradford County.

According to the statement, “In response to this situation, the Most Reverend Joseph C. Bambera, D.D., J.C.L., Bishop of Scranton, has removed Father’s Doherty’s faculties and has prohibited him from exercising public ministry pending a legal disposition. In reaction to this matter, Bishop Bambera expressed anger with the apparent inappropriate, immoral and seemingly illegal behavior. Bishop Bambera also expressed concern for the pastor and people of the parish communities in Tunkhannock and Lake Winola where Father Doherty has been serving.”

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Statement Regarding Father Daniel J. Doherty, S.S.

SCRANTON (PA)
Roman Catholic Diocese of Scranton

Posted on: 05-23-2013

On Thursday, May 23, 2013 Diocesan officials learned through local media that on Friday, May 17, 2013, Father Daniel J. Doherty, who is a priest of the Diocese of Scranton and a member of the Society of the Priests of Saint Sulpice, who has been serving as Assistant Pastor at Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary Parish, Tunkhannock, and Saint Mary of the Lake, Lake Winola, was involved in an incident at the Wyalusing Borough Park, Bradford County, Pennsylvania. The accusation is that Father Doherty and an adult female were engaged in behavior that resulted in them being charged with open lewdness and for violating local ordinances that prohibit, among other things, consuming alcohol on the borough park property. The Diocese of Scranton will cooperate fully as this matter is properly handled by law enforcement.

In response to this situation, the Most Reverend Joseph C. Bambera, D.D., J.C.L., Bishop of Scranton, has removed Father’s Doherty’s faculties and has prohibited him from exercising public ministry pending a legal disposition. In reaction to this matter, Bishop Bambera expressed anger with the apparent inappropriate, immoral and seemingly illegal behavior. Bishop Bambera also expressed concern for the pastor and people of the parish communities in Tunkhannock and Lake Winola where Father Doherty has been serving. “As we all struggle with the sobering reality of this most regrettable and unacceptable situation, be assured of my prayers and support to provide what is needed to bring healing to all affected.”

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Priest charged with open lewdness at Bradford County park

SCRANTON (PA)
Times-Tribune

Published: May 24, 2013

SCRANTON – A Diocese of Scranton priest was charged with open lewdness and consuming alcohol at a Bradford County park, officials said Thursday.

The Rev. Daniel J. Doherty, who has been working as an assistant pastor in Tunkhannock and Lake Winola, was charged after he and a woman were involved in a lewd act at Wyalusing Borough Park, according to a diocese news release. He also has served as an assistant pastor at St. John the Evangelist and Sacred Heart in Wilkes-Barre from 1994-1997 and at St. Rose in Carbondale from 1997-1999.

Police in Laceyville, who are investigating the case, could not be reached late Thursday.

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Area priest charged with public lewdness

SCRANTON (PA)
Sunday Dispatch

Last Modified: May 24. 2013

By Mark Guydish – mguydish@civitasmedia.com – 570-970-9161

SCRANTON — A Diocese of Scranton priest serving parishes in Tunkhannock and Lake Winola has been charged with open lewdness by police and barred from public ministry by Bishop Joseph Bambera.

The diocese issued a statement noting The Rev. Daniel J. Doherty a member of the Society of the Priests of Saint Sulpice and assistant pastor at Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary Parish, Tunkhannock, and Saint Mary of the Lake, Lake Winola, was involved in an incident at the Wyalusing Borough Park, Bradford County, om May 17.

According to the statement, “the accusation is that Father Doherty and an adult female were engaged in behavior that resulted in them being charged with open lewdness and for violating local ordinances that prohibit, among other things, consuming alcohol on the borough park property”

The diocese promised to “cooperate fully as this matter is properly handled by law enforcement.” Bambera also “removed Father’s Doherty’s faculties and has prohibited him from exercising public ministry pending a legal disposition.”

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USCCB Reports Decline in Abuse Allegations

NEW JERSEY
National Catholic Register

by JOAN FRAWLEY DESMOND 05/23/2013

NEWARK, N.J. — As the U.S. bishops marked the release of an annual report with “the fewest allegations and victims reported since the data collection for the annual reports began in 2004,” the May 20 arrest of a Newark, N.J., priest triggered headlines that fueled skepticism and frustration regarding the Church’s decade-long effort to protect children.

The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops issued the findings of the 2012 audit of diocesan compliance with the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People on May 9, as Newark’s The Star-Ledger published a series of articles on Father Michael Fugee. Father Fugee, a priest of the Archdiocese of Newark, resigned from ministry on May 2 and was arrested on May 20, charged with seven counts of contempt of a judicial order.

Father Fugee was accused of violating a 2007 judicial mandate to avoid any unsupervised contact with children, minister to children or hold any position in which children are involved. The judge’s order followed an appeal and request for retrial after the priest’s 2003 conviction for groping a teenage boy, a transgression he acknowledged.

According to the agreement, Father Fugee would be supervised by the archdiocese; however, a spokesman for Archbishop John Myers of Newark told reporters he had been unaware of the priest’s activities related to youth.

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Survivors of day schools share stories of abuse, pain

CANADA
CBC News

Hundreds of people who say they suffered abuse at the hands of their teachers gathered at Winnipeg’s Indian and Metis Friendship Centre Thursday.

They call themselves day school survivors.

While they were not in the residential school system, they say the abuse they suffered was the same.

Patricia Desmoulin sold handicrafts to be able to make the trip from Pick River First Nation, Ontario to find healing.

“I did suffer when I went to day school from the teachers that we had,” she said. “Physical abuse.”

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Alleged Galilee cult leader suspected of abusing children for decade

ISRAEL
Israel Hayom

Munib Farhat, 56, suspected of imposing strict disciplinary code on 11 adults, 25 children • Cult leader allegedly forced parents to beat their children, withhold food and smear them with fecal matter • Affair exposed after woman files police complaint.

Daniel Siryoti

The details of a shocking child abuse scandal began to emerge on Tuesday in the Galilee town of Majd al-Krum when a Nazareth court lifted the gag order on the affair, which apparently has been going on for ten years.

Munib Farhat, a 56-year-old resident of Majd al-Krum, is suspected of heading a cult and enforcing his will on six families in his community, including dozens of children. The police suspect Farhat of forcing the members of his cult to beat their children, humiliate them, withhold food, lock them in bathrooms and smear them with fecal matter. The cult leader is also suspected of abusing the women in the cult, committing sexual assault and sodomizing them.

The affair was exposed when a woman who belonged to the cult filed a police complaint several weeks ago. A team of investigators consequently launched an undercover probe into the woman’s allegations, in cooperation with Welfare Ministry social workers and Interior Ministry officials. The investigation, which was accompanied by the Haifa District Prosecutor’s Office, revealed that Farhat, who refers to himself as a caliph, allegedly imposed a very strict disciplinary code on 11 adults and 25 children.

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Mount Cashel orphanage survivors reach settlement worth more than $16.5 million

CANADA
Edmonton Journal

BY THE CANADIAN PRESS MAY 23, 2013

ST. JOHN’S, N.L. – Survivors of abuse at the Mount Cashel Orphanage in St. John’s, N.L. have reached a settlement with the Christian Brothers of Ireland worth more than $16.5 million.

The settlement with the Catholic religious order includes cash plus other assets that must still be approved in court.

Lawyer Geoff Budden represents 90 survivors from Newfoundland out of a total of 422 North American claimants.

He says the money will be distributed according to a court-ordered formula.

Budden says the settlement was reached by a committee of creditors that has worked with the Christian Brothers since its companies sought bankruptcy protection in the U.S.

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Christian Brothers to pay millions of dollars to abuse victims in US and Canada

UNITED STATES/CANADA
Irish Times

Patsy McGarry

A settlement of more than $16.5 million (€12.75 million) has been agreed with the Irish Christian Brothers in sexual abuse bankruptcy proceedings concluded for more than 400 survivors in the United States and Canada. The alleged abusers operated schools run by the congregation in 17 US states as well as Canada.

A statement issued yesterday by Minnesota-based law firm Jeff Anderson & Associates said “the official committee of unsecured creditors for the Christian Brothers Institute and the Christian Brothers of Ireland Inc. have approved the terms and conditions of a consensual reorganisation plan in . . . cases of the Christian Brothers Institute and the Christian Brothers of Ireland, Inc.”

Unsecured creditors
It said more than 400 survivors of sexual abuse were included in the group of unsecured creditors that will share in a financial settlement in excess of $16.5 million – an amount that will be paid by the international Catholic religious order and one of its insurance carriers.
Mr Anderson of the St Paul, Minnesota-based law firm, which represented 92 of the sexual abuse survivors who filed claims in the bankruptcy proceedings, said the settlement would still allow abuse survivors to continue legal actions “involving other parties, including schools and dioceses who share responsibility for decades of abuse staffed by members of the order including schools in California, Hawaii, Illinois, Michigan, New Jersey, New York and Washington”.

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Christian Brothers to pay $16M for abuse of children

UNITED STATES
USA Today

Michael Winter, USA TODAY

The North American branch of the “Irish” Christian Brothers will pay $16.5 million to more than 400 men and women who were sexually or physically abused as children by members of the Roman Catholic order that operates schools and orphanages around the world.

The settlement, announced Thursday in New York, came as the U.S. and Canadian victims agreed to terms of an April 2011 bankruptcy filing by two entities that hold U.S. assets for the Congregation of Christian Brothers, which was founded in Ireland in the early 19th century, The Journal of Dublin reported.

The order will pay half and an insurance carrier the other half. The victims can still sue the schools and dioceses where the alleged abuse occurred.

The religious order, which has operated in the United States since the early 1900s, also agreed to take steps to protect children from sexual abuse.

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Christian Brothers settle with sex abuse victims for $16.5M

CANADA
Toronto Sun

Hundreds of victims of sexual abuse by the Christian Brothers reached a financial settlement Thursday.

The religious order agreed to pay $16.5 million to 400 claimants, including 90 from Canada, who say they were molested as children by members of the order.

The Brothers ran the Mount Cashel Orphanage in St. John’s, N.L., for 84 years, until it announced 1989 it would shut down following revelations of a massive sex abuse scandal, thought to be the largest ever in Canada.

Victims began reporting abuse as far back as 1975; other reports said the abuse dated back to the 1950s.

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Christian Brothers settle suit with 400 sex abuse victims

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tribune

By Manya A. Brachear, Chicago Tribune reporter
11:44 p.m. CDT, May 23, 2013

The Roman Catholic religious order that runs Brother Rice High School in Chicago and St. Laurence High School in Burbank didn’t want Brother Edward Chrysostom Courtney in Chicago any longer. So in the early 1970s, the Irish Christian Brothers shipped him to the West Coast and kept the troubling reasons to themselves.

When he was finally ousted from the parochial system 10 years later, landed in a public school in rural Washington and sexually abused a boy there, those reasons came to light. Law enforcement finally got involved. The Christian Brothers dismissed Courtney from the order shortly before he pleaded guilty to indecent liberties with a child in Washington and became a convicted sex offender.

On Thursday, more than 80 alumni of both schools plus Leo High School, also once run by the order, learned they would receive compensation from a lawsuit against the order for allowing Courtney and 11 other men to teach despite allegations that those men had sexually abused children.

The $16.5 million payout to 400 accusers nationwide will come out of a Chapter 11 reorganization settlement between creditors and the Edmund Rice Christian Brothers North American Province, known as Irish Christian Brothers. In addition, the order agreed to enforce a zero-tolerance policy for brothers accused of abuse.

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Sex education banned in public school buildings owned by Catholic Church

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY CORINNE LESTCH AND BEN CHAPMAN / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

SUNDAY, APRIL 7, 2013

Thou shalt not teach public school students sex education — or give them lessons on HIV and AIDS — in classrooms owned by the Catholic Church.

As a result of a longstanding but little-known agreement between church and city officials, dozens of city schools that lease church-owned buildings must take students off site for sex education.

The unusual arrangement rankles some parents and students who believe students should get sex ed and lessons about HIV/AIDS — which are mandated by law — in their home classrooms.

“It’s crazy,” said Tayshawn Edmonds, 15, of Brooklyn, a 10th-grader at El Puente Academy for Peace and Justice in Williamsburg. The school is housed in a church building on Hooper St. that it rents for $649,000 a year.

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Christian Brothers Institute to pay $16.5 million to settle sex abuse claims

UNITED STATES
New York Daily News

BY DAREH GREGORIAN / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

THURSDAY, MAY 23, 2013

The Christian Brothers Institute has agreed to pay $16.5 million to settle claims of sex abuse at its institutions.

The group — an order of the Catholic Church headquartered in New Rochelle — was slammed with more than 400 lawsuits from across the U.S. and Canada involving its schools and orphanages, including the long-closed Cardinal Farley Military Academy in upstate Rhinecliff.

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Pell should concede failings: Vic priest

AUSTRALIA
SBS

AAP

Australia’s most senior Catholic should acknowledge the church has twice failed victims in its handling of sexual abuse claims, a Geelong priest says.

A Victorian priest says Australia’s most senior Catholic should acknowledge victims were failed, not only by abusing clergy, but by the church response to their complaints.

Cardinal George Pell will be the final witness in the Victorian parliamentary inquiry into child sex abuse when he gives evidence on Monday.

Geelong priest Father Kevin Dillon said church leaders, including Cardinal Pell, must recognise that the inquiry came about not only as a result of appalling abuse, but also because the protocols the church put in place to help victims had not succeeded.

Fr Dillon said he would dearly love Cardinal Pell to say: `On behalf of everybody in the official church I ask for forgiveness of victims, because in so many cases, not necessarily every case, we not only failed you initially, we failed you doubly by having some sort of adversarial approach to your search for justice and recognition’.

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Pädophilen-Affäre: Rücktritte bei Grünen sind ‘längst überfällig’

DEUTSCHLAND
kath.net

Vorwurf: Die Grünen stigmatisierten Andersdenkende (etwa Christen beim Thema Homosexualität), träten selbst als „Gesinnungswart“ auf, aber wollen jetzt den eigenen „Pädosex-Skandal“ mit einem „Sorry – heute sehen wir es auch anders“ beiseite wischen

München/Ansbach (kath.net/idea) Nach CSU-Generalsekretär Alexander Dobrindt haben jetzt auch theologisch konservative Kreise personelle Konsequenzen aus der Pädophilen-Affäre bei den Grünen in den achtziger Jahren gefordert. Sie reagierten damit auf Veröffentlichungen, wonach es in der Partei Kräfte gab, die für die Legalisierung von Sex mit Kindern eintraten.

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Mission: Keine Verbindung zu Verurteiltem

DEUTSCHLAND
Stimme

Von unserem Redakteur Reto Bosch

Beilstein – Das in Südafrika wegen sexuellen Missbrauchs verurteilte Mitglied der Spätregenmission war nie in Deutschland tätig. Das erklärte der Vorstand gestern in einer verspäteten Antwort auf Stimme-Nachfragen. Martin Illig, der Vorsitzende der deutschen Spätregenmission, stehe in keiner Beziehung zu dem Verurteilten. Der Vorstand betont, dass der Fall in Südafrika in keinem Zusammenhang mit der deutschen Mission stehe.

Zentrale?

Die Glaubensgemeinschaften arbeiteten in jedem Land unabhängig voneinander, es gebe keine Leitungs- oder Steuerungsabhängigkeit. Beilstein sei ausschließlich für den deutschen Raum zuständig. Diese Aussage steht allerdings im Widerspruch zu anderen Angaben. Noch heute ist auf der Homepage der deutschen Organisation zu lesen, dass die Werkstätten im Glaubenshaus Libanon für den Unterhalt der europäischen Häuser sorgen.

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Statistik belegt: Kein Grund zum Feiern – Opferfonds gescheitert

DEUTSCHLAND
Helmut Jacob

Den Opfern von physischer, psychischer und sexueller Gewalt in den zwei Nachkriegsjahrzehnten in meist kirchlichen Heimen wollte der „Runde Tisch Heimerziehung“ (RTH) unter Antje Vollmer wirklich helfen. So stellte es der RTH immer wieder öffentlich dar. Von 2008 bis 2010 hatte der Tisch getagt und eine abschließende Lösung vorgeschlagen, die vom Deutschen Bundestag übernommen wurde: „Der Runde Tisch hält eine Summe von 120 Millionen Euro für die Ausstattung des Fonds / der Stiftung für erforderlich, die sich aufteilt in 20 Millionen Euro für den ‚Rentenersatzfonds’ und 100 Millionen Euro für den ‚Fonds für Folgeschäden der Heimerziehung’“. So geschrieben im Abschlussbericht des RTH. (1)

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Five more come forward alleging abuse by Hawaii Catholic priests

HAWAII
KHON

Five more people have joined in a lawsuit saying they were sexually abused by priests in the local Catholic church.

The suit now includes 11 alleged victims claiming sex abuse as far back as the 1940′s.

One of the most recent plaintiff’s is a Hawaii Island man who says he was abused by three priests nearly 50 years ago.

The victim, who does not want to be identified, says he has never recovered from the trauma.

“My main reason for not wanting any children was I was never confident of my ability to protect them,” he says.

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Catholic order to pay $16.5 mln to more than 400 claiming sex abuse

UNITED STATES
Thomson Reuters News & Insight

5/24/2013

By Daniel Trotta

NEW YORK (Reuters) – An order of the Roman Catholic Church has agreed to pay $16.5 million to more than 400 adults who said they were sexually abused as children by religious leaders, the parties announced on Thursday in separate statements.

The victims claimed abuse at schools and child-care facilities belonging to the Christian Brothers and the Christian Brothers of Ireland, Inc, in 17 U.S. states and Canada from the late 1940s or early 1950s until the 1980s, said James Stang, a lawyer representing the plaintiffs.

The settlement agreement reached in U.S. bankruptcy court also enables the victims to pursue more assets from the Christian Brothers such as real estate or insurance claims, Stang said.

A committee representing the accusers, who claimed abuse by mostly brothers of the order, agreed to the settlement terms.

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Bishops’ Adviser on Sexual Abuse: ‘How Do We Get Children Safer?’

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Register

by JOAN FRAWLEY DESMOND 05/23/2013

Al Notzon III is the chairman of the National Review Board that advises the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops on the implementation of the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People, guidelines and procedures established by the USCCB in June 2002 for addressing allegations of sexual abuse of minors by Catholic clergy.

The function of the board is to collaborate with the bishops’ conference “in preventing the sexual abuse of minors in the United States by persons in the service of the Church.”

Notzon is also the former executive director of the Alamo Area Council of more than 100 local governments and agencies. He spoke with Register senior editor Joan Frawley Desmond on May 14, following the release of the 2012 report on the implementation of the U.S. bishops’ charter.

Based on research conducted by Georgetown University’s Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate (CARA), the report found six credible allegations against diocesan clergy and one against a member of a religious order or institute committed in 2012.

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Hope Pell will reveal truth at Vic inquiry

AUSTRALIA
Courier Mail

Daniel Fogarty From: AAP May 24, 2013

ANTHONY Foster hopes an uncomfortable and unfamiliar environment will open cracks in the armour of Australia’s most senior Catholic, bringing out the truth about the decades-long child sexual abuse scandal.

Away from the church’s army of lawyers and spin doctors, Cardinal George Pell will spend several hours alone at a table on Monday answering questions from a hard-hitting committee determined to get answers.

There will be questions about whether he personally knew of abuse and covered it up, about abusing priests being moved from parish to parish, victims being ignored and about victims who have ended their lives because of the pain of sexual abuse.

Cardinal Pell won’t be able to refuse to answer when he appears before the Victorian parliamentary inquiry into child sex abuse.

Victims and their supporters expect Cardinal Pell – the former archbishop of Melbourne and current Sydney archbishop – to begin trotting out familiar Catholic Church lines, but know he will face tough questioning and hope he will stumble.

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May 23, 2013

Review clears Davenport priest accused of touching

IOWA
Quad-City Times

Brian Wellner bwellner@qctimes.com

The Diocese of Davenport, which temporarily removed two priests from their ministries last month after allegations surfaced they inappropriately touched minors, has reinstated one of them, Bishop Martin Amos said Thursday.

The Rev. Robert Harness, pastor of Holy Family Church, Davenport, and the Rev. John Stack, chaplain at Mercy Medical Center, Clinton, were removed from their positions while an investigation was conducted.

As of Thursday, Harness will return to the ministry after a diocese investigation did not substantiate an allegation that he inappropriately touched a minor in 1990.

A review lasting a month conducted by a private detective found no wrongdoing by Harness, Amos said, adding he wanted to publicize the outcome “in the hope of helping to restore the good character of Father Harness.”

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Vandals target home of Cardinal in Dunbar

SCOTLAND
East Lothian News

Published on 23/05/2013

Vandals have attacked Cardinal Keith O’Brien’s intended retirement home in the wake of the Pope ordering him to leave Scotland.

Police launched an investigation after four windows at Our Lady of the Waves RC Church and adjoining house were smashed.

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Wisconsin monk accused in Antioch child luring out on bond

ILLINOIS
WLS

May 23, 2013 (EVANSTON, Ill.) (WLS) — Thomas Chmura, a monk from Wisconsin, is back on the streets after a Lake County judge agreed to reduce his bond.

Chmura is accused of trying to lure several underage girls in Antioch.

Bond for the 57-year-old was revoked earlier this month when court officials found children present at the Wisconsin abbey where he lived.

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Wisconsin monk out on bail in Illinois case

WISCONSIN/ILLINOIS
Enquirer-Herald

The Associated Press
WAUKEGAN, Ill. —
A Benedictine monk from Wisconsin who faces charges he tried to abduct four Illinois girls has been released on bond.

A Lake County judge lowered 57-year-old Thomas Chmura’s bail from $150,000 to $50,000. Chmura previously was held in the Lake County jail since May 2. Chmura has pleaded not guilty. He lived at St. Benedict’s Abbey in Benet Lake, Wis. He was arrested based on a description provided by one of the girls.

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New Evidence …

NEW YORK
The Jewish Week

New Evidence Could Harm Case Against Abuse Whistleblower

05/23/13

Hella Winston
Special Correspondent

New evidence has emerged that could deal a serious blow to Brooklyn District Attorney Charles Hynes’ case against Sam Kellner, a chasidic Borough Park resident who was charged with extortion and perjury after he helped to convict a fellow chasid, Baruch Lebovits, on sex abuse charges.

The evidence, obtained by The Jewish Week, is an audiotape on which a young man makes statements that undermine his previous claims that Kellner paid him to fabricate allegations of sex abuse. The young man also makes statements indicating that powerful members of his own community pressured him to accuse Kellner of perjury.

“This tape should make clear what should be clear to any reasonable person — that Sam Kellner is not guilty of these charges,” Kellner’s attorney, Michael Dowd, told The Jewish Week.

Kellner, whose ordeal was the subject of a Jewish Week story in January, played an indirect but key role in the 2010 sex abuse conviction of Lebovits, a cantor and prominent member of the Munkacs chasidic community.

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Christian Brothers…

UNITED STATES
Washington Post

Christian Brothers religious order reaches deal with more than 400 child sex abuse victims

By Associated Press, Updated: Thursday, May 23

NEW YORK — The Christian Brothers have agreed to pay more than $16 million to people who were molested as children by members of the U.S. religious order.

The settlement was announced Thursday by attorneys for the Roman Catholic group and for more than 400 victims.

The Christian Brothers staffed schools and worked in dioceses in parts of the United States, including California, Hawaii, Illinois, New York and New Jersey, as well as in Canada.

Two groups that hold Christian Brothers’ assets sought federal bankruptcy protection in the face of the claims. A judge must approve the agreement.

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New Minn. law allows more childhood abuse lawsuits

MINNESOTA
Atlanta Journal-Constitution

By PATRICK CONDON
The Associated Press

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Adults who suffered childhood sexual abuse and want to file lawsuits against both abusers and the institutions that employed them will have greater access to Minnesota’s court system under a bill awaiting Gov. Mark Dayton’s signature.

In 1996, the Minnesota Supreme Court ruled that anyone over the age of 24 who alleged they were abused when they were children had no standing to file a lawsuit. Under the new law, that statute of limitations is lifted entirely for civil claims against abusers and for lawsuits on the grounds of negligence against schools, churches and other institutions. What that means is that anyone, no matter their age, will be able to file lawsuits over claims of sexual abuse that occurred when they were children.

“Right now, it’s 24 and done,” Rep. Steve Simon, DFL-Hopkins, the bill’s chief House sponsor, said on Thursday. “No claim, no chance to confront your abuser in court. To me, this is about opening the courthouse doors that right now are slammed shut to childhood sex abuse victims.”

The Senate passed the bill unanimously last week; it passed the House later the same day by a vote of 123-3. A spokeswoman for Dayton said he is likely to sign the bill.

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Catholic order to pay $16.5 million to more than 400 claiming sex abuse

UNITED STATES
Yahoo! News

NEW YORK (Reuters) – An order of the Roman Catholic Church has agreed to pay $16.5 million to more than 400 adults who said they were sexually abused as children by religious leaders, the parties announced on Thursday in separate statements.

The victims claimed abuse at schools and child-care facilities belonging to the Christian Brothers and the Christian Brothers of Ireland, Inc, in 17 U.S. states and Canada from the late 1940s or early 1950s until the 1980s, said James Stang, a lawyer representing the plaintiffs.

The settlement agreement reached in U.S. bankruptcy court also enables the victims to pursue more assets from the Christian Brothers such as real estate or insurance claims, Stang said.

A committee representing the accusers, who claimed abuse by mostly brothers of the order, agreed to the settlement terms.

In 2011, the Christian Brothers filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in response to the sexual abuse claims.

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Mount Cashel orphanage survivors reach settlement worth more than $16.5 million

CANADA
Calgary Herald

BY THE CANADIAN PRESS MAY 23, 2013

ST. JOHN’S, N.L. – Survivors of abuse at the Mount Cashel Orphanage in St. John’s, N.L. have reached a settlement with the Christian Brothers of Ireland worth more than $16.5 million.

The settlement with the Catholic religious order includes cash plus other assets that must still be approved in court.

Lawyer Geoff Budden represents 90 survivors from Newfoundland out of a total of 422 North American claimants.

He says the money will be distributed according to a court-ordered formula.

Budden says the settlement was reached by a committee of creditors that has worked with the Christian Brothers since its companies sought bankruptcy protection in the U.S.

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Pastor G temporarily steps down from ROC

VIRGINIA
NBC 12

By Rachel DePompa

RICHMOND, VA (WWBT) –
Pastor Geronimo Aguilar has temporarily stepped down from his positions as President of the Board and Pastor at the Richmond Outreach Center due to child sexual abuse charges.

The move was announced in a statement from the ROC’s Board of Directors on the church’s website Thursday afternoon.

“While we believe the accusations against him to be completely untrue and unfounded, we have accepted his request for a temporary leave of absence,” the statement said. “Considering the severity of the charges, he feels and we sympathize that his family and these legal matters deserve his full attention.”

The board voted to give Aguilar a paid leave of absence, according to the statement. The ROC’s Executive Team will make day-to-day operational decisions and an outside, interim pastor will fill Aguilar’s role.

Some Richmond faith leaders called for Aguilar to step down after prosecutors in Texas charged Aguilar with seven felony counts in two child sex abuse cases. The cases involve claims by two women dating back to 1996. Four of the counts of aggravated sexual abuse of a child under 14, are first degree felonies that could carry life in prison.

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ROC Pastor G remains behind bars until Texas extradition

VIRGINIA
WTVR

by Nick Dutton and Shelby Brown

RICHMOND, Va. (WTVR) — CBS 6 News has learned that Geronimo Scott Aguilar, the pastor of the Richmond Outreach Center (ROC), will remain behind bars after an appearance in court Wednesday.
Earlier on Wednesday, a Richmond judge granted Aguilar a $50,000 bond and ordered him to be in Fort Worth by Friday. However, after lawyers discussed extradition details with Texas authorities, Aguilar waived extradition and was taken to jail.

Additionally, the judge said that if Fort Worth authorities do not pick up Aguilar by Friday, he will hold another hearing in which bond may be granted.

CBS 6 was in court when Aguilar signed extradition documents.

“He could be picked up as early as tomorrow .They’ve already pre-set bond there in Texas without a hearing at $100,000, so we’ll deal with bond when we get to Fort Worth,” said David Darlson.
The District Attorney’s Office in Tarrant County, Texas has formally charged the 43-year-old in in the first case with two counts of aggravated sex assault of a child under 14 and two counts of sexual assault of a child.

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Pastor G steps down as ROC pastor

VIRGINIA
WTVR

May 23, 2013, by Scott Wise, Jerrita Patterson and Sandra Jones

RICHMOND, Va. (WTVR) — Pastor Geronimo Aguilar, known as Pastor G, has stepped down as President of the Board and as Pastor of the Richmond Outreach Center, according to a statement on the ROC’s website.

This week Aguilar was charged in Texas with seven felony charges that stem from alleged sexual encounters with two minors in the 1990s.

According to the statement, Aguilar stepped down to “devote his time and energy to certain legal matters in Texas.”

The statement, signed by the Board of Directors of the Richmond Outreach Center, called the accusations against Aguilar “completely untrue and unfounded.”

“We, the Board of Directors, have voted to make this a paid leave of absence, considering the incredible contributions that Pastor Geronimo has made to The ROC as a founding member. Furthermore, we feel that it is not in the purview of the Board to act as either Judge or jury,” the statement read. “We look forward to Pastor Geronimo’s return, and we ask that you continue to keep him and his family in your prayers.”

The ROC’s Board of Directors said it has appointed “the Executive Team” to run the church’s day-to-day operations. Among its services, the ROC church provides religious and bible studies, homeless and prison ministries, addiction programs, family counseling and annual holiday events.

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Pastor placed on paid leave following sex charges

VIRGINIA
Richmond Times-Dispatch

Posted: Thursday, May 23, 2013

The board of directors of the Richmond Outreach Center said today that Pastor Geronimo Aguilar, facing sexual assault charges in Texas, will be on a paid leave of absence after his decision to temporarily step down as pastor and president of the board.

“We, the Board of Directors, have voted to make this a paid leave of absence, considering the incredible contributions that Pastor Geronimo has made to The ROC as a founding member. Furthermore, we feel that is not in the purview of the Board to act as either Judge or jury,” the board said in an email.

“While we believe the accusations against him to be completely untrue and unfounded, we have accepted his request for a temporary leave of absence. Considering the severity of the charges, he feels and we sympathize that his family and these legal matters deserve his full attention,” the email said.

The board said it is taking steps to hire an interim pastor from outside as an appointed executive team makes daily operations decisions at the ROC.

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Statement From ROC Board On Pastor G

VIRGINIA
WRIC

Statement from the Board of Directors of the Richmond Outreach Center
May 23, 2013

Dear ROC Family and Friends,

It is with heavy hearts that we inform you that Pastor Geronimo has decided to temporarily step down as President of the Board and as Pastor of the Richmond Outreach Center to devote his time and energy to certain legal matters in Texas. While we believe the accusations against him to be completely untrue and unfounded, we have accepted his request for a temporary leave of absence. Considering the severity of the charges, he feels and we sympathize that his family and these legal matters deserve his full attention.

We, the Board of Directors, have voted to make this a paid leave of absence, considering the incredible contributions that Pastor Geronimo has made to The ROC as a founding member. Furthermore, we feel that it is not in the purview of the Board to act as either Judge or jury.

During this time, we have appointed the Executive Team to make decisions concerning the day-to-day operations of the Richmond Outreach Center. Also, we are actively pursuing an outside, interim pastor to serve on the Board of Directors, to assist with preaching duties, and to lend spiritual guidance.

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Richmond mayor to investigate ROC after Pastor G’s arrest

VIRGINIA
WTVR

[with video]

May 23, 2013, by Tracy Sears

RICHMOND, Va. (WTVR) – The future of the Richmond Outreach Center (ROC) and its ties to the city of Richmond remain uncertain, now that the ROC’s well known leader has been charged with several felonies relating to the sexual abuse of minors.

Since 2001, Pastor Geronimo Aguilar, known as Pastor G, has been a friend to underprivileged and troubled youth, reaching out to more than 11,000 people weekly through progressive ministries and programs.

Among its services, the ROC church provides religious and bible studies, homeless and prison ministries, addiction programs, family counseling and annual holiday events.

Richmond Mayor Dwight Jones says Aguilar’s dedication over the past decade has undoubtedly made a difference in the community.

“There’s a lot of good the church does in terms of working with young people and working with people who have addictions and people who need to have jobs and so forth,” Jones said.

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Catholic schools operator agrees to settlement in sexual abuse lawsuits

CALIFORNIA
The Monterey County Herald

Herald Staff Report
Posted: 05/23/2013

The Irish Christian Brothers have agreed to pay $16.5 million to settle claims by more than 400 people who say they were physically and sexually abused by the order’s brothers or others at schools operated by the Christian Brothers.

Among those alleged victims are five former Palma High School students who allege they were sexually assaulted by The Rev. Gerald Funcheon when he was a chaplain at the school from 1984 to 1985.

Funcheon admitted in sworn testimony he molested one of the men.

The settlement, which is expected to be finalized in coming weeks, is part of a Chapter 11 bankruptcy the religious order filed in April 2011 in response to a tidal wave of sexual abuse lawsuits.

Palma High is not identified as one of the assets that will be used to pay the settlement. Though the school has historically been affiliated with the Irish Christian Brothers, the school’s president, Brother Patrick Dunne, has said it is a separate corporate entity.

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Christian Brothers Reach Deal in US Abuse Claims

UNITED STATES
ABC News

NEW YORK May 23, 2013 (AP)

The Christian Brothers have agreed to pay more than $16 million to people who were molested as children by members of the U.S. religious order.

The settlement was announced Thursday by attorneys for the Roman Catholic group and for more than 400 victims.

The Christian Brothers staffed schools and worked in dioceses in parts of the United States, including California, Hawaii, Illinois, New York and New Jersey, as well as in Canada.

Two groups that hold Christian Brothers’ assets sought federal bankruptcy protection in the face of the claims. A judge must approve the agreement.

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Mount Cashel abuse survivors receive financial settlement

CANADA
CBC News

Men who were abused by Christian Brothers at the Mount Cashel Orphanage and several schools in St. John’s have reached a settlement with the Roman Catholic organization.

The settlement is the result of the work of a committee that was set up last year after the Christian Brothers declared bankruptcy. The committee has represented 422 victims across North America, including about 90 victims from Newfoundland and Labrador.

Geoff Budden, the lawyer representing the N.L. victims, and a member of that committee, said the total financial settlement is worth $16.5 million.

The settlement will also enable the abuse survivors to continue lawsuits against other parties who may share responsibility for decades of abuse.

Budden added that about 70 other victims of abuse from Mount Cashel, represented by other lawyers, are involved in the same lawsuit that the committee is involved with, but those victims have not yet arrived at a settlement.

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Monk charged with trying to lure girls released on bond

ILLINOIS
Chicago Tribune

By Ruth Fuller
Special to the Tribune
3:16 p.m. CDT, May 23, 2013

A Benedictine monk charged with trying to lure several far north suburban girls into his car has been released on bond — for a second time – and is now living with his father, authorities in Lake County said today.

Judge Christopher Stride agreed on May 17 to lower bond for Thomas Chmura, 57, from $150,000 to the original amount of $50,000 after Chmura found a new place to live, said defense attorney Robert Hauser.

Chmura’s original bond was revoked on May 2 when court officials checked the Wisconsin abbey where he had lived for more than 30 years and found children present, which violated conditions of the bond. Chmura is now living with his father in Lansing, Ill., Hauser said.

Chmura was arrested after investigators said he drove up to a 14-year-old girl in Antioch on April 25 and repeatedly asked her to get in his car before she ran off.

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Greater Boston Video: Attorney in Clergy Sex Abuse Scandal Talks About Own Abuse

MASSACHUSETTS
WGBH

By WGBH NEWS

Attorney Eric MacLeish represented hundreds of people who, as children, had been sexually abused by priests in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston. He joins us to talk about the abuse he suffered as a child, and his work changing the statute of limitations on child sex abuse laws.

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Church sex-abuse victims call on Dolan to advocate for Myers’ ouster

NEW JERSEY/NEW YORK
NJ.com

[with video]

By David Cruz
NJ Today

A coalition of clergy and lay people from around the country call themselves the Catholic Whistleblowers. They gathered in New York City to assert themselves against what they see as a powerful entrenched bureaucracy turning a blind eye to the suffering of its most vulnerable members.

“I have yet to meet or even hear about a victim who has recounted that the bishop’s first response upon hearing their report of sexual abuse, was to reach out to them with any degree of compassion or concern. This is an abject disgrace,” said Canon Lawyer Father Tom Doyle.

They began forming nine months ago, without approval or cooperation from their individual diocese, bound by their desire to serve victims and to call on organizations like the National Council of Catholic Bishops to take action against those who they say have been complicit by covering up the abuse.

“We are here today to call upon Cardinal Dolan as president of the NCCB to use his influence to press the Vatican to remove Archbishop Myers from the Newark Archdiocese because of his mishandling of the Michael Fugee case. We appeal to all bishops and legislators to remove all statutes of limitations on child abuse cases as a means of demonstrating that our church is serious about pursuing truth and justice,” said Father Ron Lemmert of the Archdiocese of New York.

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New settlement includes Mount Cashel victims

CANADA
The Telegram

Published on May 23, 2013

Barb Sweet

A new settlement has been reached with the Catholic lay order, the Irish Christian Brothers, that affects some 160 victims of sexual abuse at the former Mount Cashel orphanage in St. John’s, The Telegram has learned.

The settlement is part of a $16.5 million cash payment from the Christian Brothers affecting 400 men and women in the U.S. and Canada who were molested as children by members of the Christian Brothers.

The Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors for The Christian Brothers Institute and The Christian Brothers of Ireland, Inc. has approved the terms and conditions of an agreed-to reorganization plan in the Chapter 11 cases of The Christian Brothers Institute and The Christian Brothers of Ireland, Inc. (In the United States, the Christian Brothers are the civil arms of the North American Province of the Congregation of Christian Brothers of Ireland.)

In response to sexual abuse claims, the Christian Brothers filed Chapter 11 cases on April 28, 2011 in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York. During the course of the Chapter 11 cases, more than 400 survivors of sexual and physical abuse filed claims with the Bankruptcy Court. The claims generally arise from the Christian Brothers’ operation/staffing of schools and child-care facilities from 17 U.S. states and Canada.

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Settlement for Victims of Christian Brothers

UNITED STATES
VOCM

The Committee representing hundreds of people who were molested as children by the Christian Brothers of Ireland has reached a settlement with the Catholic religious order. The financial settlement for abuse survivors is a cash payment of $16.5 million and should be filed within the next three weeks.

After the sexual abuse claims, the Christian Brothers filed bankruptcy in the Unites States. The filing lead to a reorganization plan which the Committee says will safeguard children from future abuse.

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Abuse victims to receive $16.5m as Christian Brothers declare US bankruptcy

UNITED STATES
The Journal (Ireland)

OVER 400 SURVIVORS of institutional abuse in the United States are to receive compensation totalling $16.5 million after approving the terms of a bankruptcy by the North American branch of the ‘Irish’ Christian Brothers.

The survivors – acting as a committee of unsecured creditors – have approved a Chapter 11 deal for the Christian Brothers Institute and The Christian Brothers of Ireland, Incorporated, which is based in New York.

The money will be put up by the order itself and by one of its insurance carriers.

The amount shared by each survivor will be dramatically less than some of the settlements paid to some abuse survivors before the bankruptcy process began in 2011, but the settlement was nonetheless welcomed by an attorney representing the survivors.

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Richmond pastor to be extradited to Texas

VIRGINIA
Richmond Times-Dispatch

BY LOUIS LLOVIO Richmond Times-Dispatch

UPDATE: Geronimo Aguilar, senior pastor at the Richmond Outreach Center, will be handed over to Texas authorities in about 24 hours and taken to Fort Worth, Texas.

There, he faces seven felony charges relating to sexual acts with two minors alleged to have occurred in the 1990s.

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First nation-wide Catholic abuse bankruptcy settles

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

POSTED BY JOELLE CASTEIX ON MAY 23, 2013

Today’s settlement is a true landmark for survivors of sexual abuse at the hands of Irish Christian Brothers and their employees. Because brave victims came forward, dozens of predators—some of whom were still in positions of power at schools and universities—have been exposed across the country. Communities including Chicago, Honolulu, Salinas, CA and Bergen County, NJ have now learned that many child sexual crimes and cover-ups happened in their local Irish Christian Brothers’ schools. Few groups of survivors have ever been able to expose so many criminals.

Were it not for brave Irish Christian Brothers survivors, accused and admitted predators would still be in schools, victims would still be suffering in silence and shame, and the truth would still be hidden.

But the journey for justice is not over. The victims in this settlement can still seek accountability from the schools where they were abused and where officials covered up abuse. Survivors can still seek truth from diocesan officials who turned a blind eye to the crimes at the Irish Christian Brothers’ schools. We hope that they remain vigilant and continue to protect kids RIGHT NOW.

The Irish Christian Brothers should have done the right thing years ago. They should have reported molesters to the police. They should have reached out to victims. They should have warned communities about the danger. But they didn’t. Instead, they waited to get exposed, and then used bankruptcy protection to avoid embarrassing civil trials. While it may be tempting to applaud the Brothers, we urge people to remember their decades-long cover-up of abuse in the United States, Canada and Ireland.

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Priest reinstated after archdiocese clears him of sex abuse allegations

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Globe

By Lauren Dezenski | GLOBE CORRESPONDENT MAY 23, 2013

Reverend Joseph F. Byrne has been reinstated in the ministry after the Archdiocese of Boston cleared the 69-year-old priest of sexual abuse allegations, the archdiocese said today.

Byrne was placed on administrative leave in May 2012 after someone contacted the archdiocese with an allegation that he had sexually abused a child in the 1970s. The allegation was found to be unsubtantiated, the archdiocese said.

According to Byrne’s assignment history, he served at St. Matthew’s parish in Dorchester from 1969 to 1975, then moved to St. John the Baptist Church in Quincy.

As a result of the investigation’s findings, Byrne is no longer on administrative leave and has been assigned the status of senior priest, the archdiocese said.

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Former Waltham Priest Cleared of Sex Abuse Claims

MASSACHUSETTS
Patch

By Ryan Grannan-Doll

A former Waltham priest has been cleared of allegations of sexual abuse against minors, according to the Boston Archdiocese.

Reverend Joseph F. Byrne, who previously served at Our Lady of the Comforter Afflicted in Waltham from 1994-2002, has been reinstated into his position after an investigation concluded the allegations were unsubstantiated, according to a Diocese statement. Byrne was previously placed on leave in May 2012 after the allegations surfaced. He had been been retired but was performing limited duties in Falmouth parishes.

“The allegation concerned conduct alleged to have occurred in the 1970s. Fr. Byrne is no longer on administrative leave and is assigned the status of Senior Priest,” the statement read.

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Davenport priest reinstated to ministry

IOWA
WQAD

May 23, 2013, by Shellie Nelson

Diocese officials say after evidence did not support the report, a Davenport priest accused of inappropriate contact will be restored to ministry.

Father Robert Harness, pastor of Holy Family Catholic Church in Davenport, was accused of inappropriately touching a minor in approximately 1990. Diocese officials said someone reported Father Harness inappropriately touched a minor during a game that was played at a high school retreat.
“The game was played in full view of as many as 50 students and 10 adults. None of the witnesses observed nor has anyone else reported any inappropriate behavior by Father Harness,” said Deacon David Montgomery of the Diocese of Davenport.

In keeping with the previously-established memorandum of understanding between the diocese and the Scott County Attorney, the diocese reported the allegation to the county attorney. In keeping with the memorandum of understanding, the diocese was required to remove Fr. Harness from active ministry until the month-long investigation was completed.

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Review clears Davenport priest accused of touching

IOWA
Omaha.com

The Associated Press

IOWA CITY, Iowa — A suspended Catholic priest in Davenport will return to the ministry after a diocese investigation did not substantiate an allegation that he inappropriately touched a minor in 1990.

Bishop Martin Amos of Davenport said Thursday that a monthlong review by a private detective found no wrongdoing by Father Robert Harness, pastor of Holy Family Church. Amos said he wanted to publicize the outcome “in the hope of helping to restore the good character of Father Harness.”

Amos suspended Harness last month after someone claimed Harness improperly touched a minor during a game that was played at a high school retreat.

The investigation found the game was played in front of as many as 50 students and 10 adults, and no witnesses or anyone else reported seeing any inappropriate behavior.

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Victims settle with Irish Christian Brothers for $16.5 million

UNITED STATES
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on May 23, 2013

Two years after they sought bankruptcy protection to avoid more than 200 embarrasing civil sex abuse trials, the New York-based Irish Christian Brothers (ICB) have settled with more than 400 victims of child sexual abuse (in Canada and the United States) for $16.5 million.

This marks the end of the first step for many ICB victims. The settlement does not include the actual Irish Christian Brothers schools or the dioceses where they were located. Only the actual order was included in the settlement.

For victims in Hawaii, this means that they can still take legal action against Damien Memorial and the Diocese of Honolulu, whose officials, victims say, knew about abuse and covered it up. The same holds true for ICB victims across the country, including communities such as Bergen County, NJ; Salinas, CA; Chicago and Seattle.

But there is something very important to note about the ICB bankruptcy. While the battle is far from over, brave survivors in this case exposed dozens of predators who had been hidden in schools across the country. They were able to inform communities that convicted abusers such as Brother Thomas C. Ford and Br. Robert Brouillette taught children in more than 15 states. Survivors were able to show how serial predators such as Fr. Gerald Funcheon were sent to Hawaii to hide from allegations on the mainland.

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