ABUSE TRACKER

A digest of links to media coverage of clergy abuse. For recent coverage listed in this blog, read the full article in the newspaper or other media source by clicking “Read original article.” For earlier coverage, click the title to read the original article.

July 2, 2013

Paedophile priest destroyed porn after bishop’s tip-off

AUSTRALIA
Maitland Mercury

By ELLE WATSON July 3, 2013

Paedophile priest James Fletcher destroyed a collection of homosexual pornography hidden inside his Lochinvar presbytery when he was under police investigation for the repeated sexual abuse of a young boy.

The church member who helped Fletcher move documents, that included the pornographic magazines and videos, tipped off Detective Chief Inspector Peter Fox, who was leading the Maitland investigation in 2003.

Chief Inspector Fox told the special commission of inquiry the information “gave weight” to the investigation and linked Fletcher’s “interest in this sort of activity” to the “most ugly” homosexual abuse suffered by the child.

The detective said he did not believe another member of the church who claimed ownership of the material after Fletcher denied it was his.

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.

BOOM GOES THE DYNAMITE

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Esquire

By Charles P. Pierce

And boom, as Saint Jerome once put it, goes the dynamite.

The Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, half of which was the blog’s first alma mater in the biz, has done us all an estimable service to putting online all the documents that were jacked out of the Archdiocese there as part of the bankruptcy proceedings resulting from thousands of cases of sexual abuse by priests of said Archdiocese. Needless to say, nobody comes out looking very good. In fact, the Roman Catholic Church comes out of them looking very much like an organization that should be disbanded and fed piecemeal — hierarchy first — into a woodchipper. One guy molested 50 people in 11 parishes before anything happened to him, and not very much did. The sheer magnitude of the criminality is stunning, and this is one archdiocese, and not the biggest one, either.

I would call your attention, though, to the documents and exhibits concerning the time spent in Milwaukee by Dolan Of New York, who has been one of the prime mouthpieces of the phony “religious liberty” argument by which HMC presumes to deny to its Presbyterian cleaning ladies their ladyparts medicine as required by the Affordable Care Act. Dolan is also one of those happy-priest nuisances who thinks he looks cute in a Yankees cap. In Milwaukee, it turns out, he was pretty much Winston Wolf.

Four years before the Archdiocese of Milwaukee filed for bankruptcy, then-Archbishop Timothy Dolan sought Vatican approval to move nearly $57 million in cemetery funds off the archdiocese’s books and into a trust to help protect them “from any legal claim or liability,” according to documents made public Monday.

Read more: Bad Day For Milwaukee Archdiocese – Boom Goes The Dynamite – Esquire
Follow us: @Esquiremag on Twitter | Esquire on Facebook
Visit us at Esquire.com

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

Ohio priest says abuse charges filed too late

OHIO
Bluefield Daily Telegraph

July 2, 2013

Associated Press

CINCINNATI — An Ohio priest accused of taking a 10-year-old boy to West Virginia for sex more than two decades ago says the government waited too long to file charges and he wants the case dismissed.

Robert Poandl (POHN’-duhl), of the Cincinnati-based Glenmary Home Missioners, has pleaded not guilty to sexually abusing the boy while the two visited a church in Spencer, W.Va., in 1991.

Poandl is out of jail on the condition that he has no contact with children. A jury trial is scheduled for Aug. 26.

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

Catholic Church Update: Still Terrible, Still Stacking Cash So Tall They Could Climb It

UNITED STATES
Wonkette

We’ve been thinking a lot about how to streamline our workload, synergize our growth goals, lifehack a four-hour work week, and generally figure out ways to be even more lazy. One of the proactive methodologies we’re considering is creating a one-touch macro so we can efficiently deploy a post every time the Catholic Church does something incredibly awful related to the pedophile priest scandal. We could save literally MINUTES by having pre-written and recycled this post because all we really need to point out is that they are being horrible again. Today’s particular flavor of horrible: moving assets around so that they could insulate themselves from legal claims from victims:

Files released by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Milwaukee on Monday reveal that in 2007, Cardinal Timothy F. Dolan, then the archbishop there, requested permission from the Vatican to move nearly $57 million into a cemetery trust fund to protect the assets from victims of clergy sexual abuse who were demanding compensation….

[T]he files contain a 2007 letter to the Vatican in which he explains that by transferring the assets, “I foresee an improved protection of these funds from any legal claim and liability.” The Vatican approved the request in five weeks, the files show.
Hiding your money in trust funds does indeed improve your protection of those delicious monies. Doing so to dick over victims is just what Jesus said to do in First Corinthiananans, right?! NOPE NOT RIGHT.

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.

Reports: Prosecutors wrap up probe of Vatican bank

ROME
Boston Herald

By:
Associated Press

ROME — Italian news reports say prosecutors have wrapped up their money-laundering investigation into the Vatican bank and are focusing on the institute’s two recently resigned managers.

Paolo Cipriani and Massimo Tulli stepped down late Monday from the Institute for Religious Works.
Cipriani was placed under investigation in 2010 for alleged violations of Italy’s anti-money laundering laws along with the bank’s then-president, Ettore Gotti Tedeschi, stemming from a routine transaction involving an IOR account at an Italian bank. Italian financial police also seized the 23 million euros ($30 million).

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

A Money-Smuggling Scandal Threatens to Sink the Vatican Bank

VATICAN CITY
Bloomberg Businessweek

By Carol Matlack

It sounds like a thriller plot: A Vatican cleric, a spy, and a financier accused of conspiring to smuggle 20 million euros ($26 million) out of Switzerland aboard a private jet. In fact, it’s the latest scandal to hit the Vatican bank, prompting Pope Francis to make sweeping management changes.

The Holy See removed the bank’s longtime director and deputy director on July 1, three days after Monsignor Nunzio Scarano and two other men were arrested in connection with the alleged smuggling scheme. Scarano has denied the allegations.

Since his installation in March, the pope also has appointed a trusted aide to help supervise the bank while naming a special commission to investigate charges of corruption and money laundering that have dogged the institution for decades. The bank also is to start publishing its financial accounts for the first time. Now the Vatican has even reached across the Atlantic for help, recruiting Washington, D.C.-based Promontory Financial Group to conduct a forensic review and screen the bank’s client relationships. The effort will be led by Elizabeth McCaul, a former New York state banking supervisor based in Promontory’s New York City office, and Rafaele Cosimo, an expert in bank governance and operations who works for Promontory in Europe.

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.

Cardinal Dolan asked Vatican to hide millions from sexual abuse victims

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Telegraph (UK)

America’s most senior Roman Catholic cleric obtained permission from the Vatican to move $57 million (£38 million) of church funds into a trust to shield it from sexual abuse victims seeking compensation.

By Jon Swaine, New York
02 Jul 2013

Cardinal Timothy Dolan, the President of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops, told Vatican officials in a 2007 letter that the transfer offered “improved protection of these funds from any legal claim”.

Cardinal Dolan, who is now the Archbishop of New York, has been credited with helping to root out a serious sexual abuse scandal in his previous archdiocese of Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

However, he has long insisted that he never deliberately sought to protect church funds from victims of abuse by clergy in the archdiocese, which he led as Archbishop between 2002 and 2009.

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.

Milwaukee documents show Dolan asked to transfer funds

MILWAUKEE (WI)
National Catholic Reporter

Marie Rohde | Jul. 2, 2013

MILWAUKEE Cardinal Timothy Dolan says it isn’t so, but advocates for victims of clergy sex abuse say they can now prove what they suspected: Dolan shifted almost $57 million into a cemetery trust fund to protect the money from lawsuits brought by victims.

In 2007, when Dolan was archbishop of Milwaukee, he wrote the Vatican’s Congregation for Clergy seeking permission for a “transfer of assets from the patrimony of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee to a separate juridic person, an autonomous pious foundation known as The Archdiocese of Milwaukee Catholic Cemetery Perpetual Care Trust.”

The reason for the transfer: “I foresee an improved protection of these funds from any legal claim and liability,” Dolan wrote in the letter, one of many documents the Milwaukee archdiocese released Monday.

Dolan’s letter to the Vatican provided the ” ‘smoking gun’ proving he committed federal bankruptcy fraud,” said a statement released Monday by the Milwaukee chapter of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests.

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

Priest appeals rape sentences

IRELAND
The Journal

THE Court of Criminal Appeal has reserved judgment in the case of former priest Tony Walsh, who is appealing against separate sentences imposed for the rape and sexual abuse of young boys.

Walsh (59), formerly of North Circular Road, Dublin, who was known as the ‘Singing Priest’ for his role in a travelling all-priest vocal group before he was defrocked, is serving a 16-year sentence imposed on him in 2010 for the rape and abuse of three schoolboys.

Last month, Walsh had 15 months added to this sentence for abusing two other boys.

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.

Paedophile priest…

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

Paedophile priest told boy (7) he could get dead grandfather into heaven if he performed sex act

2 JULY 2013

A paedophile priest told a distraught seven-year-old boy that he could get his dead grandfather into heaven if he performed a sex act on him, a court has heard.

Belfast Crown Court heard that the boy was quite distressed about his grandfather being in purgatory but that 55-year-old James Martin Donaghy told the child “he could get him into haven if he helped him” and performed a sex act.

Last month just before his trial was due to begin Donaghy, originally from Lady Wallace Drive in Lisburn but now languishing in Magilligan prison, pleaded guilty to four charges of indecently assaulting the boy and one of common assault against the schoolboy on dates between January and May 1989.

Following a lengthy trial at the end of 2011, Donaghy was convicted of a total of 17 sex offences including indecent assault and committing acts of gross indecency against all three 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.

Milwaukee Archdiocese Opens Abuse Files: Letter from Dolan Speaks of “Improved Protection” of Diocesan Funds as Survivors Come Forward

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Bilgrimage

William D. Lindsey

Yesterday, the archdiocese of Milwaukee, previously headed by the current president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops Cardinal Timothy Dolan, released a trove of documents having to do with how the archdiocese has handled (and covered up) cases of sexual abuse of minors. The story is told by Laurie Goodstein for New York Times, Marie Rohde (and also here) in National Catholic Reporter, Karen Herzog for the Journal-Sentinel (Milwaukee), and by M.L. Johnson in the Star Tribune (Minneapolis/Milwaukee).

On behalf of the National Survivor Advocates Coalition, Kris Ward writes:

Cardinal Timothy Dolan’s letter to the Vatican asking permission to transfer $57 million from the cemetery fund to a trust fund as the archdiocese moved toward filing for bankruptcy included the then Archbishop Dolan persuasive phrase for his request, “By transferring these assets to the Trust, I foresee an improved protection of these funds from any legal claim and liability.” Within a month the Vatican agreed.

As late into the crisis as 2007 when the letter was written Dolan assumed the letter would never be read beyond the chancery building and the stone castle walls of the Vatican.

And then she concludes:

Improved protection. That’s got some ring to it.

For Bishop Accountability, Terence McKiernan states:

The documents provide additional evidence that, contrary to Cardinal Dolan’s repeated denials, he concluded settlements with numerous offending priests, paying them bounties if they would agree to request laicization for sexually abusing children. The archive also contains an important 2007 exchange of letters between Dolan and the Vatican on the eve of the bankruptcy filing, in which Dolan asked permission to shelter $56.9 million, envisioning “an improved protection of these funds from any legal claim and liability.” The revelations about these actions, and Dolan’s denials, raise the question whether he is fit to lead the USCCB and the Archdiocese of New York. Documents also demonstrate that requests for laicization, which had been handled slowly by Cardinal Josef Ratzinger, continued to be processed at a snail’s pace, and that children continued to be endangered thereby, after Ratzinger became Pope Benedict XVI.

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

A Tale of Two Coverups

UNITED STATES
Spiritual Politics

Mark Silk | Jul 2, 2013

Yesterday brought big developments in two ongoing sexual abuse stories: the resignation of Rabbi Norman Lamm as chancellor of Yeshiva University and the revelation that Cardinal Timothy Dolan shielded a pile of cash from legal claims when he was archbishop of Milwaukee.

Lamm’s resignation came six months after the Jewish Forward reported that in late ’70s and early ’80s two senior staff members who had abused students at Yeshiva’s high school for boys were permitted by Lamm to resign and take jobs at other Jewish schools. “If it was an open-and-shut case, I just let [the staff member] go quietly,” Lamm told the Forward. “It was not our intention or position to destroy a person without further inquiry.”

Not that anyone was admitting that the resignation had anything to do with the cover-up. To the contrary, the official version was that it had been arranged for Lamm to step down three years ago. Who knew?

Still and all, in a letter to the Yeshiva community, he did repent for what he had done: “True character requires of me the courage to admit that, despite my best intentions then, I now recognize that I was wrong.” And indirectly, he acknowledged that he is in fact paying a price for what he did: “You submit to momentary compassion in according individuals the benefit of the doubt by not fully recognizing what is before you, and in the process you lose the Promised Land.”

So, despite giving himself too much credit for good intentions, and permitting himself some Mosaic self-aggrandizement (no Promised Land), Lamm did the right thing.

Meanwhile, the release of thousands of pages of documents on the handling of abuse cases by the archdiocese of Milwaukee revealed that in 2007 Archbishop Dolan obtained the permission of the Vatican to transfer a nearly $57-million cemetery fund off the archdiocesan books and into a special trust. Dolan’s request came just a few weeks before the Wisconsin Supreme Court issued a ruling that allowed victims of sex abuse to sue the archdiocese. Seventeen days after the ruling, the Vatican approved the request.

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.

Houston pastor arrested, accused of molesting two young girls

HOUSTON (TX)
KTRK

HOUSTON (KTRK) — A Houston church pastor was behind bars Monday evening, accused molesting two young girls.

Ricardo Pena faces two counts of aggravated sexual assault of a child.

Pena is the pastor at Doverside Baptist Church in north Houston.

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

Vatican bank review commission should drop individuals’ accounts

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Nicholas P. Cafardi | Jul. 2, 2013

COMMENTARY

In the last few days, Pope Francis created, in a handwritten document, a five-person group to review the operations of the Vatican bank, whose real name is the Istituto per le Opere di Religione, or IOR for short. That group will have its hands full because, you see, Italian authorities arrested Msgr. Nunzio Scarano, a Vatican official, and charged him with attempting to use the Vatican bank as part of a scheme to avoid Italian fiscal control laws. He is currently a guest of the Italian government in Rome’s Regina Coeli (Queen of Heaven) prison.

Scarano is in jail because of a reported scheme to use an Italian government jet to bring 20 million euros, owned by some friends of his, from Switzerland into Italy. (One wonders what kind of friends they were who did not want Italian authorities to know about the importation of this money.) Scarano’s alleged accomplice, an Italian secret service agent named Giovanni Maria Zito, is also in jail.

The importation scheme fell apart when the fellow in Switzerland who owed the money to Scarano’s “friends” failed to pay it, and Zito still demanded his 400,000 euro (about $525,000) “commission” for arranging the transport. Scarano evidently used his personal account at IOR to give Zito a 200,000 euro check as a down payment then reported the check as stolen, at which point things really fell apart.

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.

Improved Protection

MILWAUKEE (WI)
National Survivor Advocates Coalition

[the documents – Jeff Anderson & Associates]

[the documents – Milwaukee archdiocese]

EDITORIAL

Cardinal Timothy Dolan’s letter to the Vatican asking permission to transfer $57 million from the cemetery fund to a trust fund as the archdiocese moved toward filing for bankruptcy included the then Archbishop Dolan persuasive phrase for his request, “By transferring these assets to the Trust, I foresee an improved protection of these funds from any legal claim and liability.” Within a month the Vatican agreed.

As late into the crisis as 2007 when the letter was written Dolan assumed the letter would never be read beyond the chancery building and the stone castle walls of the Vatican.

Seems dead men can indeed tell tales when there is persistent, courageous and dedicated work by sexual abuse victims to get to the truth. SNAP leaders in Milwaukee, Peter Isley and John Pilmaier who have worked diligently on this issue cannot be over commended for their dedication, persistence and courage.

The truth is in the documents.

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.

Documents reveal …

WISCONSIN
Journal Times

Documents reveal details of former Racine County priests’ misconduct

[Michael Benham]

[Michael Benham]

[Benham timeline]

[Jerome Lanser]

[Jerome Lanser]

[Jerome Lanser]

[Lanser timeline]

[Eugene Kreuzer]

[Kreuzer timeline]

[Daniel Budzynski]

[Daniel Budzynski]

[Daniel Budzynski]

[Budzynski timeline]

[Raymond Adamsky]

[Raymond Adamski]

[Adamski timeline]

[Oswald Krusing]

[Krusing timeline]

ALISON BAUTER alison.bauter@journaltimes.com

MILWAUKEE — Thousands of documents released Monday detail allegations against 42 Milwaukee Archdiocese priests accused of sexually assaulting minors, including at least six who allegedly molested children in Racine County parishes.

In many instances, the priests have admitted to all or some of the charges, and several cases resulted in settlements with the church and received no media coverage at the time.

Former Milwaukee Archbishop Timothy Dolan made 45 names public in 2004, identifying each with substantiated allegations of sexually abusing one or more minors; documents released Monday as part of the regional archdiocese’s bankruptcy process detailed 42 of those cases.

Six former Racine County parish leaders on the list allegedly abused minors while serving here.

A series of letters from then-Archbishop Dolan detail his efforts to de-frock Michael Benham, formerly an associate pastor at St. John Nepomuk Parish in Racine, who admittedly repeatedly sexually abused an 11-year-old there in the mid-1970s. The church stripped Benham of his title in 2009.

As was the case with many of the 42 priests, the documents detail

Benham’s struggle with alcoholism. In several of those cases the alcohol abuse reportedly intersects with instances of same-sex child abuse, as with Jerome Lanser, formerly of Racine’s Sacred Heart Catholic Church, where a police report states he sexually abused an eight- or nine-year-old boy from 1975 to 1976.

Children at St. John the Baptist in rural Union Grove reportedly feared former Pastor Eugene Kreuzer during his two-decade career there, which included multiple alleged abuses of teenage boys.

Daniel Budzynski, formerly of Caledonia’s St. Louis Catholic Church, references an “unfortunate incident” with a young boy during a church retreat, which Budzynski in a 2001 letter identified as “horsing around.” He transferred parishes shortly thereafter, and over the years allegedly abused multiple boys between age 7 and 16.

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.

No further action against Thornton Heath priest accused of sex assault

UNITED KINGDOM
Your Local Guardian

A catholic priest, arrested on suspicion of sexually assaulting a teenage boy, will face no further action, police have said.

Canon Francis Moran of St Andrew’s Roman Catholic Church in Brook Road, Thornton Heath, was arrested last September and withdrew from his role at the church following his arrest.

Parishioners were informed of the allegation when they were read a statement during a Sunday Mass.

The 52-year-old answered bail at a south London police station last week and was told no further action would be taken against him.

The Archdiocese of Southwark have yet to confirm whether he will return to his role as parish priest at St Andrew’s.

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.

Column: The Catholic Church owes the women of the Magdalene Laundries

IRELAND
The Journal

The Catholic Church and the Irish State were both responsible for incarcerating women in the Magdalene Laundries – and so both must pay, writes Anne Ferris TD.

IN APRIL 1955, a Scottish writer researching a book about Ireland talked his way into the Magdalene Laundry in Galway. First he had to obtain the permission of the Bishop of Galway, Dr Michael John Browne, the same man who a decade later would refer to the RTE broadcaster Gay Byrne as “a purveyor of filth” for the sin of discussing the colour of a lady’s nightgown on the Late Late Show.

True to form, Bishop Browne warned the Scotsman “if you write anything wrong it will come back on you” adding as a condition of entry to the laundry that anything intended to be published about the visit would have to be approved in advance by the Mother Superior of the Sisters of Mercy.

The Scotsman, Dr Halliday Sutherland, agreed to abide by the bishop’s stipulation and was granted rare access to a Magdalene laundry. His subsequent account is worked into a single chapter in his 1956 book ‘Irish Journey’. To what extent it was censored by the Mother Superior, we will never know.

An ‘agreed’ year of unpaid domestic service

The day before he visited the laundry in Galway, Dr Sutherland visited the Mother and Baby home in Tuam. He noted that the accepted practice was that unmarried mothers in the Tuam home ‘agreed’ to provide a year of unpaid domestic service to the nuns, and that in addition to this servitude, the home received State support, via Galway County Council, to the tune of £1 per child or mother per week.

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.

IOR-Directorate offers resignations

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

President Ernst von Freyberg to assume General Director duties ad interim

VATICAN INSIDER STAFF
VATICAN CITY

IOR-Director Comm. Paolo Cipriani and Deputy Director Dott. Massimo Tulli have offered their resignations from their current positions. After many years of service both have decided that this decision would be in the best interest of the Institute and the Holy See. The Oversight Council and the Commission of Cardinals have accepted their resignations and asked President Ernst von Freyberg to assume the functions of the General Director ad interim with immediate effect. The Vatican regulator AIF has been informed accordingly. The Special Commission appointed on June 26 2013 has acknowledged the decision.

Ernst von Freyberg will be supported by Rolando Marranci as acting Deputy Director and Antonio Montaresi in the newly created position as acting Chief Risk Officer with the remit of overseeing compliance and special projects. Previously Rolando Marranci served as Chief Operating Officer at a leading Italian bank in London. Antonio Montaresi has served as Chief Risk and Chief Compliance Officer with various banks in the US.

“In the name of the Oversight Council I thank Mr. Cipriani and Mr. Tulli for their personal dedication over the past years,” said President Ernst von Freyberg. “I welcome Rolando Marranci and Antonio Montaresi as outstanding professionals,” he said. “Since 2010 the IOR and its management have been working hard to bring structures and processes in line with international standards for anti-money laundering. While we are grateful for what has been achieved, it is clear today that we need new leadership to increase the pace of this transformation process. Our progress is in no small measure due to the continued support from the governing bodies of the Institute and its personnel.”

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 Listecki comments on sex abuse documents

MILWAUKEE (WI)
WTMJ

[with audio]

By Jaclyn Brandt

MILWAUKEE – Archbishop Listecki agreed to talk about the thousands of pages of documents recently released regarding the sex abuse scandal in the Milwaukee Archdiocese.

He began by confronting the idea that Cardinal Dolan (then archbishop of Milwaukee) transferred funds to an account that would be protected by bankruptcy.

“Of course it was a proper transfer,” he said. “Those funds continue to be set aside for the perpetual care of the cemeteries. My sense is all Cardinal Dolan was doing is being diligent as a leader.”

Archbishop Listecki explained that the release of documents was an attempt to help the victims.

“One of the things immediately is we made the documents available in response to the attorneys representing the claimants in the bankruptcy,” Listecki explained. “Their sense was to help the individuals understand what the archdiocese knew when it knew and how it responded to various aspects.”

The archdiocese said they are attempting to move forward, while understanding the problems of their past to help heal, and make sure they can stop it in the future.

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.

DIRECTOR AND DEPUTY DIRECTOR OF THE IOR RESIGN

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Vatican City, 2 July 2013 (VIS) – A communique was issued in English by the Holy See Press Office late yesterday afternoon, the full text of which is given below:

“IOR-Director Comm. Paolo Cipriani and Deputy Director Dott. Massimo Tulli have offered their resignations from their current positions. After many years of service both have decided that this decision would be in the best interest of the Institute and the Holy See. The Oversight Council and the Commission of Cardinals have accepted their resignations and asked President Ernst von Freyberg to assume the functions of the General Director ad interim with immediate effect. The Vatican regulator AIF has been informed accordingly. The Special Commission appointed on June 26 2013 has acknowledged the decision.

“Ernst von Freyberg will be supported by Rolando Marranci as acting Deputy Director and Antonio Montaresi in the newly created position as acting Chief Risk Officer with the remit of overseeing compliance and special projects. Previously Rolando Marranci served as Chief Operating Officer at a leading Italian bank in London. Antonio Montaresi has served as Chief Risk and Chief Compliance Officer with various banks in the US.

“’In the name of the Oversight Council I thank Mr. Cipriani and Mr. Tulli for their personal dedication over the past years,’ said President Ernst von Freyberg. ‘I welcome Rolando Marranci and Antonio Montaresi as outstanding professionals,’ he said. ‘Since 2010 the IOR and its management have been working hard to bring structures and processes in line with international standards for anti-money laundering. While we are grateful for what has been achieved, it is clear today that we need new leadership to increase the pace of this transformation process. Our progress is in no small measure due to the continued support from the governing bodies of the Institute and its personnel.’

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.

AUSSIE ABUSE COVERAGE PROMPTS ENQUIRIES IN NZ

NEW ZEALAND
NZ Catholic

Tuesday Jul, 2013

by MICHAEL OTTO

WELLINGTON — Media publicity around state and federal inquiries into child abuse in Australia have prompted several adults to contact the Catholic Church’s National Office for Professional Standards in New Zealand.

Professional standards office national director Bill Kilgallon told NZ Catholic that a number of people currently living in Australia, who grew up in New Zealand, “have felt able to come forward and tell their story”.

These people are aged between 40 and 60 years and the abuse happened during their childhoods in New Zealand, he said.

Mr Kilgallon, who, in the 1990s, led independent inquiries into allegations of abuse in residential care provided by a local authority in the United Kingdom, is encouraged that these people have come forward.

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 laws need to be used to fullest effect

PENNSYLVANIA
The Daily Review

The Jerry Sandusky case and another involving the Rev. Charles Englehardt in Philadelphia exposed not only the crimes they committed against children, but the inadequacies in state laws meant to detect and deter that conduct.

Last week the state House Children and Youth Committee approved a package of six bills that should help to better protect children. For example, the bills would broaden the definition of abuse to allow earlier intervention by authorities and minimize harm to children, expand requirements to report abuse, require background checks for more people who work with children, and so on.

The bills are derived from recommendations by legislative commission that was created following the Sandusky arrest and prosecution.

Even though the bills merit adoption, they are not comprehensive. They do not address another key issue that was exposed by the Sandusky case. Even though several state agencies had some information about Mr. Sandusky’s conduct, that they did not act under the authority that they had under existing law.

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.

MALONEY CHILD PROTECTION BILL APPROVED BY HOUSE

PENNSYLVANIA
Tri County Record

On Thursday, June 20,the House of Representatives voted to approve Rep. David Maloney’s (R-Berks) child protection legislation, moving it to the Senate for further consideration.

As a member of the House Children and Youth Committee, Maloney developed House Bill 434 from concerns he has had for years about the different legal standard between teachers and other professionals in the requirements to alert police to potential child abuse. The recent Jerry Sandusky child abuse scandal has highlighted the need for such legislation.

“This bill would apply the same standards for reporting suspected child abuse to school employees as those that exist for other employees of other workplaces,” Maloney said. “So, when a school employee suspects another school employee of abusing a student, the standard for substantiating abuse, the reporting requirements and procedures, and the investigative response is the same as it is elsewhere.”

Coincidentally, the Task Force on Child Protection the General Assembly created last year to review Pennsylvania’s child protection laws has recommended just such a law to prevent the lack of reporting abuse that occurred at Penn State University when Sandusky was an assistant football coach there. To date, the House has passed and sent to the Senate more than a dozen pieces of legislation based on the task force’s recommendations.

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Teen’s father testifies at Colorado Springs priest’s trial that his son is ‘untruthful’

COLORADO
Gazette

By Lance Benzel Published: July 1, 2013

The father of a former altar boy who says a Colorado Springs priest molested him questioned his son’s veracity in court Monday, calling him “untruthful” and telling a jury: “I don’t always believe him.”

The father’s frank and potentially damaging assessment of the now 18-year-old accuser’s credibilty came as attorneys for the Rev. Charles Robert “Bob” Manning, 78, began their defense in a case pitting one man’s word against the other’s.

Manning, who retired from St. Gabriel the Archangel Catholic Church in Colorado Springs in the wake of the allegations against him, has pleaded not guilty to sexual assault on a child, which his attorneys have dismissed as fabrications by the former altar server.

Whether the father’s testimony helped shape the jury’s thinking may soon be clear: Deliberations are expected to begin Tuesday or Wednesday.

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Direktor der Vatikanbank tritt zurück

VATIKAN
Zeit

Nach der Festnahme des Geistlichen Scarano wegen Korruptionsverdachts haben der Direktor des Geldinstituts, Paolo Cipriani, und sein Vize ihren Rücktritt eingereicht.

Die skandalumwitterte Vatikanbank kommt nicht zur Ruhe: Im Zuge von Korruptionsermittlungen haben zwei Chefs der Vatikanbank ihre Posten geräumt. Der Direktor der Vatikanbank, Paolo Cipriani, und dessen Stellvertreter Massimo Tulli sind von ihren Ämtern zurückgetreten. Der Verwaltungsrat und die Kardinalskommission an der Spitze der Bank hätten die Entscheidung akzeptiert, teilte der Vatikan mit. Der deutsche Präsident der Vatikanbank, Ernst von Freyberg, werde die Aufgaben zunächst übergangsweise mitübernehmen.

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Missbrauch: Neuer Opfer-Höchststand

OSTERREICH
Die Presse

1324 Personen haben sich bisher bei der Klasnic-Kommission der katholischen Kirche gemeldet.

1324 Personen haben sich nach neuestem Stand von Montag an die durch Kardinal Christoph Schönborn eingerichtete Opferschutz-Kommission gewendet. Dies erfuhr DiePresse.com am Montag. 1150 wurden als Opfer von (sexueller) Gewalt, begangen durch Priester, Ordensleute oder Laienmitarbeiter der katholischen Kirche anerkannt. Sie erhielten oder erhalten Entschädigungszahlungen.

In 22 Fällen entschied die hochrangig besetzte Kommission unter der Führung der früheren steirischen Landeshauptfrau Waltraud Klasnic negativ. Damit sind derzeit noch 152 Fälle offen – unter ihnen auch einige besonders schwierige.

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Australischer Bischof entschuldigt sich bei Missbrauchsopfern

AUSTRALIEN
Kipa/Apic

Newcastle, 1.7.13 (Kipa) Der australische Bischof William Wright hat sich für das Versagen seiner Diözese Maitland-Newcastle in einigen Fällen sexuellen Missbrauchs an Kindern “bedingungslos” entschuldigt.

“Ich gestehe, dass bei der Anzeige von Fällen die Kirchenbehörden manchmal versagt haben, die missbrauchten Kindern und ihren Familien effektiv zu unterstützen oder auch sicherzustellen, dass in Zukunft andere Kinder vor Missbrauch von diesen Tätern geschützt werden”, zitieren australische Medien aus der Aussage des katholischen Bischofs vor einem Untersuchungsausschuss. Wright erklärte demnach, er habe seine Bistumsmitarbeiter zur “vollen Zusammenarbeit” mit dem Gremium angewiesen.

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2 Vatican bank officials resign amid scandal

VATICAN CITY
Boston Globe

By Nicole Winfield | ASSOCIATED PRESS JULY 02, 2013

ROME — The director of the embattled Vatican bank and his deputy resigned Monday, the latest heads to roll in a broadening finance scandal that has landed one Vatican monsignor in prison and added urgency to Pope Francis’s reform efforts.

The Vatican said Paolo Cipriani and his deputy, Massimo Tulli, stepped down ‘‘in the best interest of the institute and the Holy See.’’ The speed with which they resigned, however, indicated the decision was not entirely theirs.

Cipriani, along with the bank’s then-president, was placed under investigation by Rome prosecutors in 2010 for alleged violations of Italy’s antimoney laundering rules after financial police seized $30 million from a Vatican account at a Rome bank. Neither has been charged and the money was eventually ordered released.

But the bank, known as the Institute for Religious Works, has remained in the news amid fresh concerns it has been used as an offshore tax haven.

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Vatican Bank Managers Resign Amid Broadening Financial Scandal

VATICAN CITY
Bloomberg Businessweek

By Alessandra Migliaccio
July 02, 2013

The director and deputy director of the Vatican bank resigned yesterday as a series of investigations lead to a renewal of the Church’s financial structures.

Paolo Cipriani and his deputy Massimo Tulli stepped down “in the best interest of the institute and the Holy See,” the Vatican said in a statement late yesterday. Ernst von Freyberg, the bank’s president appointed last February, will take over as interim director general and a new position of chief risk officer will be created. “It is clear today that we need new leadership to increase the pace of this transformation process,” von Freyberg said in the statement.

The resignations come three days after senior Vatican cleric Monsignor Nunzio Scarano was arrested by Italian authorities along with an Italian secret service agent and a financial broker as part of a corruption investigation. The three are accused of plotting to bring 20 million euros ($26 million) into Italy from Switzerland in a private jet, according Rome prosecutor Nello Rossi. Scarano has denied the accusations.

The Vatican bank, known as the Institute for the Works of Religion, or IOR, is increasingly in the spotlight of investigations as Pope Francis works to bring it in line with international standards. Last week, the pope named a commission to oversee the operations of the Vatican bank after Moneyval, the Council of Europe’s monitoring body for money laundering and terrorism financing, called for independent supervision of the bank.

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Pope steps up Vatican bank clean-up

VATICAN CITY
AFP

By Francoise Kadri (AFP)

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis’s bid to take the scandal-dogged Vatican bank in hand has stepped up a gear, experts said Tuesday, with the ousting of top management from the institution following the launch of a special papal probe.

Officially, Paolo Cipriani and Massimo Tulli, director and deputy director of the bank, handed in their resignations on Monday “in the best interest of the institute and the Holy See”.

The bank’s president, Ernst von Freyberg, put their decision down to a need for “new leadership to increase the pace” of bringing the institution “in line with international standards against money laundering.”

Religious and judicial specialists on Tuesday said the Vatican had forcibly shed two long-serving chiefs who survived the unceremonious eviction in May 2012 of the former head, Ettore Gotti Tedeschi, purportedly for poor management but amid reports of money-laundering.

Their expulsion was deemed opportune by the Vatican, according to Fiorenza Sarzanini in the Corriere della Sera daily, because Cipriani and Tulli are of interest in an inquiry launched by Rome prosecutors in 2010 into money-laundering.

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Director of Vatican bank resigns amid fears it was used as an offshore tax haven

VATICAN CITY
Daily Mail (UK)

By DAILY MAIL REPORTER
PUBLISHED: 06:30 EST, 2 July 2013

The director of the embattled Vatican bank and his deputy have resigned over a financial scandal which has already landed one monsignor in prison.

Paolo Cipriani and his deputy, Massimo Tulli, stepped down ‘in the best interest of the institute and the Holy See’, The Vatican has said.

The speed with which they resigned, however, indicated that the decision was not entirely theirs.
But the bank, known as the Institute for Religious Works, or IOR, has remained under the watchful eye of prosecutors amid fresh concerns it has been used as an offshore tax haven.

It was the latest turmoil to hit the IOR, which has long been the source of scandal for the Holy See.
Last year, the bank’s board ousted its then-president, Ettore Gotti Tedeschi, for incompetence and erratic behavior.

Yesterday’s resignations and nominations of interim administrators represented a final overthrow of the bank’s old guard management and coincided with its efforts to comply with international regulations to fight money-laundering and terror financing.

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Archdiocese documents show priests paid to leave

MILWAUKEE (WI)
WTOP

M.L. JOHNSON
Associated Press

MILWAUKEE (AP) — As more victims of clergy sex abuse came forward, then-Milwaukee Archbishop Timothy Dolan oversaw a plan to pay some abusers to leave the priesthood after writing to Vatican officials with increasing frustration and concern, warning them about the potential for scandal if they did not defrock problem priests, according to documents released Monday.

Dolan’s correspondence with Vatican officials and priests accused of sexual abuse was included in about 6,000 pages of documents the Archdiocese of Milwaukee released Monday as part of a deal reached in federal bankruptcy court with clergy sex abuse victims suing it for fraud. Victims say the archdiocese transferred problem priests to new churches without warning parishioners and covered up priests’ crimes for decades. …

Peter Isely, Midwest director for the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, said he would ask the U.S. attorney’s office in Milwaukee to look into the possibility of bankruptcy fraud. However, Marquette University law professor Ralph Anzivino, a bankruptcy specialist, said no criminal charges could be filed unless the bankruptcy judge determined the transfer amounts to fraud.

The documents also show that Dolan repeatedly wrote to Vatican officials, pleading with them to dismiss priests accused of abuse but often was left waiting for years for a response. One of those cases involved John C. Wagner, who was accused of making advances to students at the University of Wisconsin-Sheboygan when he was in campus ministry in the 1980s. Dolan’s predecessor, Archbishop Rembert Weakland, tried in the 1990s to get Wagner to voluntarily leave the priesthood but Wagner refused.

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Milwaukee Archdiocese Releases Documentation On Child Abuse

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Wisconsin Public Radio

[with audio]

By CHUCK QUIRMBACH

The Catholic Archdiocese of Milwaukee released thousands of documents related to decades of clergy members sexually abusing children today.

Critics say the items show a pattern of cowardice among the clerics.

The documents have been released as part of the bankruptcy case involving the Milwaukee archdiocese. Attorneys for abuse victims note the documents include a letter from former Milwaukee archbishop and now New York cardinal Tim Dolan, asking the Vatican for permission to move $57 million into a cemetery fund, and away from any potential victims’ claims. Other letters deal with efforts to conceal details about abusive priests.

Victims lawyer Jeffery Anderson calls it cowardice:

Anderson: “Cowardice among the clerics at the time … contrasted to the courage of the survivors, who at great risk disclosed the secret, shared it, and demanded exposure and closure.”

Peter Isely of the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests says Archbishop Dolan’s efforts to move the money into the cemetery fund amounts to fraud.

Isely: “He should be under federal investigation. We’ll be emailing a letter today to the federal prosecutor of the Eastern District [of Wisconsin], asking him to investigate this fraudulent transfer and conveyance.”

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ROC Board To Give ‘Pastor G’ 6 Months Severance

RICHMOND (VA)
WRIC

[with video]

RICHMOND, VA – After resigning amid multiple felony charges in Texas, Geronimo Aguilar, the founding pastor of The Richmond Outreach Center, will receive six months severance from the Richmond-based church and will continue to live in the church’s parsonage.

The ROC Board made the announcement Tuesday, saying Aguilar would receive six months of severance pay and would be allowed to reside in the parsonage with his family for six months.

Aguilar, known as “Pastor G,” and three other pastors’ resignations were accepted by the ROC’s board of directors last week, according to a release on the church’s website.

Aguilar is facing multiple felony charges in Texas in two alleged cases of child sex abuse.

Also resigning is executive pastor Jason Helmlinger, who is facing a misdemeanor charge of threatening a former ROC pastor who spoke to 8News about the allegations against Aguilar. Two others also resigned Wednesday: Pastor G’s brother Matthew Aguilar and Pastor Andrew Delgado, neither of whom are facing any charges.

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$500K to each boy in Haiti sex cases

CONNECTICUT
CT Post

Michael P. Mayko
Updated 1:02 am, Tuesday, July 2, 2013

HARTFORD — Two dozen Haitian boys will each receive $500,000 in a settlement on their claims of sexual abuse at the hands of Douglas Perlitz while enrolled in Project Pierre Toussaint, a residential trade school in Cap-Haitien.

“This settlement will be a life-changing event for them,” said Mitchell Garabedian, a Boston lawyer who headed the legal team representing the boys. “It will allow them to feed themselves and their families, buy clothes, sleep with a roof over their heads and obtain medical treatment.”

Garabedian said arrangements have been made to provide financial counseling, but the money will be distributed immediately in a lump sum.

The payments are part of a $12 million settlement reached Friday with Fairfield University; the Rev. Paul Carrier, a former university chaplain and officer of the Haiti Fund, the now defunct fund-raising arm of Project Pierre Toussaint; the Society of Jesus of New England, the Jesuit order to which Carrier belonged; the Sovereign Military Hospitaller Order of St. John of Jerusalem of Rhodes and of Malta, American Association, USA, of which Carrier was Magistral chaplain; and Hope Carter, a member of the board of directors of the Haiti Fund, a New Canaan philanthropist and Malta member.

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Church ‘put lives of sex abuse victims at risk’

AUSTRALIA
The Age

July 2, 2013

Barney Zwartz
Religion editor, The Age.

The Catholic Church in Melbourne put the lives of clergy sexual abuse victims at risk, including telling one suicidal victim to ring back in four days, according to evidence to the Victorian inquiry into how the churches handled abuse.

Another victim who was told his statement to Melbourne Response independent commissioner Peter O’Callaghan, QC, was completely confidential then found it used by the church to try to discredit the victim during the trial of his civil damages claim.

Many clients have been significantly further damaged as a result of going through a church process.

The evidence of law firm Lewis Holdway, which has represented 200 victims over 17 years, was one of 10 submissions published under parliamentary privilege on the inquiry’s website late on Monday.
Lewis Holdway says another life put at risk was a child in real danger from a paedophile priest, whose mother was told she had to wait until she got a letter from Mr O’Callaghan.
Advertisement

It says some parishes – including Ballarat, Healesville and Doveton – that had a succession of paedophile priests need special support that they have not received, and asks the inquiry to investigate claims that a paedophile ring of priests may have operated in some parishes.

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Dolan Pushed to Defrock Abusive Priests, Protected Church Funds From Victims

MILWAUKEE (WI)
New York Magazine

By Margaret Hartmann

When Cardinal Timothy Dolan was archbishop of Milwaukee from 2002 to 2009, he was either trying to get abusive priests away from children as quickly as possible, attempting to protect the church from a growing sex abuse scandal, or some combination of the two. On Monday, the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Milwaukee released 6,000 pages of documents as part of a deal reached in federal bankruptcy court with victims of sexual abuse, who are suing the archdiocese for fraud. The documents offer new details on payments Dolan offered to departing pedophile priests, and reveal that Dolan moved nearly $57 million into a cemetery trust to help protect the funds “from any legal claim or liability.” What the documents say about how Dolan handled the scandal he inherited is still open to interpretation.

Dolan certainly doesn’t come out looking great, but did repeatedly urge the Vatican to defrock priests who sexually abused children, only to be met with years of silence in some instances. The Wall Street Journal reports that in one case, Dolan’s bosses wanted to suspend an admitted sex offender for just ten years, but he pushed for him to be defrocked, arguing that if word ever got out, “our credibility would be seriously damaged.” The Vatican barred the priest from ministry indefinitely.

Dolan also approved payments of up to $20,000 for some alleged abusers who agreed to leave quietly. Critics call this a payoff, but the church claims the money was necessary to help the priests transition into secular life. Dolan defended the practice again in a blog post on Monday, writing, “like it or not, bishops do have a canon law obligation to provide basic support like health care and room and board for their priests until they have finally moved on.”

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Church drags feet on punishing sex-assaulting priest, but not on protecting $57M

MILWAUKEE (WI)
New York Daily News

[John O’Brien]

[John O’Brien]

[John O’Brien]

[timeline]

[the documents – Jeff Anderson & Associates]

[the documents – Milwaukee archdiocese]

The Vatican took a month to give then-Milwaukee Archbishop Timothy Dolan the go-ahead in 2007 to move $57 million into a trust in anticipation of an avalanche of sexual abuse lawsuits against the Milwaukee Archdiocese. But it took six years for Dolan to get the Vatican to defrock an out-of-control priest who had been convicted of sexually assaulting a teen boy.

BY STEPHEN REX BROWN / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
TUESDAY, JULY 2, 2013

When then-Milwaukee Archbishop Timothy Dolan sounded the alarm on abusive priests, the Roman Catholic Church dragged its feet — but when Dolan needed to protect tens of millions of dollars, the church acted without hesitation, bombshell documents revealed Monday.

The Vatican took only a month to give Dolan the go-ahead in 2007 to move $57 million into a trust in anticipation of an avalanche of sexual abuse lawsuits against the Milwaukee Archdiocese, which Dolan ran from 2002 to 2009.

But it took six years for Dolan to get the Vatican to defrock an out-of-control priest who had been convicted of sexually assaulting a 17-year-old boy.

The stunning revelations were contained in 6,000 pages of documents released Monday by the Archdiocese of Milwaukee as part of its bankruptcy proceeding.

In 2003, Dolan — now the cardinal in New York and arguably the face of the Catholic Church in America — wrote Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, who would go on to become Pope Benedict XVI, notifying him of the Rev. John O’Brien’s criminal conviction.

“After only a few visits they began to hug each other at the end of their time together,” Dolan wrote of O’Brien and the teen victim. “Shortly thereafter, in the basement of the church building, Father O’Brien and the boy had explicit sexual contact.”

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Sex abuse files date back to Washburn parish in 1940s

WISCONSIN
Duluth News Tribune

[Oswald Krusing]

[timeline]

Thousands of documents released by the Archdiocese of Milwaukee on Monday include a long-ago report of an accused priest granted a temporary assignment in Washburn only to reoffend in his new location, a lawyer reviewing the files told the News Tribune and Superior Telegram.

By: Staff report, Duluth News Tribune and Associated Press

Thousands of documents released by the Archdiocese of Milwaukee on Monday include a long-ago report of an accused priest granted a temporary assignment in Washburn only to reoffend in his new location, a lawyer reviewing the files told the News Tribune and Superior Telegram.

“If he is willing to come to Superior to work for a time until he has readjusted himself to the life of a diocesan priest, I shall be happy to receive him,” Bishop William O’Connor of the Diocese of Superior wrote to Milwaukee Archbishop Moses Kiley about the Rev. Oswald Krusing in November 1942.

Mike Finnegan, a lawyer with Jeff Anderson and Associates in Minneapolis, said the letters between O’Connor and Kiley suggest the obfuscation used by bishops when writing about abuse.

“In English, it’s saying that they need to keep him away from the Archdiocese of Milwaukee for some time period,” he said. “We know (there was) one person that contacted the archdiocese in 1996 who reported being abused by Krusing in Superior in the 1940s. They moved him up there on another group of unsuspecting parishioners and kids, where he abused a child after he was up there for a very short amount of time.”

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Ojeda, priest accused in molestation, takes stand

CALIFORNIA
Sacramento Bee

By Andy Furillo
afurillo@sacbee.com
Published: Tuesday, Jul. 2, 2013

Speaking publicly for the first time since his arrest in 2011 on suspicion of child molestation, the Rev. Uriel Ojeda testified Monday that he thought it would all be kept confidential when he spoke to church officials and a private investigator about the misconduct accusations that had been lodged against him.

Ojeda testified in a Sacramento Superior Court hearing to determine if prosecutors can use in trial the statements he allegedly made to the secretary for Bishop Jaime Soto and a private investigator for the law firm that represents the Catholic Diocese of Sacramento.

“It never crossed my mind,” Ojeda, 33, testified when asked if his comments to the Rev. Tim Nondorf, formerly on Soto’s administrative staff, and Joseph Sheehan, the investigator for the law firm of Sweeney & Greene, might be turned over to police.

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US archbishop releases clerical abuse documents in hope of bringing healing

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Catholic Herald (UK)

By MARYANGELA LAYMAN ROMAN on Tuesday, 2 July 2013

An American archbishop has said that he decided to release almost 7,000 pages of documents related to clerical abuse in the hope of bringing healing to the victims and their families.

Archbishop Jerome Listecki of Milwaukee made the comments in an email entitled “Love One Another”, a communiqué to priests and others involved in ministry in his archdiocese. He sent the message six days before the archdiocese posted the documents on its website, Archmil.org, yesterday.

“My hope in voluntarily making these documents public is that they will aid abuse survivors, families and others in understanding the past, reviewing the present and allowing the church in southeastern Wisconsin to continue moving forward”, he wrote.

Among the documents released are depositions of retired Archbishop Rembert Weakland of Milwaukee, Milwaukee Auxiliary Bishop Richard Sklba and Cardinal Timothy Dolan taken in Chapter 11 proceedings. Cardinal Dolan, now New York’s archbishop, headed the Milwaukee archdiocese from 2002 to 2009.

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Documents show Milwaukee archdiocese shielded pedophile priests

MILWAUKEE (WI)
NBC News

By Brendan O’Brien and Geoffrey Davidian, Reuters

Roman Catholic Church officials in Milwaukee vigorously shielded pedophile priests and protected church funds from lawsuits during a decades-long sex abuse scandal, according to hundreds of newly released documents.

The documents include letters and deposition testimony from Cardinal and Archbishop of New York Timothy Dolan who, during his time as archbishop of Milwaukee from 2002 to 2009, appealed to Vatican on numerous occasions to help address the ongoing fallout from the scandal.

The 6,000 pages of documents related to eight decades of abuse cases showed in great detail the Milwaukee archdiocese regularly reassigned priests who were accused of sexual molestation to new parishes and Dolan himself asking the Vatican permission to transfer $57 million to a trust fund to protect it against court action.

In 2011, the Milwaukee archdiocese filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, citing the financial drain of settling sexual-abuse claims and acknowledging missteps by the church in dealing with pedophile priests.

The judge overseeing the archdiocese’s bankruptcy ordered the documents to be released.

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Documents: Dolan Tried to Rid Church of Problem Priests

MILWAUKEE (WI)
KPLR

[with video]

(KTVI) – Thousand of documents have been released by the Milwaukee Archdiocese detailing their response to decades of allegations of priest sex abuse.

St. Louis native, Cardinal Timothy Dolan, was Archbishop their from 2002 to 2009. But some church critics are now calling Dolan a criminal. They say he conspired with the Vatican to transfer $57 million from Archdiocese coffers to a new and also pay priest accused of sexual misconduct to leave the church.

Read documents released by the Milwaukee Archdiocese

Cardinal Dolan responded to some of these accusations in a statement released by the Archdiocese of New York saying:

“The accusations that priest were paid off and the he established the fund to shield church assets from lawsuits are ‘discredited attacks.’”

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Porn found at priest residence: inquiry

AUSTRALIA
The West Australian

AAP

Pornographic homosexual magazines and videos were found in the presbytery of a Hunter Valley Catholic priest later convicted of sexually assaulting a boy, a police whistleblower has told a special NSW commission of inquiry.

Detective chief inspector Peter Fox says a member of the Branxton Lochinvar parish told him he came across the material when he helped Fr James Fletcher move items from Branxton to Lochinvar in early 2003.

In the course of investigating child sexual abuse allegations against Fr Fletcher, Det Insp Fox asked him later that year about the magazines and videos.

“He said they belonged to a priest who had previously lived in the presbytery,” Det Insp Fox told the commission on Tuesday.

“Pornography is not illegal but it’s highly unusual that a member of the clergy have this type of material.”

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Dolan’s defense of fraudulent transfer in Milwaukee Bankruptcy is “Malarkey”

MILWAUKEE (WI)
SNAP Wisconsin

Dolan’s defense of fraudulent transfer in Milwaukee Bankruptcy is “Malarkey”

Statement by Peter Isely, SNAP Midwest Director (Milwaukee)
CONTACT: 414.429.7259

A letter that surfaced today in the Milwaukee Federal Bankruptcy Court proves that Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York transferred millions of dollars into a bogus Trust to prevent assets of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee from being accessed by survivors of clergy sexual abuse.

In a written response Dolan claims that he was forced to set up the Trust by Wisconsin state law. In a favorite word of Cardinal Dolan: “Malarkey”.

No such ridiculous requirement is found in Wisconsin law.

As today’s letter shows, the decision to establish the bogus trust was the decision of Cardinal Dolan. Under Federal Bankruptcy law it’s called “Fraudulent Conveyance” or “Transfer” and is illegal and punishable by fines, prison time, or both.

In fact, as the New York Times reported today, Dolan used his favorite word when first confronted with his fraud trust scheme in February of 2011. At the time he told the press that charges that he hid money was “terribly irresponsible, malarkey, and ridiculous and groundless gossip.”

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Bishop Sklba’s never ending excuses

MILWAUKEE (WI)
SNAP Wisconsin

Bishop Sklba’s never ending excuses

21 years ago, article shows, treatment experts already discredited archdiocese claims about priest sex offender treatment

Statement by John Pilmaier, SNAP Wisconsin Director
CONTACT: 414.336.8575

With today’s devastating document release of thousands of pages of abuse related files, the Archdiocese of Milwaukee, and especially Bishop Richard Sklba—who was called by former Archbishop Weakland his “go to guy” on all sexual abuse cases—is making the preposterous claim that his actions of leaving and putting pedophile clergy in parishes and schools was done “in the context of the time.” Sklba specifically enjoys offloading his criminal responsibility for being Weakland’s second man to treatment “experts” who “advised” him at the time.

But in an open letter to Weakland in 1992 from the Division IV of the Wisconsin Psychological Association, the committee of state experts that work with sex offenders (read the full 1992 story below) clearly shows this is utterly false.

“Since the early 1970s, there has been a general recognition among psychologists that pedophilia is a treatable mental illness, but that offenders should not be placed in environments where they could continue to abuse children,” the head of the APA group wrote at the time. What Weakland and Sklba were doing was “like giving an alcoholic a job in a bar.”

Exactly.

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Fox grilled over alleged tip-off: inquiry

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By JASON GORDON July 2, 2013

SERIOUS doubts have been cast over allegations that former Maitland-Newcastle bishop Michael Malone allegedly tipped off a priest that he was being investigated over claims of child sex abuse and told him who the complainant was.

Detective Chief Inspector Peter Fox made the claim before the Special Commission of Inquiry in Newcastle on Tuesday morning, but his recollection of the event has been heavily questioned.

Under examination by counsel assisting the inquiry, Julia Lonergan SC, Fox was asked about a complaint he received in 2002 from a victim, known only as AH.

Fox told the inquiry that AH was “very distraught” when she called him. She allegedly told Fox that Bishop Malone had spoken to Father James Fletcher, disclosed AH’s real name to him and told him that she had made a complaint to police about his sexual abuse of her.

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.

Clergy member forewarned paedophile priest: Fox

AUSTRALIA
Maitland Mercury

By ELLE WATSON July 2, 2013

Whistleblower Peter Fox considered charging a senior member of the Catholic clergy who forewarned paedophile priest James Fletcher police were investigating a sexual abuse complaint against him, a Special Commission of Inquiry heard this morning.

The inquiry, that is examining whether the Maitland-Newcastle diocese helped or hindered police investigations, heard Bishop Michael Malone met with Fletcher in 2002 and told him a woman had made a complaint against him.

Detective Chief Inspector Fox said the former Bishop gave the priest the victim’s name.

“I was far from satisfied with what he [Bishop Michael Malone] had told me, I was still contemplating whether he had overstepped the mark and committed an offence,” Inspector Fox told the inquiry.

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Abuse priest warned of investigation, inquiry told

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Dan Cox

An inquiry into child sexual abuse in the New South Wales Hunter Valley’s Catholic Church has heard “potential evidence was destroyed” when a paedophile priest was warned about abuse allegations against him.

The second stage of the inquiry is investigating claims by senior New South Wales policeman Peter Fox that the church covered-up allegations of of abuse by two priests, James Fletcher and Dennis McAlinden.

In giving evidence today, Detective Chief Inspector Fox told the court that in 2005 the then Maitland-Newcastle Bishop Michael Malone told Fletcher that someone had been to police complaining they had been sexually abused by him.

Peter Fox said the victim’s mother was most distraught that Fletcher had been told the name of the complainant.

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Detective Peter Fox gave two versions on priest evidence

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

DAN BOX From: The Australian July 02, 2013

THE detective at the centre of a state government inquiry into church child abuse has given conflicting evidence under oath about claims that a former Catholic bishop told a pedophile priest he was under police investigation.

Detective Chief Inspector Peter Fox told the NSW Special Commission of Inquiry this morning the Newcastle Bishop Michael Malone tipped off the priest, Jim Fletcher, and potential evidence was destroyed as a result.

“It seemed a fully deliberate action by going out and telling Father Fletcher there was an investigation and who the victim was … I did not see why he felt the need to expose those things to Fletcher at the time,” he said.

Detective Fox initially claimed to have recorded his conversation with Bishop Malone in writing within days of the 2002 meeting, a claim which was repeated in his police statement used during Fletcher’s trial.

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Deposition of Bishop Sklba released with church documents

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Fox 6

[with video]

[Bishop Sklba deposition]

[deposition exhibits]

July 1, 2013, by Jeremy Ross

MILWAUKEE (WITI) — Years ago, FOX6 News showed you the video deposition of Archbishop Rembert Weakland as it relates to clergy sex abuse cases within the Milwaukee Archdiocese. Now, we’re learning more about Weakland’s right-hand man.

The deposition of Bishop Richard Sklba was released on Monday, July 1st. Now retired, Sklba is a Vicar — or higher-ranking clergy member — at times, representing other priests.

Bishop Sklba was a priest for nearly 52 years. He knew much about the laws of church leadership. But when asked about some of the training outside of Scripture, he was at times, less knowledgeable.

In 2011 court documents, Sklba was asked if there was training to detect sexual abuse. His answers were not forthcoming. When asked if there was training for priests to manage their sexual lives so they would not engage in sexual abuse, Sklba found the tone offensive.

Eventually, Sklba admitted it was practice to report abuse to civil authorities only if the victim who reported it was under the age of 18. Further, he said if an adult came to him with a concern, he would suggest they go to civil authorities, adding it was not within his range of experience to do otherwise.

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Cardinal Timothy Dolan sought to protect money from claims, struggled with Vatican t

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

By Annysa Johnson of the Journal Sentinel

Four years before the Archdiocese of Milwaukee filed for bankruptcy, then-Archbishop Timothy Dolan — now cardinal of New York — sought Vatican approval to move nearly $57 million in cemetery funds off the archdiocese’s books and into a special trust to help protect them “from any legal claim or liability.”

During his tenure in Milwaukee, Dolan also pleaded repeatedly with the Vatican to “laicize,” or defrock, sexually abusive priests, a process that often took years.

One case dragged on for five years, even though the priest was convicted and had sought his own dismissal. At one point a Vatican official told Dolan he could not turn the case over to Pope Benedict XVI without “an admission of guilt and a sincere expression of remorse.”

How Dolan — now considered one of the world’s most influential Catholic prelates — and his predecessors responded to the sexual abuse crisis in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee is laid out in thousands of pages of documents made public today as part of the archdiocese’s bankruptcy.

Included in the documents were letters showing that the archdiocese paid abusive priests — usually $20,000 — to accept laicization. Critics have characterized this as a payoff or bonus to abusers. However, the church has described it as a charity payment intended to ease the priest’s transition into secular life.

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Milwaukee Releases Documents On How Cardinal Dolan Dealt With Local Clergy Sex Scandal

NEW YORK
NY1

By: Jon Weinstein

Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York says he worked to end a clergy sex abuse scandal and removed abusive priests when he was the leader of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee, but critics say thousands of pages of material released by the archdiocese on Monday prove the exact opposite. NY1’s Jon Weinstein filed the following report.

Thousands of pages of depositions, documents and letters have been released, revealing how Cardinal Timothy Dolan handled the fallout from a sexual abuse scandal when he was the top Catholic Church official in Milwaukee.

Before dozens of claims of abuse by priests led the Archdiocese to file for bankruptcy, then-Archbishop Dolan sought permission from the Vatican to move $57 million meant for cemetery care into a newly created trust separate from the archdiocese’s general funds.

In a 2007 letter seeking permission from the Vatican, which he ultimately got, Dolan writes, “By transferring these assets to the Trust, I foresee an improved protection of these funds from any legal claim and liability.”

“We see very clearly in the letter that the primary concern was with the legal claims that they were facing, and growing number of legal claims by victims of sexual abuse,” said Pam Spees of the Center for Constitutional Rights.

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A look at the Milwaukee archdiocese’s documents

MILWAUKEE (WI)
KOTA

[the documents – Jeff Anderson & Associates]

[the documents – Milwaukee archdiocese]

By The Associated Press

MILWAUKEE (AP) – The Archdiocese of Milwaukee has released thousands of pages of documents related to clergy sex abuse as part of a deal reached in federal bankruptcy court between the archdiocese and abuse victims suing it for fraud. Here is a look at what is in the documents:

WHAT’S IN THE DOCUMENTS?

The approximately 6,000 pages of documents released by the Milwaukee archdiocese include personnel files for 42 priests with substantiated allegations of sexual abuse against them, along with depositions of church leaders including New York Cardinal Timothy Dolan, the former archbishop of Milwaukee, and other records. The documents show that archdiocese officials struggled to deal with problem priests, sending them to treatment and then reassigning them to new parishes where no one would know their histories, before eventually concluding the best route was to remove them from the priesthood.

WHY DID THE ARCHDIOCESE OF MILWAUKEE DECIDE TO RELEASE THEM?

The archdiocese released the files as part of a deal with victims suing it in federal bankruptcy court for fraud. Jerry Topczewski, chief of staff for Archbishop Jerome Listecki, said the archdiocese had been reluctant to release the files because of privacy concerns for the victims, those reporting crimes, officials handling the cases and others. But he said the archdiocese eventually realized that unless it made the records public, some victims would not agree to a bankruptcy settlement.

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Cardinal Timothy Dolan Denies Moving Milwaukee Church Funds To Protect Them From Child Sex Victims

MILWAUKEE (WI)
International Business Times

By Treye Green
on July 01 2013

Cardinal Timothy F. Dolan is challenging claims that during his time as archbishop of Milwaukee he moved close to $57 million in church funds to protect the archdioscese from clergy sexual abuse victims who were asking to be compensated.

In a statement released Monday, Dolan — who is now the cardinal archbishop of New York, the preeminent post in the U.S. church — has denied attempting to keep the funds from sexual abuse victims. This follows the release of files by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Milwaukee which show that he asked the Vatican for permission to move the more than $57 million into a cemetery trust fund reports, the New York Times.

The communications office of the Archdiocese of New York stated Monday:

“Unfortunately, we have already seen how the release of these documents will cause some to raise old and discredited attacks — like priest-abusers having been ‘paid’ to apply for laicization, (like it or not, bishops do have a canon law obligation to provide basic support like health care and room and board for their priests until they have finally moved on) or that establishing a perpetual care fund from money belonging to cemeteries and designated for that purpose — as required by state law and mandated by the archdiocesan finance council — was an attempt to shield it from the bankruptcy proceedings. While certain groups can be counted upon to take certain statements and events out of context, the documents released show plainly that the bishops have been faithful to the promises made over a decade ago: permanent removal from ministry of any priest who abused a minor; complete cooperation with law enforcement officials; and strict, child-safety requirements.”

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Daniel Budzynski case shows patterns of secrecy, parish-shifting

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

By Karen Herzog of the Journal Sentinel July 1, 2013

It took nearly 40 years from the first time Milwaukee priest Daniel Budzynski sexually abused a child until he was finally, firmly told by former Archbishop Timothy Dolan not to wear his collar in public, or present himself as a priest.

Budzynski, who told authorities that he was sexually abused as a child, was linked in 1994 to the sexual abuse of some 50 individuals at 11 different parishes between 1965 and 1994 — many of which he admitted to and described in detail.

When the first allegation from a victim surfaced in August 1973, then-Archbishop William Cousins told Budzynski to take a leave of absence because remaining in the parish could induce publicity that should be avoided.

In 1982, officials sent Budzynski to a residential treatment facility for alcohol abuse and psycho-sexual problems. But once he completed the program, he continued to offend.

His case is detailed in correspondence and internal files released Monday as part of Archdiocesan bankruptcy proceedings. The Budzynski case illustrates the church’s practice of transferring documented predators from parish to parish over decades while the abuse continued and officials worried about the financial liability if victims came forward.

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Church docs show priest was shuffled while abuse continued

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Fox 6

[with video]

July 1, 2013, by Bryan Polcyn

MILWAUKEE – Father Daniel Budzynski is accused of molesting more than 40 young boys over 31 years, while the Milwaukee Archdiocese shuffled him around to a dozen local parishes. For all those years, the church never told parishioners or the public what it knew.

Timeline of events
Supporting documents
Deposition

Budzynski eventually told some of his victims that he’s sorry. And according a handwritten letter he sent to one victim, he’s asked God to forgive him, too. But when the Fox 6 Investigators called on Monday, Budzynski was in no mood to discuss it.

Bryan Polcyn/FOX 6 Investigators: “Can you explain why you continued to move from parish to parish after all of those years of sexual abuse?”

Daniel Budzynksi/Former Priest: “I tell you I have nothing to say about it.”

According to documents released by the Archdiocese, Budzynski’s molestation began at St. Helen’s parish in 1956. It continued at St. Hedwig’s in 1962. In 1966, Budzynski petitioned the church to become a guidance counselor at St. Paul’s parish, because he was “especially interested in helping boys.”

He later admitted to molesting 17 of them, including an alter boy who says Budzynski “made sure to bless us after every mass,” a reference to regular sexual assaults.

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Milwaukee Archdiocese releases details in clergy sex cases

MILWAUKEE (WI)/ ST. PAUL (MN)
Star Tribune

[the documents – Jeff Anderson & Associates]

[the documents – Milwaukee archdiocese]

Article by: ROSE FRENCH , Star Tribune Updated: July 1, 2013

The Archdiocese of Milwaukee released 6,000 pages of documents related to clergy sex abuse on Monday, including the personnel files of more than three dozen priests and the depositions of church leaders such as New York Cardinal Timothy Dolan, former Milwaukee archbishop.

The documents were made public as part of a deal reached in federal bankruptcy court between the archdiocese and the hundreds of victims suing it for fraud — a majority of whom are represented by prominent St. Paul attorney Jeff Anderson.

During a news conference held at Anderson’s law offices Monday, he stood in front of the reams of church documents and accused bishops and Vatican leaders of refusing to respond quickly enough in addressing reported abuse. Victims accuse the archdiocese of transferring problem priests to new churches without warning parishioners and covering up priests’ crimes for decades.

“We see a sense of cowardice among the clerics at the top that contrasts with the courage of the [abuse] survivors who … disclosed the secret … and demanded exposure and closure,” Anderson said. “These survivors chose to stand up against them.”

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Priest abuse victim has day of ‘truth’

MILWAUKEE (WI)
WTMJ

[with video]

By Steve Chamraz

MILWAUKEE — Details buried in thousands of pages of once-secret church files do not come as a surprise to John Pilmaier.

Rather, they reinforce the things Pilmaier came to believe about the Archdiocese of Milwaukee after he come forward as a victim of sexual abuse.

“For a faith institution to lie to the people they’ve hurt the most is really atrocious,” Pilmaier said in an interview Monday evening. “The documents are, really, as close to the truth as we are ever gonna get.”

Pilmaier was one of nearly 20 boys abused by Father David Hanser. As the documents in Hanser’s file show, it was abuse documented by the Archdiocese over decades.

The file also documents how church leaders continued to let Hanser move from position to position — even after abuse came to light.

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Reaction to Sex Abuse Reports

MILWAUKEE (WI)
NBC 26

[with video]

By Alex Hagan

Dozens of priests, hundreds of victims. New documents just released by the Milwaukee Archdiocese name more than forty priests accused of molesting minors. It’s all part of a deal between the church and sex abuse victims suing for fraud.

The names of all 45 offending priests including 15 spending time in Fond Du Lac and Sheboygan, now available to anyone on the Diocese’s website.

People in Green Bay say it’s a step forward for the Catholic Church.

“I think the church has been hiding a lot of things and i wish they hadn’t,” says Charlie Hagen of Green Bay.

“Alleviate the mysteriousness that people think surrounds the Catholic church,” says Jaena Manson of Green Bay.

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Dolan calls allegations of fraud an “old and discredited” attack

MILWAUKEE (WI)
CBS 58

by Michele McCormack
Story Created: Jul 1, 2013

MILWAUKEE-Online documents show that back in 2007 Dolan asked for and received permission from the Vatican to move 57 million dollars into a trust fund.

The chief of staff for current Milwaukee Archbishop Jerome Listecki said the money mentioned was always set aside in a separate fund for cemetery care and moving it to a trust just formalized the that.

Dolan, who is president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and the nation’s most prominent Roman Catholic official, has not been accused of transferring problem priests, after taking over control of the Milwaukee church in 2002 at that point many victims had already gone public.

Back in 2003 roughly a year after becoming leader of the Milwaukee church Dolan warned then Cardinal Ratzinger back who would later become pope..

“as victims organize and become more public, the potential for true scandal is very real.”

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Abuse Survivors’ Attorney Calls Archdiocese Revelations “Sickening”

MILWAUKEE (WI)
WBAY

[with video]

[the documents – Jeff Anderson & Associates]

[the documents – Milwaukee archdiocese]

By Tony Ullrich

Milwaukee –
The Catholic Archdiocese of Milwaukee released thousands of pages of documents Monday, publicly revealing how it handled sexual abuse allegations.

It released the documents — 40,000 pages spanning several decades — as part of a deal between the archdiocese and sex abuse victims who are suing it for fraud.

The archdiocese admits the items in the documents reveal “terrible things that happened to children” and it was ill-equipped to respond to the offenders and victims and their families.

The documents include depositions of church leaders and priests’ personnel files.

A Minnesota attorney representing some of the 575 sexual abuse survivors held a news conference Monday calling the revelations “shocking and sickening.”

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Files Show Dolan Pushed to Defrock Priests

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Wall Street Journal

By Ben Kesling, Jennifer Maloney

Cardinal Timothy Dolan, when head of the Milwaukee Archdiocese, urged the Vatican to defrock priests who sexually abused children, while also placing some $57 million of church funds in a trust that protected them from being tapped by victims through lawsuits, documents released Monday show.

The documents were part of a trove of thousands of pages released under the archdiocese’s 2011 bankruptcy case, including case files on dozens of alleged pedophile priests and depositions of senior church leaders.

In 2008, Vatican authorities recommended the imposition of a 10-year precept, or suspension, on Thomas Trepanier, a self-admitted offender. Then-Archbishop Dolan asked the Vatican to instead defrock the priest.

“If word got out that the Holy See had left the door open for a reconsideration of Father Trepanier’s case in 10 years our credibility would be seriously damaged,” he wrote in a letter to Rome. The Vatican ended up restricting the priest from ministry indefinitely.

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Vatican warned of potential for ‘true scandal’ over sex abuse claims

MILWAUKEE (WI)
CTV (Canada)

The Associated Press
Published Monday, July 1, 2013

MILWAUKEE — The cardinal of the Archdiocese of New York, in his former job, warned the future Pope Benedict XVI that “the potential for true scandal is very real” over sex abuse claims, according to documents released Monday.

Former Milwaukee Archbishop Timothy Dolan — now president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and the nation’s most prominent Roman Catholic official — sought to push problem priests out of the priesthood after people began coming forward with abuse claims in the early 2000s.

Dolan wrote to then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, the future pope, in July 2003 asking to dismiss Daniel Budzynski. Abuse allegations against Budzynski stretched back to the 1970s, and Dolan told Ratzinger that “as victims organize and become more public, the potential for true scandal is very real.”

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Documents show Milwaukee archdiocese shielded pedophile priests

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Chicago Tribune

Brendan O’Brien and Geoffrey Davidian
Reuters
10:28 p.m. CDT, July 1, 2013

MILWAUKEE (Reuters) – Roman Catholic Church officials in Milwaukee vigorously shielded pedophile priests and protected church funds from lawsuits during a decades-long sex abuse scandal, according to hundreds of documents released on Monday.

The documents include letters and deposition testimony from Cardinal and Archbishop of New York Timothy Dolan who, during his time as archbishop of Milwaukee from 2002 to 2009, appealed to Vatican on numerous occasions to help address the ongoing fallout from the scandal.

The 6,000 pages of documents related to eight decades of abuse cases showed in great detail the Milwaukee archdiocese regularly reassigned priests who were accused of sexual molestation to new parishes and Dolan himself asking the Vatican permission to transfer $57 million to a trust fund to protect it against court action.

In 2011, the Milwaukee archdiocese filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, citing the financial drain of settling sexual-abuse claims and acknowledging missteps by the church in dealing with pedophile priests.

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Die späte Reue des “Pumpgun-Paters”

OSTERREICH
der Standard

MARKUS ROHRHOFER, 1. Juli 2013

Am Landesgericht Steyr ist der Strafprozess gegen den ehemaligen Konviktsdirektor des Benediktinerstiftes Kremsmünster gestartet. Die Staatsanwaltschaft erhebt schwere Vorwürfe, Pater A. schweigt – noch

Linz – “Ich sag’ jetzt gar nix dazu” – unmittelbar vor der Verhandlung ist Pater A. gewohnt schweigsam. Behäbig schlurft der 79-jährige Ex-Ordensmann dann – gestützt auf einen Gehstock – in den großen Schwurgerichtssaal des Landesgerichtes Steyr und nimmt vor Richter Wolf-Dieter Graf auf der Anklagebank Platz. Es ist der Auftakt zu einem mit Spannung erwarteten Prozess. Erstmals muss sich seit gestern, Montag, ein hochrangiger Geistlicher im Zusammenhang mit den Missbrauchsfällen in kirchlichen Einrichtungen vor einem weltlichen Strafgericht verantworten.

Vogelfreie Zöglinge

Ruhig und gefasst verfolgt Pater A. die Ausführungen von Staatsanwältin Dagmar Geroldinger. Die Anklage wirft dem mittlerweile laisierten, ehemaligen Konviktsdirektors des Stiftes Kremsmünster Angriffe gegen die körperliche und sexuelle Integrität von 24 seiner ehemaligen Schüler vor. Neben sexuellen Übergriffen soll es Schläge, teils mit einer Ochsenpeitsche, Tritte, “Stereowatschen”, das Ausreißen von Haaren oder das “Vogelfrei-Erklären” gegeben haben. Bei Letzterem seien die Mitschüler dazu ermuntert worden, den Betreffenden zu drangsalieren, ohne Konsequenzen befürchten zu müssen.

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July 1, 2013

Vatican bank promises sweeping change as senior staff resign

VATICAN CITY
The Guardian (UK)

John Hooper in Rome
The Guardian, Monday 1 July 2013

Sweeping changes at the top of the Vatican’s scandal-ridden bank were announced on Monday night following the arrest of a senior church official in the latest of a string of scandals to have hit the institution.

The bank’s recently appointed president, Ernst von Freyberg, said its two top officials – the director and deputy director – had both resigned. He thanked them for their “personal dedication” but added: “It is clear today that we need new leadership.”

The departures came three days after the arrest of an official in another Vatican financial department, Monsignor Nunzio Scarano. The Italian authorities said he was a suspect in two inquiries involving alleged corruption and money laundering respectively.

Transactions made through Scarano’s accounts at the Institute for the Works of Religion (IOR) – popularly known as the Vatican bank – are central to both investigations. The IOR, which does not lend money and is thus not technically a bank, was set up in 1942 to handle the deposits mainly of church organisations and individual clerics. But accounts are known to have been opened for outsiders and the IOR has repeatedly been at the heart of financial scandals, often involving alleged money-laundering.

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Priest takes witness stand in teen sex crime case

CALIFORNIA
The Record Searchlight

SACRAMENTO — With jury selection expected to begin mid-month, a suspended Redding priest charged with seven felony counts of child molestation was back today in Sacramento County Superior Court for a pre-trial defense motion to try to block statements he allegedly made to a Sacramento diocese official and a private investigator.

The Rev. Uriel Ojeda, 33, who was arrested Nov. 30, 2011, is accused of lewd and lascivious acts with a teenage girl over a two-year span — starting when she was 14 — in Sacramento and Shasta counties, according to the criminal complaint.

Ojeda, who is free of jail custody on $70,000 bail, was the assistant pastor at Our Lady of Mercy Church in Redding at the time of his arrest.

The Sacramento Bee reported today that Ojeda took the witness stand and said he thought he believed his statements to church officials were confidential.

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Cardinal Dolan denies moving Milwaukee church money in sex abuse cases

NEW YORK
WPIX

[with video]

by Mary Murphy
Reporter

NEW YORK (PIX11) – Timothy Cardinal Dolan lashed out at critics Monday who claimed he moved nearly $57 million dollars in church money into a trust, when he was Archbishop of Milwaukee, so it wouldn’t be vulnerable to lawsuits filed by Catholics who said they were abused by Milwaukee priests.

The Archdiocese of Milwaukee released more than six thousand documents Monday, part of a deal it reached in federal court with lawyers representing 570 people who have lawsuits pending against the Catholic Church there.

Dolan was appointed by the Vatican to clean up the Archdiocese in 2002, after the Church’s sexual abuse crisis among the clergy exploded in the United States, and then, around the world.

SEE THE MILWAUKEE PRIEST SEX ABUSE FILES

One of the documents released Monday was a letter written by then-Archbishop Dolan to the Vatican in 2007, seeking permission to transfer money from a cemetery fund into a trust. In the letter, dated June 4, 2007, Dolan wrote, “By transferring these assets to the trust, I foresee an improved protection of these funds from any legal claim and liability.” The Vatican approved the transfer, during a time when hundreds of lawsuits were being filed against the Archdiocese of Milwaukee. The Archdiocese filed for bankruptcy protection in 2011, two years after Timothy Dolan left Milwaukee, appointed in 2009 as Archbishop of New York.

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Catholics, SNAP react to Milwaukee Archdiocese sex abuse document release

MILWAUKEE (WI)
WTMJ

[with video]

By Lacey Crisp with Jay Sorgi

MILWAUKEE – As Milwaukee’s Archdiocese releases 6,000-plus pages of documents about abuse by its priests, Catholics and a group which represents abuse victims are sounding off.

“This is a shocking and stunning document, how they have concealed and moved not only predator priests, but all the money,” said Peter Isely of SNAP, or Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests.

SNAP urges all Catholics to read all 6,000 pages.

“I think every Catholic in this Archdiocese should read this carefully because what it’s going to show is that they’ve been lied to,” said John Pilmaier, SNAP Wisconsin Director.

Jeffrey Anderson is an attorney who represents most of the 500-plus victims who have filed sex abuse claims against the church.

“In order for the future to be safe, it is there and our view the past has to be known. It has to be disclosed. It has to be exposed,” said Anderson.

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Secret Church Documents Show Vatican’s Role In Sex Abuse

MILWAUKEE (WI)
WCCO

MILWAUKEE, Wis. (WCCO) — Attorneys said 6,000 pages of secret church documents reveal in detail the Vatican’s role in child sex abuse cases.

St. Paul-based attorney Jeff Anderson said the letters show an elaborate abuse cover-up in Milwaukee from the 1950s through today.

Attorneys said the Catholic Church covered up the actions of priests, preventing parishioners from knowing their history.

On Monday, the Milwaukee Archdiocese released the personnel files of 42 priests with verified claims of abuse against them — and the depositions from top church officials.

This information has been made public through a deal between the Catholic Church and sex abuse victims.

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Lawyers respond after clergy sex abuse documents released

ST. PAUL (MN)
Fox 6

July 1, 2013, by Jenna Sachs

ST. PAUL, Minn. (WITI) — On a day when thousands of pages of documents were released, detailing the role of the Milwaukee Archdiocese in sex abuse cases involving clergy, the group largely responsible for the release of information responded: Minnesota lawyers representing hundreds of Milwaukee’s clergy sex abuse victims.

The Minnesota attorneys on Monday, July 1st applauded the courage of clergy sex abuse survivors, people they hope are feeling a sense of relief and hope after the release of these secret documents.

“They have each done something to contribute to the protection of kids in the future,” Jeff Anderson said.

Anderson is the St. Paul attorney who represents many of the victims of sex abuse by priests who served in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee. Anderson says many of the victims called Monday their day of triumph.

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Priest boasted of beating police charges

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By JASON GORDON July 2, 2013

A SENIOR police officer has told an inquiry that paedophile priest Denis McAlinden boasted of beating child sex abuse charges a decade before he was confronted with new ones.

Detective Inspector Mark Watters was the first witness called before the Special Commission of Inquiry’s second stage of hearings in Newcastle yesterday.

Inspector Watters told of his efforts to find the wanted priest and have him extradited back to the Hunter to face charges of sexually abusing children as young as four.

He told the inquiry that in 2005 he located McAlinden in Western Australia through information that had come to him via an employee of the Maitland-Newcastle Catholic diocese.

He was told by Western Australia police that McAlinden had advanced cancer and only had a short time to live.

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OPINION: Bishop offers apology on behalf of diocese

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By BILL WRIGHT July 2, 2013

Bill Wright is Bishop of the Maitland-Newcastle diocese of the Catholic Church. This is an edited transcript of his submission to the Special Commission of Inquiry.

AS Bishop of Maitland-Newcastle I wish to make an unreserved apology on behalf of the diocese to all those who have suffered as a result of acts or omissions by members of this diocese in relation to the matters before this Special Commission of Inquiry.

My apology must begin with an acknowledgment of the wrongs done.

I acknowledge that two men, Denis McAlinden and James Fletcher, now deceased but once priests of the diocese, repeatedly committed acts of sexual abuse of children.

I acknowledge that the children sometimes suffered further hurt when they were not believed because the offender was a priest.

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OPINION: Inquiry’s focus turns to conduct of Church

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By MARGARET CUNNEEN July 2, 2013

This is an edited transcript of the opening remarks of Commissioner Margaret Cunneen at the second session of the Special Commission of Inquiry into child sex abuse allegations in the Catholic diocese of Maitland-Newcastle.

TODAY we start on a new and important part of this inquiry.

While the public hearings to date have concentrated on the conduct of police officers, this second limb focuses on the conduct of Church officials of the Maitland-Newcastle diocese, including whether they hindered or co-operated with police investigations.

The sexual abuse of children is abhorrent.

It has a devastating and long-lasting effect on victims and their families, and on the community generally.

It should not be tolerated or condoned by any modern society.

It can be very difficult for children to speak out about sexual abuse. When they do, the collective responsibility to take action weighs heavily on all.

Child sexual abuse by a priest involves a gross breach of trust of the highest magnitude. It breaches the trust of the victims and their families in a manner that is reprehensible and may cause irreparable harm.

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Church sex abuse going on a long time

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By JASON GORDON July 2, 2013

THE Maitland-Newcastle Catholic Diocese allegedly knew about paedophilia within its ranks as early as 1953.

Yesterday, 60 years later, and with hundreds more children bearing the scars of sexual abuse, a public courtroom heard those claims for the first time, along with an acknowledgment from the Church that such injustice not only happened, but was allowed to perpetuate.

Some in the public gallery openly wept when Commissioner Margaret Cunneen SC and counsel assisting, Julia Lonergan SC, read their opening addresses to the packed Newcastle courtroom.

Ms Cunneen, in her opening address, described the sexual abuse of children as “abhorrent”. When it is committed by a priest, it is “a gross breach of trust of the highest magnitude”.

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Survivors group calls record release ‘day of validation’

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

By Patrick Simonaitis of the Journal Sentinel July 1, 2013

Leaders of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) and several victims of sexual abuse by priests responded Monday to the release of thousands of pages of documents relating to years of sexual abuse released by the Archdiocese of Milwaukee earlier today.

“This is a day of validation for hundreds and hundreds, if not thousands of victims of child sexual abuse,” said Peter Isely, the Midwest director of SNAP, said at an afternoon news conference outside of the federal courthouse. “Today is mostly a day of sadness and grief, but it has to turn into a day of accountability and responsibility.”

Isely said the group is sending a letter to federal prosecutors to bring fraud charges against former Milwaukee Archbishop Timothy Dolan for his role in transferring funds from the Archdiocese into a cemetery trust fund that would be protected against liability in the Archdiocese’s bankruptcy case.

“In order to solve cases of state fraud, these priests committed federal fraud,” Isely said. “It’s long overdue that there is a federal investigation into this Archdiocese and how they have concealed and moved not only predator priests, but all the money also.”

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Archdiocese documents show priests paid to leave

MILWAUKEE (WI)
My Fox Philly

[Payments to Priests Accused of Molesting Children – All Documents]

By M.L. JOHNSON
Associated Press

MILWAUKEE (AP) – As more victims of clergy sex abuse came forward, then-Milwaukee Archbishop Timothy Dolan developed a plan to pay some abusers to leave the priesthood after writing to Vatican officials with increasing frustration and concern, warning them about the potential for scandal if they did not defrock problem priests, according to documents released Monday.

Dolan’s correspondence with Vatican officials and priests accused of sexual abuse was included in about 6,000 pages of documents the Archdiocese of Milwaukee released Monday as part of a deal reached in federal bankruptcy court with clergy sex abuse victims suing it for fraud. Victims say the archdiocese transferred problem priests to new churches without warning parishioners and covered up priests’ crimes for decades.

The documents have drawn attention in part because of the involvement of Dolan, who is now cardinal of the Archdiocese of New York and the nation’s most prominent Roman Catholic official by virtue of his position as president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. The records provide new details on his plan to pay some abusers to leave the priesthood and the transfer of nearly $57 million for cemetery care into a trust as the archdiocese prepared to file for bankruptcy.

Victims and their attorneys accused Dolan of bankruptcy fraud, pointing to a June 2007 letter in which he told a Vatican office that moving the money into a trust would provide “an improved protection of these funds from any legal claim and liability.”

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Archbishop hopes documents’ release will close chapter, begin healing

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Catholic News Service

By Maryangela Layman Roman
Catholic News Service

ST. FRANCIS, Wis. (CNS) — In releasing between 6,000 and 7,000 pages of documentation related to clergy sexual abuse in the Milwaukee Archdiocese, Archbishop Jerome E. Listecki hopes that a chapter in the church’s history can be closed and that healing for abuse survivors, their families and the church can continue.

He expressed that hope in “Love One Another,” his June 25 email communique to priests and others involved in ministry in the Milwaukee Archdiocese, sent six days before the archdiocese posted the documents on its website: www.archmil.org. The material was posted July 1.

“My hope in voluntarily making these documents public is that they will aid abuse survivors, families and others in understanding the past, reviewing the present and allowing the church in southeastern Wisconsin to continue moving forward,” he wrote.

In early April, the archbishop announced that approximately 3,000 documents from priest personnel files, files of the bishops and vicar for clergy and other sources in the archdiocese would be made public by July 1 and called this planned release an effort to build “upon our commitment to transparency.”

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Victim welcomes apology

AUSTRALIA
Maitland Mercury

A man who suffered abuse at the hands of disgraced priest James Fletcher has applauded Bishop of Maitland-Newcastle Bill Wright for his heartfelt apology to victims of clergy abuse.

Vacy man Peter Gogarty was at Newcastle Supreme Court yesterday when Bishop Wright delivered his response to the Special Commission of Inquiry Concerning the Investigation of Certain Child Sexual Abuse Allegations in the Hunter Region.

“Hearing this apology was a complete surprise, but I thought it was quite heartfelt and I am grateful to him for doing that,” Mr Gogarty said.

“I thought it was a very positive gesture on the bishop’s behalf. He seems to be a very good, decent man who is genuinely upset by this abuse and I think he is appalled that the church allowed this to happen.

“Full credit to him.”

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Archbishop Timothy Dolan Purposely Shuttled 57 Million Dollars Away From Sex Abuse Victims

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Guardian Express

He Viewed The Victims As A Major Inconvenience

Added by Rebecca Savastio on July 1, 2013.

A portion of the proceeds from this article will be donated to SNAP-the Survivor’s Network of Those Abused by Priests. Please share this article on your social networks.

Breaking news out of Milwaukee today as thousands of pages of documents have been released from the Catholic Archdiocese there. The papers show that Archbishop Timothy Dolan bribed priests to keep them quiet about the child sex abuse scandal, purposely shuttled nearly 57 million dollars out of the Milwaukee Archdiocese before it declared bankruptcy in an attempt to avoid paying settlements to victims, and was far more concerned with accused priests’ well-being and comfort than with the victims themselves. The papers, published on the Archdiocese website as well as on the website of victims’ lawyers, detail depositions, personnel files and court papers in relation to 42 separate child sexual abuse cases.

In preparation of the publication of the documents, Archbishop Jerome E. Listecki of Milwaukee wrote a letter to his congregation, attempting to explain how the church has had to undergo an “arc of understanding” to comprehend the fact that molesting children is a criminal act. In one paragraph, he says “The arc of understanding sexual abuse of a minor progressed from being seen as a moral failing and sin that needed personal resolve and spiritual direction; to a psychological deficiency that required therapy and could be cured; to issues of addiction requiring more extensive therapy and restrictions on ministry; to recognition of the long-term effects of abuse and the need to hold the perpetrator accountable for this criminal activity.”

While most would say that sexual abuse of a minor would automatically be considered a criminal act for which the perpetrator should be held accountable, the church seems to have taken nearly 80 years coming to that conclusion. Owning up to the mistakes, Listecki said, took a long time because the church only realized that having sex with children was wrong when they looked back upon their actions. “Acknowledging our past… includes facing up to mistakes that were made, even if some of those mistakes become apparent only in hindsight” he writes.

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On the Milwaukee Document Release

MILWAUKEE (WI)
BishopAccountability.org

Statement by Terence McKiernan, President of BishopAccountability.org
July 1, 2013

Thanks to the determination of survivors and Judge Susan V. Kelley’s recent expressed intention to lift her protective order, a significant collection of documents and depositions has been released by Jeffrey Anderson, attorney for many of the survivors, and the Archdiocese of Milwaukee. The archive is large and will take time to assess, but it will clearly enhance our understanding of the sexual abuse of children by archdiocesan priests, the fraudulent conduct of the archdiocese, and in particular, the role of now-Cardinal Dolan in managing abuse cases and archdiocesan finances.

The documents provide additional evidence that, contrary to Cardinal Dolan’s repeated denials, he concluded settlements with numerous offending priests, paying them bounties if they would agree to request laicization for sexually abusing children. The archive also contains an important 2007 exchange of letters between Dolan and the Vatican on the eve of the bankruptcy filing, in which Dolan asked permission to shelter $56.9 million, envisioning “an improved protection of these funds from any legal claim and liability.” The revelations about these actions, and Dolan’s denials, raise the question whether he is fit to lead the USCCB and the Archdiocese of New York. Documents also demonstrate that requests for laicization, which had been handled slowly by Cardinal Josef Ratzinger, continued to be processed at a snail’s pace, and that children continued to be endangered thereby, after Ratzinger became Pope Benedict XVI.

The archive released today does not include documents on the many religious order priests accused of abusing children in Milwaukee, and the archive offers only a sample of each file that was released. But the archive deepens our knowledge of the atrocious abuse suffered by children in the archdiocese, and sheds a harsh light on the conduct of Cardinal Dolan, Pope Benedict, and others in positions of responsibility.

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SNAP calling for federal investigation into Dolan’s transfer of money

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Fox 6

July 1, 2013, by Katie DeLong

MILWAUKEE (WITI) — On Monday, July 1st, thousands of pages of documents, detailing the role of the Milwaukee Archdiocese and its officials in sex abuse cases involving clergy, and actions of the Archdiocese as it relates to finances and the Archdiocese’s bankruptcy proceedings were released. One group responding to the release is SNAP — the Survivor’s Network for Those Abused by Priests. SNAP is now calling out former Milwaukee Archbishop Timothy Dolan for his role in the transferring of money from the Archdiocese to a trust.

SNAP says on June 4, 2007, then Archbishop Timothy Dolan of Milwaukee, now Cardinal of New York, sent a letter to the Vatican requesting permission to transfer nearly $57 million dollars from the assets of the archdiocese into a new “autonomous pious foundation” called a “Cemetery Perpetual Care Trust.”

SNAP says, while this was occurring, the Milwaukee Archdiocese was facing a growing number of potential claims for fraud in concealing and transferring known child sex offenders.

SNAP says the documents released on Monday show that Dolan had considered bankruptcy for the archdiocese as early as 2004.

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Dolan Applauds Release Of Deposition Taken During Milwaukee Clergy Sex Abuse Cases

MILWAUKEE (WI)
CBS New York

MILWAUKEE (CBSNewYork/AP) – Former Milwaukee Archbishop Timothy Dolan sought and received permission from the Vatican to move $57 million from a cemetery fund into a trust to provide “improved protection” as the archdiocese prepared to file for bankruptcy amid dozens of claims by victims of clergy sex abuse, according to documents made public Monday.

Dolan’s 2007 letter, which he wrote while serving as archbishop in Milwaukee, and the Vatican’s response were included in thousands of pages of documents the archdiocese released as part of a deal reached in federal bankruptcy court between the archdiocese and clergy sex abuse victims suing it for fraud. Victims say the archdiocese transferred problem priests to new churches without warning parishioners and covered up priests’ crimes for decades.

EXTRA: Read Dolan’s Deposition (pdf) | Documents Released By Milwaukee Archdiocese

“Responding to victim-survivors, taking action against priest-abusers, and working to implement policies to protect children, were some of the most difficult, challenging, and moving events of the 6 ½ years that I served as Archbishop of Milwaukee,” Dolan said in a statement released Monday. “One of the principles that guided me during that time was the need for transparency and openness, which is why I not only welcomed the deposition as a chance to go on-the-record with how we responded to the clergy sexual abuse crisis during my years in Milwaukee, but also encouraged that it be released.”

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Dolan deposition made public

MILWAUKEE (WI)
WISN

[Cardinal Dolan deposition]

[deposition exhibits]

MILWAUKEE —Cardinal Timothy Dolan said he found a diocese full of “hurting souls” in Milwaukee as the priest sexual abuse scandal exploded in 2002, the same year Dolan was appointed archbishop of Milwaukee.

Clergy sex abuse documents and depositions from the Milwaukee archdiocese are released as part of its bankruptcy proceedings.

Dolan’s most extensive comments yet on the scandal that has rocked the Catholic Church were revealed Monday in a deposition he gave on Feb. 20, 2013, in New York City, where he is now archbishop. The deposition was part of thousands of pages of documents released in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee’s bankruptcy case.

Dolan told the attorney taking the deposition that he believed he had an obligation to his people.

“The souls of some people who had been damaged in a nauseating way when they were young people, they were hurting, their parents were hurting, the parishes were hurting,” Dolan said in the deposition.

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Dolan Sought Vatican Permission to Shield Assets

MILWAUKEE (WI)
The New York Times

Documents on Clergy Offenders
Archdiocese of Milwaukee
Lawyers of the Abused

By LAURIE GOODSTEIN
Published: July 1, 2013

Files released by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Milwaukee on Monday revealed that in 2007, the diocese’s archbishop at the time, Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan, requested permission from the Vatican to move nearly $57 million into a cemetery trust fund in order to protect the assets from victims of clergy sexual abuse who were demanding compensation.

Cardinal Dolan, now the archbishop of New York, has in the past emphatically denied seeking to shield church funds as archbishop of Milwaukee, and he reiterated in a statement on Monday that these were “old and discredited attacks.”

However, the files released Monday contain a letter he wrote to the Vatican in 2007, in which he explained that by transferring the assets, “I foresee an improved protection of these funds from any legal claim and liability.”

The Vatican moved swiftly to approve the request, the files show, even though it often took years to remove known abusers from the priesthood.

Abuse victims demanding transparency and accountability have long pressed for the release of the documents, and the victims’ lawyers had asked a judge to compel their release. One day before a judicial hearing in April, the archbishop of Milwaukee, Jerome E. Listecki, announced his intention to release the documents.

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Former Milwaukee archbishop sought money transfer from Vatican

MILWAUKEE (WI)
The Guardian (UK)

[Permission to transfer funds]

Associated Press in Milwaukee
guardian.co.uk, Monday 1 July 2013

The cardinal of the archdiocese of New York, in his former job, sought permission from the Vatican to move $57m into a trust for “improved protection” as the Milwaukee archdiocese prepared to file for bankruptcy amid dozens of claims by victims of clergy sex abuse, according to documents made public on Monday.

The Vatican granted the request of former Milwaukee archbishop Timothy Dolan, who is president of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops and the nation’s most prominent Roman Catholic official.

Monday’s release of about 6,000 pages of documents has drawn national attention because of Dolan’s involvement.

His 2007 letter, and the Vatican’s response, were among the documents the archdiocese released as part of a deal reached in federal bankruptcy court between the archdiocese and clergy sex abuse victims suing it for fraud. Victims say the archdiocese transferred problem priests to new churches without warning parishioners and covered up priests’ crimes for decades.

Dolan has not been accused of transferring problem priests, and he took over as archbishop in Milwaukee in mid-2002, after many victims had already come forward. But there have been questions about his response to the crisis.

The victims’ attorneys have accused Dolan of trying to hide the $57m as the Milwaukee archdiocese planned for bankruptcy. The archdiocese denies those allegations.

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Bishop of Roseau speaks out on alleged sexual abuse case

DOMINICA
Dominica News

The head of the largest religious organization in Dominica says he will not be intimidated, as investigations of alleged sexual misconduct by a local priest continue.

Recently, allegations surfaced, that 19 years ago, Father Reginald Lafleur sexually abused a young woman, prompting a decision to send him on administrative leave.

However, that move did not go down well with Grandbay parishioners who staged a massive demonstration in support of Fr. Lafleur, their Parish priest, during Sunday mass.

Bishop of Roseau His Lordship Gabriel Malzaire, who, for the first time, has spoken publicly about the matter, has said that the behavior of the parishioners was unfortunate.

“As the Bishop I have rules to follow. Rules that are stated by the church. Rules that are stated by canon law-the laws that govern the church and In cases of allegations of sexual abuse in the church, we are duty bound to respond in a certain way…Unfortunately the reactions were the way it was and things were communicated the way it was communicated but I was only following the rules of the church,” he said during mass on Sunday.

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CARDINAL DOLAN’S MILWAUKEE DEPOSITION

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Catholic League

[Cardinal Dolan deposition]

Bill Donohue comments on the deposition by Cardinal Timothy Dolan that was released today regarding his tenure as Archbishop of Milwaukee; the deposition was taken in February:

Under questioning by Jeffrey Anderson, an activist lawyer, Cardinal Dolan gravely disappointed the enemies of the Catholic Church: they were denied their “gotcha” moment. Indeed, pint-sized Anderson didn’t lay a glove on the big guy.

Boring. That is the most accurate word to describe the deposition. Here is a list of the topics that Anderson pursued: the statute of limitations; a public list of accused priests; the process of handling deceased and elderly priests; laicization; false and substantiated allegations; compensation for priests let go from ministry; cemetery funds; parish finances; the scope of an archbishop’s authority; the effect of the scandal on Catholics.

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Yeshiva U. rabbi says he mishandled abuse claims

NEW YORK
Beaumont Enterprise

NEW YORK (AP) — The chancellor of Yeshiva University says he was “wrong” in the way he handled allegations of sexual abuse at the university’s high school decades ago.

In a letter announcing his retirement on Monday, Rabbi Norman Lamm says his response to the allegations was “ill-conceived.” Lamm is stepping down after decades at the university amid an ongoing investigation into accusations of abuse by alumni.

The university says Lamm’s decision to retire was based on an agreement reached with the school three years ago.

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Statement Of Timothy Cardinal Dolan On The Release Of His Depostion By The Archdiocese Of Milwaukee

NEW YORK
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York

July 1, 2013

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: July 1, 2013

STATEMENT OF TIMOTHY CARDINAL DOLAN ON THE RELEASE OF HIS DEPOSITION BY THE ARCHDIOCESE OF MILWAUKEE

“I welcome today’s voluntary release of documents by the Archdiocese of Milwaukee that contain information and details related to sexual abuse by clergy, and how the Archdiocese of Milwaukee responded to it. I am especially grateful that my deposition of February 2013, given as part of the Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings, is one of the documents being released.

Responding to victim-survivors, taking action against priest-abusers, and working to implement policies to protect children, were some of the most difficult, challenging, and moving events of the 6 ½ years that I served as Archbishop of Milwaukee. One of the principles that guided me during that time was the need for transparency and openness, which is why I not only welcomed the deposition as a chance to go on-the-record with how we responded to the clergy sexual abuse crisis during my years in Milwaukee, but also encouraged that it be released.

Unfortunately, we have already seen how the release of these documents will cause some to raise old and discredited attacks – like priest-abusers having been “paid” to apply for laicization, (like it or not, bishops do have a canon law obligation to provide basic support like health care and room and board for their priests until they have finally moved on) or that establishing a perpetual care fund from money belonging to cemeteries and designated for that purpose – as required by state law and mandated by the archdiocesan finance council – was an attempt to shield it from the bankruptcy proceedings. While certain groups can be counted-upon to take certain statements or events out of context, the documents released show plainly that the bishops have been faithful to the promises made over a decade ago: permanent removal from ministry of any priest who abused a minor; complete cooperation with law enforcement officials; and, strict child-safety requirements. The sexual abuse of minors is a crime and it is a sin. The Church must remain rigorous in our response when an allegation of abuse is received, and ever-vigilant in maintaining our safeguards to do all that we can to see that children are protected. It is my hope that the release of these documents will also help to show how the Catholic Church in the United States has become a leader in dealing with the society-wide scourge of sexual abuse, and help other groups and organizations who are also seeking combat this evil.”

You may read the deposition here.

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Records: Dolan warned Vatican of sex abuse scandal

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Sun Herald

[Daniel Budzynski]

By M.L. JOHNSON — Associated Press

MILWAUKEE — Former Milwaukee Archbishop Timothy Dolan sought to push problem priests out of the priesthood to avoid further scandal after sex abuse victims began coming forward in the early 2000s.

Many victims in Milwaukee began coming forward in 2002 after news broke about clergy abuse in Boston.

Dolan wrote to then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, the future Pope Benedict XVI, in July 2003 asking to dismiss Daniel Budzynski.

Abuse allegations against Budzynski stretched to the 1970s, and Dolan told Ratzinger in correspondence made public Monday that “as victims organize and become more public, the potential for true scandal is very real.”

The Vatican removed Budzynski from the priesthood in 2004.

Dolan’s letter is part documents the Milwaukee archdiocese released Monday. Dolan is currently the cardinal of the New York archdiocese.

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Milwaukee documents show church was slow to act on abusive priests

MILWAUKEE (WI)
National Catholic Reporter

Marie Rohde | Jul. 1, 2013

Pages and pages of paperwork documenting clergy sex abuse in the Milwaukee archdiocese were released Monday afternoon, providing insight to priest abuse cases over the years as well as New York Cardinal Timothy Dolan’s request to move church assets to protect them from a bankruptcy filing before he left Milwaukee in 2009.

Jeff Anderson, a lawyer representing the victims of clergy sex abuse in the archdiocese, said in a press conference Monday that the newly released documents show that decisions were made to move $147 million to a fund for cemetery maintenance and to parishes under Dolan, then archbishop of Milwaukee. Anderson said the Vatican acted with unprecedented speed to approve the transfer of the money.

Anderson said the request to move the money was made in a June 4, 2007, letter to the Vatican and was approved July 18, 2007.

Anderson compared the speed of the money transfer to the years it took to act on abusive priests. Specifically, he said, Fr. John Wagner was accused of abusing 10 minors, and though he admitted some of the misconduct, he remained a priest for more than seven years after the allegations were made.

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Dolan 2007 letter to Vatican is “smoking gun” …

MILWAUKEE (WI)
SNAP Wisconsin

Dolan 2007 letter to Vatican is “smoking gun” proving he committed federal bankruptcy fraud, victims say

Dolan 2007 letter to Vatican is “smoking gun” proving he committed federal bankruptcy fraud, victims say

New York Cardinal conspired with Vatican while in Milwaukee to transfer nearly $57 million into new corporation for the “protection” of funds “from any legal claim and liability”

Milwaukee Archdiocese filed for bankruptcy in January 2011 not claiming Dolan’s transferred funds as assets

Survivors asking US attorney to investigate Dolan for criminal charges of “fraudulent conveyance”

Statement by Peter Isely, SNAP Midwest Director (Milwaukee)
CONTACT: 414.429.7259

Dolan letter to Vatican at this link:

On June 4, 2007, then Archbishop Timothy Dolan of Milwaukee, now Cardinal of New York, sent a letter to the Vatican requesting permission to transfer nearly $57 million dollars from the assets of the archdiocese into a new “autonomous pious foundation” called a “Cemetery Perpetual Care Trust.”

While this was occurring the Milwaukee Archdiocese was facing a growing number of potential claims for fraud in concealing and transferring known child sex offenders. Dolan had considered bankruptcy for the archdiocese as early as 2004.

According to the letter to Cardinal Claudio Hummes, Prefect of the powerful Congregation of the Clergy in Rome, Dolan said he had already established the Trust on May 4, 2007, after “extensive study and consultation” and was seeking permission from the Vatican to make the transfer.

Dolan then clearly states his intent for creating the Trust: “By transferring these assets to the Trust, they will be protected by any legal claim and liability.”

On July 1, 2007 the Wisconsin Supreme Court ruled unanimously that civil cases for fraud against the Milwaukee Archdiocese could proceed.

Two weeks later, on July 18, 2007 Dolan got his approval from Rome and the money, presumably, was then transferred.

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Norman Lamm’s letter announcing departure from Yeshiva University

NEW YORK
JTA

By Uriel Heilman
July 1, 2013

Rabbi Norman Lamm, who serves as Yeshiva University’s president, chancellor and head of its rabbinical school, announced his departure on Monday in a letter acknowledging his failure to respond adequately to sexual abuse allegations against two rabbis at Y.U.’s high school for boys in the 1980s. [UPDATE: The school has issued a statement saying that “Rabbi Lamm’s decision to retire is based on an agreement that was reached three years ago” and “his contract expired June 30.”

The full text of his letter, which was sent to students, faculty, alumni and donors, according to a Y.U. spokesman, follows. He addresses the sexual allegations in paragraphs 6-9.

Dear Friends,

When we celebrated the ninetieth birthday of my dear father, zikhrono liverakhah, I cited the Mishnah in Avot 5:21, ben tish’im la-shu-ach. Despite the standard explanation that at ninety years old a person is stooped and decrepit, and there is much truth to that, I offered a more sensitive and profound interpretation. Without going into all of the details, I observed that hishtachavayah, the prostration of the attendee at the Jerusalem Temple, was the final ritual performed at the culmination of the divine service. Through prostration pilgrims stopped to reflect on their heavenly encounter and offered their gratitude and appreciation for the opportunity to serve God through the divine service. At ninety, I suggested, a person stops to reflect on a life well lived, a family raised, professional and personal achievements, spiritual growth, accomplishments, mistakes, successes and failures—and pauses for hishtachavayah, a moment of reflection, gratitude, and appreciation.

While I have yet to reach my father’s age, at this moment of transition in accordance with an agreement reached 3 years ago—as I step down from my positions as Chancellor of Yeshiva University and Rosh Hayeshivah, ending over sixty years of official affiliation with my beloved Yeshiva University as student, faculty member, Rosh Hayeshivah, President, and Chancellor—I use this moment for mishtachavim u-modim—pause, reflection, and expression of gratitude. Before beginning, I want to acknowledge that conditions have caused me to rely on help from my family in writing this letter.

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Y.U. Chancellor Norman Lamm Steps Down After Admitting Failure on Sex Abuse

NEW YORK
The Jewish Daily Forward

In a letter announcing his resignation, Yeshiva University’s chancellor, Rabbi Norman Lamm, acknowledged his failure to respond adequately to allegations of sexual abuse against Y.U. rabbis in the 1980s.

Lamm, now 85, became the school’s third president and head of its rabbinic school, the Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary, in 1976. He stepped down as president in 2003, becoming chancellor, but stayed on as RIETS’s head.

His resignation Monday from his posts at the school were attributed to an agreement reached three years ago and come several months after a report in the Forward newspaper that detailed allegations of abuse dating back to the 1970s and ‘80s against two rabbis at Y.U.’s high school for boys, principal George Finkelstein and Talmud teacher Macy Gordon.

Last December, Lamm acknowledged to the Forward that he knew about some of the allegations but chose to deal with them privately; law enforcement authorities were never informed.

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Vatican bank director and deputy resign amid scandal

VATICAN CITY
BBC News

The director and deputy director of the Vatican bank have resigned following the arrest of a senior Italian cleric over corruption and fraud allegations.

Paolo Cipriani and Massimo Tulli offered to step down on Monday “in the best interest of the institute and the Holy See”, the Vatican says.

It comes three days after the arrest of Monsignor Nunzio Scarano.

The 61-year-old and two others are suspected of trying to move 20m euros ($26m; £17m) illegally.

Monsignor Scarano, a priest from southern Italy, worked for years as a senior accountant for a Vatican department known as Apsa (the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See).

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Management Shake-Up Hits Vatican Bank

VATICAN CITY
Wall Street Journal

By STACY MEICHTRY And GIADA ZAMPANO

VATICAN CITY—Two top managers at the Vatican bank resigned on Monday, in the latest shake-up at the scandal-plagued institution, the Holy See said.

Paolo Cipriani—managing director of the Istituto per le Opere di Religione, or IOR, as the Vatican bank is known—stepped down along with his deputy, Massimo Tulli.

As the highest-ranking administrators at the bank reporting, Messrs. Cipriani and Tulli spearheaded efforts under former Pope Benedict XVI to clean up the Vatican bank and make it more accountable to outside regulators.

“While we are grateful for what has been achieved, it is clear today that we need new leadership to increase the pace of this transformation process,” Vatican bank Chairman Ernest von Freyberg said.

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UPDATE 1-Top Vatican bank managers resign after monsignor’s arrest

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

Mon Jul 1, 2013

(Adds detail, background)

(Reuters) – The director and deputy director of the Vatican bank resigned on Monday, following the arrest of a senior cleric with close connections to the bank who is accused of plotting to smuggle 20 million euros ($26 million) into Italy from Switzerland.

A statement from the Vatican said Paolo Cipriani and Massimo Tulli had handed in their resignations, three days after the arrest of Monsignor Nunzio Scarano, an accountant in a Vatican department who is the subject of two separate investigations by Italian magistrates.

Ernst von Freyberg, the bank’s president will take over as interim director general and a new position of chief risk officer will also be created to improve compliance with financial regulations.

In the latest of a series of blows to the Vatican’s scandal-plagued bank, Scarano, 61, was arrested on Friday along with Giovanni Zito, a secret services agent, and financial broker Giovanni Carenzio.

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