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 1, 2013

Vatican bank directors step down

VATICAN CITY
Deutsche Welle

The director and the deputy director of the Vatican Bank have resigned. This comes three days after a Vatican official was arrested in a financial scandal as the pope seeks to clean up the bank.

The Vatican announced on Monday that Paolo Cipriani, director of the Vatican bank, and his deputy, Massimo Tulli, had stepped down “in the best interest of the institute and the Holy See.”

The bank has come under increased scrutiny since Pope Francis assumed the papacy, and has long been of interest to Italian authorities who suspect it is used as a tax haven.

Last week, a Vatican accountant was placed under arrest as part of an investigation by authorities in Rome into the Institute for Religious Works (IOR), as the bank is officially called.

Monsignor Nunzio Scarano is suspected of taking part in a plot to smuggle 20 million euros ($26 million) into Italy from Switzerland. He and two other accomplices are thought to have planned to give the money to Scarano’s friends in the shipping industry in the southern city of Salerno. Scarano is being investigated in Salerno on separate charges of money laundering.

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 director, deputy resign amid scandal

VATICAN CITY
Boston.com

By NICOLE WINFIELD / Associated Press / July 1, 2013

ROME (AP) — The director of the embattled Vatican bank and his deputy resigned Monday following the latest developments in a broadening finance scandal that has already landed one Vatican monsignor in prison and added urgency to Pope Francis’ reform efforts.

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

Cipriani, along with the bank’s then-president, was placed under investigation by Rome prosecutors in 2010 for alleged violations of Italy’s anti-money-laundering norms after financial police seized 23 million euro ($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, or IOR, has remained under the glare of prosecutors and now Francis amid fresh concerns it has been used as an offshore tax haven.

Last week, a Vatican accountant was arrested as part of Rome prosecutors’ broadening investigation into the IOR. Monsignor Nunzio Scarano is accused of corruption and slander in connection with a plot to smuggle 20 million euro ($26 million) into Italy from Switzerland without reporting it to customs officials.

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.

Victims blast Milwaukee Catholic officials

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

[the documents – Jeff Anderson & Associates]

[the documents – Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Milwaukee]

For immediate release: Monday, July 1

Keeping their secrets until the last possible day, Milwaukee’s archbishop finally released long-hidden records about heinous clergy sex crimes and cover ups today. He did so, however, while working hard to “spin” the documents, obscure the truth and deceive parishioners and the public about this on-going scandal.

We beg Catholics everywhere to carefully read these files. Kids are safer when cover ups are unveiled and understood. And the horrific truth is best understood when the actual writings and deeds of Catholic officials are studied, not when they are spun or summarized or sanitized by church public relations experts. We hope that Catholics and citizens will ignore the carefully crafted spin that Listecki continues to put out designed to minimize the inexcusable, recklessness, and callousness of dozens of his colleagues and supervisors.

We hope law enforcement officials will also scour these files. We suspect that there are some current or former Wisconsin Catholic officials who may yet be prosecuted for destroying evidence, intimidating victims, obstructing justice or other violations. The archaic, predator-friendly statute of limitations may prevent some (but perhaps not all) of the predators from being pursued. But we hope that police and prosecutors will work very hard to determine if any of those who committed or concealed these horrific crimes might be charged.

We hope that Catholics will look carefully at how their donations are being manipulated to deny justice to victims. We believe the records will show that millions of dollars have been deliberately – and deceptively – shifted in secrecy to funds that will enable selfish Catholic officials to hang on to them.

The records show Milwaukee church officials pretending to be powerless over predators who haven’t yet been defrocked by a callous, slow-moving Vatican bureaucracy. We believe bishops should insist that suspended predator priests live in remote, independent, secure treatment centers while still on the church payroll. Bishops act as if they can do nothing until Rome defrocks a pedophile. But that’s irresponsible. As long as a priest is a priest, his bishop can order him to live in a particular place. That place – for credibly accused child molesting clerics – is in a treatment facility, not in a neighborhood among unsuspecting families.

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.

Church aware of paedophiles

AUSTRALIA
Maitland Mercury

By ELLE WATSON July 2, 2013

Senior church officials knew Denis McAlinden abused an 11-year-old girl in 1953 and still allowed the priest to move between Hunter parishes where he continued to sexually abuse children over four decades, a sex abuse inquiry has heard.

The shocking facts were recounted by counsel assisting – Julia Lonergan SC – who told the special commission of inquiry, internal church correspondence showed clergy members had “extensive knowledge dating back to the 1950s of the serious risk to children posed by McAlinden”.

Part two of the inquiry, which began yesterday, will for the next three weeks examine whether church officials hindered police investigations into paedophilia by failing to report offences, discouraging witnesses from coming forward, alerting offenders about possible police action and destroying evidence.

One of the men who knew of the priest’s paedophilia, Monsignor Patrick Cotter, extracted a confession from McAlinden in 1976 after he sexually abused a primary school student in Forster.

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.

Information on Clergy Offenders

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Milwaukee

List of Clergy Offenders

Detailed information on archdiocesan priests with a substantiated case of sexual abuse of a minor including status, assignments, a historical narrative, timeline, and related documents.

Depositions

Seven depositions given by current and past archdiocesan officials and a former priest, related to clergy sexual abuse of minors in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee.

Additional Documents

Miscellaneous resources including: background check procedures from the early 1990’s, notes on the process to release the clergy offender names in 2004 and monitoring logs related to clergy offenders.
Clergy Offender Document Release Communications

Various archdiocesan communications related to the release of documents on July 1, 2013.

A Historical Perspective on Clergy Sexual Abuse of Minors in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee

A review of history shows how thinking has evolved regarding how child sexual abuse cases were handled in society from the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s, to today, and how the issue of sexual abuse of a minor was handled by law enforcement officials; by therapists and health professionals; and also by Church officials.

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 Historical Perspective on Clergy Sexual Abuse of Minors in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Milwaukee

July 1, 2013

Dr. Monica Applewhite, one of the leading experts on screening, monitoring and policy development for the prevention of sexual abuse, has studied the development of organizational standards of care for prevention and response to child sexual abuse. She reports that, until the mid-1970s, the belief was that child sexual abuse was rare. In the 1980s, professionals began to acknowledge how common child sexual abuse was and that it was a significant problem.

Even after realizing sexual abuse of a minor was more prevalent, including by clergy, it was only in the 1990s that professionals began to recognize the long-term effect of sexual abuse on victims.

From 1985 to 1995, most major religious organizations established policies on sexual misconduct that included codes of ethics, polices on reporting and procedures for responding to sexual abuse by ministers.

On a national level, in June 1992, the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (then the National Conference of Catholic Bishops) adopted its five principles to follow in dealing with accusations of sexual abuse, and, the following year, formalized an Ad Hoc committee of the Bishops’ Conference on Sexual Abuse. This Committee continued to produce materials for dioceses to implement as ways of responsibly addressing this issue.

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 releases thousands of pages from priest sex abuse files

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

By Annysa Johnson of the Journal Sentinel

The Archdiocese of Milwaukee released thousands of pages of documents Monday detailing for the first time how its bishops and other top leaders responded to the sexual abuse of children by dozens of its priests going back decades.

The documents, including parts of personnel files and depositions of church leaders — among them New York Cardinal Timothy Dolan, a former Milwaukee archbishop — were made public as part of the Milwaukee archdiocese’s bankruptcy. They were expected to offer an unprecedented look at how what has become a global crisis in the Roman Catholic Church played out in southeastern Wisconsin.

The documents were posted online shortly before 1 p.m. by victims’ attorneys at www.andersonadvocates.com. The Journal Sentinel will repost those in a searchable format shortly at www.jsonline.com.

Archbishop Jerome Listecki warned local Catholics late last week about the disturbing nature of many of the documents, saying “prepare to be shocked.” And the archdiocese on Saturday issued a series of talking points and a Q&A for pastors and lay leaders to use in their parishes.

Victims and their attorneys called it a historic moment that would vindicate survivors, many of whom, they said, were “re-victimized” by the actions of church leaders and continue to live in “shame and silence.”

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.

Thousands of pages of documents on priest sex abuse cases released

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Fox 6

July 1, 2013, by Cary Docter

MILWAUKEE (WITI) – Thousands of pages of secret church documents and depositions were released on Monday, July 1st. They detail the Vatican’s role and the role of Milwaukee churches in priest sex abuse cases.

CLICK HERE to view all of the released documents

What will people find in reading these documents? Milwaukee Archbishop Jerome Listecki offered this summary in a blog posted in April.

The incidents of abuse date back 25, 50, even 80 years.

The vast majority of perpetrators were not known to the archdiocese until years after they committed the abuse.

Reports of abuse were often not brought to the archdiocese or civil authorities until decades after they occurred.

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 Reveal Bishop Dolan’s Bankruptcy Scheme and Frustration With Rome

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Huffington Post

[Cardinal Dolan deposition]

[Cemetery documents]

Michael D’Antonio

Documents released today in Milwaukee show that Catholic church leaders, including then archbishop Timothy Dolan, deliberately transferred $59 million to a trust in order to protect it from the claims of people who had been sexually abused by local priests. In a letter to a Vatican official, Dolan, now cardinal archbishop of the Archdiocese of New York, explains that the move will provide “improved protection of these funds from any legal claim and liability.”

The Dolan letter, sent in 2007, is among 5,000 pages made public as part of a bankruptcy proceeding in which the $59 million trust is a point of contention for hundreds of people who have filed claims of clergy abuse. The files also include correspondence in which Dolan informs the Vatican that proposals to change statutes of limitations on sex abuse claims could adversely affect the Milwaukee archdiocese.

Overall, the picture of Dolan that emerges in the papers is one of an administrator struggling to protect an institution’s assets while defending its reputation. Some documents confirm that payments were made to induce priests who were accused of abuse to leave ministry and give up their faculties. Others show the bishop’s frustration with Vatican officials and their slow-moving response to his requests that men who were credibly accused be dismissed from the priesthood. As years pass and the cases remain unresolved he referenced legislation that would allow for more lawsuits and wrote:

“The more we can demonstrate our seriousness about purifying the priesthood, as the Holy Father has implored us to do, the more we can speak credibly about the adverse effect of such legislation. Our critics challenge us on the fact that known abusers have still not been laicized.”

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

Archdiocese of Milwaukee releases priests’ personnel files, other clergy sex abuse documents

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Duluth News Tribune

By M.L. JOHNSON Associated Press

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

The documents were made public as part of a deal reached in federal bankruptcy court between the archdiocese and 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. Many pushed for the documents’ release in the belief that it would be an important part of their healing.

The collection also has drawn interest because of the involvement of Dolan, the president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and the nation’s most prominent Roman Catholic official. Dolan has not been accused of transferring problem priests. He took over as archbishop in mid-2002, after many victims had already come forward. But there have been questions about his response to the crisis, including payments made to abusive priests when they left the church.

The archdiocese has characterized the money, as much as $20,000 in some cases, as a kind of severance pay meant to help priests transition out of the ministry. Similar amounts were made to men leaving the priesthood long before allegations of sexual abuse surfaced in the Catholic church, spokeswoman Julie Wolf said last year, when the payments came to light.

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 FILES

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Jeff Anderson & Associates

[includes timelines]

• Adamsky, Raymond J.
• Arimond, James L.
• Bandle, Ronald J.
• Beck, James W.
• Becker, Franklyn W.
• Benham, Michael C.
• Bistricky, Frederick J.
• Budzynski, Daniel A.
• Burns, Peter A.
• Collova, S. Joseph
• Doyle, Andrew P., III
• Effinger, William J.
• Engel, Ronald
• Etzel, George A.
• Farrell, William J.
• Flynt, James M.
• Haen, Edmund H.
• Hanser, David J.
• Herbst, Harold
• Hopf, George S.
• Jablonowski, James N.
• Knighton, Marvin T.
• Knotek, John T.
• Krejci, Michael J.
• Kreuzer, Eugene T.
• Krusing, Oswald G.
• Lanser, Jerome E.
• Lesniewski, Eldred B.
• Massie, Daniel J.
• Murphy, Lawrence G.
• Nichols, Richard W.
• Nuedling, George A.
• O’Brien, John A.
• Peters, Donald
• Schouten, Clarence J.
• Silvestri, Vincent A.
• Trepanier, Thomas A.
• Wagner, Jerome A.
• Wagner, John C.
• Walter, Charles W.
• Widera, Siegfried Francis

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.

DEPOSITIONS

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Jeff Anderson & Associates

Cardinal Dolan Deposition
Cardinal Dolan Deposition Exhibits

Sklba Deposition
Sklba Deposition Exhibits

Wealkand Deposition
Weakland Deposition Exhibits

Budzynski Deposition

Cusack Deposition
Cusack Deposition Exhibits

Reinke Deposition
Reinke Deposition Exhibits

Zimprich Deposition
Zimprich Deposition Exhibits

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.

St. Susanna Churchgoers Say Cardinal’s Ban Was Unreasonable

DEDHAM (MA)
Patch

Cardinal O’Malley banned a priest from the Austrian Priests’ Initiative from speaking at St. Susanna in Dedham.

Posted by Tamara Starr (Editor), July 1, 2013

The reason was because Schuller is the founder of the Austrian Priests’ Initiative which allows women and married people to become priests. However, many churchgoers of St. Susanna did not believe that was a good reason for the ban.

One woman wouldn’t give her name, but she said that the decision was completely unreasonable.

“I think it’s bologna how they think they can do whatever they want,” she said.

For Julie, another churchgoer, she said that the ban was not going to stop her from seeing him speak.

“If anything, this only makes it more interesting,” she said.

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

Michael D’Antonio’s ‘Mortal Sins’, a compelling trace of the history of the pedophile priest scandal

UNITED STATES
The Plain Dealer

By Michael O’Malley, The Plain Dealer
on July 01, 2013

In discussions and news stories about child sex abuse at the hands of Catholic priests in the United States, attention often turns to Boston, commonly regarded as the ground zero of a crisis that has touched every diocese in the nation.

In 2002, at the height of the cascading scandal, Boston’s Catholic leader, Cardinal Bernard Law, was forced to resign after acknowledging that 80 of his priests faced charges of abuse.

That admission came under pressure from vigilant newspaper reporters and aggressive lawyers who dug through files, documents and depositions, exposing the archdiocese’s harboring of serial sex abusers and covering up of heinous crimes against children for four decades.

Boston certainly was in the eye of the national media at the time. But all this didn’t start in Catholic New England, as documented in a gripping new book, “Mortal Sins: Sex, Crime and the Era of Catholic Scandal,” by the award-winning journalist Michael D’Antonio.

The book captures the drama, impact and reach of a 30-year-crisis that began before the Boston meltdown and continues today.

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.

Scarano questioned in 20 million corruption plot at Holy See

ROME
Gazzetta del Sud

Rome, July 1 – Italian magistrates questioned Msgr Nunzio Scarano Monday in a 20-million-euro corruption plot involving the Holy See’s asset-management agency APSA. Scarano, who was arrested last Friday on suspicion of corruption and fraud, said he was not comfortable in Rome’s Regina Coeli prison and requested house arrest, prosecutors said. Scarano was questioned for about three hours by investigating magistrate Barbara Callari, who will decide the next step in the process. Scarano was arrested along with Giovanni Maria Zito, an agent in Italy’s domestic intelligence agency, and Rome broker Giovanni Carenzio. It’s alleged the trio were involved in a failed attempt to fly 20 million euros of alleged tax-evasion proceeds from Switzerland back to Italy.

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

Senior Vatican cleric arrested for fraud denies charges

ROME
AFP

ROME — A senior Catholic cleric arrested as part of a sweeping probe of the scandal-plagued Vatican bank rejected accusations of money-laundering and corruption on Monday, Italian media reported.

Nunzio Scarano, 61, who was arrested Friday along with a former Italian spy and a financer for allegedly plotting to smuggle millions of euros into Italy, “strongly reaffirms his morality,” his lawyers were reported as saying.

“He has defended himself and we have requested he be moved to house arrest somewhere where he can celebrate mass,” media quoted lawyers Francesco Caroleo Grimaldi, Silverio Sica and Luca Paternostro as saying, following a three-hour meeting with their client and judge Barbara Callari in Rome.

Scarano “is not well, he is very tried and is not sleeping well,” they said.

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

Code words and safe phones: anatomy of a money smuggling plot

ROME
Reuters

By Philip Pullella
ROME | Mon Jul 1, 2013

(Reuters) – To most people, a book is a book. But to Monsignor Nunizio Scarano, a Vatican official arrested on charges of money smuggling, a “book” was a code word for one million euros in cash, a report by the judge on the case said.

“Encyclopaedia,” and “bookmarks” were among other code words that Scarano, who had close connections to the Vatican bank, used in phone conversations with secret service agent Giovanni Zito and broker Giovanni Carenzio, it said.

The three were arrested on Friday for allegedly attempting to smuggle 20 million euros in cash from Switzerland a year ago for Scarano’s rich shipping industry friends in their home town of Salerno in southern Italy.

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 priest dubbed ‘Don 500’ allegedly plotted to smuggle £17million to ‘help out friends’

ROME
Daily Mail (UK)

By DAILY MAIL REPORTER
PUBLISHED: 11:37 EST, 1 July 2013

A Vatican priest arrested in a £17million smuggling plot has admitted he behaved wrongly but said he was only trying to help out friends.

Monsignor Nunzio Scarano, dubbed ‘Don 500’ because the 500 euro note is his favourite banknote, was questioned for three hours by Judge Barbara Callari.

His lawyer Silverio Sica said that Scarano is not well in prison and had asked for house arrest to await a decision on his fate, expected in a day or two.

Scarano was arrested on Friday with two others accused of plotting to smuggle 20million euros from a Swiss bank account into Italy by private jet without reporting it to customs.

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

Lawyers seeks house arrest for Vatican monsignor

ROME
Chicago Tribune

Reuters
July 1, 2013

ROME (Reuters) – Magistrates on Monday questioned Nunzio Scarano, the Vatican prelate detained on suspicion of trying to smuggle tens of millions of euros into Italy, and lawyers asked that he be released into house arrest.

“He explained everything he could. He cooperated in an extremely loyal and honest way. He said he was in good faith and at the disposal of the magistrates whenever they needed,” lawyer Francesco Grimaldi told reporters outside Rome’s Queen of Heaven jail after the three-hour interrogation.

Scarano, who had close connections to the Vatican bank, was arrested on Friday along with Giovanni Zito, a secret services agent, and financial broker Giovanni Carenzio.

They have been accused of plotting to bring 20 million euros ($26.00 million)in cash to Italy from Switzerland for Scarano’s rich shipping industry friends in the southern city of Salerno. Scarano is under a separate investigation there on suspicion of money laundering.

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

Pope Francis says Pope Benedict’s conscience told him to resign

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

Carol Glatz Catholic News Service | Jul. 1, 2013

VATICAN CITY Pope Benedict XVI’s resignation was “a great example” of what it means to follow one’s conscience through prayer, Pope Francis said during his Sunday Angelus address to pilgrims gathered in St. Peter’s Square.

Following one’s conscience doesn’t mean chasing after one’s own self-interests; it calls for listening to God, understanding his will and carrying out his plan with determination, Pope Francis said.

Pope Benedict provided a “recent marvelous example” of following one’s conscience, Pope Francis said, evidently referring to the retired pope’s decision to leave office.

“Pope Benedict XVI gave us this great example when the Lord led him to understand, in prayer, what was the step he should take,” Pope Francis said. “He followed, with a great sense of discernment and courage, his conscience, that is, the will of God, who spoke to his heart.”

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.

Schweizer Bischöfe sprechen in Rom über “Pfarrei-Initiative”

ROM
Kipa/Apic

Rom, 1.7.13 (Kipa) Die Bischöfe von Basel, Chur und Sankt Gallen haben im Vatikan mit hohen Kurienvertretern über die “Pfarrei-Initiative” gesprochen. Es habe Einigkeit bestanden, “dass die Lehre der Kirche, wie sie vor allem in den Dokumenten des II. Vatikanischen Konzils zusammengefasst ist, die verbindliche Grundlage für die Lösung der entstandenen Fragen bildet”, heisst es in einer anschliessenden, gemeinsamen Pressemitteilung.

Das Treffen, an dem von Seiten des Vatikans die Präfekten der Glaubens- und der Bischofskongregation, Erzbischof Gerhard Ludwig Müller und Kardinal Marc Ouellet teilnahmen, habe in einer brüderlichen Atmosphäre stattgefunden, heisst es von Seiten der Bischöfe Felix Gmür von Basel, Vitus Huonder von Chur und Markus Büchel von Sankt Gallen weiter.

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.

Ehemaliger Kremsmünster-Pater gibt Missbrauch zu

OSTERREICH
Die Presse

Der ehemalige Konviktsdirektor des Stiftes Kremsmünster steht seit Montag wegen sexuellen und gewalttätigen Übergriffen auf insgesamt 24 Opfer vor Gericht. Ihm drohen bis zu 15 Jahre Haft.

Im Landesgericht Steyr hat am Montag der Missbrauchs-Prozess gegen einen ehemaligen Ordensmann des oberösterreichischen Stiftes Kremsmünster begonnen. Die Staatsanwaltschaft wirft dem heute 79-jährigen ehemaligen Konviktsdirektor sexuelle und gewalttätige Übergriffe auf insgesamt 24 ehemalige Schüler sowie den Besitz einer nicht registrierten Pumpgun vor. Der Angeklagte zeigte sich weitgehend geständig, sein Verteidiger sieht die Taten aber als verjährt an. Mit einem Urteil wird am Mittwoch gerechnet.

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.

Admitting failure …

NEW YORK
Haaretz (Israel)

Admitting failure in responding to sex allegations, Yeshiva University chancellor steps down

In a letter announcing he is stepping down as Yeshiva University’s chancellor and rosh yeshiva, Rabbi Norman Lamm acknowledged his failure to respond adequately to allegations of sexual abuse against YU 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 two 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 YU’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.

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.

Beyond reform: Why not close the Vatican bank?

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

Francis J. Butler | Jul. 1, 2013

COMMENTARY

As Pope Francis dives into his curial reform, he has started with the Institute for the Works of Religion, a bank of sorts often acknowledged by church officialdom as a kind of distant and wayward relative of the Holy See.

And no wonder. Late last week, Italian authorities arrested a priest employee of the Vatican’s administrative offices, Msgr. Nunzio Scarano, who is charged with conspiring to move 20 million euros in cash from Switzerland to Italy for his friends. Prior to his arrest, the priest had been under investigation in Salerno for money laundering, according to press reports.

The episode lent credence to long-circulated rumors that some of the Vatican bank’s clerical accounts are used to stash cash for the underworld.

Pope Francis moved quickly to fumigate the Vatican bank. He appointed a trusted bishop to a top post, created a committee of bishops and advisers to report directly to him, and is moving quickly to introduce more transparency and accountability.

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.

Special commission of inquiry into Catholic Church…

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Special commission of inquiry into Catholic Church sex abuse cover-ups to proceed in Newcastle

NEIL KEENE THE DAILY TELEGRAPH JULY 02, 2013

EVIDENCE of more than 50 years of Catholic Church cover-ups, including a paedophile priest sent overseas to escape scrutiny, is to be aired finally at a special commission of inquiry in Newcastle.

The inquiry’s second chapter got under way yesterday. The senior counsel assisting the commission, Julia Lonergan SC, said documents from the Maitland-Newcastle Catholic Diocese showed that as far back as 1953, paedophile priest Denis McAlinden sexually abused a young girl.

Her parents reported the abuse to the church to no avail.

Inquiry told police reluctant to prosecute church

A later victim – a boy who was abused for years from the age of five at the hands of McAlinden – told his own parish priest what was happening during one of his first confessions, but it never went further.

“This boy was given penance, apparently for his sin in being abused by that priest,” Ms Lonergan said.

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

Australian Paedo-Tourism in Indonesia (Or: Bali High)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

Lewis Blayse

Australia’s recently-revived Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd, is due to visit Indonesia this week, and will likely be placing the issue of the “boat people” high on the agenda. The asylum seekers from places like Iraq, Iran, and Afghanistan, pay people-smugglers to get on boats to Australia. It is perceived as a real problem, domestically, for the Australian government, which claims Indonesia is not doing enough to catch the people-smugglers, and stem the flow of the boats washing up on Australian shores.

Indonesian commentator, Iqhbal Sukokiman says that “Australian paedophiles keep washing up on our shores and it is time to do something.” Perhaps, if the Australian government did more to stem the flow of Australian paedophiles to Indonesia, and Bali in particular, the Indonesian government might be more sympathetic to the Australian government’s position on the people-smugglers.

The Australian Federal Police (AFP) has reported that Bali is the most popular destination for Australian paedophiles. It is also the most popular destination for Australian tourists in general, despite the two Bali terrorism incidents. Fixing the problem of the flow of paedophiles to Bali would go a long way towards fixing relations with Australia’s largest, and most important, neighbour.

The Royal Commission must look at this issue as a matter of priority.

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More on Bali (Or: Bad Neighbour)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

Lewis Blayse

Australian paedophiles traveling to Indonesia, and Bali in particular, was partly covered in yesterday’s posting, along with a case for Australian authorities to take the situation more seriously, at least from the viewpoint of international relations. It is a worthy topic for the Royal Commission.

Something of the local attitude by the Balinese can be seen in the following reader comment in the Bali Times by “marahcewek”: “totally agree with confiscating and preventing overseas travel for these perverted bastards!!! These poor children are so vulnerable and these sickos know it…Australian Government DO SOMETHING NOW!!!!”

It is not only in Indonesia that Western paedophiles are causing a negative attitude by the locals. When hearing a case against a U.K. citizen for abusing local boys, Bombay High Court judge, Justice Radhakrishnan commented to his lawyers, “Tell your clients that we are no more their colony.” In Uganda, commentators have slammed “the ready acceptance of ‘NGOs’ whose credentials go unchecked” for being “a major contributor” to their paedophile problem. Sri Lanka has similarly been critical of our “tourists” who indefinitely extend their visas.

In Cambodia, Action Pour Les Enfants director, Seila Samleang, notes that “The targeting of Cambodian children by Western tourists is no longer as obvious as in previous years. Abusers know too well where to hide and how to secure their abusive behaviour. At a glance, they look like a group of decent people who truly care about the plight of the local children.”

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Victims and clergy will respond …

MILWAUKEE (WI)
SNAP Wisconsin

Victims and clergy will respond Monday, 2:30 p.m. to release of Milwaukee priest sex abuse files

Victims and clergy will respond Monday, 2:30 p.m. to release of Milwaukee priest sex abuse files

SNAP leaders join with Survivor Clergy Alliance to address document release

WHO: SNAP leaders, including Peter Isely, the longtime Midwest Director of SNAP will join with members of the Survivor Clergy Alliance, Fr. Jim Connell and survivor Monica Barrett, to address the release of over 6,000 pages of priest sex abuse files from the Milwaukee Archdiocese including the depositions of Cardinal Timothy Dolan, Emeritus Archbishop Rembert Weakland, and Bishop Richard Sklba.

WHERE: The U.S. Federal Courthouse, 517 E. Wisconsin Avenue, Milwaukee

WHEN: 2:30 p.m.

DOCUMENTS: Should be posted and organized at 1:00 p.m. on the website of AndersonAdvocates.com.

SNAP Response: Updated through the day at SNAPwisconsin.com

CONTACT:
Peter Isely SNAP Midwest Director 414.429.7259, peterisely@yahoo.com
John Pilmaier SNAP Wisconsin Director 414.336.8575, pilmaier@milwpc.com
Mike Sneesby SNAP Milwaukee Director 414-915-4374
Monica Barrett 414-704-6074, 1mlbarrett@gmail.com
Fr. Jim Connell 414-940-8054, Connellj@archmil.org

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Milwaukee archdiocese set to release documents on clergy sex abuse

MILWAUKEE (WI)
National Catholic Reporter

Marie Rohde | Jul. 1, 2013

MILWAUKEE — Lawyers representing the victims of clergy sex abuse in the Milwaukee archdiocese said documents slated for release Monday afternoon will reveal greater insight into the role of the Vatican and local church leaders in priest abuse cases. The lawyers also hinted that New York Cardinal Timothy Dolan may have moved church assets before leaving Milwaukee in an effort to protect them from a bankruptcy filing.

In a statement released this weekend, Archbishop Jerome Listecki warned readers of the documents to “prepare to be shocked” and that “news about this topic can shake one’s faith.” He pleaded with readers to understand the “evolution of thinking” on sexual abuse of children since the 1970s.

“Church leaders and other professionals tried their best to deal with the issue given the knowledge available at the time,” he said.

The more than 6,000 pages of documents include:

The deposition of Dolan, archbishop of Milwaukee from June 2002 to February 2009, now the president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. Jeff Anderson, the lead lawyer representing the more than 570 victims who have filed claims, said in a press release that Dolan’s activities leading to the filing of the bankruptcy will be revealed. Lawyers for the victims earlier said Dolan transferred $55 million to a cemetery fund in order to protect it from claims. Another $35 million was transferred to parishes, they said. Bankruptcy Judge Susan V. Kelley ruled that money could not be touched. Lawyers for the claimants could appeal that ruling.

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Austrian priest in major child sex abuse trial

AUSTRIA
GlobalPost

AFP

A former Austrian priest and headmaster of a monastery boarding school went on trial Monday accused of sexually abusing 15 boys and physically assaulting nine others.

Prosecutors accuse Alfons Mandorfer, 79, now defrocked, of committing “sexual acts of differing intensity” on the pupils between 1973 and 1993 both at the Kremsmuenster school and on foreign trips.

The boys he allegedly abused were often vulnerable and had personal problems, prosecutors charge. He is also accused of whipping them, kicking them and threatening them with a pump-action shotgun.

Kremsmuenster Abbey, founded in 777 near Krems in central Austria, has already paid out more than 700,000 euros ($900,000) in compensation to victims of abuse at the school since the scandal erupted several years ago.

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Don Patrizio Poggi, Convicted Paedophile Priest…

ROME
Huffington Post

Don Patrizio Poggi, Convicted Paedophile Priest ‘Arrested For Slander Over Claims Of Vatican Rent-Boy Sex Ring’

Huffington Post UK | By Sara C Nelson
Posted: 01/07/2013

A convicted paedophile priest who claimed a gay prostitution ring has been operating within the Holy Roman Church, has been arrested for slander.

Don Patrizio Poggi was arrested on Friday after prosecutors concluded he had made up allegations that clergymen had hired underage rent-boys for sex, The Times reported.

Poggi, who was defrocked and served a five-year prison sentence for abusing teenage boys at his Rome parish, also claimed a former Carabinieri police officer recruited boys on behalf of nine clergymen, IBTimes reported.

“Poggi conceived and put into action a slanderous plan, presenting circumstances that were false,” the news channel quotes prosecutors as saying.

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Clergy abuse case filled with silent bystanders

CALIFORNIA
Los Angeles Times

Long before Father Donald Patrick Roemer was charged with molesting a young boy, his behavior had been observed by churchgoers, fellow priests, school officials and police authorities. Yet none of them did anything.

BY ASHLEY POWERS
June 26, 2013

They stared at each other, the detective and the priest. Kelli McIlvain found interrogating him somewhat surreal. She had been raised Catholic and taught that a man in a black clerical shirt and white collar was nothing less than an emissary of God.

Father Donald Patrick Roemer was 5 feet 5, maybe 150 pounds. Hazel eyes. Blondish hair. A Ventura County Sheriff’s Office report described him that night as “cooperative, seems stable,” though McIlvain remembered how he repeatedly buried his head on the desk and wept.

To her surprise, his confession came easily. Yes, he said, he molested the 7-year-old boy.

McIlvain lit a cigarette. She hushed her voice, slowed her cadence to match his. Were there others, she asked. Yes, he said, according to court papers, and offered name after name.

“Where do I go from here?” he asked as midnight neared.

“Well,” she said, “I’m going to have to arrest you.”

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$12M settlement reached in Haitian sex assault cases

CONNECTICUT
KBND

Fairfield University and a charity designed to help educate boys in Haiti have – See more at:
reportedly reached a $12 million settlement with children who were sexually abused by a founder of the group.

The Connecticut Post reports that 24 boys sought damages in connection to abuse by Douglas Perlitz, who was sentenced to nearly 20 years in prison in 2011 for the sexual assaults after admitting he engaged in sexual conduct with boys who attended the Project Pierre Touissant School in Cap-Haitien.

“This ends the litigation pending in the District of Connecticut in connection with the Perlitz matter,” Stanley Twardy Jr., Fairfield University’s lawyer, told the newspaper.

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Vatican Rentboy Scandal: Paedophile Priest Patrizio Poggi Arrested for Slander

ROME
International Business Times

By UMBERTO BACCHI

A convicted paedophile priest who claimed that an underage prostitution ring was operating inside the Holy Roman Church has been arrested for slander.

Italian prosecutors said that Patrizio Poggi, a 46-year-old former priest who named nine clergymen and three other people as involved in recruiting and abusing young boys in Rome, made up the allegations out of personal animosity.

The Vatican had refused to reinstate Poggi after he served a five-year sentence for abusing teenage boys during his time as a parish priest at the San Filippo Neri church in Rome.

“Poggi conceived and put in action a slanderous plan, presenting circumstances that were false”, prosecutors said.

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Austrian reform priest to embark on US tour

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Kate Simmons | Jul. 1, 2013

Fr. Helmut Schüller, a leader in Austria’s call for church reform, will bring his message to the United States this summer in his first American speaking tour.

Sponsored by 12 Catholic organizations, Schüller will begin his “Catholic Tipping Point” tour July 16 in New York and visit 15 cities coast to coast.

Schüller received international attention last year when, along with more than 400 priests and deacons, his call for church reform was documented in an “Appeal to Disobedience,” published by the Austrian Priests’ Initiative last June.

Schüller founded the Austrian Priests’ Initiative, a group committed to open discussions about the issues and problems within the Catholic church, in 2006.

“Catholics both in the U.S. and Europe and around the globe are really ready for a change and I believe that bringing Father Helmut to the United States helps both laity and priests see what other Catholics around the world are doing,” Nicole Sotelo, director of programs and communications at Call to Action, told NCR. “It will help inspire us to continue our movement for change here in the U.S.” The church reform group Call to Action is one of a coalition of organizations sponsoring Schüller’s visit.

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Schüller widerspricht Vatikan: Gehen Weg weiter

OSTERREICH
Die Presse

Papst Franziskus müsse nun dem vatikanischen Systen seinen “Stempel aufdrücken”. Dies erklärt der Kopf der österreichischen Pfarrerinitiative im Interview mit DiePresse.com.

„Nein.” So lautet die knappe wie klare Antwort Helmut Schüllers. Die Antwort auf die Frage im Interview mit DiePresse.com, ob er sich entmutigt sieht. Denn zuletzt hat der Präfekt der Glaubenskongregation Gerhard Ludwig Müller harsche Kritik an der reformorientierten Pfarrerinitiative geübt. Und deren Kopf Schüller wurde mit einem Auftrittsverbot in Boston von Papst-Berater Kardinal Sean Patrick O’Malley belegt.

Schüller zeigt sich von derlei wenig beeindruckt: „Wir gehen den Weg, den wir beschritten haben, konsequent weiter.” Der frühere Wiener Generalvikar unter Kardinal Christoph Schönborn sieht im Hinblick auf die jüngste Kritik im Vatikan derzeit (noch?) „die alten Instrumente in Gebrauch”. Es stelle sich die Frage, „ob das noch die Altreflexe eines sich verändernden Systems sind”. Bei Franziskus nimmt er positive Signale wahr.

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Kampf gegen Missbrauch: Tausende Kirchenmitarbeiter geschult

DEUTSCHLAND
Volksfreund

Seit mehr als einem Jahr werden in den katholischen Bistümern Mitarbeiter geschult, um sexuelle Übergriffe in Kircheneinrichtungen künftig zu verhindern. Tausende haben bereits teilgenommen. Die Betroffenheit sah nach wie vor groß.

Trier/Speyer/Mainz (dpa/lrs) – Sie lernen, sexuellen Missbrauch zu erkennen. Sie erfahren, wie Sexualstraftäter «ticken». Und wie sie Kinder und Jugendliche vor Übergriffen schützen müssen. Mehrere tausend Mitarbeiter in den katholischen Bistümern von Rheinland-Pfalz haben im vergangenen Jahr bereits eine der Pflicht-Schulungen zur Prävention sexuellen Missbrauchs besucht. Die Seminare zeigen: «Die Wissensstände sind dabei sehr unterschiedlich», teilte das Bistum Trier in einer ersten Bilanz mit. Manche Mitarbeiter seien seit Jahren mit dem Thema befasst, für andere sei alles neu. Klar sei aber: «Das Thema ruft immer noch Betroffenheit hervor.»

Im Jahr 2010 hatte ein Skandal um den sexuellen Missbrauch von Kindern und Jugendlichen in katholischen Einrichtungen die Kirche erschüttert. Die Kirche geht von mindestens 1200 Opfern aus. Einige sexuelle Übergriffe lagen mehr als 60 Jahre zurück.

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Ex-priester staat terecht voor misbruik

NEDERLAND
Kerknieuws

MA 01 jul 2013

De vroegere rector van het internaat van het gymnasium dat behoort bij de benedictijnenabdij Kremsmünster in het noorden van Oostenrijk, moet zich deze week voor de rechter verantwoorden voor seksueel misbruik. Hij zou in de periode 1973-1993 15 minderjarige gymnasiasten seksueel hebben misbruikt en tegen 9 anderen geweld hebben gepleegd, meldt het Oostenrijkse persbureau APA.

De nu 79-jarige man is de eerste hooggeplaatste rooms-katholieke geestelijke die zich voor de burgerrechter in Oostenrijk moet verantwoorden. Hij heeft in het onderzoek over de beschuldigingen steeds gezwegen. Hij wilde ook niets tegen journalisten zeggen, toen hij maandag bij de zittingszaal aankwam. De kerk heeft hem de bevoegdheid om het priesterambt uit te oefenen ontnomen.

De affaire kwam meer dan 3 jaar geleden naar buiten. De politie heeft 39 zaken onderzocht. Een aantal aanklachten verviel, omdat de feiten verjaard waren of er onvoldoende bewijsmateriaal was.

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Missbrauch im Kloster erstmals vor einem Strafgericht

OSTERREICH
der Standard

MARKUS ROHRHOFER, 30. Juni 2013, 17:50

Am Landesgericht Steyr startet der Prozess gegen einen ehemaligen hochrangigen Geistlichen des Stiftes Kremsmünster. Die Staatsanwaltschaft wirft dem 79-Jährigen unter anderem schweren sexuellen Missbrauch vor

Linz – Wenn Pater A. heute, Montag, im großen Schwurgerichtssaal vor Richter Wolf-Dieter Graf Platz nimmt, wird es für jene, denen der ehemalige Konviktsdirektor des Stiftes Kremsmünster über Jahre seine ganz besondere “Fürsorge” zukommen ließ, wohl eine späte Genugtuung sein. Erstmals muss sich mit dem heute 79-Jährigen ein hochrangiger Geistlicher in Zusammenhang mit den Missbrauchsfällen in kirchlichen Einrichtungen vor einem weltlichen Strafgericht verantworten.

Ein Blick in den rund 1200 Seiten starken Gerichtsakt, der dem Standard vorliegt, lässt den Heiligenschein von Pater A. rasch verblassen: Körperverletzung, sexueller Missbrauch von Jugendlichen, sexueller Missbrauch von Unmündigen, schwerer sexueller Missbrauch von Jugendlichen, Vergewaltigung, Missbrauch eines Autoritätsverhältnisses, gefährliche Drohung und Nötigung, Quälen oder Vernachlässigen unmündiger oder wehrloser Personen. Und ein Vergehen nach dem Waffengesetz – der beschuldigte Pater besaß illegal eine Pumpgun sowie eine Pistole und soll damit einen Schüler bedroht haben. Dem Gottesmann drohen bis zu 15 Jahre Haft.

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Chronologie: Vom “System Kremsmünster” zum Prozess

OSTERREICH
Die Presse

Nach jahrelangen Ermittlungen steht der erste höhere Geistliche im kirchlichen Missbrauch-Skandal vor Gericht.

Seit über drei Jahren sind die Missbrauchsvorwürfe gegen Ordensmänner des Stiftes Kremsmünster in Oberösterreich öffentlich bekannt. Ein mittlerweile ausgetretener Pater wird nun angeklagt. Der 79-Jährige ist der erste höhere Geistliche, der sich im Zug der Missbrauchs-Affäre in der römisch-katholischen Kirche vor einem weltlichen Richter verantworten muss. Im Folgenden eine Chronologie der Ereignisse:

* 1950er-Jahre – Es kommt zu Missbrauchsfällen, die erst im Laufe der aktuellen Affäre an den jetzigen Abt herangetragen werden. Die Vorwürfe richten sich gegen drei bereits verstorbene Patres.

* 1962 bis 1998 – Der nun angeklagte Ex-Pater ist Lehrer bzw. Erzieher im Stiftsgymnasium in Kremsmünster, von 1970 bis 1996 sogar Internatsleiter, die Jahre 1973 bis 1993 sind für die Anklage relevant. Ex-Zöglinge beschreiben die Zeit als “System Kremsmünster”, in dem Gewalt und sexuelle Übergriffe alltäglich gewesen seien.

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NSW church child abuse inquiry approaches heart of the matter

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

Stephen Crittenden
guardian.co.uk, Sunday 30 June 2013

The Maitland-Newcastle diocese has been described as the probable epicentre of Catholic clerical abuse in Australia. There are 400 known victims. Seven priests have been convicted, the church has paid compensation to the victims of eight others, and four are currently facing abuse or concealment charges. Four religious brothers and six lay teachers have also been convicted, and two brothers are facing charges.

But on Monday, after three frustrating weeks of public hearings in Newcastle, a New South Wales special inquiry into child sex abuse within the Catholic church is finally expected to begin to get to the heart of the matter.

The NSW premier, Barry O’Farrell, convened the inquiry in November last year, after Chief Inspector Peter Fox, a detective with years of experience investigating clerical sex abuse in the Maitland-Newcastle diocese, turned whistleblower in an interview on the ABC’s Lateline program, claiming he had evidence that the Catholic church covers up abuse and hinders police investigations.

The special inquiry, chaired by Commissioner Margaret Cunneen SC, centres on a sheaf of internal church documents, obtained by Newcastle Herald journalist Joanne McCarthy in 2009, that reveal a group of senior clergy allegedly attempted to conceal the crimes of one of Australia’s worst paedophile priests, Denis McAlinden.

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Catholic church concealed pedophile priest Denis McAlinden’s abuses

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

DAN BOX From: The Australian July 01, 2013

THE Catholic church received repeated reports that a pedophile priest was abusing children, some as young as four, but failed to pass these on to police for decades, an inquiry has heard.

Church authorities instead actively concealed his abuse and encouraged the priest, Father Denis McAlinden, to move to other dioceses in Australia and overseas, where he was able to continue abusing children.

Even after NSW Police issued a warrant for the priest’s arrest in 1999, the inquiry heard, church authorities did not initially provide his address, and the priest ultimately died six years later without being charged.

The NSW Special Commission of Inquiry has heard that the first recorded report of McAlinden’s abuse was in 1953, when the parents of one his victims reported it to the then-Bishop of Maitland.

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Release of Documents

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Milwaukee

Most Reverend Jerome E. Listecki
Archbishop of Milwaukee

Click here to read this blog in Spanish.

On April 3rd, I informed you of my decision to authorize the release of documents related to diocesan priests with substantiated allegations of sexual abuse of a minor. These documents are scheduled to be posted to the archdiocesan website next week and I’m sure they will generate many stories in the news.

We have worked with the attorneys for abuse survivors who identified almost 6,000 pages of documents they believe should be made public and that best demonstrate how the archdiocese handled allegations of sexual abuse, responded to reports, and dealt with offending priests. Those are the documents that will be posted.

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. We can never tell abuse survivors enough how sorry we are for what they endured. My apology goes out to all who have been harmed and I continue to offer to meet with any individual abuse survivors who would find it helpful.

What we do today in responding to reports of abuse is different than in decades past but that fact does not erase the past. The documents present one part of the history of what happened and demonstrate how people tried to do their best with what they knew at the time. We may never have the complete picture because the records are not always clear and there is no way to delve more deeply because many of the people involved are dead or have had memories fade as 20, 30 or 40 years or more have passed. …

In general, the documents show some of the following themes:

Terrible things happened to innocent children.

People were ill-equipped to respond — to victims and families, and to perpetrators.

Church leaders and other professionals tried their best to deal with the issue given the knowledge available at the time.

Reports of abuse were often not brought to the archdiocese or civil authorities until decades after they occurred.

The archdiocese consistently showed care and concern for abuse survivors, and paid for therapy for individuals who were harmed.

The incidents of abuse date back 25, 50, even 80 years.

The majority of perpetrators were not known to the archdiocese until years after they committed the abuse.

In the 1970s and 80s, priests were often removed from their parish for “medical reasons,” sent for counseling and, based upon a recommendation from their therapist or medical professional, reassigned to another parish.

Twenty-two priests were reassigned to parish work after concerns about their behavior were known to the archdiocese.

Eight of those 22 priests reoffended after being reassigned.

Civil authorities did not always pursue investigations and neither did the archdiocese.

Even when priests were prosecuted and found guilty or pled no contest, they often received probation as a sentence and did not go to jail.

People often reported concerns about a priest that were not instances of sexual abuse, but rather concerns about unusual or questionable behaviors, such as uninvited attention/affection — what we know today as possible signs of “grooming.”

In the early 1990s, a more formalized approach of outreach to abuse survivors and in dealing with offenders began to emerge.

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“Prepare to be shocked”; Milwaukee Cathloic Archdiocese to release documents on sex abuse

MILWAUKEE (WI)
WTAQ

MILWAUKE, WI (WTAQ) – For the first time Monday, we’ll learn about numerous sex abuse incidents in the Milwaukee Catholic Archdiocese which date back for decades – and what the church did and did not do about them.

The archdiocese will release thousands of pages of documents as part of an agreement connected with the church’s two-and-a-half year old bankruptcy case.

Archbishop Jerome Listecki says we should quote, “prepare to be shocked.”

In his weekly letter to church members, Listecki said there are “terrible things described in many of the documents.”

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A timeline of clergy sex abuse in Milwaukee

MILWAUKEE (WI)
San Francisco Chronicle

MILWAUKEE (AP) — The Archdiocese of Milwaukee plans to release thousands of pages of documents related to child sexual abuse by its priests on Monday. Here is a look at key dates in the scandal drawn from the archives of The Associated Press:

1940s — Edmund Haen abuses a child while serving at St. Lawrence Church, the priest’s first parish. The child, who became a priest himself for a time, tells the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel about the abuse in 2002.

1972 — Haen abruptly transfers from a West Bend parish that he founded in 1955 to one in Mequon. Thirty years later, a West Bend businessman tells a newspaper there that he was molested by Haen as a child.

1973 — Siegfried Widera is convicted of sexual misconduct with a boy and placed on three years of probation. Within two years, another allegation is made against him.

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Archdiocese prepares to release sex abuse reports

MILWAUKEE (WI)
WTMJ

[with video]

By Yona Gavino and Nick Montes
CREATED JUN. 30, 2013

MILWAUKEE — On Monday, the Milwaukee Archdiocese will be releasing documents that describe sexual abuse by priests. It’ll include what church leaders did in response. Archbishop Jerome Listecki states: if you decide to go and review this material, prepare to be shocked. It can shake ones’ faith.

The documents will detail how abusive priests were moved from a parish or school without their histories being revealed.

“Anytime the truth comes forward, it’s always a huge opportunity for healing,” explains Peter Isely, Midwest Director for Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests.

The Archbishop wrote on his blog that the abuse stems back 25, 50, and even 80 years.

“These crimes live in secrecy. And so the anecdote for the healing of these crimes is to take them out of the dark shadows of secrecy and bring them into the light,” adds Isely.

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SEX ABUSE VICTIMS CALL FOR PELL TO QUIT

AUSTRALIA
7 News

AAP
July 1, 2013

Cardinal George Pell must be asked to stand down following his failure as a moral leader after the Catholic Church’s child sex abuse scandal in Australia, a victim’s advocacy group says.

Commission of Inquiry Now (COIN) has started a petition to pressure the church to ask its most senior prelate in Australia to stand down.

The petition says Cardinal Pell has failed Australia’s five million Catholics and the Australian people in general as a religious and moral leader.

“Practically every day, the Australian people learn about the hideous crimes of child sexual abuse taking place within the Roman Catholic Church,” the petition at change.org says.

Katrina Lee, spokeswoman for the Catholic Archdiocese of Sydney, said she did not want to comment specifically on the petition, which had about 120 signatures at 4pm (AEST) on Monday.

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Abuse “unusual but not extremely serious”

AUSTRALIA
Maitland Mercury

By Elle Watson July 1, 2013

Part two of a Commission of Inquiry into the alleged cover-up of child sexual abuse by the Catholic Diocese of Maitland-Newcastle has heard a senior member of the church knew Father Denis

In her opening address to the special commission, senior counsel assisting the inquiry Julia Lonergan SC, said Monsignor Patrick Cotter received confessions from McAlinden that he inappropriately touched girls as young as seven-years-old.

The Monsignor recommended McAlinden undergo treatment but he was moved from the parish where the abuse occurred and continued to offend the Hunter.

The special commission heard McAlinden sexually abused children in Maitland and Newcastle over four decades.

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Dramatic apology to victims of church abuse

AUSTRALIA
Illawarra Mercury

By CATHERINE ARMITAGE July 1, 2013

Even though the Catholic Church had “extensive knowledge dating back to the 1950s” of the “serious risk posed to children” by the paedophile priest Denis McAlinden, he continued sexually abusing children for decades before he was removed from the priesthood in 1993, an inquiry has heard.

The Bishop of the church’s Maitland-Newcastle diocese, Bill Wright, made a dramatic, unreserved apology from the witness box to victims and their families at the inquiry into an alleged police and church cover-up of child sex abuse allegations against two priests in the Hunter region on Monday morning.

Bishop Wright’s apology is believed to be the most comprehensive acknowledgement of child sex abuse in the Catholic Church yet made by a serving church leader.

He acknowledged that McAlinden and another priest, James Fletcher, both now dead, were “sexual predators” who “repeatedly committed acts of sexual abuse against children”, using their positions of trust in the church to gain access to the children and to conceal their acts. The inquiry heard that one victim complained in 2001 that she had been abused by McAlinden in 1977 when she was four years old.

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Appellate Court: South Windsor Church, Episcopal Diocese Not Liable in Sexual Abuse Case

CONNECTICUT
Patch

Connecticut Appellate Court affirms a lower court’s decision that St. Peter’s Church of South Windsor and the Episcopal Diocese of Connecticut did not owe a duty of care to the plaintiff.

Posted by Ted Glanzer (Editor), June 30, 2013

The Connecticut Appellate Court last week affirmed a lower court’s ruling that a South Windsor Church and the Episcopal Diocese of Connecticut are not liable for the injuries a man suffered as a result of allegedly being sexually abused by a priest in 1977.

The Appellate Court held that the trial court properly concluded that St. Peter’s Episcopal Church of South Windsor and the the diocese were not liable to Robert Gough, who testified in a deposition that he was sexually abused by Bruce Jacques, a priest employed by the church and the diocese, in the spring of 1977.

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VIDEO: Bishop’s ‘unreserved apology’ – inquiry

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By JASON GORDON July 1, 2013

MAITLAND-Newcastle Bishop Bill Wright has issued an ‘‘unreserved apology’’ to the victims of child sexual abuse by priests, and acknowledged that some members of the church ‘‘failed to act’’ in protecting them from these ‘‘predators’’.

Bishop Wright was allowed to make an opening address to Monday’s hearing of the Special Commission of Inquiry after opening statements from Commissioner Margaret Cunneen and counsel assisting, Julia Lonergan.

The inquiry switched its attention on Monday to what the church knew, and did or didn’t do with allegations concerning the abuse inflicted by disgraced priests Denis McAlinden and James Fletcher. It is also exploring whether the church hindered or obstructed police investigations or conspired to cover up illegal activities.

In an extraordinary opening address, Ms Lonergan indicated that the inquiry had received written documents from the Maitland-Newcastle Catholic Diocese which suggests that senior church clergy not only knew about the ‘‘abhorrent’’ sexual abuse by Denis McAlinden, they went to great lengths to cover it up.

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HUNTER VALLEY INQUIRY HEARS PRIEST ABUSE VICTIM WAS TOLD TO ‘REPENT HIS SINS’

AUSTRALIA
7 News

By Dan Cox, ABC
Updated July 1, 2013

A New South Wales inquiry into child sexual abuse in the Hunter Valley’s Catholic Church has heard that a boy was told to repent his sins after telling his priest he had been abused by clergy.

Part two of the inquiry got underway this morning and is investigating claims by senior policeman Peter Fox that the church did not cooperate with police over abuse allegations against two priests – Father James Fletcher and Father Dennis McAlinden – and instead tried to protect them.

In her opening remarks, counsel assisting the commission Julia Lonergan said the inquiry will hear evidence that a boy abused by McAlinden between the ages of five and nine told his Singleton parish priest about it during his first confession.

“This boy was given penance apparently for his sin in being abused by that priest,” she said.

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Milwaukee Archdiocese to release personnel files about priest abuse Monday

MILWAUKEE (WI)
CBS 58

by Becky Mortensen
Story Created: Jul 1, 2013

MILWAUKEE — The Milwaukee Archdiocese has promised to release the personnel files that will divulge information about sexual abuse in the church today.

The Archdiocese made the announcement the files will become public last week. They say the documents are hundreds of pages long and they include graphic details about the abuse.

The documents are being released as part of a deal reached in court after sex abuse victims sued the church for fraud.

The files will include personnel files of 42 priests with verified claims of abuse against them along with depositions from top church officials. One of those officials is New York Cardinal Timothy Dolan, the former head of the Milwaukee Archdiocese.

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Church bought flight for priest

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

Monday July 1, 2013

Catholic Church leaders bought a one-way plane ticket to New Guinea in 1976 for known Hunter Valley pedophile priest Denis McAlinden, a special NSW commission of inquiry has heard.

In the Supreme Court in Newcastle on Monday, counsel assisting the commission, Julia Lonergan, outlined testimony that would be presented by witnesses and through documents during the next three weeks.

The inquiry, before Commissioner Margaret Cunneen, is examining how police and church officials handled child sexual abuse allegations involving McAlinden and another Hunter Valley Catholic priest, James Fletcher.

Ms Lonergan said church documents showed McAlinden, who died in 2005, was bought the plane ticket despite church officials knowing he had repeatedly abused young girls and boys in a variety of parishes from 1953.

Also appearing at Monday’s hearing was Maitland/Newcastle Bishop William Wright, who read a prepared statement of ‘unreserved’ apology that acknowledged abuse by McAlinden and Fletcher, who died in jail in 2008.

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Church knew of priest’s abuse since 1950s

AUSTRALIA
The Age

[with video]

July 1, 2013

Catherine Armitage

The Catholic Church had “extensive knowledge dating back to the 1950s” of the sexual abuse of children by the paedophile priest Denis McAlinden which continued over four decades on children as young as four and five, an inquiry has heard.

One boy who was abused by McAlinden between the ages of five and nine at Singleton was required to do penance after he told his parish priest, “apparently for his sin in being abused”, the inquiry into an alleged cover-up of child sexual abuse in the Catholic church in the NSW Hunter region has been told.

In 1975 there were further allegations of abuse by McAlinden against primary school children in the Forster area.

A meeting of church officials on May 16 1976 recommended he be given permission to seek work in the Geraldton diocese in Western Australia.

A “very significant” letter the following day from one of the church officials, Vicar Capitular Monsignor Cotter, to then Bishop Clarke said the allegations against McAlinden were “not extremely serious”.

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Church plan to transfer paedophile priest

AUSTRALIA
The West Australian

AAP

Plans to move a known paedophile Catholic priest from the NSW Hunter Valley region to work in Western Australia in 1976 were “a good cover up”, a special commission of inquiry has been told.

The special commission is examining how police and church officials handled child sexual abuse allegations involving Dennis McAlinden and another Hunter Valley Catholic priest, James Fletcher.

Counsel assisting the commission, Julia Lonergan, says the idea of a cover up about McAlinden was put forward in a letter from senior Hunter Valley Catholic priest, Monsignor Patrick Cotter, to the then Bishop Leo Clarke.

Church officials “had extensive knowledge (of the serious risk McAlinden posed to children) dating back to the 1950s”, Ms Lonergan said.

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Milwaukee priest sex abuse records to be released

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Chippewa Herald

Associated Press

The Archdiocese of Milwaukee was expected to release thousands of 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 including New York Cardinal Timothy Dolan, the former archbishop of Milwaukee.

A deal reached in federal bankruptcy court between the archdiocese and victims suing it for fraud called for the documents to be made public by July 1. Victims say the archdiocese transferred problem priests to new churches without warning parishioners and covered up priests’ crimes for decades. Many pushed for the documents’ release in the belief that it would be an important part of their healing.

Similar files made public by other Roman Catholic dioceses and religious orders have detailed how leaders tried to protect the church by shielding priests and not reporting child sex abuse to authorities. The cover-up extended to the top of the Catholic hierarchy. Correspondence obtained by The Associated Press in 2010 showed the future Pope Benedict XVI had resisted pleas in the 1980s to defrock a California priest with a record of molesting children. Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger led the Vatican office responsible for disciplining abusive priests before his election as pope.

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