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 23, 2013

Church ‘must learn from inquiry into abuse claims’

UNITED KINGDOM
Yorkshire Post

THE Archbishop of York has stressed the Church of England will learn from any failings after announcing the team who will lead an independent inquiry into allegations of child abuse against a former cathedral dean.

Dr John Sentamu revealed yesterday that members of the independent inquiry will report back to him with recommendations by the end of October after conducting the investigation into the allegations against Robert Waddington, a former Dean of Manchester Cathedral.

Dr Sentamu’s predecessor, Lord Hope of Thornes, has denied suggestions he covered up allegations against Mr Waddington, who died from cancer five years ago.

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

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

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.

Editorial: Nutrition tests were unethical

CANADA
Times Colonist

The abuses in Canada’s Indian residential schools have been a stain on the country’s history, but the experiments carried out on unwitting children in the schools and on adults outside are staggering in their callousness.

It is not enough to say, as is often said in other cases, that times were different and we cannot judge previous generations by current standards. Even in the 1940s and 1950s, experimenting on people without their knowledge or consent was wrong. To do it to children was monstrous.

Ian Mosby, a food historian from the University of Guelph, has uncovered documents showing that between 1942 and 1952, malnourished people were subjected to nutrition experiments at the Alberni Indian Residential School, five other residential schools across Canada and reserves in northern Manitoba.

The projects began in March 1942, when researchers descended on several northern Manitoba reserves. They were headed by Dr. Percy Moore, Indian Affairs Branch superintendent of medical services, and RCAF Wing Commander Dr. Frederick Tisdall, the co-inventor of Pablum, who was described as Canada’s leading nutrition expert

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The Record: Children first

NEW JERSEY
The Record

TUESDAY JULY 23, 2013
THE RECORD

A PASTOR in Oradell allowed a priest to stay in his rectory who had been accused of sexually molesting a teenage boy. The Rev. Thomas Iwanowski and a spokesman for the Archdiocese of Newark said allowing Monsignor Robert Chabak to stay at St. Joseph’s rectory was “an act of compassion.” We ask: “To whom?”

Certainly not to the boy who was allegedly molested in the 1970s. The archdiocese removed Chabak from ministry in 2004 after it determined there was credible evidence to support the allegations. The statute of limitations had passed, and no criminal charges were filed. In May, the archdiocese was made aware of a second allegation regarding Chabak.

Iwanowski has known Chabak for more than 40 years; they met in seminary. When Chabak’s home in Toms River was damaged by Superstorm Sandy, the archdiocese gave him permission to stay at the rectory in Oradell. St. Joseph School is a block away.

The church’s pastor has resigned effective July 31, saying it was a mutual decision between him and the archdiocese and had nothing to do with the Chabak incident. Some disagree that the resignation had nothing to do with Chabak. It is a small point either way.

What is not so small is that the archdiocese thought it was appropriate to allow someone it had removed from active ministry because of a credible sexual-abuse allegation to live in a parish rectory near a school and not tell parishioners or be concerned that the priest could venture out. Chabak was not under house arrest; he was free to go wherever he chose, and the archdiocese continues to minimize the potential risks this raised for children and, of lesser consequence, the damage these kinds of decisions have on the Catholic Church’s reputation.

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 says parish priest failed to fire known sex offender

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

A priest was terminated from his position at the Santa Barbara Catholic Church because he failed to follow a direct order that related to the safety of children, according to the Archdiocese of Agana.

Father Paul Gofigan was asked to terminate the employment of an employee publically known to have a sex offense on his record, the Archdiocese stated.

Gofigan, in a letter he disseminated on Saturday to the Dededo parishioners said he did terminate the employee. He noted that the crime had been committed more than 32 years ago.

The Archdiocese said an investigation showed the person continued to have an active presence at the parish as a volunteer.

“The person had keys to the facilities and had an active role on church grounds in different ways,” the Archdiocese stated.

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 victim opens up at inquiry

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By IAN KIRKWOOD July 23, 2013

A VICTIM of paedophile priest Jim Fletcher known as AH has given an emotional statement to the special commission of inquiry in Newcastle about the impact Fletcher’s abuse has had on his life.

The case of AH, who cannot be named, has been a centrepiece of this inquiry and his appearance in the witness box had been long anticipated.

The commission room, including Commissioner Margaret Cunneen, broke into applause at the end of his statement.

Commissioner Cunneen reminded AH that no shame remained with him under the shame was properly wear it now lay.

AH began by telling the commission of the difficulty he had in telling people about the abuse.

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

VIDEO: Father Paul Believes …

GUAM
Pacific News Center

VIDEO: Father Paul Believes His Canonical Rights as a Priest Were Violated

Guam – Father Paul Gofigan, the overthrown priest of Santa Barbara Catholic Church in Dededo, has spoken out about the controversy over his defiance from the Archdiocese, saying he believes his canonical rights as a priest were violated.

The Archdiocese of Agana, however, says the decision to replace father Paul was out made of concern for the safety of the children.

“I just would like to say that I didn’t really mean for this to escalate as far as it did but there is a point to be made here that my office as pastor of Santa Barbara is a canonical one and therefore being canonical, removing a pastor from a parish has its own canonical process,” says Father Paul Gofigan.

Father Paul believes his rights were violated when Archbishop Anthony Apuron forced him to resign without fair warning. The controversy stems from a decision Father Paul made about two years ago to hire a convicted sex offender at the Santa Barbara Church. The crime was rape and it was committed over 32 years ago when the man was about 21 years old. His victim at the time was an 18 year old female. About two years ago, in 2011, Archbishop Apuron warned Father Paul about that decision.

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.

Choir volunteer charged …

OHIO
Coshocton Tribune

Choir volunteer charged with soliciting nude photos, sexual favors passed four background checks, fair spokeswoman says

Written by
Valerie Boateng and Elizabeth Dickson
Staff Writers

COLUMBUS — A man accused of soliciting nude photos and sexual favors in regard to the All-Ohio State Fair Youth Choir had volunteered with the organization for only one year.

Zachary Ruppel, 26, of Columbus, was arrested and charged with disseminating matter harmful to juveniles and compelling prostitution involving a minor in regard to the All-Ohio State Fair Youth Choir.

Ruppel was an unpaid volunteer in 2011 and has not been a volunteer or had official contact with the fair since, said Alicia Shoults, state fair spokeswoman. Shoults said Ruppel passed four rounds of background checks before he was allowed to become a volunteer.

Those reviews included a check with the sex offender registry and the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction as well as a drug test and background check.

Columbus Police Department Sgt. Terry McConnell said complaints were made to the All-Ohio State Fair Youth Choir staff that Ruppel was soliciting nude photos and sex acts in exchange for positions in the choir from his St. Francis DeSales High School students as well as other juveniles involved with the All-Ohio State Fair Youth Choir dating back to 2011.

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.

Monk seeks dismissal in child abductions

ILLINOIS
Lake County News-Sun

By Jim Newton jnewton@stmedianetwork.com July 22, 2013

Several defense motions, including a request to dismiss the case against a Benedictine monk accused of child abduction attempts in the Antioch area, will be the focus of a hearing Aug. 21 in Lake County Circuit Court.

Thomas Chmura is charged with four counts of child abduction, a felony punishable with up to three years in prison, related to his alleged offering of rides to a number of girls whose ages ranged from 11 to 14 on April 25 and April 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.

Richard Andron: Boca Raton Synagogue alerts congregation about alleged sex abuse by a member

FLORIDA
WPTV

[with video]

By: Marissa Bagg
BOCA RATON, Fla. – Members of the Boca Raton Synagogue remain on edge as a longtime member of their congregation was named in a sex abuse lawsuit.

19 former students of the Yeshiva University school in New York City claim they were repeatedly abused by two rabbis and a youth volunteer in the 1970’s and 1980’s.

“He’s a good person, he does good things in the community, but you never know,” said Boca Raton Synagogue member Eyal Cohen.

The lawsuit alleges Richard Andron molested high school students while working as a volunteer at the school in Manhattan.

Andron briefly spoke with NewsChannel 5 off-camera at his Boca Raton home Monday about the allegations. He said he was cooperating with the investigation but had no other comment.

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 ‘gay lobbyist’ worked in T&T

TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO
Trinidad Express

By Joel Julien joel.julien@trinidadexpress.com
Story Created: Jul 22, 2013

An official of the Roman Catholic Church in the Vatican, who was once stationed in Trinidad and Tobago, has been named in a “gay lobby” scandal currently affecting the church.

On June 15, Pope Francis appointed Monsignor Battista Ricca the Prelate of the Institute for Works of Religion (IOR), commonly known as the Vatican Bank.

The Italian news magazine L’Espresso on Friday published an article which linked Ricca to the “gay lobby” and revealed he has been involved in several relationships with men.

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

Pope’s Brazil Visit Will Coincide With SlutWalk and Other Political Protests

BRAZIL
ABC News (US)

By SANTIAGO WILLS
July 22, 2013

A group of Brazilian women will wear suggestive nun outfits and other erotic attire when they march in Rio this week during Pope Francis’ first visit to Brazil. The protest — called “SlutWalk” — is part of an international rally that began in Toronto in 2011 against sexual profiling and sexual abuse.

“We’ve decided to organize SlutWalk during the Pope’s visit to establish a political counterpoint,” Rogeria Peixinho, an activist from the Association of Brazilian Women, told EFE. “We want to show that there’s another youth and another way of thinking that is against oppression and the control of female sexuality.”

The pope is set to land in Brazil today to celebrate World Youth Day, a five-day gathering between the pope and Catholic youth from all around the globe that takes place every two or three years.

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Herald News: Another misstep in Newark archdiocese

NEW JERSEY
Herald News

TUESDAY, JULY 23, 2013
HERALD NEWS

A PASTOR in Oradell allowed a priest to stay in his rectory who had been accused of sexually molesting a teenage boy. The Rev. Thomas Iwanowski and a spokesman for the Archdiocese of Newark said allowing Monsignor Robert Chabak to stay at St. Joseph’s rectory was “an act of compassion.” We ask: “To whom?”

Certainly not to the boy who was allegedly molested in the 1970s. The archdiocese removed Chabak from ministry in 2004 after it determined there was credible evidence to support the allegations. The statute of limitations had passed and no criminal charges were filed. This May, the archdiocese was made aware of a second allegation regarding Chabak.

Iwanowski has known Chabak for more than 40 years; they met in seminary. When Chabak’s home in Toms River was damaged by Superstorm Sandy, the archdiocese gave him permission to stay at the rectory in Oradell. St. Joseph School is a block away.

The church’s pastor has resigned effective July 31, saying it was a mutual decision between him and the archdiocese and had nothing to do with the Chabak incident. Some disagree that the resignation had nothing to do with Chabak. It is a small point either way.

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.

VIDEO: Victim of paedophile priest testifies

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By IAN KIRKWOOD July 23, 2013

A VICTIM of paedophile priest Jim Fletcher has given an emotional statement to the special commission of inquiry in Newcastle about the impact that the abuse has had on his life.

The abuse of the victim, known in proceedings as AH, has been a centrepiece of this inquiry and his appearance in the witness box had been long anticipated.

The commission room broke into applause at the end of his statement.

Commissioner Cunneen reminded AH that that ‘‘no shame’’ was attached to him and that his courage had ‘‘placed the same where it belongs’’.

AH began by telling the commission of the difficulty he had in telling people about the abuse.

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

Abuse victim brings inquiry to tears

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

BY PAUL MAGUIRE AAP JULY 23, 2013

A WITNESS has drawn tears from the public gallery and applause from the commissioner of a special inquiry as he told his story of abuse at the hands of a NSW Catholic priest.

The man, now 37, flew to Newcastle from interstate to tell how abuse at the hands of Father James Fletcher had contributed to his alcohol use, relationship breakdowns, depression, business failure and a suicide attempt.

He questioned how different his life would have turned out if the church “had done something about Fletcher years ago instead of moving him around. Would he have got to me?'”

He said Fr Fletcher did “a terrible job on me.”

“I had tried to block it out but there were many times I was tormented by memories and the shame, anger and embarrassment which had a really bad effect on me,” he told the inquiry into the police handling of child sexual abuse allegations involving Hunter Valley priests, Fr Denis McAlinden and Fr Fletcher.

“The breach of trust I have experienced at the hands of the Catholic church will affect me forever as I was an innocent little kid with a big hope for the future…I expected that when I finally got the courage to tell someone about it the church would not let me down…

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Woman sexually assaulted during Seattle church service

WASHINGTON
Thomson Reuters Foundation

By Elaine Porterfield

SEATTLE, July 22 (Reuters) – A registered sex offender has been jailed on suspicion of sexually assaulting a woman as she was in the midst of prayer during Sunday church services in Seattle, police said on Monday.

The suspect was subdued inside the sanctuary by several of the victim’s relatives, who restrained the man until police arrived on the scene of what officers called one of the most outrageous sexual assault cases they had ever encountered, Seattle Police spokeswoman detective Renee Witt said.

“We’ve all seen and heard some pretty bizarre and egregious things, but this … it just kind of blows your mind,” Witt said.

The 25-year-old victim was accosted while attending services with her family and boyfriend on Sunday morning at Saint Spiridon Russian Orthodox Cathedral, a church just north of downtown Seattle familiar for its blue, onion-shaped domes.

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How church can survive by cleansing itself of past sins

AUSTRALIA
Border Mail

By MICK McGLONE July 23, 2013

IT’S not easy being a Catholic, even for those of us who don’t involve themselves in the strict rituals of the church, such as attending Mass on Saturday or Sunday or on holy days of obligation.

It has become fashionable in recent times for the Catholic Church to be the target of all sorts of vicious and often ignorant comments, many of them of a sneering, vitriolic nature.

Quite often weaknesses or flaws of the whole Christian movement are sheeted home solely to the Catholic Church because it suits the motivations of many of its critics.

But Catholics must share the shame of the evil of child sexual abuse that has been perpetrated by some of its clergy over many years.

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Norfolk priest charged with child sex abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
Norwich Evening News

Peter Walsh
Tuesday, July 23, 2013

A Norfolk Roman Catholic priest has been charged in relation to alleged historic sexual abuse at a children’s home.

Father Anthony McSweeney, 66, of St George’s Church in Norwich, was charged with three counts of indecent assault, three of making indecent images of a child, one count of taking indecent images of a child and one of possessing indecent images of a child following an investigation into abuse alleged to have taken place at Grafton Close Children’s Home in Hounslow, west London, the Metropolitan Police said.

A second man, John Stingemore, 71, was charged with eight counts of indecent assault, two of taking indecent images of a child and one count of conspiracy with persons unknown to commit buggery.

The charges relate to seven victims, all of whom were aged between nine and 15 when the offences are alleged to have taken place during the 1970s and 80s.

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Victim of child sex abuse gives evidence at Newcastle inquiry

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Dan Cox

A victim of a Hunter Valley paedophile priest says a Catholic bishop told him to “keep the faith” the day his abuser was found guilty.

The man known as AH was abused by Maitland-Newcastle priest James Fletcher and is the first victim to have given evidence at the New South Wales Special Commission of Inquiry’s public hearings in Newcastle.

The inquiry is investigating claims the Catholic church covered up the crimes of Fletcher and another priest, Denis McAlinden.

AH said those responsible for the alleged cover-up of child sexual abuse by clergy must be held accountable.

He told the inquiry the day Fletcher was found guilty of abusing him, the bishop at the time Michael Malone rang and asked him to “keep the faith”.

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Tormented by shame, he brought applause

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

July 23, 2013

Catherine Armitage
Senior Writer

The black-haired man with sparkling eyes sat nervously in the witness stand, his voice faltering as he tried to count the cost to his life and his family of years of sexual abuse by a Catholic priest when he was a boy.

By the time he was finished the courtroom was weeping with him – at the bar table, in the public gallery, in the media seats. The room erupted in applause.

The victim, whose name is suppressed, told the state government inquiry into church and police cover-ups of sexual abuse in the Hunter Valley that he had been “an innocent little kid with a big hope for the future” when Father James Fletcher began sexually abusing him. Fletcher was convicted of the abuse in 2004 and died in jail in 2006.

The abuse left his victim feeling as an adult that he was “just stuffing up my life”. AH, as he is known at the inquiry, eyeballed his younger brothers, there in the court to support him with his mother and father, and confessed he was sometimes jealous of them.

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Priest charged with child sex abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
Littlehampton Gazette

A Roman Catholic priest from West Sussex has been charged in relation to alleged historic sexual abuse at a children’s home, police said.

Father Anthony McSweeney, 66, was charged with three counts of indecent assault, three of making indecent images of a child, one count of taking indecent images of a child and one of possessing indecent images of a child following an investigation into abuse alleged to have taken place at Grafton Close Children’s Home in Hounslow, west London, the Metropolitan Police said.

A second man, John Stingemore, 71, was charged with eight counts of indecent assault, two of taking indecent images of a child and one count of conspiracy with persons unknown to commit buggery.

The charges relate to seven victims, all of whom were aged between nine and 15 when the offences are alleged to have taken place during the 1970s and 80s.

McSweeney, of Old Brighton Road North, Pease Pottage, West Sussex, and Stingemore, of Stonehouse Drive, St Leonards on Sea, East Sussex, are due to appear at Westminster Magistrates’ Court on September 4.

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July 22, 2013

Archdiocese Says …

GUAM
Pacific News Center

Archdiocese Says Sex Offender Continued to Work at Santa Barbabra Church as Volunteer, After His Dismissal

Guam – The Archdiocese of Agana maintains that an investigation by Church officials showed that a convicted sex offender continued to work as a volunteer at Dededo’s Santa Barbara Church, even after the Archbishop ordered Father Paul Gofigan to fire him.

A news release from the Archdiocese Monday night, defends the decision to replace Father Paul as Pastor of the Church and insists that the safety of children is foremost.

Archdiocese Archbishop Anthony is off-island and the release was issued by Vicar General Monsignor David Quitugua on behalf of the Archdiocese following the public disclosure of a July 16th letter from the Archbishop to Father Gofigan demanding his resignation, and Father Gofigan’s July 20th letter to parishioners refusing to resign.

In his letter to parishioners issued last Saturday, Father Paul said that instead of complying with the Archbishop’s demand for his resignation he has decided instead to seek a canonical hearing so he can “defend himself and save my vocation as a priest.” Father Paul insisted in his letter to parishioners that he had complied with the Archbishop’s 2011 order that he fire a registered sex offender.

But in his release Monday night, the Archbishop However, our investigation has revealed that the person continued to have an active presence at the parish as a volunteer. The person had keys to the facilities and had an active role on church grounds in different ways.

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.

Former DeSales Teacher Accused Of Soliciting Minors For Nude Photos

OHIO
NBC4i

By: Alex Carbello

COLUMBUS, Ohio –
A man who volunteered with the All Ohio State Fair Youth Choir is facing two counts of disseminating matter harmful to juveniles and one count of compelling prostitution.

Columbus police say Zachary R. Ruppel, 26, was soliciting nude pictures and sex acts in exchange for positions in the All Ohio State Fair Youth Choir from his St. Francis DeSales High School students, as well as other juveniles involved with the All Ohio State Fair Youth Choir in 2011.

Detectives searched Ruppel’s home after complaints were made to Ohio State Fair Choir staff about the allegations against Ruppel.

The two victims in the most recent incident are a 15-year-old boy and 17-year-old boy, according to a Columbus police report.

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Former DeSales choir director arrested on sex-related charges involving students

OHIO
The Columbus Dispatch

By Kathy Lynn Gray
The Columbus Dispatch
Monday July 22, 2013

The former St. Francis DeSales High School in Columbus choir director and former Ohio State Fair choir staff member has been arrested on child sex charges.

Zachary R. Ruppel, 26, was charged yesterday by Columbus police for soliciting nude pictures and sex acts from DeSales students and other juveniles in exchange for membership in the State Fair choir dating back to 2011. Choir directors across the state recommend students for membership in the state fair choir.

Ruppel, of 4906 Lunar Dr., was a member of the state fair choir staff that year. He was the DeSales choir director until he resigned at the end of the school year, according to a DeSales student who answered the phone at the school on Friday.

The director of the choir, Charles R. Snyder, was put on leave on July 11 by fair manager Virgil Strickler because of the investigation. Sgt. Terry McConnell of the Police Division’s sexual-assault unit said Friday that Snyder has not been cleared in the investigation.

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Senior church leaders to front abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

One of Australia’s most senior Catholic church officials is scheduled to front an inquiry into an alleged cover-up of child sexual abuse by clergy in the New South Wales Hunter Valley.

Catholic Church documents tendered to the inquiry show the general secretary of the Catholic Bishops Conference, father Brian Lucas, knew about abuse by Denis McAlinden, one of the two priests at the centre of the investigation.

Father Lucas is scheduled to give evidence later today or tomorrow.

The documents show there was “a possible confession” by McAlinden to Father Lucas in 1993, and that McAlinden was asked by the bishop to retire because of his “ill health”.

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Reformist priest sees potential ally in Pope Francis

WASHINGTON (DC)
Religion News Service

Kevin Eckstrom | Jul 22, 2013

WASHINGTON (RNS) An Austrian priest who’s been banned from speaking at Roman Catholic churches during his three-week U.S. tour said Pope Francis could be an ally in reforming the Catholic Church, but said it will take more than the pope to open the priesthood to married men and women.

The Rev. Helmut Schuller, founder of the Austrian Priests’ Initiative, has been drawing crowds of several hundred people with his call for greater participation from the church’s lay “citizens” and a married priesthood.

“We are trying to open the church to a real approach to modern society,” Schuller said Monday (July 22) in a speech at the National Press Club. “There are a lot of questions to our church in these times, and the answers are really old-fashioned.”

Schuller is the key organizer behind a group of about 430 Austrian priests who are openly challenging the hierarchy on allowing women priests, married priests, same-sex marriages and lay Catholics’ voice in the election of bishops.

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Schüller: Now is not the time for Third Vatican Council

WASHINGTON (DC)
National Catholic Reporter

Caitlin Hendel | Jul. 22, 2013

WASHINGTON Women who have chosen to become ordained Catholic priests are “very prophetic,” Fr. Helmut Schüller told a group of journalists Monday, but he said the focus still should be on opening up the entire priesthood to women.

“It’s a system we have to change,” he said during a press conference at the National Press Club here. “It’s a question of strategy.”

Even so, “we see in these women who are ordained already very prophetic women,” Schüller said.

He also is wary of any moves to allow women to become deacons, saying he has heard the Vatican is trying to degrade the structure of the deaconate, possibly as a preparatory strategy before making such a change. “I’m warning sometimes: Pay attention, as it could be a threat,” he said.

Washington is the fifth stop on Schüller’s 15-city, coast-to-coast tour of the United States that began July 16. He speaks Monday night at the Augustana Lutheran Church in Washington. His appearances in New York, Boston, Philadelphia and Baltimore have attracted crowds of 300 to 700 people, with several hundred spilling out of a small church in the sweltering heat of Boston last week.

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Roman Catholic priest, 66, and 71-year-old man charged …

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

By SARA SMYTH

A 66-year-old priest and 71-year-old man have been charged in relation to alleged historic sexual abuse at a children’s home in Hounslow, police said tonight.

Father Anthony McSweeney was today charged with three counts of indecent assault, three of making indecent images of a child, one count of taking indecent images of a child and one of possessing indecent images of a child.

The arrests follow an investigation into the abuse alleged to have taken place at Grafton Close Children’s Home in west London.

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Pope Bomb Scare At Shrine of Our Lady of Aparecida, Explosive Devise Found Where Francis Is Scheduled To Visit On Wednesday

BRAZIL
Huffington Post

A bomb has been found at a shrine that Pope Francis was due to visit on Wednesday and hold a mass.

The homemade explosive device was discovered in the bathroom of the shrine of Our Lady of Aparecida, in the parking lot, reports ABC.es.

The Sao Paulo military police detonated the bomb, which had a fuse and a dynamite-like covering, after members of the Brazilian Air Force found it while conducting a security inspection.

A statement released by the police said, “”It was a home-made device with little potential to cause fatalities,” with “a plastic body and wrapped with adhesive tape.”

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DAVID STEWARD,II’S START-UP, CARDINAL DOLAN’S LETTER…

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Berger’s Beat

. . . According to today’s Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, more than a decade ago,then-Archbishop Timothy Dolan acknowledged in a letter that most accused predator priests “painfully and admirably admit” their own guilt. The letter, recently disclosed because victims pushed to get church records released, goes on to urge forgiveness for the offenders. . .

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Judgment of Pope Francis under scrutiny

VATICAN CITY
Irish Times

Paddy Agnew

Mon, Jul 22, 2013

On the eve of the departure of Pope Francis this morning for the week-long World Youth Day celebrations in Brazil, Italian weekly news magazine L’Espresso suggested he has just made the first serious error of his pontificate.

The report claims he recently and unknowingly appointed an actively gay Vatican monsignor to a senior post in the Vatican bank, IOR.

L’Espresso claims Msgr Battista Ricca (57), who last month was nominated as secretary to the commission of cardinals who oversee the affairs of IOR, has a colourful and well-documented gay past.

Although the concerns raised in the article about Msgr Ricca seem legitimate, Vatican observers last night suggested the report might be intended as a Curia shot across the bows of the reform-minded pope.

L’Espresso claims that in 1999 to 2000, when Msgr Ricca served as pro-nuncio in Uruguay, he had a “ménage à deux” in the Vatican nunciature with his then lover, Swiss army captain Patrick Haari. It also claims he was involved in a brawl at a gay bar in 2001.

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Priest charged with child sex abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
Belfast Telegraph

22 JULY 2013

A Roman Catholic priest has been charged in relation to alleged historic sexual abuse at a children’s home, police said.

Father Anthony McSweeney, 66, was charged with three counts of indecent assault, three of making indecent images of a child, one count of taking indecent images of a child and one of possessing indecent images of a child following an investigation into abuse alleged to have taken place at Grafton Close Children’s Home in Hounslow, west London, the Metropolitan Police said.

A second man, John Stingemore, 71, was charged with eight counts of indecent assault, two of taking indecent images of a child and one count of conspiracy with persons unknown to commit buggery.

The charges relate to seven victims, all of whom were aged between nine and 15 when the offences are alleged to have taken place during the 1970s and 80s.

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The NSW Enquiry Winds Up (Or: How Many Victims Make A Lot?)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

The NSW government enquiry into child sexual abuse by priests in the Newcastle-Maitland diocese had a non-hearing day today. The rest of the week is largely taken up by clergy, Hart, Searle, Lucas and Harrigan. Friday should see priest, Burston (he of the poor memory), finally front the enquiry after having been excused, last Friday, by Commissioner Cunneen, because he was stressed by victim protests.

During the week, evidence will be heard from Elizabeth Doyle and Patricia Feenan. Ms. Feenan, whose son Daniel was abused, has written a book, “Holy Hell” (available at http://www.holyhell.com.au/).

Hart has already given some evidence. He was asked by the Commissioner about a letter stating an abusive priest was “ill”. She said, “And this reference to health in the first sentence of the letter, could it be a coy way to refer to his propensity to the sexual abuse of children?” Hart simply answered “Yes”. Earlier in the day, he had said that he was unaware of any confidential files held by the diocese leaders involving allegations of sexual abuse by the region’s priests. He only learned of their existence when he went to Sydney this year to discuss his evidence to the commission with a legal representative.

Harrigan was an old friend of serial abuser, Fr.Fletcher. He conducted the funeral service for Fletcher, who had died in prison. Father Harrigan, who was reported as being visibly upset at the end of proceedings, asked the congregation to pray for Fletcher and his family. He prayed for Fletcher to be forgiven his sins.

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Team 10 obtains video of admitted child molester in Jehovah’s Witnesses

CALIFORNIA
10 News

Posted: 07/22/2013

Mitch Blacher

SAN DIEGO – Team 10 has obtained a video that some people say helps to prove Jehovah’s Witnesses covered up child abuse for years.

In a video deposition taken in 2011 during a civil lawsuit, admitted serial pedophile Gonzalo Campos said he abused several children in his San Diego congregation from the early 1980’s through the mid 90’s.

“I did abuse him,” said Campos in the video. “I touched his private parts.”

((See the video deposition today on 10News At 5:00.))

His on-camera admissions and a confidential settlement worth millions, may have to be enough for his victims. The Jehovah’s Witnesses never told police about Campos, who was a church elder. He’s never been charged with a crime and he may never see the inside of a prison cell. He has fled the country and now is in Mexico. He also still is a member of Jehovah’s Witnesses.

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Two charged with historic child abuse under Operation Fernbridge

UNITED KINGDOM
This is Local London

The former deputy head of Richmond Council’s Grafton Close children’s home has been charged with offences on boys aged nine to 15.

John Stingemore, 71, was today charged along with Father Anthony McSweeney, 66, with indecent assault and making indecent images of children.

Both were arrested under the Metropolitan Police’s Operation Fernbridge, which is investigating historic allegations of sexual abuse at Elm Guest House in Barnes.

They were charged today and will appear at Westminster Magistrates’ Court on bail on September 4.

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Archdiocese says parish priest failed to fire known sex offender

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

A priest was terminated from his position at the Santa Barbara Catholic Church because he failed to follow a direct order that related to the safety of children, according to the Archdiocese of Agana.

Father Paul Gofigan was asked to terminate the employment of an employee publically known to have a sex offense on his record, the Archdiocese stated.

Gofigan, in a letter he disseminated on Saturday to the Dededo parishioners said he did terminate the employee. He noted that the crime had been committed more than 32 years ago.

The Archdiocese said an investigation showed the person continued to have an active presence at the parish as a volunteer.

“The person had keys to the facilities and had an active role on church grounds in different ways,” the Archdiocese stated.

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CCH FILES LAWSUIT …

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Chackes, Carlson and Halquist

CCH FILES LAWSUIT ALLEGING DIRECT INVOLVEMENT BY ARCHBISHOP OF ST LOUIS IN FAILING TO SUPERVISE ABUSIVE PRIEST

CCH attorneys Ken Chackes and Nicole Gorovsky filed a new lawsuit on behalf of a young teenage girl and her parents, seeking to hold the Archdiocese of St Louis and Archbishop Robert Carlson responsible for the injuries they caused due to sexual abuse of the young girl by a priest. The accused priest, Fr. Xiu Hui “Joseph” Jiang, was personally supervised by Archbishop Carlson since the priest was moved from China to the United States, while Carlson was a Bishop in Michigan. Fr. Jiang moved with Carlson to St Louis when he became Archbishop, and lived in the Archbishop’s residence.

The young girl first met Jiang when she was fifteen years old and she attended church with her family at the Cathedral Basilica in St. Louis. Jiang became very close to the family and he regularly visited their home in Lincoln County, Missouri.

The Archdiocese and Archbishop had at least two warnings about Jiang. During the time that Jiang was getting close to the young girl, he reported to his superiors that he needed a reassignment because he was having personal problems. But despite the warnings, Jiang was allowed to resume unlimited access to this young girl and her family.

After the parents discovered the abuse, they confronted Fr. Jiang about it, and Jiang admitted it to them. He then tried to give them a $20,000 check. Archbishop Carlson soon called the parents and told them that Fr Jiang also admitted the wrongdoing to him. During that conversation, the mother asked Carlson if Jiang would be removed from the priesthood and Archbishop Carlson responded that he would remove Jiang if he “had sex” with the child, but not for activities other than that. Archbishop Carlson then suggested that the parents return the $20,000 check to him.

Instead, the parents turned the matter over to the police. Jiang is now being prosecuted criminally for two felonies, for engaging in sexual conduct with the child and for victim tampering by trying to pay the family to let the matter drop. The criminal case is being prosecuted by the Prosecuting Attorney of Lincoln County.

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Schüller in Philadelphia: ‘Where has obedience got us?’

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
National Catholic Reporter

Patricia Lefevere | Jul. 22, 2013

PHILADELPHIA
At best, the Catholic church has five to six years before the shortage of clergy members plays itself out in unknown ways in Europe and North America. This is the so-called “Catholic Tipping Point” foreseen by Austrian Fr. Helmut Schüller, one of the most vocal advocates for new models of leadership in the church. The remarks came in an extended interview with NCR before his Friday evening address at Chestnut Hill College here.

Schüller and approximately 400 Austrian priests — about 10 percent of the nation’s total Catholic clergy — launched the Austrian Priests’ Initiative in 2006 following worry and discussions about who would care for their parishes when there were not enough priests to take over after they retire. In 2011, they issued an “Appeal to Disobedience” in which they pledged, among other things, not to celebrate multiple Sunday Masses. The movement seeks to open the priesthood to each person suited for the office, including women and married men.

Schüller, 60, said the word “disobedience” upsets many people, but he showed no sign of finding a less troublesome word. “Where has obedience got us?” he asked, reviewing his own priesthood of 36 years. “I feel the church often misuses obedience to keep people down.”

In an afternoon meeting with 20 priests of the Philadelphia archdiocese at Chestnut Hill College, the Austrian cleric said he found “a lot of sympathy” and “very supportive” comments from local priests. Some, he said, shared experiences similar to his in Vienna and told Schüller how their work had, at times, brought them into conflict with church authorities.

He pointed to growing frustrations among priests who are asked to pastor three or four cluster parishes. “There is the tension of having to do the same thing continually and not having sufficient time to get to know parishioners,” he said, adding that he thought the idea of such a ministry impeded men from joining the priesthood. “My hope is that these potential candidates will not leave the church but will become engaged lay leaders.”

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Author Tom MacDonald to Hold Launch Party for His New Novel, Beyond the Bridge, Sunday, July 28th in Charlestown, MA

MASSACHUSETTS
PRWeb

Beyond the Bridge, the prequel to Tom MacDonald’s award winning debut novel, The Charlestown Connection, will be officially released on August 6, 2013.

Fans of MacDonald, his novels, and his Irish/Micmac Indian protagonist, Dermot Sparhawk, are invited to the Charlestown launch on Sunday July 28th, from 1:00 to 4:00 at:

Knights of Columbus
545 Medford St.
Charlestown, MA
Entertainment provided by:
Irish Band: The Old Brigade

The author will be on hand to sign copies of his novels which will be available for purchase.

Oceanview Publishing provided the following synopsis from Beyond the Bridge:

“Dermot Sparhawk, a former all-American football star at Boston College, returns in Beyond the Bridge, the prequel to Tom MacDonald’s award-winning debut novel, The Charlestown Connection.

In Beyond the Bridge, Sparhawk, a struggling alcoholic, agrees to help find the killer of an accused pedophile priest. When two more priests are slain in Boston’s Charlestown neighborhood, it becomes evident that it is the work of a sadistic serial killer who crucifies his prey after killing them.

Sparhawk blazes an unconventional trail to the killer that puts him at odds with the very people he is trying to help and initiates a turf war with law enforcement.

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Scandal-Ridden DA Loses Major Union Endorsement

NEW YORK
Failed Messiah

In a major blow to Brooklyn District Attorney Charles J. Hynes, New York City’s largest labor union, 1199/SEIU United Healthcare Workers East, today announced its unanimous endorsement Ken Thompson for Brooklyn District Attorney. Representing over 220,000 members in New York City and 100,000 members and retirees in Brooklyn alone, the union cited Ken Thompson’s commitment to justice as the major reason for its endorsement of Thompson and rejection of Hynes, whose sloppy prosecutions and shady tactics have brought condemnation from diverse political leaders, legal scholars and community activists alike.

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Die Landesverräterin

OSTERREICH
Kurier

Sie deckte auf, dass Kinder in einer kirchlichen Behinderteneinrichtung in Tirol schwer misshandelt wurden. Dafür musste Brigitte Wanker allerdings bitter büßen. Das System schlug mit einer Wucht zurück, mit der sie nicht gerechnet hatte. Sie wollte Missstände aufzeigen und wurde als Nestbeschmutzerin bezichtigt und gezwungen, ihr Heimatland Tirol zu verlassen. Jetzt, 33 Jahre später, soll sie geehrt werden.

1980 nahm die gelernte Weberin Wanker, damals 22 Jahre alt, eine Stelle im St. Josephs Institut, geführt vom Orden der Barmherzigen Schwestern in Mils in Tirol an. Ihre Schilderungen über die brutalen Misshandlungen behinderter Kinder durch die Klosterschwestern sind erschütternd (siehe Zusatzbericht unten).

„Verbrennen“
Wanker wusste, so kann man Kinder nicht behandeln. Verzweifelt suchte sie jemanden, dem sie sich anvertrauen konnte. „Ich habe mein Tagebuch genommen und bin damit zum Leiter des Innsbrucker Jugendamtes gegangen“, sagt Wanker. Der Herr Rat wollte von den Missständen freilich nichts wissen. „Er hat mich aufgefordert, das Tagebuch zu verbrennen.“ Sie sei zu sensibel für den Beruf und solle kündigen, waren die Ratschläge, die ihr der Amtsleiter mit auf den Weg gab.

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NJ- Catholic officials let predator secretly be near kids but no one’s punished

NEW JERSEY
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, July 22, 2013

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

A Newark archdiocesan priest secretly let a suspended predator priest live in a parish across the street from an elementary school. He did so with the approval of his church supervisors.

Yet no one is being punished. The priest is just being moved to a new parish. The supervisors aren’t even being identified. And the predator remains on the payroll.

Without consulting with or telling St. Joseph’s parishioners, Fr. Thomas Iwanowski let Fr. Chabak live in the rectory for eight months. Fr. Chabak is a credibly accused child molester. He’s suspended from ministry.

So Newark Catholic officials again quietly put kids in danger.

That’s incredibly reckless and callous.

As he’s done time and time before, Newark’s Archbishop John Myers did nothing until this inexcusable move became public. And when it did, Myers did next to nothing.

He’s moving Iwanowski to a new parish.

No wrongdoer is facing real consequences. And we don’t even know who some of the wrongdoers are. Did Myers himself personally tell Iwanowski it was OK to let a suspended pedophile priest live in a parish? Or was it another archdiocesan supervisor?

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Dededo Priest asked to Resign

GUAM
KUAM

by Sabrina Salas Matanane

Guam – Father Paul Gofigan has been asked to resign as the Pastor of Santa Barbara Catholic Church. According to a letter Father Gofigan addressed to his parishioners dated July 20th, he explained why he has been replaced by Father Dan Bien as the temporary Parochial Administrator or Santa Barbara Church.

According to the letter he was asked by the Archbishop to resign because he believes that he is still employing an individual he was directed two years ago to terminate. The individual, according to the letter, committed a crime more than 32 years ago. “I knew this individual had paid his debt to society, and had fully repented, and he and his wife and their two daughters were eager to return to the Church and embrace their Catholic faith. Although I disagreed with this decision, out of obedience to the Archbishop, I had to comply,” Fr. Gofigan wrote.

Fr. Gofigan stated the Archbishop and his advisors are under the mistaken belief that the individual was not terminated and as a result on July 16th was asked in a letter from the Archbishop to resign or “experience a more arduous and painful closure to your assignment at Santa Barbara Church.”

Fr. Gofigan says the matter could have been cleared up if they had simply spoken to him and conducted a basic investigation. He added that he could have easly accepted the Archbishop and his advisors demand to resign or follow the more difficult path which will “ultimately lead to the truth”. He said after much prayer and quiet reflection he has decided not to take the easy path and instead request for a hearing so that he can be allowed to defend himself and to save his vocation as a priest, “I cannot in good conscience accede to their demands without defending my vocation as a priest and allowing the truth to be heard,” he wrote.

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Archdiocese Responds to Priest Replacement

GUAM
KUAM

by Sabrina Salas Matanane

Guam – The Archdiocese of Agana has issued a statement in response to a letter Father Fred Gofigan issued to his parishioners to explain why he had been replaced by Father Dan Bien as Parochial Administrator of Santa Barbara Church.

Father Gofigan says he was asked to resign by Archbishop Anthony Apuron because he believes he failed to terminate an individual as instructed two years ago because of his criminal past. Fr. Gofigan in his letter stated that although he disagreed with the termination “out of obedience to the Archbishop, I had to comply,” he wrote.Fr. Gofigan says the matter could have been cleared up if they had simply spoken to him and conducted a basic investigation. Fr. Gofigan said he would not resign and has since requested a hearing so that he can be allowed to defend himself and save his vocation as a priest.

In the press release from the Archdiocese it states that the Archbishop is currently off island. It further states that Father Gofigan is still a priest at this time.

The Archdiocese issued the statement to “set the record straight”. Here are the facts the press release stated:

I. INVESTIGATION & COMMUNICATION — Father Paul stated in his letter he was asked to resign despite following the Archbishop’s directive. He wrote, “… this entire issue could have been cleared up if they had simply spoken with me, and done a basic investigation…”

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Controversial Catholic priest comes to Chestnut Hill College …

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Newsworks

Controversial Catholic priest comes to Chestnut Hill College despite Philadelphia Archdiocese ban

July 22, 2013
By Jana Shea for NewsWorks, @jujukus

The Archdiocese of Philadelphia didn’t roll out the welcome mat when Father Helmut Schüller came to town to speak at Chestnut Hill College on Friday night. The Catholic priest is something of an outlaw to the Holy See.

Schüller’s message is simple: the Catholic Church needs to get with the times.
Together with the Austrian Priests’ Initiative (API), he has put forth an “Appeal for Disobedience,” advocating for sweeping reforms.

The appeal calls for “a new image of the priest” where women and married persons may be ordained, among other proposed changes. These actions will enable the church to become deeply involved in a conversation with modern society, Schüller said.

As a result, Schüller was stripped of his monsignorship and demoted to parish priest. Schüller has embarked on a 15-city tour of the U.S. to spread the message of reform, but has been prohibited from speaking on church properties.

“The Archdiocese wanted to avoid any confusion about Catholic teaching — especially a priest speaking about Catholic teaching — so we made it very clear that Father Schüller would not be permitted to speak at any parishes or Archdiocesan facilities in the area,” said Archdiocese of Philadelphia spokesman Kenneth Gavin in a statement to NewsWorks last week.

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Priest who allowed accused molester to live in parish says he may have made a mistake

NEW JERSEY
The Star-Ledger

By Steve Strunsky/The Star-Ledger
on July 21, 2013

ORADELL — A Catholic priest conceded today that he may have made a mistake by arranging for a former priest once accused of molesting a teenage boy to stay in the rectory of his Bergen County parish.

“Hindsight is 20-20,” the Rev. Thomas Iwanowski of St. Joseph Roman Catholic Church in Oradell said after services on his next-to-last Sunday there.

Iwanowski is being removed from St. Joseph by the Archdiocese of Newark as of July 31 in the wake of a scandal over the arrangement that allowed the accused priest to live at the rectory. The situation was the subject of a report in The Sunday Star-Ledger.

It was with the permission of the archdiocese that Iwanowski, 64, allowed the Rev. Robert Chabak to stay in the rectory after his mother’s home in Toms River, where he had been living, was damaged during Hurricane Sandy. The church’s elementary school is across the street from the rectory, while the middle school building is right next door.

Parishioners were not told that Chabak, 66, a friend of Iwanowski’s since the two attended seminary together four decades ago, would be staying at the rectory and only learned of his past after he was transferred to a retirement home in February. But even after that, parishioners said, Chabak would return to St. Joseph’s to spend the night. Some grew angry and demanded he be kept away.

“Obviously, looking back, Monsignor Chabak and I, if we knew this was going to be such a difficult decision, maybe we would have moved in a different direction,” Iwanowski told reporters after the 12:30 mass. “But we tried to make a compassionate decision.”

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Priest resigns Oradell post amid talk of aiding colleague with clouded past

NEW JERSEY
The Record

SUNDAY, JULY 21, 2013

BY DENISA R. SUPERVILLE
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

The pastor of St. Joseph Roman Catholic Church in Oradell said Sunday that he’s had second thoughts about letting a priest accused of sexually molesting a teenage boy stay at the parish rectory for months.

The Rev. Thomas Iwanowski, interviewed after he celebrated the 12:30 p.m. Mass, said he has resigned effective July 31 and called it a mutual decision with the Archdiocese of Newark. He said it was based on dissatisfaction some parishioners had with his administration and leadership style.

But parishioner Daniel O’Toole said that while he has disagreed with Iwanowski on several issues, he doesn’t think those were the reasons for his departure.

“The reason he was removed, as best as I can understand it, was because he was harboring a priest with a known history for sexual predation,” O’Toole said.

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Archbishop Announces Independent Inquiry

UNITED KINGDOM
Archbishop of York

Monday 22nd July 2013

The Archbishop of York, Dr John Sentamu, has today announced the appointment of Her Honour Judge Sally Cahill QC to be Chair of an independent Inquiry into the Church’s handling of reports of alleged sexual abuse by the late Robert Waddington, formerly Dean of Manchester.

Her Honour Judge Sally Cahill QC will be assisted in the Inquiry by Joe Cocker, an Independent Social Work Consultant. The Secretary to the Inquiry is to be Mrs Nicola Harding, Solicitor, and Registrar of the Diocese of Ripon and Leeds.

The Inquiry will seek to establish what information suggesting that Robert Waddington had committed sexual abuse was made known to whom in the Church of England and when;

It will focus upon an examination of the way in which the relevant Child Protection Policies were or were not applied between the years 1999 and 2005 in the handling, (a) by the Diocese of Manchester and (b) by the then Archbishop of York Lord Hope, of the information provided to them suggesting that sexual abuse had been committed by the late Robert Waddington;

It will further consider whether and if so to what extent the handling of that information might have been dealt with differently if the current safeguarding Policies of the Church of England as set out in ‘Protecting all God’s Children’ (2010) and in ‘Responding Well’ (2011) had been in place.

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Church details inquiry into alleged sex abuse cover-up

UNITED KINGDOM
The Times

Sean O’Neill Crime Editor

Details of an independent inquiry into the alleged cover-up of sex abuse by a senior Church of England cleric have been announced by the Archbishop of York.

Dr John Sentamu said that the inquiry into the Church’s failure to deal with allegations against the Rev Robert Waddington, former Dean of Manchester, would be chaired by Judge Sally Cahill, QC.

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Dismissed priest caused “great harm” to Church

POLAND
The News

A progressive priest who was dismissed from his parish last week caused “great harm” to the Church, according to a statement released by the curia.

“Father Wojciech Lemanski, who became a voluntary hostage of the media, caused great harm to the Church, and created grave confusion and anxiety in society,” the curia of the Warsaw-Praga diocese claimed, as cited by the Polish Press Agency (PAP).

“He always claimed to know better, without showing necessary restraint or a sense of proportion. Applying the principle ‘pars pro toto’, he portrayed the Church as a community of rapists, paedophiles, hypocrites, extortionists and drunkards.”

Archbishop of the Warsaw-Praga diocese Henryk Hoser issued a decree on 5 July that Father Lemanski would no longer be vicar of his parish at Jasienica, east of Warsaw, as of 9 pm on 14 July.

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Scandal, crisis, fraud, Mafia, bribes: How people see the Pope’s bankers

VATICAN CITY
DNA (India)

Nick Squires

The first clue that the Institute for Works of Religion is a bank like no other lies just inside its imposing stone entrance. Tucked away on the left is an ATM machine with instructions in Latin: “Inserito scidulam quaeso ut faciundam cognoscas rationem” – insert your card to determine the desired operation.

The second clue lies in the Vatican Bank building itself, the magnificent gothic Tower of Pope Nicholas V, set within the walls of the tiny city state. Centuries ago the circular, 15th century tower was used as a papal prison.

Now it is the nerve centre of a campaign to hunt down modern-day miscreants as the Vatican, under the new management of Pope Francis, embarks on a concerted effort to crack down on money-laundering, tax evasion, hidden sources of income and other abuses that have besmirched the reputation of what Forbes last year called the “most secret bank in the world.”

Those efforts have been given greater urgency in the past month with a fresh scandal involving the arrest of a Catholic priest working as an accountant in the Vatican on suspicion of money-laundering. Nunzio Scarano, who is now in a Rome jail, is accused of laundering money through at least two accounts held at the bank and of trying illicitly to bring in 20 million euros in cash on a private jet from Switzerland. In a plot worthy of a Dan Brown thriller, two others were arrested at the same time – a former member of the Italian secret services and a shadowy financier.

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Francis’s clean-up of Vatican bank gathers pace

VATICAN CITY
Irish Independent

NICK SQUIRES – 22 JULY 2013

Investigators in Rome are combing through the 19,000 accounts held by the Vatican’s bank in search of money laundering and other crimes, in a long-delayed attempt to clean up the institution’s tarnished reputation.

The campaign to bring more transparency and accountability to the bank, started under Benedict XVI, has dramatically picked up momentum under his successor Pope Francis since his election in March.

The review is being orchestrated by a German banker, along with forensic accounting experts from Promontory Financial Group, who are analysing around 1,500 accounts a month, hunting for any suspicious financial activities.

“Our work is to make the bank transparent,” said Ernst von Freyberg, its new president.

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Members of SNAP hand out fliers asking victims to come forward

ST. LOUIS (MO)
KSDK

[with video]

ST. LOUIS (KSDK) – Members of SNAP (Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests) spent Sunday handing out fliers to parishioners leaving mass at the Cathedral Basilica.

They want to make sure local Catholics know about the serious accusations against a St. Louis priest.

A lawsuit filed against St. Louis Archbishop Robert Carlson says that he knew Father Joseph Jiang was a danger to children.

The lawsuit claims that Jiang fondled a 16-year-old girl and convinced her to set up a secret email account to send her inappropriate messages.

Father Jiang is currently on administrative leave from his position at the basilica.

“We’re here to beg anyone who has been harmed to come forward and to go to the police in healing,” said Barbara Dorris, SNAP Victims Outreach Director. “We’re here to beg victims and whistleblowers to work with law enforcement until we either prove or disprove these allegations. Its time for the truth to come out.”

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Report: Brooklyn D.A. Releases Names Of Orthodox Jews Convicted In Child Sex-Abuse Cases

NEW YORK
CBS New York

NEW YORK(1010 WINS) — In a massive shift in policy Brooklyn District Attorney Charles Hynes has released the names of 46 convicted child sex-abusers, according to a published report.

On Sunday, The New York Post, reported that Hynes had turned over the names of 45 men and 1 woman in the Orthodox Jewish Community who were convicted in ‘sex-attack cases’.

In the past Hynes had avoided releasing those names amidst concerns that doing so could cause victims to be exposed to intimidation tactics by other members of the community and that it might deter other victims from speaking out, the Post reported.

The Kol Tzedek program, which was created to help Orthodox Jews come forward about abuse within their community has led to the pursuit of 118 cases. Twenty-five offenders have done jail time, with one receiving a sentence of 103-years, the New York Post reported.

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Hall of Shame

NEW YORK
New York Post

The Brooklyn District Attorney’s Office released the following names of those convicted since 2009 in child sex-abuse cases in the Orthodox Jewish community:

Simon Lemmer, 2nd Degree Criminal Sexual Act
Moshe Spitzer, 2nd Degree Criminal Sexual Act
Yona Weinberg, 2nd Degree Sexual Abuse; Endangering the Welfare of a Child
Stefan Colmer, 2nd Degree Criminal Sexual Act
Joel Pinter, Endangering the Welfare of a Child
Shlomo Tourjman, 2nd Degree Course of Sexual Conduct Against a Child
Nathan Actman, Sexual Misconduct
Boris Shaulov,, two counts 3rd Degree Rape; 3rd Degree Criminal Sexual Act; Endangering the Welfare of a Child
Constantine Kotzalides, First Degree Sexual Abuse
Fredy Conde, 1st Degree Sexual Absue
Simon Benisty, 1st Degree Sexual Abuse
Yaakov Maimon, 1st Degree Sexual Abuse
Bjorn Daley, 2nd Degree Attempted Kidnapping
Solomon Marmorstein, Attempted Endangering the Welfare of a Child
Sheldon Siller, 2nd Degree Criminal Contempt
Tzvi Boxer, 1st Degree Course of Sexual Conduct
Joseph Passof, 1st Degree Sexual Abuse
David Klausner, 2nd Degree Criminal Sexual Act
Emanuel Yegutkin, 1st Degree Course of Sexual Conduct Against a Child
Michael Sabo, Predatory Sexual Assault Against a Child
Andrew Goodman, 2nd Degree Criminal Sexual Act
Meir Dascalowitz, 2nd Degree Criminal Sexual Act
Nechemya Weberman, 1st Degree Course of Sexual Conduct Against a Child
Yosef Donin, 2nd Degree Course of Sexual Conduct Against a Child
Hector Valerdi, 1st Degree Sexual Abuse
Jacob Kaff, 2nd Degree Course of Sexual Conduct Against a Child
Menachem Deutsch, 1st Degree Sexual Abuse
Arthur Samet, Endangering the Welfare of a Child
Israel Nivazou, Attempted Forcible Touching
Frankie Hatton, Forcible Touching
Chaim Becker, 3rd Degree Sexual Abuse
Moshe Keller, Endangering the Welfare of a Child
Jedrych Macie, Endangering the Welfare of a Child
Moshe Vaisfiche, Endangering the Welfare of a Child
John Pilieci, Endangering the Welfare of a Child
Eli Belili, Endangering the Welfare of a Child
Nuchum Hammerman, Attempted Endangering the Welfare of a Child
Robert Mannis, Endangering the Welfare of a Child

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.

Brooklyn DA releases names …

NEW YORK
New York Post

Brooklyn DA releases names of 46 convicted child sex-abusers who terrorized the Orthodox Jewish community from within

By SUSAN EDELMAN

Last Updated: 7:58 PM, July 21, 2013

The Brooklyn District Attorney’s Office has convicted 45 men — and one woman — in sex-attack cases in the Orthodox Jewish community since it began a crackdown more than four years ago, officials say.

DA Charles Hynes gave The Post their names, except for several juveniles, in a major shift from his prior stance that publicizing the perverts could expose the victims to vicious intimidation or deter others from coming forward.

CLICK HERE FOR THE FULL LIST

“We feel now it’s good for the community to know those who have been convicted,” said spokesman Jerry Schmetterer.

Hynes, who is running for re-election, has come under fire from critics who charge that his policies pander to ultra-Orthodox voters.

Of 118 cases pursued under a program called Kol Tzedek, Hebrew for “voice of justice,” 25 sex offenders have gotten jail time, officials said. The longest sentence — 103 years — went to Nechemya Weberman, an unlicensed therapist who had abused a girl starting when she was 12.

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Names of 46 convicted child sex offenders …

NEW YORK
Daily Mail (UK)

Names of 46 convicted child sex offenders who terrorized the Orthodox Jewish community from within are released by Brooklyn DA

22 July 2013

The Brooklyn District Attorney has convicted 45 men and a woman in the four years since it launched its clampdown on sex abuse within the ultra-Orthodox Jewish community, it was revealed today.

DA Charles Hynes, who is running for re-election in the New York district, released their identities in an apparent U-turn on his previous policy of not naming perverts for fear victims might suffer intimidation or that others may be deterred from coming forward.

The most high-profile case saw religious counsellor Nechemya Weberman, 54, sentenced to 103-years in prison for molesting a girl, beginning when she was 12-years old.

‘We feel now it’s good for the community to know those who have been convicted,’ Hynes’ spokesman told the New York Post.

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Gibney doc uncovered in Europe

EUROPE
C21 Media

European broadcasters Arte, YLE and DR are among the channels to have picked up Alex Gibney’s acclaimed documentary on sex abuse within the Catholic Church.

Distributor Content Media has secured a raft of sales for Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence in the House of God, produced by Gibney’s New York-based prodco Jigsaw Productions.

The feature-length doc exposes the culture of sexual abuse and cover-up throughout the church through the story of four deaf men in the US who set out to expose the priest who abused them during the 1960s.

It will air on HBO in the US and has also been picked up by HBO Europe for broadcast on its channels in the Netherlands and Poland. YLE in Finland, Danish pubcaster DR and Franco-German pay net Arte have also taken on the doc.

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July 21, 2013

SNAP hands out fliers on recent allegations at Cathedral Basilica

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Fox 2

[with video]

July 21, 2013, by Betsey Bruce

WEST ST. LOUIS, MO (KTVI)-As parishioners left mass Sunday at the Cathedral Basilica, members of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused By Priests, handed out fliers about recent allegations involving a Chinese priest serving the St. Louis region. Father Joseph Jiang is charged with four counts of sexual abuse against a girl in Lincoln County. He’s also charged with witness tampering because Jiang allegedly offered $20,000 in what prosecutors call hush money to the victim’s family.

The fliers encouraged any additional victims to come forward and encouraged Archbishop Robert Carlson to actively participate in the criminal investigation. There have been allegations that the archbishop may have tried to cover up the priest’s alleged crimes.

In response, the Archdiocese of St. Louis released the following statement Sunday:

As was reported in a statement dated June 27, 2012, the Archdiocese of St. Louis encourages anyone who wishes to report sexual abuse of a minor by Father Joseph Jiang or by any other priest, deacon or employee of the Archdiocese of St. Louis to contact Deacon Phil Hengen, Director of Child and Youth Protection, at 314.792.7704 or the civil authorities. Reports may also be made to the Missouri Division of Social Services Child Abuse Hotline at 800.392.3738.

The Archdiocese of St. Louis is fully cooperating with authorities in this investigation and makes no presumption of innocence or guilt with regard to the charges filed against Father Jiang. We only presume that this is a matter that necessitates prayer, certainly for the alleged victim, but also for Father Jiang and for everyone involved.

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Alleged Child Molester was Living in St. Joseph’s Rectory, Report Says

NEW JERSEY
Patch

Posted by Ann Piccirillo (Editor), July 21, 2013

A priest removed from the ministry in 2004, after evidence supported allegations that he molested a teenaged boy over a three-year period during the 1970’s, was living in the rectory of St. Joseph’s Church in Oradell, according to a report published by the Star Ledger Sunday.

According to the report, Robert Chabak, 66, who had been living in his mother’s Normandy beach house since 2004, was given permission to move into St. Joseph’s rectory by the Newark Archidiocese and Rev. Thomas Iwanowski, Pastor of St. Joseph’s, after the beach house was destroyed by Hurricane Sandy.

Jim Goodness, a spokesman for Archbishop John. J. Myers, told the Star Ledger, the archdiocese allowed Chabak to move into St. Joseph’s rectory “out of a sense of compassion.”

However, the report states that no one had informed the parishioners of St. Joseph’s about this arrangement, therefore, “knowingly putting the children at risk.”

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The Crisis Inside the Church

UNITED STATES
Waiting for Godot to Leave

Kevin O’Brien

Rod Dreher at The American Conservative has written about the Scandal in St. Louis and mentions me and some of the things I’ve posted recently here.

Rod’s concluding sentences speak directly to the spiritual turmoil I now find myself in …

It is very, very hard to walk the tightrope between cynicism and credulity; I struggle with this every day. The problem is when you don’t struggle at all. Hardcore cynicism is a different kind of Big Lie.

Rod says this, speaking as a man whose faith took a direct hit from the horrors he discovered when investigating the Sex Scandal in the Catholic Church – which is something he did as a journalist, in depth and at length. Learning the truth that he learned – a truth that most of us are unwilling to face – separated him from the true-believers who commit themselves to clericalism at all costs (a Big Lie), but also put him in the dangerous position of giving in to something that was cynical and bitter – “a different kind of Big Lie”.

In fact, one of the commenters in Rod’s post makes the very natural Protestant claim that if Catholic Bishops are, in most cases, either cowards or scoundrels, and if the people they shepherd are generally no better, then why would any Catholic believe anything the Church teaches? How can a Christian leader – a successor to the Apostles – teach infallibly on Faith and Morals if he’s buggering the altar boy or covering up for priests who do? Or – even worse – if he’s complicit in such crimes, and then cooperating with lay Catholics who shame and ostracize the victims when the victims come forward, sacrificing children and families for personal status and position. (Which may or may not be happening in the Fr. Jiang case, but which has certainly happened again and again in the Church during the course of this past decade.)

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Pastor departs NJ church amid complaints that accused priest was allowed to live in rectory

NEW JERSEY
The Republic

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
July 21, 2013

ORADELL, New Jersey — The pastor of a northern New Jersey church is stepping down amid parishioners’ complaints that a priest accused of molesting a teenage boy was allowed to temporarily live in the church rectory.

The Star-Ledger (http://bit.ly/15zjv3v) reports the pastor, the Rev. Thomas Iwanowski, will leave the St. Joseph Roman Catholic Church in Oradell on July 31.

The departure comes amid complaints about the Rev. Robert Chabak, who was removed from ministry in 2004. That came after church officials determined there was evidence to support allegations he molested a teenage boy in the 1970s.

The statute of limitations had expired and Chabak was not criminally charged. Chabak wasn’t removed from the priesthood altogether but was stripped of his priestly faculties, meaning he can’t wear a collar or represent himself as a priest.

The 66-year-old Chabak has lived in Toms River in recent years. But when his home was damaged by Superstorm Sandy, archdiocese officials allowed him to live at St. Joseph “out of a sense of compassion.”

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Priest who allowed accused molester to live in parish says he may have made a mistake

NEW JERSEY
The Star-Ledger

By Steve Strunsky/The Star-Ledger
on July 21, 2013

ORADELL — A Roman Catholic priest said today he may have made a mistake by arranging for a former priest — once accused of molesting a teenage boy — to stay in his Bergen County parish.

“Hindsight is 20-20,” the Rev. Thomas Iwanowski of St. Joseph Roman Catholic Church in Oradell said after holding services on his next-to-last Sunday there.

Iwanowski will be removed from St. Joseph on July 31 in the wake of scandal over the arrangement that allowed the accused priest to live at the rectory. The situation was the subject of a report in The Sunday Star-Ledger.

With permission from the Archdiocese of Newark, Iwanowski allowed the Rev. Robert Chabak to stay in the parish rectory after his mother’s home in Toms River, where he had been living, was damaged during Hurricane Sandy. The church’s elementary school is across the street from the rectory.

Parishioners were not told Chabak would be staying there and only learned of his past after he was transferred to a retirement home in February. But even after that, parishioners said, he would return to St. Joseph’s to spend the night. Some grew angry and demanded he be kept away.

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Church responds to diet experiments in residential schools

CANADA
Kenora Online

Written by Mike Aiken on Sunday, 21 July 2013

Earlier this week, news reports described experiments in nutrition run through two residential schools in Kenora. They included children at C.J. and St. Mary’s during the 1940’s and 1950’s. On Friday, Steve Allen from the Presbyterian Church in Canada responded to the research by Dr. Ian Mosby.

“Reading his paper is chilling, and it’s really painful. Dealing with the legacy of the residential schools doesn’t have an easy beginning and end. These things emerge,” said Allen, who heads the justice ministries programs on behalf of the church.

Mosby is a post-doctoral researcher at the University of Guelph. He recently published an academic article, which described experiments designed to help aboriginal people make the transition from a traditional diet to more mainstream foods.

In his paper, Mosby writes “The experiment therefore seems to have been driven, at least in part, by the nutrition experts’ desire to test their theories on a ready-made ‘laboratory’ populated with already malnourished human ‘experimental subjects.’ ”

Mosby further emphasizes that the research was carried out without the informed consent of the parents or children involved.

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Pope Francis’s judgment in question after priest named in gay sex scandal

VATICAN CITY
The Guardian (UK)

[Papa Francesco e la lobby gay in Vaticano – L’Espresso]

[The Prelate of the Gay Lobby – Chiesa]

John Hooper in Rome
The Guardian, Sunday 21 July 2013

Vatican post was named in a gay sex scandal. Photograph: Max Rossi/Reuters
Pope Francis will fly out of Rome on Monday, leaving behind the latest controversy to engulf the Holy See – a slew of gay sex claims, denied by the pope’s spokesman, against the man Francis chose to be his representative at the Vatican “bank”.

On 15 June, the pope appointed Monsignor Battista Ricca, an Italian cleric and former Vatican diplomat, to be “prelate” of the bank, formally known as the Institute for the Works of Religion (IOR). As such, Ricca is entitled to attend meetings of both the bodies that oversee the scandal-ridden IOR’s operations – its board and a five-strong commission of cardinals. The prelate can also demand to see any document he cares to inspect.

According to the latest edition of the weekly news magazine L’Espresso, Ricca has a past punctuated with scandal. Its report, which the pope’s spokesman branded as “not trustworthy”, claimed Ricca lived more or less openly with a Swiss army officer while at the Holy See’s nunciature (embassy) in Uruguay. It said he arrived with his lover and, while running the post between nuncios, provided him with both accommodation and a job.

The weekly magazine said Ricca was once beaten up in a gay bar in Montevideo and that, when the lift at the nunciature broke down in the night, firefighters called to deal with the emergency found him inside with a local rent boy known to police. It said that, after he was transferred to Trinidad and Tobago, that his alleged lover left trunks behind in Uruguay containing his effects. When they were opened later, they were found to contain a pistol, large numbers of prophylactics and sizeable quantities of pornography, the magazine said. Ricca has not made any comment on the allegations.

Catholic teaching regards homosexuality as “objectively disordered” and homosexual acts as “contrary to natural law”. It condemns discrimination against gay men and women on the grounds of their sexual orientation, but says they are “called to chastity”.

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‘Gay romance’ with Swiss guard shocks Vatican

VATICAN CITY
The Local

The Vatican’s “gay lobby” was back in the headlines on Friday after the alleged exposure of a homosexual prelate appointed by Pope Francis to a key position at the Vatican bank.

‘Vatican appointee had affair with Swiss guard’ (19 Jul 13)
Vatican bank ‘gay scandal’ uncovered (19 Jul 13)

The Italian weekly L’Espresso said prelate Battista Ricca had gay relationships during his time at the Vatican embassy of Montevideo in Uruguay as well as an affair with a Swiss army officer which ultimately saw him sent back to Rome in disgrace.

Vatican expert for L’Espresso Sandro Magister said Ricca provided lodgings and a pay check for captain Patrick Haari in 1999 and was once left badly beaten after trawling notorious gay hangouts before his behaviour saw him transferred out of Montevideo in 2000. …

Vatican spokesman Frederico Lombardi brushed off the story as “not credible” but the magazine insisted the allegations were confirmed by primary sources. It said “numerous bishops, priests, religious and laity” in Uruguay had testified against Ricca.

Religious watchers said the leaks about Ricca’s past may be an internal attempt to block the prelate from carrying out reforms.

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The Lie That Helps Us Sleep At Night

UNITED STATES
The American Conservative

By ROD DREHER • July 21, 2013

I’ve been thinking lately about a serious situation I’ve learned about recently in which some good people I know prefer preserving their peace of mind to facing the painful truth. In talking to a friend about this stuff the other day, I brought up the conversation my niece Hannah and I had in Paris — I tell this story in Little Way — in which I told her there’s nothing wrong with happiness, but we must not seek to maintain or achieve happiness at the expense of the truth. That prompted Hannah to immediately put me to the test by revealing an extremely painful truth about how her sister saw me. I’m still struggling with the fallout from that, but I have never for one moment regretted her telling me this, because it is much, much better to deal with the real world, in all its disorder, than with a comforting lie. In most cases, the happiness believing in the comforting lie brings us is bought at too high a price.

That came to mind this morning in reading posts by Kevin O’Brien that a reader sent to me. Kevin is a St. Louis Catholic who has been blogging about a growing scandal in his archdiocese. The details are here, but the outline is a familiar one: priest molests minor after getting close to her family, family complains to archbishop, archbishop refuses to remove priest from service, until criminal charges were filed. A twist here is that Archbishop Carlson, according to a civil suit, allegedly tried to destroy physical evidence testifying to the accused priest’s guilt. The priest lived with Abp Carlson, and was very close to him, having followed him to St. Louis from his previous post in Michigan.

Kevin O’Brien notes this in one of his postings on the subject:

The family claims that they discovered emails of a sexual nature the priest was secretly sending the daughter. If these emails actually exist, their content will be revealed in both the criminal and the civil trials – if either case comes to trial. Since the DA in Lincoln County is prosecuting this case, it is almost certain that these emails do in fact exist; a case like this would not be prosecuted on the victim’s verbal claims alone, if the claims were not somehow substantiated with hard evidence.

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Pastor departs NJ church amid concerns

NEW JERSEY
ABC 27

ORADELL, N.J. (AP) – The pastor of a northern New Jersey church is stepping down amid parishioners’ complaints that a priest accused of molesting a teenage boy was allowed to temporarily live in the church rectory.

The Star-Ledger (http://bit.ly/15zjv3v) reports the pastor, the Rev. Thomas Iwanowski, will leave the St. Joseph Roman Catholic Church in Oradell on July 31.

The departure comes amid complaints about the Rev. Robert Chabak, who was removed from ministry in 2004. That came after church officials determined there was evidence to support allegations he molested a teenage boy in the 1970s.

The statute of limitations had expired and Chabak was not criminally charged.

Chabak wasn’t removed from the priesthood altogether but was stripped of his priestly faculties, meaning he can’t wear a collar or represent himself as a priest.

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Ex-priest seeks $450,000 from Wis. archdiocese

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Merced Sun-Star

[Marvin Knighton – Milwaukee Archdiocese files via Jeff Anderson & Associates]

By M.L. JOHNSON — Associated Press

MILWAUKEE — The list of creditors for the Archdiocese of Milwaukee includes hundreds of child sexual abuse victims, along with a bank, pension funds and others typical in bankruptcy cases. It also includes one less usual: a priest removed from the priesthood amid allegations of abuse.

Marvin Knighton was charged with child sexual abuse in 2002 but acquitted by a jury the next year. The church still removed him from the priesthood, however, saying its investigation found two allegations against him had merit.

Knighton steadfastly fought his dismissal and has put in a claim for $450,000 for back pay from the archdiocese in federal bankruptcy court. A church bankruptcy expert said while the claim is not unique, it is highly unusual. Knighton’s victims called it “disturbing” and “grossly inappropriate.”

“That money should be going to survivors, not child molesters,” said Thomas C. Bersch Jr., who said he was abused by Knighton in the 1970s. “During the bankruptcy proceedings, if he gets even a nickel of this money, it would be the most unbelievable thing that could happen. I wish there is something I could do to prevent that.”

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Past abuses linger over First Nations education debate

CANADA
CBC News

The Canadian Press Posted: Jul 21, 2013

Aboriginal leaders are pointing to past abuses as evidence that the federal government should let their communities craft their own education policies.

When news broke that more than 1,300 aboriginal people, mostly children, were used as subjects of nutritional experiments initiated by the Canadian government in the 1940s and ’50s, it struck a chord with aboriginal leaders that was all-too-contemporary.

A statement from the Assembly of First Nations said such horrors would never have happened if aboriginal people were in control of their own lives and communities.

News of the old abuses resurfaced as the national organization was meeting this week in Whitehorse, where members were discussing education reform.

Some lamented that federal policy-makers haven’t learned key lessons of the past, as they prepare to present the First Nation Education Act to Parliament this fall.

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Key moments in the struggle over First Nations schooling policy

CANADA
Montreal Gazette

BY THE CANADIAN PRESS JULY 21, 2013

Education policy has long been a source of tension between the federal government and First Nations, from the painful legacy of residential schools to the current debate over the upcoming First Nation Education Act. Here are some key moments:

1874

The Canadian government’s involvement in residential schools begins. Aboriginal children are removed from their communities across the country and placed in government-funded, church-run institutions. These schools are used to assimilate aboriginal children, by exposing them to new language and cultural traditions while stripping them of their own.

1972

The National Indian Brotherhood (which later becomes the Assembly of First Nations) asks for more control of its peoples’ education. A policy is outlined in a paper called Indian Control of Indian Education.

1996

The last residential school closes in Yellowknife. The negative repercussions of life at these schools trickles down through generations of aboriginal peoples.

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Arrested Vatican prelate acted as private banker, document says

ITALY
Reuters

Sun Jul 21, 2013

* Magistrates’ says prelate used web of contacts illegally
* Scarano lawyer says document has no proof, only suspicions
* Scarano is target of two Italian investigations
* IOR in spotlight over global rules against tax evasion
* Pope has made cleaning up the Vatican a goal of his papacy

By Philip Pullella and Massimiliano Di Giorgio

ROME, July 21 (Reuters) – A senior Catholic prelate arrested last month used his influence at the Vatican to provide private, illegal financial services for rich friends, Italian investigators say in a judicial document.

They say Monsignor Nunzio Scarano, who is the target of two Italian investigations and had accounts at the Vatican bank, engaged in “totally private, illegal activity which was also aimed at serving outsiders”.

Scarano was arrested in Rome on June 28 along with a self-styled financier and a member of Italy’s secret services and formally accused of taking part in a plot to smuggle 20 million euros ($26.28 million) into Italy from Switzerland. .

Reuters has obtained the 28-page document in which magistrates in Rome had asked a judge to order his arrest.

Scarano’s lawyer, Silverio Sica, denied the accusations it contains. “They don’t have any evidence to prove all of this,” he said on Sunday. “These are just suspicions”.

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The good sisters believe they have already paid their dues

IRELAND
Irish Independent

GERARD O’REGAN – 20 JULY 2013

They were an unlikely duo to put it mildly – the alcoholic vagabond poet Patrick Kavanagh, and the austere, uncompromising, religious dictator of his time, Archbishop John Charles McQuaid.

And what brought them together was money.

Kavanagh famously abandoned the “stony grey soil of Monaghan” for what would prove to be a lifetime of relative poverty in the much documented 1950s’ Dublin literary scene.

But as he weaved those wonderful lines of poetry, which strike a chord with so many, he also indulged too many booze-filled evenings in the likes of McDaid’s, the Bailey, and the Palace bar. It meant his already precarious lifestyle, all too often, plummeted into the depths of abject poverty.

Meanwhile, up the road in Drumcondra, in the plush surroundings of what was termed his ‘Bishop’s Palace’, Archbishop McQuaid kept a beady eye on Kavanagh. The archbishop, of course, had his “vigilantes” scouring the capital for any kind of tittle-tattle, which would inform him of “immoral tendencies” by Catholics in positions of power or influence. …

Maybe another very individualistic approach to money matters is reflected in the attitude of the four religious orders, who this week point-blank refused a request from Justice Minister Alan Shatter to offer some money towards the Magdalene Laundries compensation fund.

The initial reaction from many quarters was one of anger and condemnation. How could those religious orders be so tight-fisted, given the blighted lives of so many who were in their care?

Surely they could even make a token gesture? They are not so hard up that this would be beyond them.

But the response to the minister from the nuns has been “no”, and a steely “no” at that. They will help out wherever necessary by way of providing documentation to help process compensation claims – but there will be no financial compensation forthcoming; the State can pick up the tab.

Could it be that these nuns believe they picked up the tab for the State during all those years when parents, politicians, priests and gardai so often connived to ensure they would be the ones to look after the forlorn and the destitute.

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Another Alleged Aussie Paedo-Tourist Charged (Or: Popping Up Everywhere)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

The Australian Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse will, if it achieves its aims, place considerable pressure on local child molesters. They will be looking to operate in an environment where there is less pressure from the law. Unfortunately, they are increasingly choosing to operate in less-developed countries, particularly in S.E. Asia.

There is a scientific principle which has been around for centuries, called Pascal’s principle. It means that pressure on one end of a tube must come out at the other end. It is the principle behind hydraulic systems. The “tube”, by analogy, is the tourist trade.

Earlier posts have tried to show how Australian paedophiles have moved to S.E. Asian “orphanages” now that the local children’s homes are no longer available. There have also been cases, such as the infamous McAlinden case (see previous postings) where priests have been transferred to places like the Philippines when it became too hot for them in Australia.

As the situation in Australia responds to the pressures from the Royal Commission, more and more “rank and file” child abusers will seek out countries where the pressures are not as great. Most Australians would agree that it would be wrong to export our problems in this regard to other, unsuspecting, countries, for a variety of reasons, including national pride.

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NSW Enquiry Session 2 Week 3 Day 4 (Or: Where Did I Leave My Keys?)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

“He has given his life to the Catholic Church”: Commissioner Cunneen., concerning William Burston (pictured above), second-in-charge of the Newcastle-Maitland diocese under former Bishops Clarke and Malone. Ms. Cunneen claimed that Burston had been “subjected to rudeness” by some members of the public. She said she would consider laying charges against them, if they can be identified. She further issued a warning about “people pre-judging events”.

[A search of transcripts does not reveal the good Commissioner referring to whistleblower Detective Chief Inspector Fox as having “given his life to the NSW police department”, or cautioning people who were less than courteous to him.]

Burston said, at least 60 times, that he could not remember events, which prompted Counsel Assisting, Mr. David Kell, to suggest that he was being “highly selective” and that it was “inconceivable” he could not recall details of things involving obviously inappropriate behaviour. The list of things Burston could not recall is too long to detail here (some are given in the references below).

This response to questioning had caused the public gallery to (according to media reports) respond with “audible groans”, and “gasps of shock and disgust”. [Ms. Cunneen’s stern warning came at the end of proceedings.]

Fr. Burston attributed his poor memory to the effects of several operations’ anesthetics over the past ten years, although he had not consulted a doctor regarding it and ,so, had no medical opinion to back his claims. When Counsel Assisting remarked to Fr. Burston that his memory was precise on some aspects and not on others, the priest agreed, but said he was not trying to hinder the enquiry.

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The Yeshivah College Case (Or: Australia Exports Yet Another Paedophile)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

In what is believed to be the only case of a member of a Jewish institution in Australia pleading guilty to child sexual abuse, Rabbi David Kramer will be sentenced next Wednesday. Kramer allegedly abused students at the prestigious Yeshivah College in Melbourne while a teacher there.

Victims’ advocate, Manny Waks, who has been very active in exposing cover-ups in Jewish institutions here, has called for the resignation of Rabbi Glick, the former head of the College, if he knew of Kramer’s offending. Outside court, Mr. Waks said he wanted the case to form part of the upcoming Royal Commission into institutional handling of child abuse allegations. “Hopefully each and every person who was responsible for whatever happened will be held to full account,” he has said.

The Kramer case is a classic example of authorities trying to cover-up for an offender, which resulted in more victims being created. At Kramer’s plea hearing on Wednesday, prosecutor Brett Sonnet said Yeshivah’s administration had initially declined to stand Kramer down because of concerns for his wellbeing. Mr Sonnet said Kramer had admitted some of the accusations, but the college did not act until parents staged a protest outside his house.

The school finally agreed to send him to Israel in 1993. Yeshivah did not report Kramer to police. When NSW police were told by victims of the offending, the police did not investigate or pass information on to other authorities. Even Kramer’s lawyer, Tim Marsh, said that Yeshivah had covered-up Kramer’s offences, saying Kramer had been “quietly shuffled out the back door to Israel.”

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NSW Enquiry, Session 2, Week 3, Day 5 (Or: Poor Old Steptoe)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

NSW enquiry head, Ms. Cunneen, so far has only considered legal action against Detective Chief Inspector Fox (who triggered the enquiry) for tweeting, and victims who have protested outside the court. Action against Mr. Fox was eventually dropped, while the victims are still under threat from Ms. Cunneen.

Something is very wrong here. From the perspective of the enquiry officials’ little pond, it is clearly no big deal. However, those who live in the much larger pond of Australia and the world, may think concerns have been somewhat skewed.

Yesterday, Ms. Cunneen referred to Maitland-Newcastle deputy, Fr. Burston, as “having given his life to the Catholic Church” and having been subjected to “unacceptable behaviour” by victims. Today, after lunch, she further ruled that Fr. Burston was excused from giving evidence until next Friday, “when the stress of the events of the past few days”- pointedly the peaceful demonstration outside the court on Wednesday (see yesterday’s posting’s picture) – “would hopefully be behind him.”

Lawyer for Fr. Burston, Mr. Gyles (see previous posting), submitted that the “unacceptable behaviour” of the victims may have affected Burton’s ability to give evidence, and he should be excused from the enquiry while he stabilized. Counsel Assisting, Mr. Kell objected. However, Ms. Cunneen agreed to Burston’s lawyer’s request.

Prior to Burston being excused from the enquiry, it had heard that he had told another church official that the priest’s alleged victim “had been demonstrating bizarre behaviour for years.” He allegedly also said the victim’s claim to have been sexually abused by convicted serial child sexual abuser, Fr.Fletcher, “was just another sign of his psychological disturbance.” Burston fell back on his usual poor memory defence, saying he did “not remember” saying that.

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Rebel Priest: Church’s ‘No. 1 Enemy’ A Symbol of Polish Change

POLAND
ABC News

By JAN PUHL, SPIEGEL
July 20, 2013

He’s loved by his congregation but loathed by the archbishop. Rebellious priest Wojciech Lemanski is seen as the church’s No. 1 enemy in Poland. His dismissal highlights the deep divide between church authorities and the faithful in this staunchly Catholic nation.

Pastor Wojciech Lemanski stepped up to his small pulpit on Wednesday morning to hold what may be his last sermon at his church in the town of Jasienica near Warsaw. The slender cleric, with his close-cropped gray hair, has become a household name in Poland in recent weeks. Newspapers have run stories about him and he’s been a topic of discussion on television in what has been dubbed “Pastor Lemanski vs. the Curia.” The case shows that support for the church is even crumbling in devoutly Catholic Poland.

Lemanski, who was ordained in 1987, was never a compliant priest. He repeatedly used his pulpit and his blog to voice his criticism of the church. He has accused the church leadership of not doing enough to oppose anti-Semitic tendencies among Poland’s Catholics. He has also critcized the establishment’s lenient treatment of clerics accused of sexual abuse, and its fierce rejection of artificial insemination and contraceptives. His vocal criticism drove Henryk Hoser, the archbishop of Warsaw-Praga, to suspend Lemanski last week. But Lemanski wrote the archbishop a letter informing him that he wouldn’t budge.

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He’s a priest. He’s a parent. And nothing’s simple after that.

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 07/20/2013

Members of the Roman Catholic Church of St. Columba in St. Paul suffered a double blow in the summer of 2004: Their school closed and their parish priest abruptly left.

Officials of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis never told parishioners why the Rev. Daniel Conlin was reassigned, church members said. A simple announcement was made. But news soon made its way through the grapevine: Conlin had fathered a child during a consensual relationship with a married woman.

The baby was born after Conlin left St. Columba, according to the child’s birth certificate. The baby’s mother and her husband separated a short time later; their divorce was final in 2008, court records show.

As recently as mid-June, the 51-year-old priest and canon lawyer sat on the archdiocese’s marriage tribunal, which decides annulments — rulings in the eyes of the church that a marriage never existed. His name and biography were removed from the website after the Pioneer Press alerted the archdiocese that its report on Conlin and the archdiocese was nearing publication.

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Archbishop angry over Catholic Church’s lack of concern for abused children

IRELAND
Irish Central

By PADDY CLANCY, Irish Voice Reporter
Published Sunday, July 21, 2013

The Catholic Archbishop of Dublin Dr. Diarmuid Martin has hit out at the church’s lack of concern for children abused by priests.

He was responding to a just-published report which was severely critical of three previous archbishops of Dublin including Cardinal Desmond Connell.

The report, Chapter 20 of the investigation by Judge Yvonne Murphy into abuses in the Dublin Archdiocese, was released for publication by the High Court on Friday although the rest of the judge’s findings were published in November 2009.

Chapter 20 was censored from the initial publication pending trial of defrocked priest Patrick McCabe.

The chapter, when finally published last week, found there was “shocking” Garda (police) “connivance” with the church authorities when one serious complaint was stifled, there was failure to investigate another, and McCabe was allowed by his superiors to leave the country.

Martin, hitting out at the lack of concern for children abused by priests, said Chapter 20’s criticisms of the church showed “there was concern for everybody except the child.”

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Pope John Paul II is no saint

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times

By David McGrath
July 19, 2013

I’ve had a troubling obsession with my Catholic religion ever since I was a kid.

Between the six altar boys in our family serving Mass every week, and at least one of us always preparing for a first communion, confession or confirmation, religious affiliation seemed at least as important as membership in Davy Crockett’s fan club, growing up in the 1950s.

My own participation was dutiful, if reluctant. For it was no secret that I was the worst behaved child in our household, the undisputed champion of fighting, disobeying, talking back. So even at the tender age of 9, I felt like a hypocrite while devoutly folding my hands in prayer, the same hands that had earlier stolen the loose change from my mother’s purse (sorry, Mom).

Ironically, it may have been my childhood mischief and mounting guilt that led me to ramp up my religious commitment, sending me to St. Joseph’s Franciscan seminary in Westmont at age 14. A sinner like myself might be able to save his soul if he could just get a job on the inside.

Predictably, that plan was doomed from the start. The same high spiritedness that made me a trouble maker in the McGrath home got me booted from St. Joe’s. I personally didn’t think that keeping a transistor radio inside the cutout pages of my Bible, so that I could listen to the White Sox after lights out, meant that I was incorrigible. But they had their own rules.

During that time period, however, something interesting happened: I discovered that the adults – the priests and brothers who were our teachers and surrogate parents – were a lot like me. Not worse. Just human.

The ceremonies, the robes, the pomp – it was all mostly for show, rather like the way I used to fold my hands.

Father Blaine was as vain as I was. Father McArdle an even bigger hypocrite. Father Gerard may have been mean, but Father Floyd was cruel, the king of sarcasm, and this was decades before bullies on the Internet.

The discovery was disappointing. But in many ways, it set me free.

Later, when priests from the same generation in our suburban white church chose to remain silent during the civil rights battles, I was surprised even less. For I knew they were ordinary men running the church, the same ones running GE or the NAACP or the NRA. The church was just another business or fraternal organization, willing to do what was necessary for money, for power, and for defense of their own interests.

Don’t get me wrong. I do not denigrate the genuine Christian message of compassion and love for all mankind. I reference only the clergy, the shifty folks who hijacked Jesus’ church and never practiced the preaching.

All of which is why today, upon reading about the imminent canonization of Pope John Paul II, that my reaction is not, technically, cynical. Rather, I am as unsurprised as when a CEO of one of the banks that brought the U.S. to its knees is rewarded with a generous bonus.

That’s because conferring sainthood upon a man who showed no compassion to the innocent victims of heinous sex crimes, perpetrated by his own soldiers, is more of a public relations stunt. Or a sham. Or a political attempt at a distraction, at best.

John Paul deserves sainthood, say church officials, because of evidence of two separate miracles, in which individuals experienced unlikely recoveries from terrible diseases after they prayed to the departed John Paul.

Whereas, when he was alive he failed a much more telling test, by having never apologized for the church’s horde of sex criminals.

This was no oversight. During his papal tenure, he apologized officially for everything from the Crusades to the persecution of Galileo.

Yet, while formal reports of cases in which priests molested multiple children in America were made to the Vatican as early as 1985, Pope John Paul II remained mostly silent.

Here is Notre Dame theologian Richard McBrien’s assessment of John Paul: Indeed, he had a terrible record, full of denial and foot-dragging, on the greatest crisis to confront the Catholic Church since the Reformation of the 16th century.

He never apologized and refused requests to meet with victims, blaming the media’s sensationalism of the scandal.

John Paul would not accept responsibility. What’s worse, he allowed that the church’s zero-tolerance policy be altered to grant easier due process to accused priests.

This CEO of the Catholic church chose, unsurprisingly, to serve his shareholders, and to hell with the traumatized children and the journalists who believed them.

Admirers of Pope John Paul point out that he spoke 13 languages, traveled all around the world, spoke against communism, and advocated for the common worker and human rights.

He reached out to Jews, and he actually visited a prison to forgive the man who shot and nearly killed him in St. Peter’s Square.

But when the most debilitating scandal in church history occurred on his watch, the Jesus-like love and piety that John Paul was known for was never extended to the victims of the church’s predatory priests.

Seriously, wouldn’t the heart of a true saint have gone out to those who were so egregiously harmed?

Shouldn’t a Saint John Paul have said, I’m sorry?

David McGrath is Emeritus Professor of English, College of DuPage, and author of The Territory. mcgrathd@dupage.edu

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Sin and Character

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Waiting for Godot to Leave

Kevin O’Brien

I am glad to say that the combox discussion in my post about Fr. Jiang has been civil and intelligent.

Fr. Jiang’s defenders are defending him, it seems, not just because of his Catholic orthodoxy, but because of his character. And I don’t know Fr. Jiang, so I can’t comment on his character.

But I can say something about character in general.

It is quite possible for the most reverent of men to harbor the most sinful of thoughts and desires, and even to conceal some of the most heinous of acts. We have lost sight of sin. As I’m often saying, we hear very little about sin from the pulpit, even the most common (and deadly) sins that surround us in our parishes – adultery, greed, fornication, the use of pornography, lying, contraception, etc. And when have we ever heard any Catholic echo St. Paul, “How can we who have died to sin still live in it?” (Rom. 6:2)

Our baptism was a death to sin and a rebirth to Christ.

For we know that our old self was crucified with him so that the body ruled by sin might be done away with, that we should no longer be slaves to sin, because anyone who has died has been set free from sin. (Rom. 6:6-7)

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My Hesitation

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Waiting for Godot to Leave

Kevin O’Brien

Re. Fr. Jiang and Archbishop Carlson, I just wrote to a friend about the difficulty of blogging about this …

I keep trying to address the fact that we don’t really know all the facts here – but even when we did (as in the Bishop Finn case), the Super-Catholics still rallied around their guy and vilified the victims.

So, yes, I’m skeptical and I’m cynical. The story told by the alleged victim in Old Monroe fits a pattern; it rings true. It may be false. But apparently there’s enough evidence to substantiate it, and if it is indeed true, it means we’re dealing with a level of depravity in our archdiocese that no one is going to want to face head on. It means that clergy and laity alike will lie thorough their teeth or at least bend the truth in order to keep up appearances and reputation. It means that children and families will be sacrificed for the sake of status and power.

If the allegations are false, then we’re dealing with a similar level of depravity on the other side.

Either way, I pray that we all have the courage to confront the truth when it finally comes out. If it finally comes out.

But I fear that if this girl has indeed been victimized, and if Archbishop Carlson has indeed enabled the crime and attempted to cover it up, my fellow theologically orthodox Catholics will look the other way, call Bill Donohue for a spin job, and crucify me and any other Catholic who reports on this in the process.

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Gay scandal at the heart of the Vatican: Pope Francis faces his first crisis

UNITED KINGDOM
The Telegraph

By Damian Thompson

Pope Francis is discovering just what a nasty place the Vatican can be. Having acknowledged that there was a “gay lobby” in the Curia, the Pope has been told that the man he’s appointed to be prelate of the Vatican Bank, Monsignor Battista Ricca, has an allegedly scandalous gay past.

Moreover, Ricca is not only Francis’s personal representative at the bank: he’s also Director of the Domus Santa Marta, where Francis has chosen to live. Indeed, the Pope often eats with the 57-year-old Ricca, whose supposed sexual indiscretions are the subject of an explosive article by Sandro Magister, Vatican expert of L’Espresso magazine.

The best guide through this troubling affair is Dr Robert Moynihan, one of the most respected of all commentators on Vatican affairs and the author of a new book about Pope Francis. I receive his email newsletter, the Moynihan Report, in which he sets out the sequence of events:

Ricca, a 57-year-old Italian prelate is a career Vatican diplomat who … in the past year, has directed the Domus Santa Marta, where the Pope is now living. In his post at the Secretariat of State, Ricca was in charge of accounting for all financial expenditures in all the nunciatures of the world. So he has a certain competence in economic matters.

His staff confirm that he is a considerate, thoughtful man. I myself, during recent stays in the Domus, have spoken with him several times, and he has spoken eloquently of the need for Christians to live out the Christian faith, especially through acts of charity toward the poor and needy.

During these years, Ricca got to know Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio [who] came not only to know Ricca, but to trust him.

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Catholic Church hails George Yeo’s Vatican role

SINGAPORE
AsiaOne

By Janice Tai
The Straits Times
Sunday, Jul 21, 2013

SINGAPORE – The Catholic Church in Singapore has hailed the appointment of former foreign minister George Yeo to a special Vatican commission set up by Pope Francis I.

Official Vatican news release on the setting up of the commission

The Holy Father, by a chirograph dated 18 July, has established a Pontifical Commission for Reference on the Organisation of the economic-administrative structure of the Holy See.

The Commission will gather information, report to the Holy Father and co-operate with the Council of Cardinals for the study of the organisational and economic problems of the Holy See, in order to draft reforms of the institutions of the Holy See, with the aim of a “simplification and rationalisation of the existing bodies and more careful planning of the economic activities of all the Vatican Administrations”.

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No clergy to be prosecuted after three-year probe

IRELAND
Irish Independent

MAEVE SHEEHAN – 21 JULY 2013

NOT a single Catholic bishop or priest will be prosecuted for covering up the scandal of clerical sex abuse over several decades at the end of a three-year Garda investigation.

The enormous and time-consuming investigation involved a team of 12 to 14 detectives who interviewed more than 800 witnesses over three years.

The probe was launched in 2009 after the Murphy report on clerical abuse in the Dublin archdiocese revealed how the Catholic priests and bishops colluded with state authorities and gardai to shield paedophile priests.

Detectives were unable to build a case against surviving clergy for secretly moving paedophiles from parish to parish during the Eighties and Nineties because covering up for child abusers was not a specific offence at the time.

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New probe renews investigation of priest in sex abuse scandal

NEW JERSEY
The Record

SUNDAY, JULY 21, 2013
BY JEFF GREEN
STAFF WRITER

Voicing a view repeated often among parishioners in defense of an embattled priest, the Newark archbishop last month downplayed sex-abuse allegations against the Rev. Michael Fugee, saying his behavior was “ill advised, but did not rise to the level of sexual abuse.”

Archbishop John J. Myers said in a newspaper interview that Fugee’s alleged groping of a 13-year-old Wyckoff boy in 2001 presented a case that had “more grays than black and white.”

But in stark contrast to that assertion, Bergen County prosecutors paint a picture of a priest who relentlessly preyed upon the boy, alleging in court documents newly released in a public-records request that, far from accidentally touching the boy in a mock wrestling match, Fugee deliberately pinned him down on five distinct occasions, groped his genitals and “lingered there” in spite of the boy’s protests.

Prosecutors wrote in court briefs that the alleged victim became so paralyzed with fear of the priest that he would lock himself in his room whenever he visited and once, upon learning of Fugee’s arrival, he hid behind a refrigerator at the restaurant where he worked and pleaded with his boss to not let the priest know where he was.

With the victim’s testimony, prosecutors embarked on a methodical hunt for evidence against Fugee, knocking on parishioners’ doors throughout Bergen County, interviewing dozens of people with knowledge of the alleged abuse and seeking records from what they described as a resistant Newark Archdiocese.

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July 20, 2013

Newark Archdiocese stirs outrage after allowing accused molester to live in parish

NEW JERSEY
The Star-Ledger

By Mark Mueller/The Star-Ledger
on July 20, 2013 at 8:00 PM

Parishioners at St. Joseph Roman Catholic Church in Oradell first noticed the man in November. Each night, he slept in the rectory. Every morning, he attended Mass in the soaring brick church, across the street from the parish’s elementary school.

What parishioners didn’t know — what neither their pastor nor the Archdiocese of Newark told them — was that the man was an accused sexual predator.

The Rev. Robert Chabak, 66, was removed from ministry in 2004, when church officials determined there was evidence to support allegations he molested a teenage boy over a three-year period in the 1970s.

In the years since, Chabak has lived in a home once owned by his mother in the Normandy Beach section of Toms River. When Hurricane Sandy damaged that home, the archdiocese allowed him to take up residence at St. Joseph “out of a sense of compassion,” said Jim Goodness, a spokesman for Archbishop John. J. Myers.

But no one informed parishioners, who now say the archdiocese and the pastor, the Rev. Thomas Iwanowski, knowingly put children at risk.

It would be months before a few members of the parish discovered Chabak’s background. Under pressure from those parishioners, the archdiocese removed Chabak from St. Joseph in February, transferring him to a retirement home for priests in Rutherford.

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The Rev. Helmut Schuller, Austrian priest banned in Boston, to speak in Independence and Cleveland

OHIO
Beacon Journal

By Colette M. Jenkins
Beacon Journal religion writer

The Rev. Helmut Schuller, the reformist Austrian priest who advocates for institutional change and inclusive priesthood in the Roman Catholic Church, will stop in Northeast Ohio this week for two speaking engagements.

Schuller will present The Catholic Tipping Point: Conversations with Helmut Schuller at 7 p.m. Thursday at Independence Middle School, 6111 Archwood Road, and at noon Friday at the Cleveland City Club, 850 Euclid Ave.

His talks are part of a 15-city national tour that began Tuesday in New York City and ends Aug. 6 on Long Island.

Other stops on the tour include Seattle; Los Angeles; Cincinnati; Detroit; Philadelphia; Washington, D.C.; and Boston, where Cardinal Sean O’Malley issued a statement forbidding Schuller from speaking on Catholic property in the archdiocese.

Schuller gained international attention in 2011 when his organization, the Austrian Priests’ Initiative, spearheaded a “Call to Disobedience.” The call, which according to published reports garnered support from more than 70 percent of Austrian priests, called for such reforms as greater lay leadership, allowing “believers of good will” to participate in the Holy Eucharist and opening ordination to women and married men as a way of addressing the worsening priest shortage in the church.

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What the church documents reveal

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

By Karen Herzog of the Journal Sentinel

When the Milwaukee Catholic Archdiocese recently released secret documents linked to how the church dealt with sexual abuse of children by priests, the headlines focused on former Archbishop Timothy Dolan’s plans to pay abusers to leave the priesthood and to move $57 million into cemetery funds to protect the money “from any legal claim or liability.”

But those aren’t the only stories revealed in some 6,000 pages of documents the church had kept confidential for decades. The documents also shed light on issues pedophile priests were dealing with both before and after they abused children. They include letters to priests from archbishops who failed to face the issue of child abuse head on. And they reveal the anguish of the victims and the victims’ parents.

The documents, which were released July 1 as part of the church’s bankruptcy case, reveal the human side of the scandal.

Some of the priests said they had been sexually abused as children. The victims were often insecure and searching for guidance. And archbishops, in addition to trying to protect the church, felt a pastoral responsibility to priests who were abusers.

Only a few of the accused priests were criminally charged; many denied they did anything wrong. Most left the priesthood with severance pay or were allowed to retire with a pension, health benefits and a place to live. Of the dozen priests included in this story, three are still alive but have been stripped of their priestly ministry: Franklyn Becker, Michael Krejci and Thomas Trepanier, according to archdiocese records.

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Religious orders reject newspaper claims of giving just €1.6m to fund

IRELAND
Irish Independent

DANIEL MCCONNELL POLITICAL CORRESPONDENT – 20 JULY 2013

THE religious orders who ran the controversial Magdalene Laundries have strongly rejected newspaper claims they have given just €1.6 million to a fund for survivors.

In a lengthy statement, issued yesterday afternoon, the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy insisted they have contributed €21.7 million in cash to the Statutory Fund since 2009.

The Sisters argued that “as taxpayers who donate their net salaries/pensions to our charitable funds, our Sisters share in the burden of all citizens in responding to women for whom, in past decades, admission to Magdalene Laundries was seen as appropriate refuge.”

The Sisters were last week severely criticised for stating that they would not be contributing to the state scheme, which led to calls for their orders to lose their charitable status. Taoiseach Enda Kenny and Justice Minister Alan Shatter both ruled out such a move, claiming an inability to do so.

In their statement yesterday, the sisters claimed that the €21.7 million cash already paid “is part of a larger contribution offered by our Congregation and valued in December 2009 at in excess of €127.5 million”.

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Fantasy vs. Reality among Super-Catholics

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Waiting for Godot to Leave

Most of this is just a teenage girl’s fantasy.

… so said a commenter on the St. Louis Post-Dispatch website, dismissing in the most brutal manner possible a teen-aged girl in Old Monroe, Missouri who claims to have been molested by a St. Louis priest, whose crime her parents insist Archbishop Carlson enabled and tried to cover up.

As I said before, this case has yet to go to trial (and I strongly suspect it never will, that it will now be plea bargained away). And while we don’t know many things, nor can we pre-judge the guilt or innocence of the accused cleric, we do know some things for certain.

* The priest was a favorite of Archbishop Carlson’s, actually living with the archbishop in the archbishop’s mansion, and having been brought by Carlson to St. Louis from Saginaw, Michigan, where Carlson was last assigned.

* The priest became a very close friend of the alleged victim’s family’s, and would often spend the night at the family’s house – even though it was only an hour from his room in the archbishop’s mansion.

* The parents became concerned about inappropriate contact between the priest and their 15-year-old daughter – stroking, physical displays of affection. When they confronted the priest about this, he stopped seeing the family, asked for a transfer from St. Louis for “personal reasons”, but eventually ingratiated himself back into the family, visiting them frequently.

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Pope’s bank clean-up man ‘found stuck in elevator with rent boy’

VATICAN CITY
Belfast Telegraph

BY MICHAEL DAY – 20 JULY 2013

As the man charged with cleaning out the stables at the scandal-struck Vatican bank, Monsignor Battista Ricca will need Machiavellian cunning, good fortune and a whiter-than-white record to have even a fighting chance.

But Pope Francis’s new banker appears to possess none of these attributes after it was reported yesterday that he was found stuck in a lift with a rent boy. Msgr Ricca, as Francis’s new primate with responsibility for the troubled financial institution, known officially as the IoR (Institute for Religious Works), is supposed to usher in new transparency and badly needed reforms after years of financial scandal.

Earlier this month, a major report from finance police and magistrates warned that a lack of checks and controls by the IoR and the Italian financial institutions it had dealings with made the Vatican’s bank a money-laundering hot spot.

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Valcourt says 2008 residential schools apology covered nutritional experiments

CANADA
iPolitics

By The Canadian Press | Jul 19, 2013

PRINCE ALBERT, Sask. — Aboriginal Affairs Minister Bernard Valcourt says the federal government’s 2008 apology to victims of residential schools includes children and adults who were subjected to nutritional experiments.

Valcourt told CTV Prince Albert the past can never be erased and everyone needs to reconcile and move forward.

Earlier this week, the Assembly of First Nations passed resolutions at its annual meeting in Whitehorse calling on the federal government to apologize and make restitution to those affected by experiments conducted between 1942 and 1952.

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Wrong is wrong

CANADA
The Telegram

It is almost unfathomable today: that a Canadian government would use at least 1,300 Canadians as nutritional guinea pigs: that, in an effort to understand food issues, scientists would give some subjects healthy food, while denying that same food to others. Give some nutritional supplements: withhold those supplements from others. And throughout the process, deny the unwitting subjects proper dental care, over concerns that care could cloud the results of the experiments.

But that is apparently what did happen between 1942 and 1952 with aboriginal children and adults in six residential schools across the country, in native reserves in northern Manitoba and, perhaps, on a broader scale as well.

Revelations about the studies came in a paper published by University of Guelph food historian Ian Mosby: widely reported on Tuesday, Mosby’s examination says that scientists took children and adults who were living essentially at a starvation level, and instead of getting them food, experimented with other nutritional options like supplements without informed consent for the studies.

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Editorial: Food experiments on aboriginals make a shameful chapter for Canada

CANADA
Calgary Herald

Heartbreaking is the only word that can describe the revelations by University of Guelph food historian Ian Mosby that aboriginal children and adults were deliberately kept on starvation diets and denied basic nutrition as part of experiments more than 60 years ago.

Mosby said that experiments took place on reserves in northern Manitoba as well as at six residential schools around the country. They involved denying some of the children and adults vitamins and minerals, recommended levels of milk, adulterated flour, oranges, and even dental services. The 1,300 “subjects” used in the experiments were already hungry and suffering nutritionally. One of those children was Assembly of First Nations national chief Shawn Atleo’s father, who attended a residential school in Port Alberni, B.C.

It is terribly painful to think of people being deliberately deprived of food in this land of plenty, and adding to that hurt is the knowledge that they were treated as heartlessly as if they had been lab rats instead of human beings. In fact, the experiments and the complete lack of ethics involved with carrying them out sound, frankly, like something that would have come out of Nazi Germany.

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Panel to Study Vatican’s Finances and Transparency

VATICAN CITY
The New York Times

By RACHEL DONADIO
Published: July 19, 2013

ROME — As he forges ahead with reforming the Vatican’s troubled bureaucracy, Pope Francis has established a committee of international experts to help improve its finances and transparency, the Vatican said Friday. The committee of seven lay experts and one cleric will answer directly to the pope and a panel of cardinals he appointed to help coordinate reforms. The new committee will help carry out “the simplification and rationalization” of the Vatican’s departments, the Vatican said.

Francis was elected in March after the resignation of Pope Benedict XVI, whose eight-year papacy was rocked by scandal. The Vatican said that the new committee would also work “to avoid the misuse of economic resources, to improve transparency in the processes of purchasing goods and services, to refine the administration of goods and real estate; to work with ever greater prudence in the financial sphere; to ensure correct application of accounting principles and to guarantee health care and social security benefits to all those eligible.” It will hold its first meeting after Francis returns from a trip to Brazil this month.

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Pope’s man at Vatican bank had ‘string of gay affairs’

VATICAN CITY
Irish Independent

NICK SQUIRES ROME – 20 JULY 2013

The Holy See is involved in a fresh scandal after it was claimed that a priest appointed to a key role in the Vatican bank had a string of homosexual affairs that forced his recall from an overseas posting.

Pope Francis recently appointed Monsignor Battista Ricca as his “eyes and ears” within the bank after introducing reforms aimed at curtailing alleged money laundering, tax evasion and other financial abuses.

However, yesterday it was claimed that Msgr Ricca (57) who had a 15-year career as a Vatican diplomat, allegedly shocked fellow priests and nuns at the Holy See’s embassy in Montevideo, Uruguay, by having a homosexual affair with a captain in the Swiss army.

The monsignor allegedly met the officer, named as Captain Patrick Haari, during an earlier posting to Berne in Switzerland, and the soldier accompanied him to Uruguay.

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Former Boy Scout leader, Boy Scout council, church are named in abuse lawsuit

MINNESOTA
Post-Bulletin

Kay Fate, kfate@postbulletin.com

A former Rochester scoutmaster is at the heart of a civil lawsuit that is expected to be filed Monday in Olmsted County District Court, which is believed to be the first civil lawsuit involving the Boy Scouts of America using a new Minnesota law.

Two men claim several adults failed to protect them from sexual abuse at the hands of their Boy Scout leader, Richard C. Hokanson, who sexually assaulted them during the 1970s while they were in Rochester Troop 210. The new Minnesota law eliminates the civil statute of limitations for children who are sexually abused.

A news conference is scheduled at 11 a.m. Monday outside the Olmsted County Government Center to discuss the details, including damages sought, said the men’s attorney, Jeff Anderson, who has represented thousands of victims of sexual abuse in high-profile cases against the Catholic Church and Penn State University, and who will lead Monday’s news conference.

The new law also allows a three-year window for past victims of childhood sexual assault to file lawsuits against the accused abuser and/or an institution that may have allowed the abuse. St. Pius X Catholic Church, the troop’s sponsor; the Boy Scouts of America; and Gamehaven Council Inc., of southeast Minnesota, are also named as defendants.

Anderson said he will introduce one of the alleged victims, who will offer a prepared statement.

According to a news release from Anderson’s office, the conference will also discuss “the failings of multiple adults involved at St. Pius X, the troop and the Boy Scouts, who received information in the early 1970s pertaining to Hokanson’s sexual abuse, and failed to act to protect the children…”

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Jeff Anderson to file sex-abuse suit against ex-Scout master, troop’s sponsor

MINNESOTA
Minneapolis Star Tribune

PAUL WALSH , Star Tribune Updated: July 19, 2013

A lawsuit to be filed next week implicates a former Boy Scout leader in the sexual abuse of two children.

St. Paul attorney Jeff Anderson said Friday that the suit will be filed Monday in Rochester against a convicted child molester, the Boy Scouts of America, the Gamehaven Scout Council and troop sponsor St. Pius X Church in Rochester.

The suit will be the first involving the Boy Scouts of America filed under the new Minnesota law that drops the civil statute of limitations and allows a three-year window for victims of childhood sexual abuse to sue their abusers and/or institutions that may have allowed the abuse. Anderson has filed similar suits against Catholic dioceses since the law took effect in May.

Anderson said the suit is being filed on behalf of two former members of Troop 210 who were abused in the 1970s by the convicted molester, who now lives in Faribault, Minn. Anderson said the man spent 22 years as a Scout leader and held other positions in the Rochester area involving youth activities.

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