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.

November 19, 2013

Scotland: parishioners walk out of Mass in protest at suspension of priest

SCOTLAND
Independent Catholic News

By: Dan Bergin, Michael Glacken
Posted: Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Scottish parishioners walked out of Mass at St John Ogilivie’s Church in High Blantyre on Sunday, in protest at the sudden dismissal of their parish priest, Father Matthew Despard the night before.

Father Despard, 48, published his book ‘Crisis in the Priesthood’ on Amazon after the resignation of Cardinal Keith O’Brien, who admit ted that he had gay relationships over a number of years and was accused by some priests of making unwanted homosexual advances towards them.

In April this year, the previous Bishop of Motherwell Bishop Joseph Devine, had said that no sanctions would be taken against Fr Despard. On Saturday Bishop Toal told the congregation that a ‘penal judicial process’ had been instituted against Fr Despard because of the book.

When acting Bishop Joseph Toal came to say Mass in the parish with Fr William Nolan, who has been appointed temporary administrator, one woman got up to speak in defence of Fr Despard. The majority of the congregation then stood up and walked out. Many were in tears. Parishioners have now begun a petition calling for Fr Despard’s reinstatement.

A spokesman for Bishop Toal said: “Since there is a canonical case in progress at the present time, Bishop Toal felt it was appropriate to remove Fr Matthew Despard from Parish Ministry until the judicial process has run its course. This action does not prejudice the case in any 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.

Diocese faces new sex assault allegations

MINNESOTA
Mankato Free Press

By Dan Nienaber
dnienaber@mankatofreepress.com

NEW ULM — A Minnetonka attorney has filed a second lawsuit against the Catholic Diocese of New Ulm, claiming officials there allowed a priest to continue working at churches under its control when they should have known he was sexually abusing teenagers.

The diocese responded to the allegations by Patrick Noaker and his client, identified as John Doe 107, with a news release listing the locations Rev. William Marks worked while he was a serving as a priest from 1936 through 1979. The diocese in New Ulm wasn’t created until 1957, but the allegations claim the boy was sexually abused from about 1957 to 1960 while he was an altar boy at the Church of St. John in Hector.

The incident will be investigated, but there is no additional information at this time, the news release said. It also said the diocese regrets the “devastating effects of sexual misconduct on the part of clergy” and that it is working diligently to provide a safe environment at its churches.

A similar response was issued after Noaker filed his first lawsuit against the diocese in June that claims another client was sexually abused by Rev. Francis Markey while Markey was serving as a substitute priest at St. Joseph Catholic Church in Henderson. The victim was about 15 years old when he was allegedly assaulted in 1982.

A third lawsuit, filed in September by another attorney, names two women who claim they were sexually assaulted by Rev. David Roney while he was serving as a priest in Willmar during the late 1960s and early 1970s.

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.

Maplewood priest charged with criminal sexual conduct, accused of fondling female parishioner

MINNESOTA
Daily Journal

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First Posted: November 19, 2013

MINNEAPOLIS — Prosecutors have charged a Maplewood priest for allegedly fondling a female parishioner while giving her spiritual guidance.

The Rev. Mark Huberty, 43, pastor of the Church of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary, was charged Tuesday in Hennepin County.

Huberty is charged with fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct, a felony. He was charged by summons and is not in custody.

According to the complaint, Huberty and the woman met in 2008 when the woman came to him for spiritual counseling.

The woman went to police in May. The priest went on leave and was removed from the church rectory in September pending the investigation.

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 sex abuse victim killed in motorcycle crash

DELAWARE
Houston Chronicle

RANDALL CHASE, Associated Press | November 19, 2013

DOVER, Del. (AP) — A Delaware man who reached a $1.7 million settlement in a priest sex abuse case has been killed in a motorcycle accident.

State police say 43-year-old Joseph Curry was riding his motorcycle at high speed Tuesday morning on U.S. 40 when he ran a red light and crashed into a utility trailer.

In 2011, Curry reached a settlement with St. Dennis parish in Galena, Md., over claims that he was molested as a boy by the late Rev. Edward Carley. Carley was one of several pedophile priest identified by the Catholic Diocese of Wilmington.

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

ANOTHER LAWSUIT FILED AGAINST SOUTHERN MN PASTOR

MINNESOTA
KDUZ

Another lawsuit has been filed against the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, by a man who claims he was one of at least 27 molested by a cleric who served in Hastings, Hector, and other southern Minnesota towns.

MNN reports the personal injury lawsuit filed on behalf of John Doe 107 names the late Revered William Marks as his abuser, and also names the Diocese of New Ulm.

Bob Schwiderski of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests says he was abused by the same priest in the early 60′s and he is appalled by the refusal of church officials to name every priest credibly accused of molesting children — referring to the story outlined in Luke 25-through-37. Schwiderski says “They have not been good Samaritans. As they have been on that path, riding their donkeys, and they see those lying at the side of the road bleeding they refuse to get off their donkeys and help those that have been harmed”.

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.

I-Team: Letters detail alleged sex abuse in diocese

RHODE ISLAND
NBC 10

Part 1 – I-Team: Letters raise questions about alleged sex abuse in diocese

[with copies of the letters]

Updated: Nov 19, 2013
By Katie Davis

PROVIDENCE –
In a recent investigation, the NBC 10 I-Team obtained through a records request 88 pages detailing sexual abuse by Rhode Island Roman Catholic priests, going back more than 30 years.

In each case, a letter detailing allegations of sexual abuse was sent to Rhode Island State Police by the Diocese of Providence.

The diocese began the practice around 2003, although there’s no legal mandate requiring the letters.

A total of 45 letters were sent to state police between 2003 and 2013.

The documents which were stamped “confidential” were heavily redacted by state police.

The names of priests were blacked out, even those people who are already dead. Dates and locations were blacked out. The names of the churches were blacked out too.

But the details that remained were stories from victims who say there were sexually assaulted, raped and told to keep quiet.

Some where children forced to engage in oral sex and were told no one would believe them.

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

Bishop Slater handed over reins to man linked to abuse

AUSTRALIA
The Morning Bulletin

Jessica Grewal 20th Nov 2013

AFTER apologising for his failure to handle child abuse claims, Grafton’s outgoing Anglican bishop Keith Slater chose as his replacement a man who for 10 years helped run the home where untold horrors were alleged to have been committed.

The revelation came yesterday, the second day of an inquiry into the Grafton diocese’s response to allegations of sexual abuse at Lismore’s North Coast Children’s Home.

Former acting registrar Anne Hywood was questioned for much of the day about her role in the events leading up to former Grafton Bishop Slater’s exit earlier this year.

She told of how she had become so concerned about the way in which Bishop Slater and then registrar and Clarence Valley councillor Pat Comben had handled allegations of sexual abuse at the home that she wrote to senior clergy members in Sydney.

She believed the pair managed claims on their own for many years, without complying with the professional standards protocol and had looked at the situation from a legal position rather than the obligation of the church.

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 planning parish closures; announcement due in September

NEW YORK
The Journal News

NEW YORK — Faced with a priest shortage and dwindling attendance, the Archdiocese of New York is looking to close and merge some parishes.

The Wall Street Journal says the archdiocese is in discussions with its 368 parishes. It expects to deliver recommendations to Cardinal Timothy Dolan by June.

The decision on closings and mergers is to be announced in September, archdiocese spokesman Joseph Zwilling said.

The archdiocese closed 21 parishes in 2007. This year, it also closed 24 Catholic schools.

The Rev. John O’Hara, who’s leading the church’s effort, says the archdiocese has many churches with attendance well below the building’s capacity, making them financially unviable. He says the Catholic church would like to spend more money on education programs.

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.

Sexual misconduct charges filed against Maplewood priest

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

by Tom Scheck, Minnesota Public Radio
November 19, 2013

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman filed criminal sexual misconduct charges Tuesday against the Rev. Mark Huberty, who served as pastor at Church of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Maplewood from 2007 until September.

According to the charges, Huberty inappropriately touched a woman under his spiritual care. They later engaged in other sexual activity over several months in the woman’s Maplewood home, at the church and in Huberty’s car.

Huberty and the woman were scheduled to go on a vacation to Kansas City in April, the complaint says. He later canceled the vacation, upsetting the victim. She later approached Huberty asking how she could stay in the church and attend mass knowing what they did together. Huberty “revealed that other women friends seemed to have no problem remaining active in the church when their relationship with him ended,” the complaint says.

The victim filed a report with the Maplewood Police Department in May after Huberty encouraged her to not tell her husband about the relationship.

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.

Lawsuit accuses former St. John’s Abbey priest of sexually abusing boy

MINNESOTA
St. Cloud Times

Written by
David Unze

ST. PAUL — A civil lawsuit filed Tuesday accuses a former St. John’s Abbey priest of sexually abusing a child at a Hastings parish where he was assigned after his superiors knew he had sexually abused a boy in Cold Spring.

The Rev. Francis “Fran” Hoefgen admitted in March 1984 that he had sexually abused a boy in the St. Boniface parish residence in Cold Spring. Hoefgen was sent to St. Luke Institute in Maryland for evaluation and treatment and never was charged criminally in Stearns County.

Officials in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis then assigned Hoefgen to a parish in Hastings, where he sexually abused another boy from 1989 to 1992, according to the lawsuit. The victim in the Hastings abuse was 10-13 at the time and is suing Hoefgen, St. John’s Abbey, St. Luke Institute and the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis.

Hoefgen’s superiors were aware of his record of abuse when they assigned him to Hastings, said attorney Jeff Anderson, who filed the lawsuit. But they did nothing to tell anyone in Hastings about it.

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

New Ulm Diocese Named in Lawsuit

MINNESOTA
KEYC

[with video]

By Mitch Keegan, Anchor, KEYC News

The Diocese of New Ulm has been named in a new lawsuit filed over alleged sexual abuse by a priest.

Minnetonka attorney Patrick Noaker filed the lawsuit in Ramsey County on behalf of a Colorado plaintiff referred to as John Doe 107.

The complaint says Father William Marks, who died in 1979, sexually abused the plaintiff while serving at the Church of St. John in Hector.

The lawsuit also names the Archdiocese of Minneapolis and St. Paul, which was Father Marks’ jurisdiction before the New Ulm Diocese was created in 1957.

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.

MN- Another priest faces criminal charges

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, Nov. 19 2013

Statement by Minnesota SNAP leader Megan Peterson (218-689-9049, Survivor19@live.com)

We are glad Father Mark Huberty faces criminal charges for sexually exploiting a parishioner. It’s virtually always hurtful – and often illegal – for clerics to have any sexual contact with a congregant.

[Pioneer Press]

If a criminal embezzles from a bank, no one talks about their “financial relationship.” So no one should ever talk about “a relationship” between a predatory priest and a parishioner. It’s a crime. It should be treated and described as a crime. It should not be minimized or mischaracterized by words or phrases that suggest consent when no genuine consent is possible.

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.

Man killed in Bear motorcycle crash was clergy sexual abuse victim

DELAWARE
The News Journal

[with video

Joseph L. Curry, one of the first victims of clergy sexual abuse to tell his story publicly in Delaware, died today when his motorcycle slammed into another vehicle on U.S. 40 near Bear.

State police say Curry, 43, of New Castle, was speeding eastbound on U.S. 40 at about 9:21 a.m. when he went through a red traffic light. Police say Thomas B. Christy, 50, of West Chester, Pa., was turning left onto U.S. 40 from Church Road in a 2006 GMC Sierra pickup truck with a utility trailer behind it.

The motorcycle struck the side of the utility trailer, pinning both Curry and the motorcycle underneath it, according to state police spokesman Sgt. Paul Shavack.

Curry was taken to Christiana Hospital Trauma Center, where he was pronounced dead. Christy was not injured.

Curry was among dozens of abuse victims who filed suit against the Catholic Diocese of Wilmington under provisions of the 2007 Child Victims Act. The Delaware law made it possible for those whose cases would otherwise be barred by the statute of limitations to file suit in civil court.

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

Lawsuit: St. John’s priest admitted abuse, returned to ministry

MINNESOTA
KMSP

ST. PAUL, Minn. (KMSP) –
A Minnesota man filed a lawsuit Tuesday against St. John’s Abbey, the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and the St. Luke Institute, alleging they should have known the priest who abused him was a sexual predator.

The lawsuit claims Rev. Fran Hoefgen sexually abused the victim between 1989 and 1993, when he was 10 to 13 years old. The alleged abuse occurred during Rev. Hoefgen’s tenure at St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Catholic Church in Hastings, Minn.

The lawsuit alleges the defendants should have known Hoefgen was a danger to children because he sexually abused another boy at the St. Boniface School in Cold Spring, Minn. in 1983.

Hoefgen confessed to the St. Boniface abuse in a signed statement to police, but was never charged. Instead, the priest was sent to the St. Luke Institute for mental health evaluation, then returned ministry.

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

Retired minister found guilty of sexual offences

CANADA
The Record

By Record staff

A retired Anglican priest from Cambridge has been found guilty of sex offences dating back almost 25 years.

Rev. George Ferris, 66, faced two counts of sexual assault and one count of sexual exploitation in connection with offences that took place in Brant County between 1983 and 1989.

His trial in October was held in Ontario Court in Brantford. The Brantford Expositor reports a 42-year-old witness testified he was molested over several years from the age of about 13, in a situation that escalated from embraces to oral and anal sex. The court was also told the witness asked Ferris for “hush” money in 2006, and received $5,000 deposited in his bank account.

Ferris served at St. James’ Anglican Church on Ellis Road in Cambridge for about nine years until his retirement at the end of December 2010. He served as interim priest at St. James’ Anglican Church in Ingersoll in 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.

Maplewood priest had affair with female parishioner, charges say

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 11/19/2013

Prosecutors have charged a Maplewood priest with criminal sexual conduct, alleging he had a sexual relationship with a female parishioner while giving her spiritual guidance.

Mark Andrew Huberty, 43, of the Church of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary, was charged Tuesday in Hennepin County District Court.

While meeting regularly with the woman to discuss issues raised in her catechism classes, Huberty asked her to be his friend, according to the criminal complaint.

Huberty “explained that a rule of their friendship was that any touching would be above the waist and over clothing,” and began to regularly visit her in her home, the complaint said.

As time went on, Huberty began to slip his hands under the woman’s pants and fondle her buttocks, as well as fondle her breast while hugging her, the complaint said. The behavior progressed to Huberty asking the woman to stroke his genitals, charges said.

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

Archdiocese Facing New Allegations Of Priest Abuse

MINNESOTA
WCCO

MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO/AP) — The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis is facing new accusations of child sexual abuse by a priest.

Those claims are part of a new lawsuit filed by a Twin Cities man who said he was molested by Father Francis Hoefgen, who had already admitted to sexually abusing children. Lawyers held a news conference Tuesday on the matter and are asking the church to hand over more information.

The plaintiff in this suit wants the names of clerics and priests who have been credibly accused of molesting children. Attorneys named the priest at the center of this lawsuit, Hoefgen, and explained why he should not have still been in the priesthood.

The lawsuit filed Tuesday says Rev. Francis Hoefgen molested the man from 1989 through 1992 when the victim was 10 to 13 years old. Hoefgen was at St. Elizabeth Ann Seton church at the time.

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.

Probe concludes: Vatican envoy sexually abused 5 Dominican boys

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
Dominican Today

Santo Domingo.- The Justice Ministry on Monday said it concluded the investigation into ousted Vatican envoy Jozef Wesolowski with depositions from five victims.

It said the prelate’s case file and has medical exams were sent to the Vatican, with taped the testimony from some of the victims, as well as statements from the deacon Francisco Javier Occis, who was allegedly aware of the Catholic bishop’s actions and affirmed he had intercourse with Wesolowski.

Among the victims is a boy who is18 years of age today, but was abused for several years when he was a minor.

In his deposition, the deacon said that “he (Wesolowski) apparently smoked and took passes (snorted cocaine). He never did it in front of me. He bought the drug on the street,”

The Pope has the audios by the victims and the versions of the deacon.

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.

Back to the Future for the Catholic Church?

UNITED STATES
LA Progressive

By John MacMurray

“As it was in the beginning, it now and ever shall be…” pretty much sums up what most of us know about the history of the Catholic Church; it’s always just sort of been there just like it is.

And priests have always been celibate, so stories about young parishioners being molested have been part of Church history since, well, since forever.

Not so, in fact.

The Roman Catholic Church has changed greatly over its long life, and one of the points that has changed is the issue of celibacy for the Clergy.

Until about the 13th century, celibacy was seen as optional.

In fact, most priests and other officials in the early Church were married. The first 39 Popes, from St. Peter (AD32-AD67) to St. Anastasius I (AD399-AD401), were married. During this time also, women were ordained to the priesthood; but that came to an end in AD494.

It was 13th Century Medieval politics that forced the issue. The Church leadership decided that the best way for it to stay out of the nepotism and succession problems was to have an unmarried clergy that was not involved in the fights.

This might be a good time to explain the difference between priests and clerics. A priest is engaged in a vocation of service, a spiritual calling from God. A cleric occupies an organizational position in the institutional church. A man can be a priest without being a cleric.

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.

Diocese named in another suit over alleged clergy abuse

MINNESOTA
The Journal

November 19, 2013
By Kevin Sweeney – Journal Editor , The Journal

NEW ULM – The Diocese of New Ulm has been named as a defendant in a second lawsuit that accuses the diocese of failing to protect parishioners from sexual abuse from a priest that it should have known was a sexual predator.

The lawsuit was filed in Ramsey County Monday on behalf of a defendant identified as John Doe 107, now an adult residing in Colorado. The suit names the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and the Diocese of New Ulm.

The lawsuit claims the plaintiff was sexually abused by the Rev. William J. Marks, who was a priest in the two dioceses from 1948 to 1979. Marks, who died in November 1979, was assigned to parishes including St. Dionysus in Tyler, St. John’s Catholic Church in Hector, and St. Clotilde in Green Valley. All were located within the Archdiocese until 1959, when the Diocese of New Ulm was formed.

The suit alleges that the plaintiff was abused by Fr. Marks from 1957 to 1960, when he was 10 to 14 years old and served as an altar boy at St. John’s in Hector. The plaintiff said Marks would hug the boy hard, and slide his hands into and over the boy’s pants, usually before and after mass when the boy was changing into or out of his altar boy robes.

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.

What Tommy Said (Or: Saving The Furniture)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

Abuses at the North Coast Children’s Home have been detailed to the third “case study” hearing of the Australian Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in Sydney this week. The institution was run by the Anglican Church (known elsewhere as the Episcopalian Church or the Church of England), although their officials have denied this, claiming it was, in fact, run by a committee, and therefore the church was not morally or legally responsible for what happened there.

The audacity of the church’s attempts to deny responsibility can be shown by the inclusion of the sign on the main gate to the Home (pictured above) clearly identifying the “Church of England” (as the Anglican Church was then known). The above photo was tended to the enquiry as evidence.

An insight into Phillip Aspinall’s (see previous posting) church’s duplicity was given by the testimony, today, of lawyer, Simon Harrison, who represented some of the victims. He testified that the way the Anglican Church dealt with the claims was the most “scurrilous and mean-minded” he has ever seen. He said that a lawyer for the Grafton diocese, Peter Roland, claimed there were limited funds for Mr Harrison’s clients.

“He was pleading poverty, but I have seen that so many times with churches I just took it as a matter of course. Out of all the claims I’ve dealt with over quite a few years, the way this was dealt with by the church was perhaps the most scurrilous and mean-minded attitude I’d ever come across quite frankly.” When Mr Harrison represented a former resident, known only as CA, who sought compensation after the group settlement had been reached in 2007, he was told the North Coast Children’s Home file was closed.

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.

O’Malley and Curia reform

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

In an interview with the National Catholic Register, the Archbishop of Boston says “the Church is not a democracy” but a place of “dialogue and prayer”

MARCO TOSATTI
ROME

In two weeks’ time, the international group of eight cardinals Bergoglio chose to advise him on Curia reform will be holding their second meeting to discuss the progress of the work being done. The process of reform will not necessarily be a quick one: Paul VI’s reforms were several years in the making and even John Paul II’s Curia, which was decidedly smaller, took about two years to reform completely. After December’s meeting and another meeting in February on the occasion of the Consistory announced for the feast of the Chair of St. Peter, there will be yet another, apparently informal, meeting between members of the College of Cardinals. During this meeting it is likely that cardinals will at least be given some general guide lines. For now, very little information has been given about concrete plans.

The interview the Archbishop of Boston, Cardinal Sean O’Malley gave a few days ago to the National Catholic Register doesn’t seem to provide any clues either. “As has been announced, there is a desire to reform the curia, to make it more at the service of the Holy Father and the local Churches. The goal is to make the curia more efficient and thus to allow the Holy Father to govern more effectively. It is important to review the functions of the dicasteries and pontifical councils, to see how they can work better.”

Then there is the question of internationalisation, a subject which has been debated for many years and which has been dealt with at the top levels of the Catholic Church (this is the third non-Italian Pope in a row) but perhaps not so much at other levels. “The Church has grown so much and is more international. So there is a desire to internationalize the curia to some extent. That could be difficult, however, because of linguistic challenges and the need for people to live in Rome.”

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.

El plan de la Iglesia colombiana para atacar la pederastia

COLOMBIA
El Tiempo

[Summary: Obeying Vatican orders, the Colombian Catholic Church has begun taking measures to avoid child sexual abuse by priests.]

Denuncias ante las autoridades civiles y un mayor filtro en los seminarios, parte de las medidas.

Obedeciendo a órdenes vaticanas, la Iglesia Católica colombiana empezó a impartir una lista de medidas con las que se busca evitar casos de abusos sexuales a niños por parte de sus sacerdotes.

Se trata de una serie de decretos, producto de una asamblea plenaria de obispos realizada en junio pasado –con instrucciones de la Santa Sede que surgieron desde el pontificado de Benedicto XVI- que ya están siendo implementados en varias jurisdicciones eclesiásticas del país. Las primeras son las diócesis de Ibagué y Espinal (Tolima), Tunja (Boyacá) y Girardota (Antioquia) pero las demás se irán sumando paulatinamente.

En general, estas medidas prometen que habrá tolerancia cero con los sacerdotes involucrados en casos de pederastia. Según monseñor José Daniel Falla, secretario general de la Conferencia Episcopal, se busca establecer una política integral de protección a los menores de edad para prevenir, investigar y sancionar eventuales delitos sexuales en las instituciones de la Iglesia.

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.

Plucking The Demon Out Of One Eye

SPRINGFIELD (IL)
The American Conservative

By ROD DREHER • November 16, 201

… while leaving a legion of them in one’s own:

Bishop Thomas Paprocki of Springfield, Illinois has announced that he will conduct prayers of exorcism at the city’s cathedral on November 20, the date when Illinois Governor Pat Quinn will sign into law a bill recognizing same-sex marriage.

In a statement released by the Springfield diocese, Bishop Paprocki explained that the ritual of exorcism is designed not only for cases of demonic possession, but also for circumstances when the work of the devil is evident in public activities “and in various forms of opposition to and persecution of the Church.”

I’ll bet there’s not a bit of difference between my view of SSM and Bishop Paprocki’s. But I wonder if Bishop Paprocki has publicly exorcised his chancery. From a 2006 investigation then-Bishop Lucas ordered into his predecessor’s behavior:

Bishop Ryan engaged in sexual misconduct with adults and used his authority to conceal this misconduct. Although denied by Bishop Ryan, this behavior did occur and caused scandal in the Church by leading others to do evil. It resulted in feelings of hurt and anger, as well as thoughts of doubt and mistrust both in the Church as an institution and in its leaders. There is anecdotal evidence of local Catholics abandoning the faith as a result of that behavior. Bishop Ryan no longer resides in the diocese and no longer participates in public ministry.

From the Catholic News Service’s report on the results of the investigation:

Retired Springfield Bishop “engaged in improper sexual conduct and used his office to conceal his activities” when he headed the diocese, said an investigative report released by the diocese Aug. 2.

It said Springfield’s bishop from 1984 to 1999, fostered “a culture of secrecy … that discouraged faithful priests from coming forward with information about misconduct” by other clergy in the diocese.

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.

Nienstedt throws “PR ploy” task force under the bus

MINNESOTA
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on November 19, 2013

On October 5, the Archdiocese of St. Paul & Minneapolis, which has been mired in a sex abuse and cover-up crisis, announced that an “independent” task force will convene to investigate how archdiocese officials handled abuse allegations, as well as review policies and procedures in place.
.
The official announcement stated that “The Vicar [Fr. Reginald Whitt] and the task force, which will convene this week, will have full authority and all the resources needed to complete their work. The findings and recommendations of this task force will be released publicly when the final report is complete.”

Then, less than two weeks later in a letter to clergy, Rev. Reginald Whitt wrote “Access to these files will be within my control, and limited only to what is necessary for the Task Force to be able to make an informed decision with respect to their policy review.”

Sound familiar? It’s the same tactic that bishops have been using with lay review boards for years: make a big announcement about being “open and transparent,” appoint a review board, then, when media attention dies down, tie the board members’ hands behind their back and throw them under the bus.

It’s public relations, nothing more.

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: Synod questionnaire an opportunity to hear from the people

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

NCR Editorial Staff | Nov. 19, 2013

EDITORIAL

The documents we reprinted as a pullout in the center of the Nov. 22-Dec. 5 issue of the newspaper were sent to NCR by someone who feared the questionnaire from the Vatican about next year’s Synod of Bishops on the family wouldn’t get as wide a distribution as intended, at least here in the United States. The bishops of England and Wales put the questionnaire online for all to examine and respond to, but the instructions from the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops didn’t seem to push for widest possible distribution.

NCR posted the documents online Oct. 31. At first, a couple church officials said NCR was making too much of this questionnaire — “We get requests like this all the time. We’ll handle it in the usual manner,” they said. The Vatican spokesman, Jesuit Fr. Federico Lombardi, told another news outlet Nov. 2 that it is “only a document sent to bishops’ conferences” and a part of the habitual “praxis” of the Synod of Bishops. To say the document was more than that, he said, was “not true.”

But on Nov. 5, the Vatican had called a news conference to explain the documents and it too posted them online. The Synod of Bishops’ general secretary, Archbishop Lorenzo Baldisseri, said he expected pastors would provide summaries of the views and experiences of their parishioners, and that their findings would be “channeled” in turn through national bishops’ conferences for ultimate consideration by the synod. However, he also welcomed individual Catholics to communicate directly with the synod’s offices at the Vatican. Synod staff would consider that input for the synod’s working document, which should be published in May 2014, he said.

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TX – New Ft. Worth bishop named; SNAP responds

FORT WORTH (TX)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, Nov. 19, 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 )

Msgr. Michael F. Olson has been named the bishop of the Ft. Worth Catholic diocese.

[Star-Telegram]

We are glad every time a newly named bishop comes from outside a chancery office. Olson is no “outsider.” But we are encouraged because his last position wasn’t inside a diocesan headquarters.

Still, we urge Ft. Worth citizens and Catholics to be skeptical. Vigilance protects kids. Complacency protects no one. So while it’s tempting to give the new guy “the benefit of the doubt,” we urge parishioners and the public to report known and suspected clergy sexual misdeeds to secular officials, not church officials.

There are 12 publicly accused Ft. Worth child molesting clerics (according to BishopAccountability.org). We suspect the real number us three or four or five times higher. We hope the new bishop will scour the files and disclose the names, photos, whereabouts and work histories of every proven, admitted and credibly accused child molesting cleric who lives/lived or works/worked in the diocese (whether living or deceased, religious order or diocesan). And we hope he will update the list regularly and publicly.

Finally, we hope he will aggressively seek out others who saw, suspected or suffered child sex crimes by Father William Paiz. Last year, Fr. Paiz was accused of assaulting a child at All Saints Catholic Church, St. George Catholic Church and other locations. He worked at Nolan High School.

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Seminary rector named bishop of Fort Worth, Texas

FORT WORTH (TX)
National Catholic Reporter

Dennis Coday | Nov. 19, 2013 NCR Today

This is a press release from the U.S. bishops’ conference this morning:

Pope names seminary rector bishop of Fort Worth, Texas

November 19, 2013

WASHINGTON—Pope Francis has named Msgr. Michael Olson, 47, a priest of the Diocese of Fort Worth, Texas and rector of Holy Trinity Seminary at the University of Dallas in Irving, Texas, as bishop of Fort Worth.

The appointment was publicized in Washington, November 19, by Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, apostolic nuncio to the United States.

He succeeds Bishop Kevin Vann, who was named bishop of Orange, California, September 21, 2012.

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Good News for Fort Worth

FORT WORTH (TX)
National Catholic Reporter

Michael Sean Winters | Nov. 19, 2013 Distinctly Catholic

“Il Santo Padre Francesco ha nominato Vescovo di Fort Worth (U.S.A.) Mons. Michael F. Olson, del clero della medesima diocesi, finora Rettore del Seminario Holy Trinity a Irving, Texas.”

Placet! I remember Bishop-elect Olson when he was a Basselin Scholar at Theological College when I was also an inmate there. He was very smart and very, very funny. I also like the idea of bishops being chosen from within a diocese, not always, but a good candidate should not be excluded simply because he is a priest of the diocese in question. The good people of Ft. Worth are getting a very good man as their bishop. Ad multos annos!

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Latest Vatican Reform Has Scores of Priests Returning to Their Dioceses

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Register

by ANDREA GAGLIARDUCCI/CNA 11/19/2013

VATICAN CITY — At least 30 priests employed in Vatican departments may be removed from their posts and sent to dioceses in the following months, according to three different Vatican sources.
“The Congregation for Clergy will be the first of the list,” a Vatican source familiar with the congregation told CNA.

Four priests employed in the congregation have been called to serve in dioceses. Among them is Msgr. Luciano Alimandi, who had been private secretary for a number of years to the department’s former head Cardinal Dario Castrillon Hoyos.

According to the source, Msgr. Alimandi and the other three were “all part of the Cardinal Mauro Piacenza’s inner circle.” He was prefect of the Congregation for Clergy until last September.

Cardinal Piacenza was appointed to lead the Vatican’s Apostolic Penitentiary tribunal on Sept. 21. Archbishop Beniamino Stella replaced him as prefect for the Congregation of the Clergy.

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Lawsuit: Priest admitted abuse but stayed active

MINNESOTA
Westport News

By AMY FORLITI, Associated Press
Updated 12:48 pm, Tuesday, November 19, 2013

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — A Minnesota man who claims he was sexually abused by a priest in Hastings is suing the Twin Cities archdiocese, St. John’s Abbey, and a center that treats clergy with psychological issues.

The lawsuit filed Tuesday says Rev. Francis Hoefgen molested the man from 1989 through 1992 when the victim was 10 to 13 years old. Hoefgen was at St. Elizabeth Ann Seton church at the time.

The lawsuit alleges defendants should have known Hoefgen was a danger because he molested another boy in 1983 at St. Boniface rectory in Cold Spring. Hoefgen admitted the abuse to police in a signed statement but wasn’t charged.

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Abuse allegation against deceased priest credible

MICHIGAN
The Mining Journal

MARQUETTE – Officials of the Catholic Diocese of Marquette have deemed credible a recent allegation of sexual abuse of a minor made against a deceased religious order priest from Belgium.

The allegation was lodged against the Rev. Bernard (“Father Ben”) Van der Schueren, S.J., a priest of the Society of Jesus, commonly called the Jesuits. The complaint deals with an incident involving a boy that happened during July of 1989 when Van der Schueren filled in for a diocesan priest at St. Michael Parish in Marquette, according to a press release from the diocese.

Van der Schueren died in 2009 at the age of 86.

As soon as the allegation was received, diocesan officials immediately began following the Diocese of Marquette’s Policy on Sexual Misconduct in Ministry, the release said. In keeping with that policy, the complaint was referred to Jesuit leadership, in this case, the Chicago-Detroit Province.

In addition, the Office of the Administrator of the Diocese of Marquette informed the Diocesan Review Board for the Protection of Children and Young People of the complaint, and the diocesan attorney reported the allegation to the Marquette County Prosecutor’s Office.

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Ex-Hastings priest living in Anoka County named in abuse suit

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 11/19/2013

A former Hastings priest and St. John’s Abbey were among those named Tuesday in a lawsuit by a Minnesota man who alleges the priest sexually abused him after “graduating” from a sex-offender treatment facility.

The alleged victim, now in his 30s, also sued the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis and the treatment facility, Saint Luke Institute of Silver Springs, MD.

Rev. Francis Hoefgen admitted to police in 1984 that he sexually abused a minor, then was assigned the next year to St. Elizabeth Ann Seton in Hastings after an evaluation at the institute, said the plaintiff’s attorney, Jeff Anderson, of St. Paul, in a statement.

It was at St. Elizabeth Ann Seton that Hoefgen sexually abused the plaintiff, identified as John Doe 27.

Hoefgen, a member of St. John’s Abbey, remained in ministry until 1992, serving in Cold Spring, Minn., as well as Hastings, Anderson said. Public records show him living currently in Columbia Heights. He was only 42 when his priestly assignments ended.

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Suit says St. Luke clergy treatment center failed to protect victims

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: TONY KENNEDY , Star Tribune Updated: November 19, 2013

Tuesday’s lawsuit claims prominent clergy treatment center and archdiocese concealed threat to minors.

Lawyers filed suit Tuesday morning in St. Paul against a Catholic-run treatment facility that cared for an abusive priest who then was sent to a new parish where he allegedly targeted a 10-year-old boy for years of repeated abuse.

Jeff Anderson, the St. Paul attorney who filed the suit on behalf of “Doe 27,” said it is the first lawsuit under Minnesota’s new Child Victims Act to name St. Luke Institute as a defendant. The facility in Silver Spring, Md., has been a popular destination for the treatment of Minnesota Catholic monks and priests who have been accused of sexual abuse of children, other sexual misconduct and addiction. The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and St. John’s Abbey in Collegeville are also being sued on behalf of Doe 27.

Coupled with a separate sexual abuse lawsuit filed Monday on behalf of a victim of another priest, the archdiocese has been sued at least 21 times since the Child Victims Act lifted the statute of limitations for childhood sexual abuse cases and gave past victims a three-year window to bring previously barred claims.

Susan Gibbs, a spokeswoman for St. Luke Institute, said she had not seen the lawsuit and had no immediate comment. The archdiocese could not be reached immediately for comment.

According to the latest complaint, the Rev. Francis Hoefgen, now 63, openly admitted to police in Cold Spring, Minn., that he sexually abused a 17-year-old boy while assigned to St. Boniface of Cold Spring in 1983. Then-Abbot Jerome Theisen, who was in charge of monks and priests from St. John’s Abbey, learned of the abuse in March 1984 and directed him to St. Luke’s, where he resided for about six months.

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Assignment Record – Rev. Brion T. Ares

WORCESTER (MA)
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: Ares was a priest of the Worcester diocese, ordained in 1987. He was was indicted in late 1993 on charges of rape and indecent assault on a male youth who had gone to him for counseling. The case ended in a mistrial when the jury couldn’t reach a verdict. Ares died in 1998.

Ordained: 1987

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Gallup’s victim tally rivals dioceses ten times larger

GALLUP (NM)
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on November 19, 2013

Months after the Diocese of Gallup announced intentions to seek bankruptcy protection, Gallup Bishop James Wall FINALLY filed a declaration with the federal bankruptcy court to officially begin the process.

Why the delay? Why were James Wall and church officials stalling? Perhaps it was this astonishing revelation:

Bishop Wall says in his declaration that there are 105 victims of sexual abuse in the Diocese of Gallup. According to the Gallup Independent, those survivors are alive.

When you compare the number of victims in Gallup with other dioceses, the shocking nature of the numbers is clear:

According to Catholic-Hierarchy.org, in 2006 (the last year that numbers were available), there were 60,000 Catholics in the Diocese of Gallup. The total population was 470,000.
Now, let’s compare:

In 2003, California opened a one-year civil window for victims of child sexual abuse. During that year, 97 victims came forward in the Diocese of Orange. At the time, there were 1,280,159 Catholics in Orange. The total population was slightly over 3 million.

That same year a little farther south, 150 victims came forward and filed child sex abuse and cover-up lawsuits against the Diocese of San Diego. That year, there were approximately 919,000 Catholics in that diocese. Total population was 3.1 million.

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Defence questions memory, motivation of priest’s alleged sex abuse victims

CANADA
CTV

The Canadian Press
Published Tuesday, November 19, 2013

IQALUIT, Nunavut — The defence lawyer for a priest facing dozens of sex abuse charges involving Inuit children is questioning the memory and motivation of the complainants.

Malcolm Kempt has cross-examined a woman who says Eric Dejaeger taped her face-down by her wrists and feet to a bed frame and violated her when she was a little girl.

Kempt asked the witness what Dejaeger was wearing at the time and requested she outline specific events around the attack.

Canada allowed priest charged with sex abuse to leave the country: church leader
He also queried her about a $16,000 out-of-court settlement she got from the Catholic Church.
Kempt has said the memory and credibility of alleged victims about events 30 years ago are key to Dejaeger’s defence.

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MN – Victims applaud suit vs. Catholic center

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday November 19, 2013

Statement by Barbara Dorris, Outreach Director, 314-862-7688 SNAPdorris@gmail.com

An unusual new clergy child sex abuse and cover up suit charges that a Catholic facility is negligent for enabling predator priests to be put back on the job, sometimes even after the clerics admit to sexually assaulting kids. We applaud this novel approach. Kids are safer when all institutions the protect pedophiles are held responsible, not just the sex offenders’ direct supervisors.

[Anderson Advocates]

This is the second time in a week that a Twin Cities area predator priest who admitted molesting kids and was put back on the job is in the news. (The other: Fr. Clarence Vavra)

St. Luke’s has evaluated and housed hundreds of credibly accused child molesting clerics, enabling them to flee and stay hidden, often until a controversy blows over. It has likely seen more priests accused of molesting kids than any other church facility, and has dealt with many of the most notorious serial clergy predators.

St. Luke’s has often refused to tell police when its “patients” tell its “therapists” about child sex crimes. St. Luke officials claim they are not legally required to make such reports.

In many cases, predators have left St. Luke’s and been assigned to a parish only to continue molesting children.

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Diocese: 105 clergy sex abuse survivors?

NEW MEXICO
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, NM, Nov. 18, 2013

By Elizabeth Hardin-Burrola
Independent correspondent
religion@gallupindependent.com

ALBUQUERQUE — For more than a decade, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Gallup has declined to specify how many alleged victims have come forward with allegations of clergy sex abuse.

But during the diocese’s first hearing in U.S. Bankruptcy Court on Friday — mixed into the courtroom’s opening discussion of how to keep the diocese operational and how the Chapter 11 process will begin to move forward — a startling number emerged against the backdrop of mundane details. It was a number that was repeatedly referenced in discussions about mailing lists, notices that had to be sent, and names and addresses that had to be kept confidential.

Based on statements made by Judge David T. Thuma, as well as by attorneys for both the diocese and for some of the abuse survivors, apparently 105 people have come forward and said they are survivors of clergy sex abuse in the diocese. That number includes people who have already signed financial settlements with the diocese in the past, people who came forward with allegations but did not seek settlements and those who have current claims against the diocese.

Because the 105 names are included on the case’s confidential mailing list, presumably all 105 individuals are still living.

This figure significantly boosts any previous estimates as to the total number of clergy sex abuse victims in the Gallup Diocese. A number of alleged victims are deceased, including some who have committed suicide and others who have died of alcohol and drug abuse, based on past reporting. It is also possible that more abuse survivors could come forward.

As part of the Chapter 11 process, a “bar date” deadline will be set. Abuse survivors who want to file a claim against the Gallup Diocese must come forward by that date.

According to the hearing Friday, the court will be approving a plan to provide notice to abuse survivors and the public, and a creditors’ committee will be formed. In church bankruptcy cases, the creditors’ committees generally have five to seven members who are clergy sex abuse survivors.

Also Friday, Thuma ruled that employees of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Gallup can continue to be paid and receive benefits during bankruptcy protection proceedings.

For those interested in reading the documents the Diocese of Gallup initially filed in bankruptcy court, they are available for download via the Voice of the Southwest website. They are located in the “News” section under the headline “Chapter 11 Filing: Documents from November 12 and 13.”

— The Associated Press contributed to this story
Online: www.voiceofthesouthwest.org/category/news/

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CA – Victims want bishop to admit few allegations are false

CALIFORNIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday November 19, 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 )

We are worried that some victims of child sex crimes will be even more afraid to report predators in light of the damage award in the recent case involving a Catholic school teacher.

[NBC Bay Area]

It’s extremely tough for men, women and kids who were sexually assaulted as children to speak up, get help, expose wrongdoers, protect others and start healing. Most victims never tell of the horror they endured. So most predators are never charged, convicted or jailed. And so the horrific cycle of violence and pain continues, and millions of children’s lives are shattered every year.

One way to help end this tragedy is to make it easier, not harder, for victims to disclose their suffering and pursue their perpetrators.

Again, we fear this $362,000 award will scare more already-wounded and struggling victims into staying silent.

So we call on San Jose Bishop Patrick J. McGrath to educate his flock about how rare false abuse allegations are leveled against Catholic employees.

The overwhelming majority of child sex abuse charges against Catholic officials are legitimate.

Consider:

–According to BishopAccountability.org: “Fewer than 2 percent of sexual abuse allegations against the Catholic church appear to be false.”

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Bishop’s declaration telegraphs legal intent

NEW MEXICO
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, NM, Nov. 14, 2013

By Elizabeth Hardin-Burrola
Independent correspondent
religion@gallupindependent.com

ALBUQUERQUE — The Diocese of Gallup filed its petition for Chapter 11 reorganization in Albuquerque’s U.S. Bankruptcy Court late Tuesday, after claiming mounting clergy sex abuse claims forced the decision.

The diocese’s newly hired bankruptcy attorneys are set to appear before Judge David T. Thuma for an emergency hearing Friday morning to ask the court to approve a number of motions to keep the diocese operating. Included in the motions are requests to use existing bank accounts and cash management system, prohibit utility service providers from discontinuing services and the payment of wages to its employees.

The diocese, incorporated in both New Mexico and Arizona, filed more than 400 pages of documents. Listed creditors include a couple of banks, a number of local and national utility companies and about 50 employees, including six priests out of the 38 priests reported to be working in the diocese. It is unclear why the remaining priests are not listed as employees.

The main creditors are expected to be individuals with clergy sex abuse claims against the diocese. Currently, 13 men and women, represented by attorneys Robert E. Pastor, of Phoenix, and John C. Manly, of Irvine, Calif., have filed clergy sex abuse lawsuits against the diocese in Arizona’s Coconino County Superior Court. The diocese has said there are another eight pending claims not in litigation, and it expects more claims to be filed. Pastor and Manly are listed as attorneys for tort claimants, as is Houston attorney Richard T. Fass.

Bishop’s declaration

“I believe it is in everyone’s best interests to move the Reorganization Case expeditiously to conclusion,” Gallup Bishop James S. Wall stated in a declaration document he filed supporting the petition. “Otherwise, estate assets will be consumed with the costs of the Chapter 11 as opposed to being primarily used to compensate those who have been harmed.”

Wall admitted the diocese “will be challenged just to pay the costs of administration of the Reorganization Case, without regard to funding a plan to compensate those who have been abused.”

Certainly the diocese’s bankruptcy attorneys — who charge hundreds of dollars per hour — might walk away from the Chapter 11 with more money than any claimant who was sexually abused as a child by a Gallup priest.

Those attorneys are Susan Bowell, Elizabeth Fella and Lori Winkelman, of Quarles & Brady in Tucson, Ariz., and Thomas D. Walker, of Walker & Associates in Albuquerque. Boswell, the top bankruptcy attorney, has previously represented other Roman Catholic dioceses.

In addition, the diocese hired Keegan, Linscott & Kenon, a Tucson tax, accounting and business consulting firm, after its chief financial officer, Deacon James Hoy, resigned just two months before the Chapter 11 announcement was made.

Bankruptcy strategy

Where the diocese will be getting the money to pay these attorneys, accountants and creditors was not explained by the bishop in his declaration document. However, the bishop appears to hint at the diocese’s bankruptcy strategy through the following points:

-Wall claims the Gallup Diocese is the poorest Roman Catholic diocese in the country.

-Wall emphasizes the large Native American population in the diocese’s geographic area even though the majority of Catholics in the diocese are Hispanic and Anglo, and the majority of Native Americans are not Catholic.

-Wall offers considerable explanation as to how the Gallup Diocese and its parishes “are separate ecclesiastical entities in their own right” and that their debts and assets are separate from each other. The only exception to that is St. Anthony’s Parish in McNary, Ariz., which “simply does not have the resources to support itself,” Wall states.

-Wall states, “The diocesan bishop … does not have the right to possess, sell, encumber or otherwise dispose of parish property.”

-Wall also states that although in many instances the Diocese of Gallup is listed on the deeds to parish property as the title holder, this “does not reflect the true ownership of the property.”

-Wall admits that shortly before the diocese filed the Chapter 11 petition, he and a representative of every parish “executed and caused to be recorded in the public records of the county in which the real property was located a notice of the trust relationship” between the diocese and the parish. Wall said this was done in “order to avoid any confusion about the ownership” of parish property.

-Wall continues to claim most of the clergy abuse allegations date back to the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s even though a number of publicly accused abusers remained in ministry in the 1980s and 1990s and last decade.

In contrast, although the bishop has stated the need for Chapter 11 reorganization was caused by rising numbers of clergy sex abuse claims, Wall, in his submitted document, does not provide any information about the names of the clergy sex abusers whose crimes against children led the diocese into bankruptcy court, nor does he offer information about the total number of alleged victims who have come forward or the total number of abuse allegations.

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Nunavut court: Dejaeger trial opens with disturbing tales of child rape, bestiality

CANADA
Nunatsiaq Online

DAVID MURPHY

The Nunavut Court of Justice heard stories of child rape, bestiality and defecation as a means to escape sexual assault on Nov. 18, day one of the Eric Dejaeger trial in Iqaluit.

A lean Dejaeger, 66, showed up in court wearing a shaggy grey beard hanging down to his chest and blue standard-issue prison garb.

At the start of the day’s sitting, Dejaeger pleaded guilty to eight charges of indecent assault.

That leaves 69 more charges, most of them sex-related allegations involving minors, to be tried before Justice Robert Kilpatrick, who is sitting alone without a jury.

Reporters and supporter witnesses packed the courtroom to hear from three witnesses whose evidence is related to nine of the 69 charges.

The trial began with a witness who testifying about her experience with “Father Eric” inside the Catholic church in Igloolik between 1978 and 1982.

None of the witnesses may be indentified.

The first witness said Dejaeger put his hand into her pants and stroked her vagina under her underwear while she sat on his lap in the mass area of St. Stephen’s church.

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Belgian activist in Nunavut court to complete her work on Eric Dejaeger

CANADA
Nunatsiaq Online

BY DAVID MURPHY)

Father Eric Dejaeger might not be sitting in an Iqaluit courtroom this week if it hadn’t been for the work of Godelieve Halsberghe.

She’s the person who discovered Dejaeger had been living and working in Belgium for 15 years in spite of outstanding arrest warrants against him issued in Nunavut and by Interpol.

This ultimately led to the priest’s return to Canada to face numerous sex charges, most of them flowing from his stay in Igloolik in the later 1970s and early 1980s.

That was in 2010. Now her niece, Lieve Halsberghe, is visiting Iqaluit to see her aunt’s work completed.

“She gave me this file and I took it on and I have to finish,” Halsberghe said in an interview with Nunatsiaq News.

She’s travelled more than 7,500 kilometers to get from Beligum to Iqaluit to attend Dejaeger’s trial, which began Nov. 18.

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Editorial – Tuesday, November 19: Good move, poor timing

AUSTRALIA
Daily Examiner

Jenna Cairney 19th Nov 2013

IT MAY have been coincidence rather than conniving but neither is really good enough.

I’m talking about the timing of the announcement of the new bishop of the Grafton Diocese.

The timing of the announcement on the first day of the public inquiry’s hearing into evidence of child abuse at the Anglican Church’s North Coast Children’s Home was insensitive.

By all accounts the evidence heard yesterday was harrowing and heartbreaking.

It’s hard to think of adults breaking down in the witness stand recounting what they had to endure as children.

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Police treatment of alleged abuse victim discussed

UNITED KINGDOM
Channel Online

The police treatment of a disabled woman who claimed she was abused by a church warden in Jersey is being discussed by politicians today.

Back in March, the island’s Dean was suspended for failing to properly investigate the allegations by the 26-year-old disabled woman.

Jersey comes under the Diocese of Winchester which has clear safeguarding procedures on what to do when allegations of abuse are made against a church worker.

The disabled woman – known as HG – claimed a church warden had abused her, but the independent review found that the Very Rev Key did not properly handle the complaint.

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$2.4 Million Jury Award in Priest Abuse Case

DELAWARE
Delmarva Public Radio

By DON RUSH

WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) – A federal jury in Delaware has awarded $2.4 million to a New Jersey man who claimed he was abused as a boy more than 30 years ago by a cleric who worked in the Archdiocese of New York.

Forty-four-year-old Brian Elliott said he was repeatedly molested by Brother Damian Galligan in several states, including while passing through Delaware during a trip to Virginia in 1981.

Galligan is 86 and lives in a Missouri retirement facility. He initially denied the allegations but later decided not to fight the lawsuit, saying he was in poor health and didn’t have the strength to do so.

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OK – Alleged predator priest who lived in OK gets “off the hook”

OKLAHOMA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Two local Catholic bishops should do “outreach,” victims say
Accused in two states, they fear he may have hurt OK kids too
A jury awarded one of his victims $4 million but cleric has paid little

For immediate release: Tuesday, Nov. 19, 2013

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

A credibly accused predator priest who allegedly molested kids in two states has apparently lived in Oklahoma but never been accused here. And victims’ group is urging Oklahoma Catholic officials to warn parents, parishioners and the public about him and “aggressively” seek out anyone there who may have be hurt by him.

[Bangor Daily News]

A child sex abuse lawsuit against Fr. Raymond P. Melville, who allegedly assaulted kids in Maine and Maryland, was tossed out last week by the Maine Supreme Court. Leaders of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, are asking the Catholic bishops of Tulsa and Oklahoma City to use church bulletins, pulpit announcements and parish websites to alert Oklahoma citizens and Catholics about Fr. Melville’s presence here.

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Tragic story of Hana Williams, who died after abuse from her adoptive parents

UNITED STATES
NEWS.com.au

HANA Williams was supposed to have a better life in the United States.

Instead, the Ethiopian teenager was subjected to horrifying abuse at the hands of her adoptive parents, Larry and Carri. Then, three years after travelling to the US from an African orphanage, Hana was found dead in her own backyard.

Carri Williams has since been convicted of “homicide by abuse” and sentenced to 37 years in prison. Her husband Larry will serve 28 years. The pair terrorised a household of nine children, two of whom were adopted, with a strict disciplinary regime that turned deadly on May 11, 2011. …

The Williams family lived on an isolated, 5.6-acre property in Sedro-Woolley, a small town deep in the American northwest. Larry and Carri practised a fundamentalist brand of Christianity while homeschooling their children and banning most TV and internet access, Slate reports.

The couple’s strict parenting style appears to have been taken from the book To Train Up A Child, which has been implicated in the deaths of two other adoptees. While the Williams’ biological children were seemingly well “trained”, their two adopted kids, Hana and Immanuel, were often singled out for brutal punishment.

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Saint Luke Institute, Priest Named in Sexual Abuse Lawsuit

MINNESOTA
KAAL

By: Jennie Olson

There’s another lawsuit against the Catholic Church over more sexual abuse claims.

The lawsuit names the Order of St. Benedict/St. John’s Abbey, the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, Saint Luke Institute and Father Francis Hoefgen as defendants.

The lawsuit alleges the organizations allowed Father Hoefgen to work with children even after he admitted to police in 1984 that he sexually abused a minor.

Hoefgen, who was a member of St. John’s, was sent to Saint Luke Institute for an evaluation in 1984 and returned to ministry in 1985 at St. Elizabeth Ann Seton in Hastings, according to the lawsuit.

The lawsuit says he sexually abused a boy when he was there. The victim is a Minnesota man who is now in his 30s.

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Pope names new bishop for Fort Worth Catholic diocese

FORT WORTH (TX)
Fort Worth Star-Telegram

BY DOMINGO RAMIREZ JR.
ramirez@star-telegram.com

FORT WORTH For the first time in the history of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fort Worth, a priest within the diocese was named as its bishop on Tuesday by Pope Francis, diocese officials said.

Pope Francis named Rev. Msgr. Michael F. Olson, 47, a rector of Irving-based Holy Trinity Seminary, as the fourth bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Fort Worth.

The announcement of the appointment was made Tuesday morning by Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, the Apostolic Nuncio to the United States — the Vatican’s ambassador to the U.S.

Olson will be ordained bishop and installed as Bishop of Fort Worth at a 2 p.m. Mass Jan. 29 in the Fort Worth Convention Center, 1201 Houston Street.

The 47-year-old Olson will become the second youngest bishop in the United States to lead a diocese. The youngest is fellow seminary classmate Bishop Oscar Cantú of the Diocese of Las Cruces, New Mexico. Both are graduates of the St. Mary Seminary in Houston, a Fort Worth diocese release states.

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Pope Francis Names Rev. Msgr. Michael F. Olson, S.T.D., M.A. as New Bishop of Catholic Diocese of Fort Worth

FORT WORTH (TX)
Roman Catholic Diocese of Fort Worth

Attention: A live stream video of the introduction and press conference of Bishop-elect Michael F. Olson, S.T.D., M.A. will be made available on this web page starting at at 9:45 a.m. The event begins at 10:00 a.m.

El Papa Francisco Nombra al Rev. Mons. Michael F. Olson, S.T.D., M.A. como Nuevo Obispo De la Diócesis Católica de Fort Worth

His Holiness, Pope Francis on Tuesday named Rev. Msgr. Michael F. Olson, S.T.D., M.A. 47, a priest of the Diocese of Fort Worth and currently the rector of Irving-based Holy Trinity Seminary, the fourth bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Fort Worth.

The announcement of the appointment was made by Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, the Apostolic Nuncio to the United States—the Vatican’s ambassador to the U.S.

Complete Press Release
Bishop-elect Michael F. Olson’s Biography

Su Santidad, el Papa Francisco este martes nombró al Rev. Mons. Michael F. Olson, S.T.D., M.A. de 47 años, un sacerdote de la Diócesis de Fort Worth y rector actual del Seminario de Holy Trinity en Irving, el cuarto obispo de la Diócesis Católica de Fort Worth.

El anuncio de este nombramiento fue hecho por el Arzobispo Carlo Maria Viganò, el Nuncio Apostólico a los Estados Unidos—el embajador del Vaticano a los EE.UU.

Nota de prensa completa
Biografía del Obispo-electo Michael F. Olson

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OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 19 November 2013 (VIS) – Today, the Holy Father:

– appointed Msgr. Michael F. Olson as bishop of Fort Worth (area 62,007, population 3,287,000, Catholics 710,000, priests 129, permanent deacons 109, religious 151), U.S.A. The bishop-elect was born in Park Ridge, U.S.A. in 1966 and was ordained a priest in 1994. He holds a doctorate in moral theology from the Alphonsianum Academy, Rome, and has served in a number of pastoral and academic roles, including lecturer at the St. Louis University Medical School, formator at the St. Mary seminary, professor at St. Thomas University, Houston, priest in the parish of St. Peter the Apostle in Fort Worth, and vicar general of Fort Worth. He is currently diocesan consultor and rector of the Holy Trinity seminary in Irving.

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Anglicans ‘broke abuse report protocol’

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

The Anglican Diocese of Grafton broke protocol by keeping files on child abuse allegations in its registry rather than referring them for independent scrutiny.

The diocese’s view that the attention of the professional standards director was not warranted in these cases was described during a royal commission hearing on Tuesday as demonstrating the diocese was not fully committed to investigating allegations.

The northern NSW diocese is the focus of hearings in Sydney as the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse looks at the response to claims of abuse at the North Coast Children’s Home in Lismore.

Former Anglican Diocese of Grafton acting registrar Anne Hywood told Tuesday’s public hearing a November 2012 audit identified matters in the registry that should have been referred to professional standards director Michael Elliot.

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Harrowing evidence against Anglican Diocese …

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Harrowing evidence against Anglican Diocese in Grafton given at royal commission into child sexual abuse

MATTHEW BENNS THE DAILY TELEGRAPH NOVEMBER 19, 2013

YOUNG children would chant prayers in their dark church dormitory while an Anglican Minister fondled one of them under their bed clothes, the royal commission into child sexual abuse heard today.

One of the victims from the former North Coast Children’s Home in Lismore wrote a harrowing letter, years later, to the Anglican Diocese in Grafton to tell how children would say special prayers “and then have a Minister fondle your little body.”

“He would hear our prayers in the dark dormitory at the end of the home. A chair pulled to the chosen child’s bed and as all chanted the prayers his hands would wander over the small budding body,” wrote the victim, who can only be identified as CA.

“His mouth on lips that had never known a gentle human touch whilst the tongue explored a mouth that needed to scream,” wrote the female victim, now aged 58.

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Abuse lawyer slams Anglican church

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

A lawyer who represented abuse victims from a NSW children’s home says the way the Anglican Church dealt with the claims was the most ‘scurrilous and mean-minded’ he has ever seen.

When Simon Harrison led a group claim for victims of abuse at the North Coast Children’s Home in Lismore, a lawyer for the Grafton diocese, Peter Roland, claimed there were limited funds for Mr Harrison’s clients.

‘He was pleading poverty, but I have seen that so many times with churches I just took it as a matter of course,’ Mr Harrison told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse on Tuesday.

‘Out of all the claims I’ve dealt with over quite a few years, the way this was dealt with by the church was perhaps the most scurrilous and mean-minded attitude I’d ever come across quite frankly.’

And when Mr Harrison represented a former resident, known only as CA, who sought compensation after the group settlement had been reached in 2007, he was told the North Coast Children’s Home file was closed.

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Is the Catholic Church image tarnished?

MINNESOTA
KARE

[with video]

Rena Sarigianopoulos

MINNEAPOLIS — It seems there is a new lawsuit announced almost daily in regards to allegations of priest abuse in the Minneapolis-St. Paul Archdiocese. But how much of an impact is it really having on the image of the church?

“So far they haven’t been very adept at responding to this, so they’re getting beat up in the short term,” says public relations and crisis management specialist Jon Austin.

Austin’s whole world is helping organizations deal with the public when things go terribly wrong. He says though the Archdiocese should really be more transparent, regardless of how they handle it, they’ll likely be just fine.

“If you go to Rome and you stand in the Vatican in the square and you just contemplate the sheer scope of this organization, you have to conclude this is not an existential threat to the church,” says Austin.

That said, and not taking anything away from the seriousness of the allegations, Austin says, this is a case of a 2,000 year old establishment trying to operate in today’s world.

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Church to probe suspended priest’s claims

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

Gerry Braiden
Senior reporter

Tuesday 19 November 2013

AN investigation into a parish priest suspended for his memoirs alleging a culture of homosexual bullying within the church will also deal with his accusations.

Father Matthew Despard was suspended amid dramatic scenes at the weekend after a penal judicial process was launched, a full eight months after his book Priesthood In Crisis was put on sale.

However, church sources have said that, as well as investigating Father Despard’s conduct in releasing the book and its impact on serving clergy, any probe would have to examine what is alleged within it.

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7 acts Australia must do for humanity’s good motivated by the Victorian Inquiry that slams the Vatican (Roman) Catholic Church!

UNITED STATES
Pope Crimes & Vatican Evils…

Paris Arrow

Updated November 18, 2013

When the Victorian Inquiry 750-page report was tabled last November 13, 2013, it made 15 sweeping recommendations and it particularly savaged the Catholic Church because, as committee member Andrea Coote said in her speech to Parliament, the Vatican (Roman) Catholic Church was the focus of the vast majority of testimony (estimated 95% of the pedophile crimes discovered in the inquiry were committed by pedophile priests) and the report made clear, that members of the committee were unimpressed by the testimony of Catholic leaders – especially Cardinal George Pell – who trivialized and minimalized – the most heinous crimes against children committed by bestial priests – covered-up by him and his colleagues of Catholic Cardinals and Bishops for decades – to protect the “godly” reputation and hidden wealth of the Vatican (Roman) Catholic Church. One headline by The Tablet read: “Australian report finds ‘substantial criminal child abuse’ in Church” meaning the Vatican Catholic Church (it’s not “Roman Catholic”, read why and see news compilation below).

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Australian bishops welcome report that seeks changes in abuse protocols

AUSTRALIA
Catholic Sentinel

Catholic News Service

SYDNEY — Australian bishops have welcomed the report by the Victorian state inquiry into clerical sexual abuse, which recommended sweeping changes in the wake of what one archbishop described as more than 25 years of “inexcusable failures” by the church.

Those who would conceal, fail to report, or knowingly expose a child to abuse, including priests and religious leaders, would face imprisonment under recommendations by the Victorian parliamentary committee.

Under current law, only those who benefit from the concealment of crime can be prosecuted. The state has six months to respond.

The report, Betrayal of Trust, also recommended overturning statutes of limitations in civil suits, improving prevention systems, requiring strict compliance audits and establishing alternative avenues of justice for victims, because it said systems set up by churches were not truly independent.

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Vatican’s new Dominican Republic envoy arrives amid pedophilia scandals

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
Dominican Today

Santo Domingo.- The Vatican’s new envoy Jude Thaddeus Okolo will arrive Monday in the country, where two of his Catholic Church colleagues are at the center of major scandals involving the alleged sexual abuse of minors.

Citing sources, elnuevodiario.com.do reports that Dominican ambassador in the Vatican Victor Grimaldi on Sunday hosted a sendoff for Okolo, just months after his predecessor Jósef Wesolowski, from Poland, was ousted as the scandal surfaced of his alleged pedophilia.

Catholic priest and Polish national Wojciech Gil was also indicted for allegedly abusing boys in the town of Juncalito, Santiago Province.

Okolo’s farewell at the Dominican Embassy came after he met with Pope Francis.

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Dispelling myths around sexual abuse …

UNITED KINGDOM
The Northern Echo

Dispelling myths around sexual abuse – rapists don’t look like Jimmy Savile and victims are never to blame, according to charity

By Joanna Morris
A NORTH-EAST charity is calling for more to be done to dispel myths around sexual and domestic abuse ahead of the international Eliminate Violence Against Women Day on Monday November 25.

Figures from 2010 showed more than 160,000 women living in the North-East have experienced domestic abuse and almost 150,000 have suffered sexual assault.

Since then, The Centre – a rape and sexual abuse counselling centre covering Darlington and County Durham – has seen demand increase by 100 per cent.

Despite this, many cases of rape and sexual abuse still go unreported.

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New Archbishop calls for greater support for victims of child sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Adrienne Francis

The new Canberra and Goulburn Archbishop says the Catholic Church could do more to support victims of child sexual abuse.

Former Victorian bishop Christopher Prowse was installed as the new Catholic Archbishop during a solemn Mass at St Christopher’s Cathedral in Forrest.

In delivering the homily, Archbishop Prowse mentioned the Royal Commission and parliamentary inquiries into child sexual abuse, telling the packed congregation he truly felt for its victims.

“We can always do a lot more,” Archbishop Prowse said.

“First of all, we have got to listen to their stories. I think we need to really improve on that.

“The victims, these courageous and brave people, coming out to share their horrendous stories and we want to stand alongside them and be supportive of them in these fragile times.”

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The Forward’s Freudian Slip

NEW YORK
Failed Messiah

Sam Kellner hasn’t been convicted or tried. In fact, the case against him has very publicly imploded and Kellner has not been put on trial and has not pleaded guilty.

But the Jewish Daily Forward not only ran a hit piece on Kellner last week, its Twitter feed claims Kellner is a “convicted extortionist,” as you can see below.

Right below that libelous November 16, 2013 tweet about Kellner – which was still posted at 8:30 pm CST tonight, more than 2 days after it was originally made – is a tweet about a Sisterhood blog post by Elana Sztokman, Why Hasidic Sex Abuse of Boys Is Feminist Issue.

That post originally mentioned anti-child-sex-abuse activist Rabbi Nuchem Rosenberg and the Vice article that opens with Nuchem’s 2005 trip to Zupnik’s mikva in Jerusalem, where he stumbled upon an adult hasid having anal sex with a young boy.

That post was taken down by the Forward and reposted a day later with that citation – and Nuchem Rosenberg – removed.

I don’t have a screenshot of the original post, unfortunately. But you can read my post on that Zupnik mikva incident from 2006. Note that Badatz Yerushalayim took Nuchem seriously and appointed a guard for the mikva to try to stop rape of children from happening there.

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Gallup diocese tries to protect itself

NEW MEXICO
KRQE

[with video]

By Kim Vallez

GALLUP, N.M. (KRQE) – Employees of the Gallup diocese will continue to get paid and receive benefits while the diocese goes through bankruptcy protection proceedings.

The diocese announced in September that it planned to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection because of mounting claims of clergy sex abuse.

Attorneys say more than 100 people may file claims in the case putting the diocese in a tight financial spot.

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Jury: Girls, Parents Liable For Calling Catholic Teacher “Perv”

CALIFORNIA
CBS Bay Area

A Santa Clara County jury that found three schoolgirls and their parents liable for defaming a Catholic school teacher they branded a ”perv” is about to decide how much one of the students should pay in punitive damages.

The jury found on Friday that the defendants damaged John Fischler’s reputation by spreading false statements that he inappropriate touched the children and peeked into a girls’ bathroom. The former P.E. teacher was cleared by police of sexual misconduct.

The San Jose Mercury News reports the 49-year-old teacher was awarded at least $362,000 in compensatory damages.

The jury also found that one of the girls, now 14 years old, acted with malice and is liable for punitive damages. The second phase of the trial to determine how much she’ll have to pay is set to begin Monday.

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Teacher awarded $362,653 in defamation suit against former students for calling him a ‘perv’

CALIFORNIA
The Raw Story

By George Chidi
Sunday, November 17, 2013

False accusations of misconduct fuel the nightmares of grade school teachers, given the litigiousness and bureaucracy of the schoolhouse.

But one former Catholic school teacher in California has achieved what his attorney called “complete vindication” against a cabal of Mean Girls-style student accusers, and their parents: a civil court judgment of $362,653 in compensatory damages after a jury found the families had spread false statements about him that damaged his reputation.

John Fischler, 49, a former physical education teacher at Holy Spirit school in Almaden Valley faced accusations of inappropriately touching 10- and 11-year-old girls and peeking in a girls’ bathroom, the San Jose Mercury News reported. After school officials cleared him of misconduct, Fischler sued the students and the parents for defamation, claiming that the persistent rumor-mongering by their families had tainted his teaching career and prevented him from returning to the classroom.

In one of the accusations, an 11-year-old girl said Fischler touched her buttocks in 2009 while teaching squat thrusts. Fischler denied having touched the girl’s rear but admitted to touching her hips to correct her form. He was admonished for violating a “no-touching” rule but cleared of misconduct. The sister of the girl, in a group with other students, later accused him of leering into a girls bathroom, a charge that police later determined was unfounded. Fischler had been forced to enter after the sound of shrieking disrupted a nearby class down the hall. Police later found that the girls had been trying deliberately to get them fired, with one of them coercing others into the false accusation.

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John Fischler, Calif. teacher branded as “perv,” awarded $362K in defamation case

CALIFORNIA
CBS News

(CBS/AP) SAN JOSE, Calif. – A Northern California jury that found three schoolgirls and their parents liable for defaming a Catholic school teacher they branded as a “perv” is about to decide how much one of the students should pay in punitive damages.

The Santa Clara County Superior Court jury found on Friday that the defendants damaged John Fischler’s reputation by spreading false statements two years ago that he inappropriately touched the 10- and 11-year-old girls and peeked into a girls’ bathroom at Holy Spirit School in Almaden Valley.

The former physical education teacher was awarded $362,000 in compensatory damages.

The jury also found that one of the girls, whom Fischler called the “ringleader” in spreading the rumors, acted with malice and is liable for punitive damages. The San Jose Mercury News reports the second phase of the trial to determine how much she’ll have to pay is set to begin Monday.

According to an October report by CBS San Francisco, a girl who was a witness in the case said she was pressured into saying Fischler leered into the girl’s bathroom.

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Catholic school teacher exonerated of ‘perv’ charges

CALIFORNIA
California Catholic Daily

The following comes from a Nov. 15 Mercury News story.

Two years after San Jose schoolgirls branded a teacher as a “perv” and “creeper” who inappropriately touched kids and peeked into their restroom, a civil jury Friday found the children and their parents financially liable for defamation in a case that pitted the rights of the accused against the aim of reporting perceived abuse.

The jury awarded $362,653 in compensatory damages to former Catholic school physical education teacher John Fischler after finding the families spread false statements about him that damaged his reputation. The 49-year-old broke into a huge smile Friday when he heard the favorable verdict, which his lawyer characterized as “complete vindication.”

“I’m grateful the jury was able to see through the smoke screen and the truth came out.” Fischler said in a choked voice outside the courtroom. “There’s always going to be a scar. But the jury saw through the deception.”

The Santa Clara County Superior Court panel also found that one of the girls — who was 11 years old at the time — acted with malice and is liable for punitive damages. The jury will decide how much during the second phase of the trial, which begins Monday. Judge William Monahan admonished jurors not to discuss the trial until it’s over.

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Police ‘unfair’ in their evidence to child abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
The Age

November 19, 2013

Barney Zwartz, Religion Editor

Victoria Police evidence about child sexual abuse that savaged the Catholic Church was unfair and an attempt to distance itself from its own failures, a state government report says.

It took 16 years – and problems becoming public – before police paid attention to the fundamental problems in the way the church in Melbourne dealt with complaints – a process to which police had originally agreed, the report says.

Betrayal of Trust, the report of the parliamentary inquiry into how the churches handled child sexual abuse, was tabled last week.

In testimony to the inquiry last October, police accused the church of deliberately impeding their investigations into child abuse, dissuading victims from reporting to police, failing to engage with police, protecting sexual offenders and alerting suspects of allegations against them.

Police also attacked the Melbourne Response independent commissioner, Peter O’Callaghan, QC, and complained that not one case had been referred to them.

However, Mr O’Callaghan defended himself vigorously when he gave evidence, saying the church and police had signed an agreement on how the Melbourne Response church protocol would work before he was appointed, and police had not told him of any dissatisfaction until the inquiry was announced.

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Sex abuse allegations against former pastor prompts church school meeting

GEORGIA
WSBT

[with video]

By Tom Regan

DOUGLASVILLE, Ga. — Parents of children who attend the Kings Way Baptist Church School in Douglasville packed a meeting Monday night to learn more about the abrupt resignation of their pastor of 15 years.

The Rev. Bill Wininger left the church last month, after allegations of sexual abuse from nearly 20 years ago in Michigan, surfaced on the Internet. Wininger has neither been arrested nor charged with any crime.

Bethany Nicole-Leonard, who claims she was abused as a child, traveled from her home in Pennsylvania to speak out to parents and other church members at the meeting. She started an online petition drive to call attention to her allegations and those of others.

“A friend of mine actually started it. A Facebook page for justice for victims of Bill Wininger, is what it’s called. We have a petition on that page, and every time it’s signed, it’s sending an email to the prosecutor in Michigan to try to get them to do a thorough investigation and take action criminally,” Nicole-Leonard told Channel 2’s Tom Regan.

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Church leader accused of sexually abusing children

TEXAS
My Fox DFW

By: Brandon Todd
Adapted for Web by: Sarah Crandall

ARLINGTON –
A spiritual leader at an Arlington church has been accused of sexually abusing three children.

Dale Edwin Orth, 56, remains in jail on a $450,000 bond since his arrest in September.

Orth was an elder at Grace Community Church in Arlington, and its pastor says its members are praying for healing.

Meanwhile, investigators are trying to find out how many children will be a part of their case against one of this church’s former spiritual leaders.

“All the leadership of the church, we were shocked…we’ve been saddened, grieved by all this,” said senior pastor Gary Hutchison.

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Royal Commission hears of cruel, barbaric hell

AUSTRALIA
CQ News

Jessica Grewal 19th Nov 2013

CRUEL barbaric and utter hell is how child abuse victim Richard “Tommy” Campion has described the conditions children were forced to live in at Lismore’s North Coast Children’s Home.

Eight years after he first broke his silence about the torment he and many others were subjected to under the watch of the Anglican Church, the now 66-year-old has told his story to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

The whistleblower was the first witness to take the stand at Monday’s public inquiry, which is looking at how the Anglican Diocese of Grafton responded to claims of child sexual abuse at the home and it’s handling of a group claim.

With a cracked voice, Mr Campion painted a confronting picture of a dark place where children as young as toddlers suffered whippings and other physical and sexual abuse at the hands of a “sadistic matron” and two “wicked” reverends who had “no regard for human life, let alone the wellbeing of a child”.

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Hell in Heaven: Paedophile Ring Priests Group Beat and Lick Children as Cleansing Ritual

AUSTRALIA
International Business Times

By Athena Yenko | November 19, 2013

On Monday, Nov 18, The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse started a public hearing examining the response of the Anglican Diocese of Grafton to claims of child sexual abuse at the North Coast Children’s Home in Lismore and the policies and procedures of the Diocese in handling a group claim.

The public hearing was focused on the victims claiming abuse against the diocese from 2005.

“This hearing will investigate whether the Diocese followed appropriate policies and procedures with respect to a group claim made by victims. It will examine how the group claim was settled and what occurred when former residents of North Coast Children’s Home came forward seeking compensation after the group claim had been settled,” Royal Commission CEO Jannette Dines, said.

“This historical example of institutional child sexual abuse will help the community to be better informed about how claims were dealt with by the Anglican Diocese of Grafton and is expected to highlight just how devastating and long-lasting the effects of child sexual abuse are,” Ms Dines added.

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Abuse victims ‘missed boat’ on compensation payments, commission told

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Dan Box
From: The Australian
November 19, 2013

AN Anglican diocese refused to compensate victims of abuse committed in a children’s home, despite previously making dozens of payments in other similar cases, because it was struggling with debts elsewhere, an inquiry has heard.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse heard this morning that a letter to the Bishop of Grafton from one of these victims detailing his abuse went effectively unanswered for 18 months.

The victim was one of dozens of children at the North Coast Children’s Home in Lismore, northern NSW, who suffered brutal sexual and physical abuse at the hands of priests and church workers, the commission heard.

This victim, as well as another who had also written personally to Bishop Keith Slater, subsequently heard back from his lawyers, who said their claims would not be considered, despite around 40 other victims receiving settlements in the past.

Anne Hywood, who was employed as the diocese’s acting registrar earlier this year, said she had been “furious” to discover this had been the official response to the victim’s claims.

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Child abuse victim ‘manipulated’ by Anglican Church

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

The royal commission into child sexual abuse has heard a former resident of a children’s home in northern New South Wales felt intimidated and manipulated when she raised allegations of abuse with the Anglican Church.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse yesterday began its latest round of public hearings to examine the alleged sexual and physical abuse of up to 200 children at the North Coast Children’s Home in Lismore.

Today the commission heard from a third former resident of the home, and just like those who appeared yesterday she told a story of severe physical and sexual abuse.

The woman did not want to be named or to speak publicly, so instead told her story to the commission through a statement.

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Abuse lawyer slams ‘mean’ Anglican church

AUSTRALIA
9 News

A lawyer who represented abuse victims from a NSW children’s home says the way the Anglican Church dealt with the claims was the most “scurrilous and mean-minded” he has ever seen.

When Simon Harrison led a group claim for victims of abuse at the North Coast Children’s Home in Lismore, a lawyer for the Grafton diocese, Peter Roland, claimed there were limited funds for Mr Harrison’s clients.

“He was pleading poverty, but I have seen that so many times with churches I just took it as a matter of course,” Mr Harrison told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse on Tuesday.

“Out of all the claims I’ve dealt with over quite a few years, the way this was dealt with by the church was perhaps the most scurrilous and mean-minded attitude I’d ever come across quite frankly.”

And when Mr Harrison represented a former resident, known only as CA, who sought compensation after the group settlement had been reached in 2007, he was told the North Coast Children’s Home file was closed.

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Minnesota: Former altar boy sues church, alleging abuse by priest in late 1950s

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

[the lawsuit]

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 11/18/2013

The Catholic Church was sued Monday over the alleged actions of a priest who served in Hastings and several southern Minnesota towns, including the sexual abuse of a boy. A state victims advocate said he himself was one of at least 27 alleging abuse by the cleric.

The Rev. William J. Marks worked in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and the Diocese of New Ulm from 1948 to 1979, according to the lawsuit, filed Monday in Ramsey County District Court.

The anonymous plaintiff, identified as John Doe 107, was between 10 and 14 when he was abused by Marks between 1957 and 1960, the lawsuit said. The abuse took place at St. John’s Catholic Church in Hector when the plaintiff was an altar boy, the suit said.

New lawsuits are being filed on old cases because of a 2013 state law, the Child Victims Act, that creates a three-year window for civil lawsuits by victims of child abuse.

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November 18, 2013

Meetings planned to discuss future direction of church

CANADA
Cape Breton Post

Published on November 18, 2013

SYDNEY — The Diocese of Antigonish will host several community meetings over the next two months to hopefully restore confidence and re-engage Catholics with their faith.

Like other dioceses around the globe, Antigonish members have been hit hard by decades of sexual abuse at the hands of priests.

Among the devastating results of such crimes, local parishes are now on the hook to pay millions of dollars in compensation claims to the victims, which forced the closure and sale of many churches and other properties.

A press release issued Monday by the diocese indicated that over over the past three years, the church has worked hard to get back on track, and this round of public meetings is another example of reaching out and listening to the concerns of Catholics.

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Diocese reaches out to victims of sex abuse

CANADA
The Chronicle-Herald

November 18, 2013

BY FRANCIS CAMPBELL TRURO BUREAU

The Diocese of Antigonish wants to extend a healing hand to its parishioners.

Seven gatherings have been scheduled to talk about the past wrongs committed by the church and to search for productive ways to move forward.

“What these sessions are about is trying to hear what it’s been like to have been hurt by the church,” said Father Donald MacGillivray, a diocesan spokesman who now works out of St. Ninian’s Cathedral in Antigonish. “More specifically, how it’s been to have been hurt by a priest because of sexual abuse. That’s our starting point.

“It’s also about some kind of reconciliation, or at the very least, we’ll contemplate how we can move on from this. With anything in life, it’s not that we don’t make mistakes. People make mistakes, institutions make mistakes and I’m not saying this to try to downplay the difficult stuff that’s come from this mistake. The reality is that there’s been a wrong here. There’s been a mistake. It’s about for us to try to move on. For the people who have been hurt to move on and, as an institution to move on from this.”

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I-Team: Letters raise questions about alleged sex abuse in diocese

RHODE ISLAND
NBC 10

[Response from the Providence diocese]

Updated: Nov 18, 2013
By Katie Davis

PROVIDENCE –
Three Roman Catholic priests were forced out of Rhode Island parishes in the last year and a half.

All of them were credibly accused of sexually abusing children.

In each case, a letter detailing allegations of sexual abuse was sent to Rhode Island State Police by the Diocese of Providence.

The diocese began the practice around 2003, although there’s no legal mandate requiring the letters.

So the NBC 10 I-Team wondered, how many other letters are out there? And what do the documents say?

To find out, the I-Team began a series of public records requests over a six-month period, asking state police to search its files.

The I-Team found 88 pages detailing sexual abuse by Rhode Island priests, going back more than 30 years. A total of 45 letters were sent to state police between 2003 and 2013.

The documents were heavily redacted by state police. …

“The letters were heavily redacted. Effort was made so that you couldn’t even understand what year it took place, or what parish it took place in or what town,” said Anne Barrett Doyle.

Barrett Doyle heads Bishop Accountability, a watchdog group that collects and publishes documents about priest sexual abuse. She worries some of the priests described in the letters could still be working in Rhode Island churches.

“Even if the statute of limitations has expired on some of these alleged crimes, the diocese is under a moral imperative to remove priests suspected of misconduct from the ministry,” Barrett Doyle said.

The diocese said in a statement it has been and continues to be very aggressive in responding to allegations of sexual abuse of minors, while respecting the rights of all involved parties.

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Response of the Diocese of Providence to NBC 10 Story

RHODE ISLAND
Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence

(In response to inquiries from NBC 10 about Diocesan response to allegations of sexual abuse of minors, the Diocese offers the following information.)

The Diocese of Providence has been and continues to be very aggressive in responding to allegations of sexual abuse of minors, while respecting the rights of all involved parties. A recent regularly scheduled audit of the Diocese by the audit firm of StoneBridge Business Partners of Rochester, NY, has confirmed that the Diocese is in full compliance with the “Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People” promulgated by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops.

There are no priests currently in ministry of any sort in the Diocese of Providence who have had credible allegations of sexual abuse of minors lodged against them.

The Diocese reports every allegation of sexual abuse of minors to the Rhode Island State Police or other local law enforcement agencies. That reporting includes charges that date back many years, sometimes decades, even in some cases in which the accused individual is deceased. It should be noted that the Diocese communicates regularly with law enforcement agencies about a variety of issues having nothing to do with sexual abuse.

The Diocese is committed to working with victims of sexual abuse to ensure that they receive the personal, pastoral and spiritual assistance they need and deserve. Also, to promote the protection of our children and youth in the future, the Diocese has implemented a comprehensive and effective program of safe environment training for all parishes, schools, religious education and youth ministry programs of the Diocese.

In dealing with all matters related to the sexual abuse of minors, the response of the Diocese is directed by the Diocesan Review Board, composed of competent members of the Church and community, Catholic and non-Catholic alike.

Because of the ongoing investigation of some past incidents of sexual abuse, the Diocese is unable to comment further on specific details of these situations.

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The Third Case Study (Or: Sugar-Coated Salt)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

Allan Kitchingman (see previous posting), still fondly known by some as “Kitch”, was to be the focus of the third “case study” by the Australian Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. Kitchingman, 81, remains an ordained priest, although relieved of parish duties, despite being convicted for offences against children at the North Coast Children’s Home (see previous posting) in the New South Wales town of Lismore.

It was all going to look very bad for the Anglican Church, known elsewhere as the Episcopalian Church or the Church of England, for the cover-ups associated with his case. When Kitch was first convicted, in 1968, of a “child sex matter” (as the church referred to paedophilia) in Newcastle, his Bishop, James Housden, immediately transferred him to Grafton.

Housden organized the transfer because he was ‘‘anxious to help him [Kitchingman] in every way possible whatever the result of the trial’’. He wrote that Kitchingman had ‘‘a real flair for work among young people”, so he ended up as “chaplain” at the children’s home. There he committed the crimes, in 1975, for which he was convicted many years later.

The cover-up by Bishop Housden was so complete, that the court was not aware of the 1968 conviction, when it heard the case concerning the 1975 offences.

Now, this case alone should have convinced anybody that the Anglican Church was in the same basket as the Catholic Church when it came to cover-ups. It will also be revealed later in the present hearings that it acts the same when considering compensation and support for victims as well.

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MEDIA ADVISORY: SAINT LUKE INSTITUTE, FATHER FRANCIS HOEFGEN NAMED …

MINNESOTA
Jeff Anderson & Associates

MEDIA ADVISORY: SAINT LUKE INSTITUTE, FATHER FRANCIS HOEFGEN NAMED IN SEXUAL ABUSE LAWSUIT

St. Paul News Conference Tuesday

First Child Victims Act Lawsuit to Name Treatment Facility Run by Bishops
Where Known Offenders were Recycled into Ministry

Father Francis Hoefgen admitted abuse to police, sent to St. Luke’s
and placed back in Hastings parish where he molested Doe 27

Saint Luke Institute, St. John’s, Archdiocese, named in sexual abuse lawsuit

What: At a news conference on Tuesday in St. Paul, Minnesota former priest and monk Patrick J. Wall, along with attorney Jeff Anderson, will:

• Announce the filing of a sexual abuse lawsuit on behalf of a Minnesota man now in his 30s, naming the Order of St. Benedict a/k/a and d/b/a St. John’s Abbey, the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, Saint Luke Institute and Father Francis Hoefgen as defendants. The lawsuit alleges defendants were negligent in allowing Father Hoefgen to work with children after admitting to police in 1984 that he sexually abused a minor. Hoefgen, a member of St. John’s, was subsequently sent to St. Luke’s for an evaluation in 1984 and returned to ministry in 1985 at St. Elizabeth Ann Seton in Hastings, where he sexually abused Doe 27.

• Request the Order publicly release the names and files of 17 accused clerics who are credibly accused of sexual abuse involving minor children and for the Archdiocese to release their list of 33 priests credibly accused of sexual abuse.

• Reveal the police report and internal church documents regarding Hoefgen.

WHEN: Tuesday, November 19, 2013 at 11:00AM

WHERE: Jeff Anderson & Associates
366 Jackson Street, Suite 100
St. Paul, MN 55101

WHO: Patrick J. Wall, former priest and monk, was assigned by the Abbott and Archbishop to St. Elizabeth Ann Seton parish in Hastings, MN immediately following Father Hoefgen’s departure. Wall now works for Jeff Anderson & Associates as a consultant and advocate for sexual abuse survivors. Jeff Anderson, sexual abuse attorney, will be available for additional comment and questions.

Notes:
• Information packets, including copies of the documents, will be available at the press conference and on our website tomorrow at www.andersonadvocates.com.
• Fr. Hoefgen remained in ministry until 1992 and worked in parishes in Hastings and Cold Spring, Minnesota. He is believed to be living in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Contact Patrick Wall: Office: 651.964.3458 Cell: 949.307.3935
Contact Jeff Anderson: Office: 651.964.3458 Cell: 612.817.8665

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Lawsuit expected against St. John’s Abbey, priest

MINNESOTA
St. Cloud Times

Written by
David Unze

ST. PAUL — A press conference has been scheduled for Tuesday morning in St. Paul to announce the filing of a clergy sex abuse lawsuit against a former St. John’s Abbey priest.

The lawsuit names as defendants the Rev. Fran Hoefgen, St. John’s Abbey, the archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, and St. Luke Institute, a renowned treatment facility in Baltimore.

The lawsuit is being filed on behalf of a 30-year-old Minnesota man who accuses Hoefgen of sexually abusing him at a Hastings parish where Hoefgen was assigned after being sent to St. Luke for evaluation.

Hoefgen before that had served at a Cold Spring parish, where he was accused of sexually abusing a boy. That accusation led to his evaluation at St. Luke. No criminal charges were filed against Hoefgen.

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As church scandal grows, Catholic Charities keeps an eye on donations

MINNESOTA
MinnPost

By Cynthia Boyd

Catholic Charities of St. Paul and Minneapolis is closely watching for any decline in giving because of fallout from the ongoing clergy sexual-abuse scandal in Minnesota.

But so far, officials for the nonprofit that’s been helping immigrants and the poor for 144 years say donations are holding steady.

The mounting scandal involving the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis could even result in more donations going to the charity. That’s because some faithful and high-profile donors are channeling their money away from the archdiocese and its Annual Catholic Services Appeal, which provides a tiny percentage of income to Catholic Charities, and instead funneling donations directly to Catholic Charities.

But it’s too early to discern any pattern, and some people — believing that the archdiocese and Archbishop John Nienstedt control Catholic Charities’ budget, an assertion the charity says is wrong — say they are side-stepping the social-service organization.

One lifelong Catholic, a 75-year-old St. Paul woman, told me she worries any donations to Catholic Charities would “be under the control of the archdiocese.’’ The woman, who spoke only on condition her name not be used because she didn’t want to get involved with the church controversy, said she gives about 5 percent of her income each year to a variety of social-service, art and environmental groups — including organizations that have connections to the Catholic Church, such as the Dorothy Day Center in St. Paul — but not to Catholic Charities. The woman, who has cut off donations to Catholic Charities because of the scandal, said “I give to organizations that may be served by Catholic Charities’’ instead.

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Das katholische Weltbild

DEUTSCHLAND
Frankfurter Allgemeine

[Summary: The Catholic bishops will meet at the grave of St. Boniface at Fulda for their four-day plenary session. Topics are not particularly edifying but they will discuss the work of the abuse scandal which is far from complete. They are also expected to discuss Limburg Bishop Franz-Peter Tebart van Elst, who has been accused to spending too much money of building projects.]

Von RAINER HANK und GEORG MECK

Wie stets im Herbst kommen die katholischen Bischöfe Deutschlands (und der Apostolische Exarch der Ukrainer) von Montag an in Fulda am Grab des heiligen Bonifatius zu ihrer viertägigen Vollversammlung zusammen. Besonders erbaulich sind die Themen nicht, die dieses Mal auf der Tagesordnung der nicht öffentlichen Beratungen stehen. Da ist die Aufarbeitung des Missbrauchsskandals, die noch lange nicht abgeschlossen ist. Dann gibt es mit dem Limburger Mitbruder Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst das ein oder andere ernste Wort zu wechseln wegen seiner Liebe zu großzügigen Bauvorhaben (und einigen anderen Dingen). Und dann sind die Bischöfe auch noch in ihrer Eigenschaft als kapitalistische Unternehmer gefordert.

Denn die Verlagsgruppe „Weltbild“ (Umsatz 1,59 Milliarden Euro, 6800 Mitarbeiter), die den Bischöfen gehört, will nicht zur Ruhe kommen und wird von ihren Eigentümern nur noch wenig geliebt. Das Unternehmen, das Filiale um Filiale eröffnet hat, steckt tief in der Suche nach einem Sinn im stationären Buchhandel – die Online-Kaufhäuser sind stärker. Zuletzt musste „Weltbild“ einräumen, im vergangenen Geschäftsjahr Verluste gemacht zu haben (einen Abschluss gibt es nicht); auch für das kommende Jahr sind die Aussichten nicht gut, „dauerhaft positive Ergebnisse“ werden frühestens vom übernächsten Jahr an erwartet, teilte die Geschäftsführung mit.

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Delaware federal jury deliberates unusual clergy sex abuse case

DELAWARE
The News Journal

Written by
Sean O’Sullivan
The News Journal

WILMINGTON — A federal jury is deliberating on an unusual clergy sex abuse case today involving a New Jersey man and a retired Marist Brother.

Brian Elliott, 44, of Cedar Knolls charges that Brother Damian Galligan sexually abused him repeatedly in the mid to late 1970s into the 1980s, from when he was 8 years old until he was 14.

Two of those hundreds, if not thousands, of incidents of abuse occurred in Delaware in the summer of 1981 when Galligan took the young Elliott on a trip to visit Washington D.C., which is what brings the case to the U.S. District Court in Delaware.

The case is one of the last of the wave of lawsuits filed after the Delaware Child Victim Act was passed in 2007, which involves residents of other states who are not able to sue their abusers for acts committed against them when they were children in their home state but allege some part of their abuse happened in Delaware.

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Delaware jury weighs clergy sex abuse claims

DELAWARE
WDEL

By Randall Chase, Associated Press

Updated Monday, November 18, 2013

A federal jury in Delaware has begun deliberations in a lawsuit filed by a man who claims he was abused as a boy more than 30 years ago by a cleric who worked in the Archdiocese of New York.

Forty-four-year-old Brian Elliott claims he was repeatedly molested by Brother Damian Galligan, including while in Delaware during a trip from Elliott’s New Jersey home to Virginia in 1981.

Galligan is 86 and lives in a Missouri retirement facility. He has denied the allegations but is not defending himself, saying he’s in poor health and doesn’t have the strength to do so.

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Witness says Inuit girls came up with their own plan to stop attacks by priest

CANADA
The Province

BY BOB WEBER, THE CANADIAN PRESS NOVEMBER 18, 2013

IQALUIT, Nunavut – A witness at the trial of a priest facing dozens of sexual abuse charges involving Inuit children testified Monday that the girls in her community were forced to devise a foul way to stop him.

CAUTION: GRAPHIC CONTENT FOLLOWS AND MAY DISTURB SOME READERS.

The woman, who can’t be named under a court order, told a pin-drop silent courtroom that the only thing the girls could think of to stop Eric Dejaeger’s attacks was to defecate on him.

Dejaeger pleaded guilty to eight counts of indecent assault when his trial began Monday in Iqaluit, Nunavut. Testimony began on the remaining 69 charges he faces, including sexual abuse, indecent assault, making threats and confinement.

The woman described her home town of Igloolik, Nunavut, as a friendly place between 1978 and 1982, when the assaults were alleged to have occurred.

She said it was common for children to gather at the Catholic church, where they had room to play and were given crayons and pictures to colour.

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5 decades of alarms and concerns “unanswered” by archdiocese & diocese of New Ulm

MINNESOTA
Minnesota SNAP

For Immediate Release: Monday, November 18, 2013

Statement by Bob Schwiderski, State Director, Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

I have been asked to comment on the personal injury Summons and Complaint of John Doe 107 vs. the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis and the Diocese of New Ulm.

In 1962, Bishop Schladweiler of Diocese of New Ulm, and Archbishop Binz of the Archdiocese of St. Paul were informed of acts of childhood sexual abuse by Fr. William Marks. Over the next 5 decades, the diocese and archdiocese received more information about sexual abuse by Marks. The information came from individuals, me included, from the Minnesota communities of Hector, Green Valley, Glencoe, Cottonwood, Gent, Marshall, and Milroy.

Marks assignment history: Fr William Marks: PEDOPHILE http://mnsnap.wordpress.com/william-joseph-marks-abusive-priest/

Marks victims, a group I call the “Boys of Hector,” hoped the information would serve the church as an emergency alarm and ignite pastoral care, healing, and recovery for clergy sexual abuse victims, their loving family members, and their parishes.

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Nicht gut, aber gerecht

DEUTSCHLAND
Frankfurter Allgemeine

Von DANIEL DECKERS

Eines ist seit Montag sicher: Die Hamburger Justiz hat Papst Franziskus die Entscheidung über die Zukunft des Limburger Bischofs Tebartz-van Elst nicht abgenommen. Hätte das Amtsgericht die beiden falschen Aussagen an Eides statt nämlich so gewichtet wie die Staatsanwaltschaft und einen Strafbefehl erlassen, hätte der Vatikan den rechtskräftig verurteilten Bischof – nach bisheriger Übung – aus dem Amt entfernen müssen. Nun aber richtet sich alle Aufmerksamkeit auf ein Geschehen in Limburg, das seit Monaten unter dem Codewort „Bischofshaus“ Rätsel aufgibt.

Wie in Hamburg, so geht es auch in Limburg um das (wohlwollend formuliert) flexible Verhältnis des Geistlichen zur Wahrheit – doch nicht nur darum. Denn die absichtliche Verschleierung der Kostenexplosion und die Irreführung der Öffentlichkeit durch falsche Tatsachenbehauptungen über die Höhe der Bausumme mögen das Vertrauen in die moralische Integrität des Bischofs unwiederbringlich zerstört haben, wie Domkapitel und Diözesanversammlung einmütig feststellen. Justitiabel ist dieses Verhalten nicht – und für den Papst offensichtlich kein Grund, an Tebartz-van Elst ein Exempel zu statuieren.

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Bischof Tebartz-van Elst muss 20.000 Euro zahlen

DEUTSCHLAND
Frankfurter Allgemeine

[Summary: The Hamburg district court has said Limburg Bishop Franz-Peter Tebartz van Elst must pay 20,000 euros in the criminal proceedings against him. It is alleged that the bishop made two false statements under oath in connection with a first-class flight he took to India. Prosecutors said the bishop has confessed.]

Das Amtsgericht Hamburg hat das Strafverfahren gegen den Bischof von Limburg gegen Zahlung einer Geldauflage in Höhe von 20.000 Euro vorläufig eingestellt. Der Beschluss ist nicht anfechtbar. Die Staatsanwaltschaft hatte zuvor ihre Zustimmung zu der Entscheidung gegeben, ebenso Bischof Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst. Der Strafbefehl gegen den Bischof war im September beantragt worden, weil dieser im Zusammenhang mit einem Erste-Klasse-Flug nach Indien zwei eidesstattliche Falschaussagen gemacht hatte. Laut Staatsanwaltschaft hat Tebartz-van Elst inzwischen ein Geständnis abgelegt.

Hintergrund waren rechtliche Auseinandersetzungen zwischen dem Bischof und dem in Hamburg ansässigen „Spiegel“-Verlag über die Indien-Reise des Bischofs. Tebartz-van Elst hatte angegeben, es sei ihm weder die Frage vorgelegt worden, ob er erster Klasse geflogen sei, noch habe er die Antwort gegeben: „Business-Klasse sind wir geflogen.“ Diese Erklärung sei, so das Gericht, nach dem Ergebnis der staatsanwaltschaftlichen Ermittlungen falsch. Das Gericht hat laut Strafprozessordnung die Möglichkeit, ein Verfahren gegen bestimmte Auflagen einzustellen, „wenn die Auflagen geeignet sind, das öffentliche Interesse an der Strafverfolgung zu beseitigen und die Schwere der Schuld nicht entgegensteht“.

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Vatican tasks Ernst & Young with auditing its financial activities

VATICAN CITY
Rome Reports

[with video]

November 18, 2013 (Romereports.com) The Vatican selected Ernst & Young to carry out “the task of auditing and consultation” for “economic activities and administrative management procedures” of the Vatican City-State.

Pope Francis will allow the London-based firm to look into the accounts and procedures from the departments managed by the Vatican City-State, like the Vatican Museums and the Post Office.

Once the audit is complete, the results will be presented to the Commission on Economic Structures, which will use the audit to recommend changes.

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INTERNATIONAL TEAM OF ASSESSORS ON ADMINISTRATIVE ACTIVITIES

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 18 November 2013 (VIS) – We publish below the communique issued this morning by the Governorate of Vatican City State:

“On 15 November the Governorate of Vatican City State, by agreement with the Pontifical Commission for Reference on the Organisation of the Economic and Administrative Structure of the Holy See, following a selection process, has mandated an international team from Ernst & Young to carry out the task of auditing and consultation in relation to the economic activities and administrative management procedures of the Entity.

“The documentation containing the outcome of this consultation will be available to the Commission and will be used to propose eventual recommendations intended to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of the Governorate’s economic and administrative procedures”.

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POPE FRANCIS’ MOTU PROPRIO ON THE A.I.F.

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 18 November 2013 (VIS) – The Holy See Press Office has issued the following communique regarding Pope Francis’ Motu Proprio on the new Statute of the Financial Information Authority (F.I.A.):

“The Apostolic Letter issued Motu Proprio of 15 November 2013, by which Pope Francis has approved the attached new Statutes of the Financial Intelligence Authority (F.I.A.), is published today. This pontifical document will enter into force on 21 November 2013.

“As is known, with his Motu Proprio of 8 August 2013 and with the Law N. XVIII of 8 October 2013 on norms on transparency, supervision and financial intelligence, Pope Francis had strengthened further the institutional framework of the Holy See and the Vatican City State to prevent and combat potential illicit activities in the financial sector and had accorded to the F.I.A., in addition to the functions that it already had on the basis of the Motu Proprio of Benedict XVI of 30 December 2010, the function of prudential supervision of those entities that carry out financial activities professionally. The present Statutes adapt F.I.A.’s internal structure to the functions it is now called to perform.

“In particular, the Statutes distinguish the role and functions of the President, the Board of Directors and the Directorate, so as to ensure that the F.I.A. may fulfil even more adequately its institutional functions in full autonomy and independence and in a manner consistent with the institutional and legal framework of the Holy See and the Vatican City State. In addition, the new Statutes establish a specific office for prudential supervision, providing it with the necessary professional resources.”

The full text of the Motu Proprio may be consulted in English and Italian at:

http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/francesco/motu_proprio/index_it.htm

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US accountants Ernst&Young to audit Vatican finances

VATICAN CITY
The Economic Times

VATICAN CITY: US accountancy giant Ernst&Young will carry out an audit of the internal finances of the Vatican City — the smallest sovereign state in the world, the Vatican said in a statement on Monday.

The audit was agreed as part of a overhaul of the financial and administrative structure of the Vatican initiated by Pope Francis following his election in March.

A US consulting firm, Promontory Financial Group, has already been called upon to audit the 19,000 accounts at the Vatican bank, ..

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Vatican puts third department under outside financial scrutiny

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

* Department at centre of “Vatileaks” corruption allegations
* Pope also strengthens independence of financial regulator

By Philip Pullella

VATICAN CITY, Nov 18 (Reuters) – The Vatican has hired an international accounting firm to scrutinise the department at the centre of corruption allegations that surfaced in last year’s “Vatileaks” scandal.

Ernst and Young will look at the “Governatorato,” which runs the day-to-day activities of Vatican City, including its lucrative museums, the Holy See said in a statement.

Since assuming office in March, Pope Francis has taken action to tackle years of financial scandals, some involving the Vatican bank, which is being reformed after years of failing to meet international standards against tax evasion and the disguising of illegal sources of income.

The Governatorato is the department where Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano, the deputy governor of Vatican City, worked before his abrupt transfer to the United States after speaking out against what he said was corruption there.

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Eric Dejaeger, former priest, pleads guilty to sex charges

CANADA
CBC News

Disgraced former priest Eric Dejaeger has pleaded guilty in an Iqaluit courtroom to eight of 76 sex-related charges involving Inuit children.

The eight charges Dejaeger, 66, entered pleas on are all for indecent assault against male victims.

The trial will go ahead on the 68 other charges. With dozens of witnesses, it’s expected to last about six weeks.

Dejaeger looked solemn in the courtroom Monday morning and said nothing.

One of about 40 complainants in the case took the stand. The now 40-year-old woman is from Igloolik, and was between five and nine years old when she alleges Dejaeger sexually abused her.

She described a time when she said “Father Eric,” as he was known, fondled her. Another time, she alleges he had intercourse with her in his bedroom.

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Former northern priest Eric Dejaeger pleads guilty to sex charges in Nunavut

CANADA
Toronto Star

By: Bob Weber The Canadian Press, Published on Mon Nov 18 2013

IQALUIT, NUNAVUT—A northern priest has pleaded guilty to some of the dozens of sex-related charges he faces involving Inuit children.

Eric Dejaeger has admitted in a Nunavut courtroom to indecent assault in eight cases against him.

Dejaeger was supposed to be tried in 1995 for accusations stemming from when he was an Oblate priest in the tiny Arctic hamlet of Igloolik, but he returned to his Belgian homeland.

He was sent back by Belgium in 2011 after it was discovered he was living there illegally.
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An agreed statement of facts has yet to be entered on the charges to which Dejaeger pleaded guilty.
The trial in Iqaluit is now continuing with testimony from complainants.

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Children were ‘forced to eat their own vomit…

AUSTRALIA
Daily Mail (UK)

Children were ‘forced to eat their own vomit and have sex with older residents at Australian orphanage run by Anglican church’

Children were forced to eat their own vomit and have sex with staff at an Australian orphanage run by the Anglican church, an inquiry has heard.

A former child resident told the royal commission into the alleged abuse that young children were viciously beaten over decades of systematic abuse at the North Coast Children’s Home in Lismore, New South Wales.

The witness, known only as CK, said today that some children suffered ritual sexual abuse at the hands of staff.

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